Brown, Don Richard v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 24, 2003
Docket01-02-00856-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Brown, Don Richard v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Opinion issued April 24, 2003.






In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01-02-00856-CR





DON RICHARD BROWN, Appellant


V.


THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee





On Appeal from the 209th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 917205





MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Appellant, Don Richard Brown, was charged by indictment with the felony offense of aggravated robbery. A jury found appellant guilty of the lesser included offense of robbery, and the trial court assessed punishment at 45 years’ confinement. In a single point of error, appellant challenges the factual sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction.

Background

          Appellant and his co-defendant, Michael Jones, were tried in a joint trial for the robbery of the Tran family home. Two Tran family members, Tina Le and her 15-year-old daughter Elizabeth Tran, testified at trial. Before trial, appellant filed a motion to suppress the out-of-court identifications of appellant made by Tran and Le, asking the court to suppress the identifications until it held a hearing on whether the identifications were impermissibly suggestive or whether appellant’s rights had been violated during the identification process. In pre-trial proceedings, the trial court stated that the motion was to be taken with the case, and appellant’s counsel did not object.

          At trial, Elizabeth Tran testified that she, her younger brother, and her mother were making dinner at approximately 10:00 p.m. Tran stated that they were in the kitchen when they heard a loud noise from the front of the house. Tran went into the living room to investigate, and she encountered a stranger coming into the home through the front door. At trial, Tran stated that the man she had seen was (1) approximately 40-50 years old, (2) wearing a grey short-sleeved T-shirt with an American flag logo on it and blue jeans, and (3) holding a rifle. The man told Tran that he was “robbing the house.” Tran ran back through the kitchen and fled through the kitchen door into the family’s garage to hide. Tran’s younger brother had also fled into the garage to hide. The man followed Tran into the kitchen, where Le had remained after her children had fled to the garage. The man pointed a gun at Le’s head and pushed her down to the kitchen floor. At trial, Le described the man as “kind of skinny.” Le stated that the man also had a little mustache and that he wore a grey T-shirt with an American flag on it. Le could not remember what type of pants the man was wearing, only that they were long pants. The man ordered Le to close her eyes, and then started towards the garage after her daughter.

          From her hiding place inside the garage, Tran heard the man telling her mother not to call the police. The man then came into the garage and found Tran. He put the gun he was holding to Tran’s neck and told her to lie down on the floor. The man next put the gun to Tran’s mouth and asked her where the family’s money was. Tran told him they did not have any. The man left the garage and went back into the kitchen to demand Le give him whatever money and jewelry were in the home. Le agreed to give him whatever money she had and led him into her bedroom. On the way into her bedroom, Le saw a second man coming out of her bedroom with his hands full of the family’s belongings. Le stated that this second robber was taller than the first, and that he appeared to be stronger. Le also stated that this second robber wore a red shirt and blue jeans.

          In Le’s bedroom, the first robber pushed Le down and tore her blouse open. He pinched her nipple, telling her that he would kill her. Le stated that the robber then showed her a tattoo on his arm and again stated that if she called the police, he would come back to kill her and her family. At some point during the exchange, the man noticed jewelry Le wore and demanded that she take it off. Le took off her jewelry and gave it to the robber. Le testified that the robber put the jewelry she gave him into his pocket.

          While Le and the first robber were in Le’s bedroom, the second robber entered the family garage and attempted to hot-wire the family van. He was unable to start the van, so he instead told Tran, who was still in the garage, to get up and go into her mother’s bedroom. When Tran entered her mother’s room, she saw her mother was sitting on the bed with her shirt torn open, visibly upset. Tran saw the first man show her mother his tattoo. Tran also testified that the first man was telling her mother that he “was an American.” The second robber, who had followed Tran into her mother’s bedroom, at that point asked the first robber where the “money and gold” were. The first robber pointed to his pants pocket. The second robber then asked Le where the keys to the family van were, and Le told him that they were in the kitchen. The first robber put the gun to Le’s head, and both men escorted Le into the kitchen to find the van keys. Le gave the van keys to the first robber and, following their demands, opened the garage door so that they could drive away. The first robber gave the keys to the second robber, and they drove away in the van with the first robber as the passenger and the second robber as the driver. Le ran back into her house and called the police, who arrived 10 minutes later.

          Approximately 20 minutes after the police arrived at Le’s home, officers told her that the men who had stolen her van had been arrested. Le and Tran were taken in a police car to the location where the men had been apprehended. Le stated that, as they approached in the police car, she saw the van had been damaged and two men in handcuffs. Le testified that she saw the first robber, no longer wearing the grey American flag T-shirt, in handcuffs, and that the second robber was in the ambulance. Police officers asked Le to look carefully and to confirm whether the men she saw were the ones who had robbed the Tran house. Le confirmed that they were. Le also stated that, although it was nighttime, the scene and the suspects were illuminated by the lights of patrol cars as well as light from the open doors of the ambulance.

          Tran testified that, when she arrived at the scene, she saw the first robber, bare-chested and wearing blue jeans, in a police car, and she saw the second robber in an ambulance. From her view in the police car, Tran positively identified the men as the robbers.

          

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Related

Johnson v. State
23 S.W.3d 1 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2000)
Jones v. State
944 S.W.2d 642 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1996)
Young v. State
976 S.W.2d 771 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1998)

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Brown, Don Richard v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-don-richard-v-state-texapp-2003.