Carlos Kidd v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 4, 2010
Docket03-08-00208-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Carlos Kidd v. State (Carlos Kidd 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
Carlos Kidd v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-08-00208-CR

Carlos Kidd, Appellant



v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF MILAM COUNTY, 20TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. CR 21,636, HONORABLE ED MAGRE, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N


A jury found appellant Carlos Kidd guilty of escape. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 38.06 (West Supp. 2009). The jury found the enhancement allegation in the indictment true and assessed punishment at ten years' imprisonment and a $5,000 fine. In two points of error, Kidd argues that the evidence was legally insufficient to support his conviction and that the trial court erred in failing to include in the jury charge the entirety of his proposed jury instruction on necessity. Having found no reversible error, we affirm the judgment of conviction.



FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND On the evening of October 31, 2005, Kidd, a Texas Department of Criminal Justice ("TDCJ") inmate, claimed to have inserted a razor blade into his penis and was sent to the infirmary. Daniel Thorn, the licensed vocational nurse who examined Kidd, did not see any visible injury. Nonetheless, Thorn called the on-call medical provider, (1) who ordered that Kidd be transported to the University of Texas Medical Branch Galveston ("UTMB") emergency room for further examination, then sent on to a TDCJ mental health facility for psychiatric evaluation. Thorn called TDCJ security and requested a van for transport.

Correctional officer Omar Scarbrough brought the van to the back gate of the infirmary. Scarbrough testified that when he arrived, Kidd was restrained. (2) Scarbrough helped load Kidd into the van and closed and locked the van's interior metal cage around him. In accordance with normal procedure for transports to UTMB, one officer, Jose Cirilo, drove the van, and another, Latarsha Spears, rode along as an armed passenger. TDCJ procedures provide that transportation officers have the keys to the back of the van and restraints, as well as the authority to use deadly force should an inmate try to escape.

Michelle D'Alesandro, a law enforcement officer at UTMB, was on duty at the UTMB emergency room when the van arrived. She testified: "I did not see any prisoners; all I seen was a driver and a passenger and no one in the back half of that van." After the van parked, Spears walked around to the back, and opened the door. Officer D'Alesandro testified that Spears "was frantic, panic-stricken," and that she ran to D'Alesandro and said that "the inmate [was] gone." Officer D'Alesandro asked Spears for Kidd's identifying information and notified her dispatcher of his escape. Spears told Officer D'Alesandro that she noticed Kidd in the back of the van while they were in Galveston approximately five to ten minutes before arriving at the hospital. Officer D'Alesandro asked Spears to open the van. She observed that the interior cage was "already down" and that the handcuffs and shackles were laid on the seat, closed back and secured. The handcuff box was padlocked around the handcuffs.

Melberic Player, a TDCJ officer at UTMB, also observed the restraints laid neatly on the van's seat. He pushed on the van's back window lightly with his pen and "just with no force, it fell out." Mark Bowers, a criminal investigator with the TDCJ Office of the Inspector General also reported to the scene. He interviewed Cirilo and Spears. He observed that the van's rear window latch had been damaged and "appeared to be jimmied and manipulated in some way with some type of object." He observed scratches around the frame of the window that had been pushed out but not the other back window. He testified that if regular procedures had been followed, Kidd would have undergone a body cavity search prior to entering the van, and that the van would have been searched throughly before Kidd was loaded into it.

At approximately 8:30 p.m. on November 1, Dickinson (3) Police Officer Christopher McCollum was dispatched to a Kroger store in response to a report that someone at the store resembled Kidd. He and another officer waited for Kidd to come out of the store bathroom and asked him for identification. When he had none, Officer McCollum handcuffed him. McCollum testified that Kidd then stated, "Okay, you got me," and told him that his name was Carlos Ray Kidd. McCollum testified that Kidd asked him what level offense the crime of escape was.

Kidd was arrested and indicted for escape. His indictment contained an enhancement allegation that, prior to his escape, his conviction for burglary of a habitation became final. At trial, Scarbrough, D'Alesandro, Player, Bowers, and McCollum testified for the State. The State also presented the testimony of the assistant warden of Kidd's unit and a Special Prosecution Unit investigator regarding the restraints used on Kidd. Cirilo and Spears, who were disciplined for reckless endangerment and dismissed from employment with TDCJ, did not testify. After the State rested, the defense moved for directed verdict. The court denied the motion, and Kidd took the stand. He testified that he had been transferred to UTMB several times prior to the October 31 incident, each time claiming self-inflicted injuries caused by swallowing razor blades or inserting things into his penis. He explained:



I wasn't getting any help or any relief on the unit level. I would go to the wardens for help, I would go to the officers for help for my safety, and they wouldn't do anything for me, you know. They would tell me, "Hey, well, we don't have no evidence of this, we don't have no evidence of that."



And it got to the point where that I felt that my safety and my life was in such imminent danger that I had to inflict some type of harm on myself to be moved off the unit, and the only means to do that would be to harm myself some way. And that is the only way to be able to get off the unit . . . .



I figured that if I went to the hospital, that I could talk to doctors--people that wasn't on the unit, doctors and officials at the hospital and explain my situation to them and maybe they could help me somehow and maybe override the prison and get me moved to another unit somewhere where I was safe.



Kidd testified regarding the difficulties he faced within the TDCJ system since his 2002 convictions for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and burglary of a habitation. In 2003, Kidd reported being sexually assaulted by a corrections officer, who was eventually convicted of improper sexual activity with a person in custody. Kidd testified that after he reported the assault, he received numerous threats from other inmates on the officer's behalf. He was subsequently transferred to several different units, but the threats followed him.

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Carlos Kidd v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlos-kidd-v-state-texapp-2010.