Clinton Vernon Williams v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 20, 1999
Docket04-97-00349-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Clinton Vernon Williams v. State (Clinton Vernon Williams 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
Clinton Vernon Williams v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Nos. 04-97-00348-CR and 04-97-00349-CR


Clinton Vernon WILLIAMS,
Appellant


v.


The STATE of Texas,
Appellee


From the 290th Judicial District Court, Bexar County, Texas
Trial Court Nos. 95-CR-1601 and 95-CR-1602
Honorable Sharon MacRae, Judge Presiding(1)


Opinion by: Tom Rickhoff, Justice

Sitting: Tom Rickhoff, Justice

Catherine Stone, Justice

Paul W. Green, Justice

Delivered and Filed: January 20, 1999

AFFIRMED



Clinton Vernon Williams was convicted of murder and attempted murder after gunfire erupted at a San Antonio intersection. He was sentenced to 75 years on the murder charge and 60 years on the attempted murder charge; the jury made a deadly weapon finding in each case, and also found that Williams was a habitual offender. In four points of error common to both cases, Williams contends he was denied a fair trial because he was not afforded an adequate opportunity to confront a prosecution witness. In two points of error germane only to his murder conviction, Williams challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the identification of the victim. We affirm.

Facts

On October 17, 1994, a car containing Chad Davis, Theron Smith and Quentin Henry pulled up behind a Suburban with tinted windows at the intersection of Acme Road and Commerce Street in San Antonio. Smith testified at trial that he saw Williams get out of the front passenger side of the Suburban and start shooting with what appeared to be an SKS assault rifle. (Smith said he knew Williams; apparently they were related.) Smith said he was hit four times by bullets and flying glass. Smith said Chad Davis, the driver, backed up the car and parked it in a store parking lot near the intersection; he said he did not realize Davis had been hit at the time. Meanwhile, bystanders drove him from the parking lot to his mother's house in another car. After learning Davis had been hit, Smith said, he returned to the scene and saw that Davis was unconscious and bleeding. An ambulance was summoned, but Davis later died of his wounds. Smith said he had never been convicted of a felony.

Quentin Henry testified that he was riding in the back seat of a car with Davis and Smith when they stopped for a traffic light at the corner of Acme Road and West Commerce Street. When Henry looked out the front, he said he saw Williams in front of a Suburban with tinted windows. Henry said he looked away from Williams, and when he did, five shots rang out in quick succession; at that point Henry said Smith pushed his head down in the back seat. Henry said he heard "more than 10" shots in quick succession; when he looked up, the Suburban and Williams were gone. Henry said Davis managed to park the car at a store and he left to tell Smith's grandmother what had happened. At the time, Henry said, he did not realize Davis had been hit. When Davis didn't show up at the house, Henry said, he went back to the parking lot and found Davis bleeding and unable to talk.

On direct examination Henry admitted his parole on burglary of a motor vehicle charges had recently been revoked and that he was waiting to be sent back to the penitentiary.

Both Henry and Smith testified that they were unarmed and that there were no guns in their car at the time of the shooting.

Dr. Vincent DeMaio, Bexar County medical examiner, testified that he had performed an autopsy on an individual identified as Chad Davis. He said Davis bled to death from a bullet wound to the chest.

Richard Stengel, a firearm and tool mark examiner with the Bexar County Forensic Science Center, testified he had examined the remains of the bullet that killed Chad Davis. He said the bullet could only have been fired from an AK-47 or SKS assault rifle.

Williams' complaints center around the testimony of Gwendolyn Keeter,(2) Smith's mother. Keeter testified that Williams called her on the phone the day after the shooting and stated that "he did not mean to shoot [her] son, but he meant to kill Chad Davis." Keeter also testified that Williams called her several times a day for several days after the shooting, seeking to relay messages to her son through her.

Keeter was not on the prosecution's witness list. Prosecutors said they interviewed her two days before trial and informed defense attorneys of their intent to call her the day before trial. Keeter testified on cross-examination that she told Detective Barry Gresham of the San Antonio Police Department about Williams' phone call two days later, but that the detective was not interested in her story and did not take her statement. She said she called the district attorney's office just days before trial and told them what Williams told her. Williams sought a continuance based on this testimony, which was granted in part; the trial was postponed for two days while defense attorneys attempted to contact Gresham. (They were unsuccessful.) The defense was able to call James Caruso, a civilian police service agent assigned to the homicide unit. Caruso testified he had gone through Detective Gresham's case file and found no note or report on a conversation between Gresham and Keeter. Caruso also testified that he had no personal knowledge of a phone call from Keeter to Gresham in which Keeter might have disclosed the alleged admission.

Stephanie McHenry testified that the reputations in the community of Henry and Smith for telling the truth and veracity were bad.

The jury convicted Williams in the murder of Davis and the attempted murder of Smith.

The defense moved for a new trial based on surprise. Williams asserts that Keeter testified for the first time at trial that she told the detective about her conversations with Williams two days after the shooting. Williams argues that because of this surprise, he was unable to call the detective to impeach Keeter's testimony. (At the time of trial, Gresham was on vacation in Hawaii). At a motion for new trial, Gresham testified he talked to Keeter "a couple of times on the phone" but that she never told him of any admission by Williams.

Another matter at issue at the motion for new trial hearing was Keeter's criminal record. Defense attorneys introduced Keeter's conviction for welfare fraud and subsequent ten-year probation and complained that the prosecution's conduct did not afford them the opportunity to impeach Keeter's testimony at trial with her conviction. The prosecutor who handled Keeter at trial testified that she ordered a cursory computer search for any police record on Keeter which turned up nothing.(3) She said Keeter did tell her "a long time ago [she] had some kind of welfare thing but she had paid it off and it was not a conviction." Based on this, the computer search, and the office's policy of granting deferred adjudication for welfare fraud, the prosecutor said she assumed Keeter's record was clean. In fact, Keeter had pled guilty to welfare fraud in 1994 and was on probation through 2004.

Surprise Witness

Williams' complaints center on his inability, due to Keeton's last-minute appearance on the prosecution's witness list, to impeach her testimony.

1. Continuance

Williams first contends the trial court abused its discretion in not granting a continuance and that this failure to grant a continuance abridged his Sixth Amendment right to confront Keeter.

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