Brian Keith Jensen v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 16, 2012
Docket02-10-00449-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Brian Keith Jensen v. State (Brian Keith Jensen v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brian Keith Jensen v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

02-10-449-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 02-10-00449-CR

BrIan Keith Jensen

APPELLANT

V.

The State of Texas

STATE

----------

FROM THE 89th District Court OF Wichita COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

Introduction

          Appellant Brian Keith Jensen appeals his conviction and life sentence for murder.  We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

          Appellant and Robert Neal Sommer were part of a New Mexico construction crew working on a project in Wichita Falls.  During a hiatus, the rest of the crew returned to New Mexico, while Appellant and Sommer stayed behind, sharing room 446 at the Econo Lodge hotel and enjoying the local nightlife.

          Herbert Palmer owned and operated a taxicab in Wichita Falls.  Sometime during the afternoon on March 20, 2008, Palmer took Appellant and Sommer to a liquor store on 9th Street and a Walgreens nearby.  Later, after Palmer had dropped them off back at the hotel, Appellant hired him again to drop Appellant at the corner of 15th and Austin and wait while Appellant visited a house on the block.  After seven or eight minutes, Appellant returned to the cab, and Palmer drove him back to the hotel.

          Later still, Palmer was again called to the Econo Lodge; this time to carry Appellant and Sommer to Maximus, a strip club on Seymour Highway.  As Appellant climbed out of the front seat into the club parking lot, Palmer noticed the handle of a pistol protruding from Appellant’s waistband.  He also heard Sommer ask Appellant if the nightclub staff searched patrons at the door for weapons; Appellant assured him that they did not.

          Inside the club, Appellant chatted with and bought drinks for a dancer who worked there.  She noticed that when Appellant ran out of money, he borrowed more from Sommer.

          When Appellant and Sommer decided to leave, they called Palmer, who once more ferried them back to the hotel.  Appellant paid him the seven-dollar fare, and Sommer offered to add a tip but had nothing smaller than a hundred dollar bill, for which Palmer had no change.

          Around nine or ten o’clock that night, Appellant called Palmer once more to pick him up at the hotel.  As Palmer pulled into the parking lot, he saw neither Appellant nor Sommer waiting for him as they usually had, so after waiting for a moment, he walked into the office.  There, he was told that the room Appellant and Sommer had rented should be empty since the two had gone.  Palmer doubted that, and on the way back to his cab he saw Appellant hailing him from outside his room on the fourth floor.  Palmer waited a bit longer in the cab before Appellant came down and climbed in.

          Sweating heavily, Appellant started talking, saying that he had just shot his friend in the head and had “hurt him real bad.”  He borrowed Palmer’s cell phone and directed Palmer to return him to the corner of 15th and Austin.  Palmer overheard Appellant on the phone reiterate to his boss that he had hurt someone “real bad,” and confide “that he was fixing to skip town, that he wouldn’t see him anymore.”

          When they reached the corner of 15th and Austin, Appellant “cussed” Palmer and instructed him that he “didn’t hear nothing, didn’t see nothing.”  He then stepped out of the cab and, after pausing long enough at the back of it to worry Palmer, he set off down the street.  When Appellant was half a block away, Palmer “took off.”

          Palmer called his wife and told her what had happened; she advised him to call the police.  After a couple of blocks, he spotted Wichita Falls Police Officer Jesse Bartow in a patrol car, flagged him down, and reported that he had just dropped off a man claiming to have shot his friend in the head.  Palmer described Appellant and said that he and the other man had been staying at the Econo Lodge in room 446.

          Officer Bartow radioed for backup and drove to the hotel.  After acquiring a keycard from the manager, he went to room 446 to check on the welfare of the occupant.  He knocked on the door to no response.  Eventually, he used the keycard and entered the room where he found Sommer’s body on the floor between two twin beds, apparently shot and killed.  An empty leather wallet chained to Sommer’s belt lay on the floor next to his body.

          Carl Anthony Flint was in the doorway of his efficiency apartment on 16th Street when he saw Appellant knock at the backdoor of a known drug house nearby.  When no one answered, Flint called Appellant over and offered to go find some drugs for him.  Appellant gave Flint a hundred dollar bill, which Flint took down the street, returning momentarily with rocks of crack cocaine.

          Appellant and Flint promptly consumed the drugs in Flint’s apartment.  Flint looked up at some point, startled to see that Appellant, sitting next to a small stove Flint used to heat his apartment, had taken out a revolver.  Appellant had extracted from it an empty cartridge, which he set on top of Flint’s stove.

          Flint asked what Appellant was doing with a gun.  Appellant was evasive at first, but when Flint pressed him, said, “If somebody’s going to shoot me, I’m going to shoot them first.”  When Flint asked Appellant if he had killed someone, Appellant replied, “I don’t know.  The bullet went past his head.”

          After they had smoked the crack, Appellant suggested that they go to a strip club.  The two decided, however, that the club was closed at that hour, so Appellant suggested they go to Walmart instead.  He asked Flint if he wanted anything there.  Flint mentioned that he could use a new DVD player; Appellant told him to pick one out.  Flint called a cab.

          Tom Terry was the night supervisor for the cab company and was handling the company’s dispatch that night.  The police called him to get in touch with Palmer, who soon joined him and the police at the hotel.  There, Palmer described Appellant and all that he had recently seen and heard.

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Brian Keith Jensen v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brian-keith-jensen-v-state-texapp-2012.