Clarence Dewayne Willis v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 18, 2020
Docket06-19-00246-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Clarence Dewayne Willis v. State (Clarence Dewayne Willis 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
Clarence Dewayne Willis v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana

No. 06-19-00246-CR

CLARENCE DEWAYNE WILLIS, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 5th District Court Bowie County, Texas Trial Court No. 18-F-1425-005

Before Morriss, C.J., Burgess and Stevens, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Burgess MEMORANDUM OPINION

A Bowie County jury convicted Clarence Dewayne Willis as a party to the murder of

Tony Sanders. After Willis pled true to the State’s punishment enhancement allegations of

aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and robbery, he was sentenced to ninety-nine years’

imprisonment. On appeal, Willis argues that he did not receive a fair trial because (1) the trial

court admitted hearsay statements by a co-defendant, (2) the trial court allowed the jury to hear

allegedly false testimony, and (3) counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to “obtain[] a

more favorable result.”

We find that Willis failed to preserve his first two points of error. We also find that

Willis has not shown that he received ineffective assistance of counsel. As a result, we affirm

the trial court’s judgment.

I. Factual Background

At trial, it was undisputed that Takyme James shot and killed Sanders.1 The issue before

the jury was whether Willis was a party to the offense. While Willis argued that James acted

alone, several witnesses testified about Willis’s involvement in the murder.

The State’s first witness, Ricky Darden, testified that Sanders was hosting a Sunday night

football watch party at a biker’s clubhouse that was attended by James. According to Darden

and Sanders’s wife, Dorsanner Butler, Sanders asked James to leave after he became intoxicated

and aggressive toward other partygoers. James responded to Sanders’s request by punching him

1 This Court affirmed James’s murder conviction in James v. State, No. 06-18-00217-CR, 2019 WL 4493470, at *1 (Tex. App.—Texarkana Sept. 19, 2019, no pet.). 2 in the face, prompting a fight between the two that led to James fleeing the clubhouse. Butler

testified that she and Sanders also left the clubhouse and went home.

Kim Willis, cousin to James, Willis, and LaPrince Willis, testified that James “beat[] on

[her] door like he was the police and actually startled [her].” Kim said that James was bloody,

“riled up,” and reported that he had been “jumped.” Kim called Willis and LaPrince and asked

them to come to her home to help her determine what had happened to James. According to

Kim, Willis and LaPrince reported that they were already headed to her house in LaPrince’s

black Chrysler because they had heard of the altercation. Kim said Willis and LaPrince picked

James up and left. LaPrince’s wife, Andrea Sanders, also testified that James, Willis, and

LaPrince got into LaPrince’s vehicle.

According to Butler, Sanders contacted Willis to smooth things over, but Butler and

Sanders decided to leave the house because the conversation took an uneasy turn. Butler said

that, just as they were going to leave, they saw LaPrince’s vehicle coming down their street and

decided to get back into the house. She testified that Sanders was fumbling with the keys to the

front door and told her he noticed that James and Willis had guns when they got out of

LaPrince’s car. A neighbor also testified that he saw Willis outside of the car. Butler, who

admitted that she did not see a weapon in Willis’s hands, testified that James and Willis were

“screaming and hollering” as she and Sanders rushed into their home and locked the door behind

them. Butler ran into a closet and called 9-1-1. When she came out of the closet, she found

Sanders laying on the ground barely responsive. He had been shot.

3 Butler identified James and Willis as the perpetrators during her 9-1-1 call and during

conversations with responding police officers, including Brad Thacker, an officer with the

Texarkana, Texas, Police Department (TTPD). According to Thacker, Butler said that James

and Willis were both yelling at Sanders as they approached his home, and both told him,

“[D]on’t run in the house now . . . . Don’t get scared now.” Butler and Thacker testified that the

front door was kicked in. According to Butler, Willis “wasn’t trying to stop [James],” “was

more crooked than [James] was[,] . . . [and] had more hardness than [James] did that night.”

Thacker said that, based on Butler’s description of the getaway vehicle, LaPrince was identified

as the driver.

Brian Purcell, a detective with TTPD, testified that LaPrince was the first to be

apprehended after Sanders died at the hospital and told TTPD that he had been with Willis.

Purcell testified that Willis agreed to an interview with TTPD but provided a version of events

different from the versions given by LaPrince and James in their interviews. Willis admitted that

Sanders called him when he was with James after the altercation. According to Purcell,

telephone records showed that Willis’s conversation with Sanders happened at 9:45 p.m. and that

Butler’s 9-1-1 call was placed at 9:52 p.m. During his interview, Willis claimed that James acted

alone while he and LaPrince drove away. Yet, he told officers that, if they found a footprint at

the door that could match his, it was because he had given James his shoes, which revealed to

Purcell that Willis was there because “[he] specifically knew that the door was kicked instead of

shouldered.”

4 Purcell testified that James admitted to shooting Sanders, “would not tell [the TTPD] who

kicked in the door,” but “adamantly denied” that he had kicked in the door. James did tell TTPD

that Willis and LaPrince were “hot” after Willis’s conversation with Sanders and that “[Sanders]

tried to talk [Willis] down, and [Willis] wasn’t having it.”

Jerome Washington, Willis’s cellmate, claimed that Willis said he was involved in

Sanders’s murder. Without objection, Washington testified that Willis said that “he came to

[James’s] aid, . . . kicked the door [to Sanders’s home], and his cousin . . . shot the gun.”

Washington said that Willis took the gun to Melvin Hill’s home and that it would never be

found. Washington also said that James was covering for Willis by not revealing to TTPD who

was with him during the crime. Cody Harris, a TTPD detective, testified that Willis said he had

gone to Hill’s house after the incident during the interview, that this fact had not been released to

the public, and that Washington could have only obtained that information from Willis.

After hearing this evidence, the jury found that Willis was a party to the murder. During

punishment, Willis pled true to the State’s punishment enhancement allegations. The evidence

showed that Willis had previously committed an aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon and

aggravated sexual assault, that those offenses were reduced pursuant to charge bargains in

exchange for pleas of guilty to robbery and sexual assault, and that Willis was sentenced to

twenty years’ imprisonment for each offense. The State also showed that Willis was previously

convicted of both misdemeanor and felony evading arrest, escape, theft, and failing to identify a

fugitive from justice and that he was on federal probation for possession with intent to distribute

5 methamphetamine. As a result of this punishment evidence, the jury assessed a sentence of

ninety-nine years’ imprisonment.

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