Calvert, James

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 9, 2019
DocketAP-77,063
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Calvert, James, (Tex. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS NO. AP-77,063

JAMES CALVERT, Appellant

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

ON DIRECT APPEAL FROM CAUSE NO. 241-1467-12 IN THE 241ST DISTRICT COURT SMITH COUNTY

NEWELL, J., delivered the unanimous opinion of the Court.

OPINION

In October 2015, a jury convicted Appellant of murder in the course of committing

or attempting to commit burglary or kidnapping.1 Based upon the jury’s answers to the

special issues set forth in Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Article 37.071, Sections 2(b)

and 2(e), the trial judge sentenced Appellant to death.2 Direct appeal to this Court is

1 TEX . PENAL CODE § 19.03(a)(2). 2 TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 37.071, § 2(g). Unless otherwise indicated, all references to Articles refer to the Code of Criminal Procedure. CALVERT—2

automatic.3 After reviewing Appellant’s twenty-nine points of error, we find them to be

without merit. Consequently, we affirm the trial court’s judgment and sentence of death.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

While visiting Croatia, Appellant met the victim, Jelena. She accompanied him on

his return to Tyler, and they married in 2004. Jelena became increasingly fearful of

Appellant over the course of their marriage.

Appellant and Jelena’s first child, E.C., was born in 2006. Their second child, L.C.,

was born in 2008. Appellant and Jelena separated in 2009 and divorced in 2010. Jelena

obtained a restraining order that barred Appellant from going to her new home. According

to their divorce decree, Jelena had primary possession of the children. She could not move

with the children more than 125 miles from the Smith County Courthouse. Appellant had

visitation rights on alternate weekends and Thursdays. The order specified that Jelena and

Appellant would exchange the children at Jason’s Deli.

In January 2012, Jelena married Arvind Sriraman. Jelena wanted to move with the

children to Houston, where Sriraman had taken an engineering job, but Appellant refused to

agree to modify the terms of the child custody order. He was also uncooperative during

mediation. Eventually, Jelena and Sriraman took the matter to trial. On October 19, 2012,

a jury determined that the custody order should be modified so that Jelena and the children

could move up to 500 miles away from the Smith County Courthouse.

3 TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 37.071, § 2(h). CALVERT—3

About twelve days later, on October 31st, Jelena was packing to move to Houston.

L.C., age four, was home with her. E.C., age seven, was at school. Although Appellant did

not have visitation that day, Jelena had agreed that Appellant could take the children to

dinner and then trick-or-treating.

Shortly before the scheduled visit, Appellant told Jelena that they needed to exchange

the children at her house instead of the deli. Jelena did not know it but Appellant had been

avoiding service of a motion by Deidre Adams, his first wife. Adams and Appellant had a

child together, J.C., and Adams had filed a motion to enforce court-ordered child support.

Appellant suspected that Adams was planning to serve him with that motion at the deli.

Jelena would not agree to exchange the children at her house. Appellant angrily canceled the

visit. Jelena was upset about this incident, which she relayed to multiple friends.

Less than three hours later, Appellant broke into Jelena’s house and, in front of L.C.,

shot her multiple times. Appellant took L.C. and fled to Louisiana. That evening, following

a high-speed chase in West Monroe, Louisiana, police officers arrested Appellant and

discovered L.C. physically unharmed in the back seat of Appellant’s car.

Appellant was indicted for capital murder. Counsel (Jeffery Haas and Jason Cassel)

were appointed to represent him. However, in February 2014, Appellant requested and was

granted the right to represent himself. He represented himself through approximately fifty

pretrial hearings, voir dire, and roughly three weeks of the jury trial. Appellant’s attorneys,

in standby status, were present and available to assist him. On September 15, 2015, during CALVERT—4

the guilt phase, the trial court revoked Appellant’s pro se status and reinstated counsel to

represent him.

At trial, Shonda Emmert testified that she was in the parking lot across the street from

Jelena’s house around noon on the day of the offense. She heard, “[B]ang, bang, bang,”

which she initially thought was a nail gun “going off.” About a minute later she saw a man

walking out of the house, carrying a small child wrapped in a blue blanket. He went to a car

parked down the street, put the child in the back seat of the car, and drove away.

Emmert drove to the house to see if things were okay. Another woman, Robin

Dickerson, pulled up at the same time, ran into the carport, and screamed at Emmert to call

911. Emmert walked toward the house to get a better look at the house number. She saw a

body in the carport; the door between the kitchen and carport was “splintered” and looked

like it had been kicked in. When the prosecutor showed Emmert photographs of L.C.,

Appellant, and Appellant’s car, she stated that the photos were consistent with the

appearance of the child, the man, and the car she saw on the day of the offense.

Dickerson testified that she worked at the same church as Jelena. On the day of the

offense, around noon, she was in a parking lot near Jelena’s house when she heard four or

five shots. She looked toward Jelena’s house and saw a man carrying a child from the

carport to a car parked on the street. The man got into the car and left. Dickerson believed

that the child she saw was L.C. and the man, Appellant. Dickerson drove up, walked into the CALVERT—5

carport and saw Jelena lying in the doorway, dead. When Emmert drove up, Dickerson told

her, “Call 911. He shot her.”

Tyler Police Detective Craig Shine, the lead detective in this case, responded to the

911 call. He testified that it was apparent from the number and locations of Jelena’s gunshot

wounds that the shooter knew her and wanted her dead. Based on his observations and

interviews at the crime scene, Shine obtained a capital murder warrant for Appellant. The

Tyler Police Department broadcasted a BOLO (“be on the lookout”) Alert and an Amber

Alert.

Texas Ranger Brent Davis testified that he went to the crime scene and saw numerous

cartridge casings on the kitchen floor. All of the casings were from a .40-caliber semi-

automatic pistol and were marked “.40 S&W.” From the location of the casings, it appeared

that the rounds were fired at Jelena from inside the house. Davis observed bullet strikes on

the door, the door frame, the car, and the concrete floor of the carport. It appeared that the

door between the kitchen and the carport had been kicked in; the strike plate and pieces of

wood from the door frame were on the floor. The door was standing open. Tyler police

officers advised Davis that L.C. was missing and that they believed he had been kidnapped.

It appeared to Davis that Jelena had been trying to leave the house to escape from the shooter

when she was shot multiple times.

Dr. Elizabeth Ventura, a medical examiner at the Southwestern Institute of Forensic

Sciences, conducted the autopsy. She testified that Jelena was intentionally killed. CALVERT—6

Specifically, Jelena sustained six gunshot wounds, five of which damaged vital organs in her

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