Curtis Adams v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 8, 2016
Docket03-14-00180-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Curtis Adams v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-14-00180-CR

Curtis Adams, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 299TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. D-1-DC-11-904084, HONORABLE BOB PERKINS, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found Curtis Adams guilty of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon other

than a firearm. See Tex. Penal Code § 22.02(a)(2). The jury assessed punishment at twenty years

in prison. On appeal, Adams complains that the court erred and violated several parts of the state

and federal constitutions by denying him the chance to present his insanity defense, by admitting

medical records that were not timely filed, and by denying his motion for mistrial based on the

prosecutor’s argument in court that appellant contends implied that he had committed prior bad acts.

We will affirm the judgment.

BACKGROUND

Three eyewitnesses testified that they saw appellant beat the victim in the street

near the intersection of Airport Boulevard and Oak Springs in Austin. One witness testified that

appellant was expressionless as he sat astride the victim and punched him quickly and repeatedly, knocking him unconscious, drawing blood, and breaking his nose. The witness testified that

appellant then walked calmly away. Another motorist saw the latter part of the altercation and

described it similarly, except he was too far away to observe facial expressions. He said he followed

the assailant and observed him until Austin Police Department officers arrested the man. A third

witness testified that he saw the end of the beating and the assailant’s casual walk away.

A paramedic who treated the victim at the scene testified that the victim was injured

fairly critically with a lot of facial trauma and bleeding. She testified that his level of consciousness

was low when she arrived but improved slightly as they transported him to the hospital. She rated

his injuries as eight out of ten on the severity scale compared to the thousands of patients she had

treated. She agreed that his injuries might have been life-threatening.

The victim testified that he suffered a broken nose, several cuts above his eye, a

wound to his lip that required stitches, and a lot of pain in his legs. He said that he still suffered from

severe headaches nine months later and that his vision was impaired by the assault. He also testified

that the assault caused him to suffer memory problems. He did not remember the assault itself

except for pain and a memory of trying to grab his assailant’s leg.

APD Officer Michelle Gish testified that she was responding to a different complaint

and stopped when she saw the victim lying in the street. She testified that he was bleeding from

the face, nose, and mouth, and gurgling as he tried to breathe because blood was blocking or

restricting his airway. Gish said she rolled him onto his side, supporting his head and neck, and he

coughed and blood poured out of his nose and mouth. He was able to breathe better, but remained

unconscious. APD Officer Jose Robledo took photographs at the scene and of the victim at the

2 hospital. He said that the victim seemed disoriented and claimed to be unaware that he had been

assaulted. Robledo said he also took photos of appellant at the scene. He described appellant as

cooperative.

APD Officer Robert Pfaff arrested appellant. He said that appellant was moving

briskly away from the scene of the reported assault, but not running. He testified that appellant

complied with the arrest but was verbally belligerent. Pfaff testified that he did not form an

opinion of whether appellant was intoxicated. He also testified that appellant seemed fairly rational

for a person under arrest and charged with a serious crime. Pfaff testified that he had dealt with

“countless” mentally ill persons and that appellant appeared more rational than most. Pfaff testified

that appellant’s allegations of poisoning and behavior in his squad car were more indicative of

substance abuse than mental illness. Pfaff agreed, however, that a fellow officer could be heard on

the squad-car video describing appellant as “hardcore 10-96”—the code number for mental illness.

APD Officer Brent Cleveland testified that appellant seemed very upset, with

behavior swinging from excited to crying. He testified that appellant made some statements that

led the officer to believe appellant was paranoid. Cleveland said that appellant appeared to be

intoxicated because of his demeanor, behavior, slurred speech, odor of alcohol, and admission that

he had consumed four small bottles of rum. Cleveland testified that appellant said that drug dealers

had taken his money without delivering drugs and that he attacked the victim because he believed

the victim to be associated with the drug dealers. Cleveland testified that appellant also said he

had requested to speak with the CIA because someone was attempting to poison him by putting

3 gas in the air where he lived. Cleveland testified that he believed appellant to be both intoxicated

and mentally ill.

Psychiatrist Dr. Harold Scott performed a court-ordered psychological evaluation

of appellant. He talked with appellant and watched recordings of his behavior at the scene after

his arrest. Scott testified that he diagnosed appellant as having an unspecified psychotic disorder

and that this was consistent with a previous diagnosis of appellant as having a bipolar type of

schizoaffective disorder. Scott testified that appellant is delusional and that methamphetamine

use might contribute to that, but opined that appellant suffered from mental illness before and

independent of drug use. He also testified that appellant had suffered carbon-monoxide poisoning

when he was three years old and has borderline intelligence. Scott testified that appellant said

that, at the time of the attack, he had drunk rum and was coming down from using “speed”

(likely meaning methamphetamines). Scott testified that persons coming off meth use tend to be

uncomfortable, paranoid, and emotional, and that alcohol use can have a disinhibitory effect, causing

the user to be more likely to express any feeling. Scott agreed that appellant was still delusional after

months in jail which, presuming that appellant did not have access to drugs in jail, indicated that his

delusions were independent of drug use.

Despite these diagnoses, Scott concluded that appellant was competent to stand trial

and was sane at the time of the attack. He opined that appellant manifested a diminished capacity

to appreciate wrongfulness because of intense, emotional, and disordered thinking, but still could

make the distinction. Scott testified that he based his conclusion in part on appellant’s statement that

he “blew up” because of everything that had happened and that he anticipated being arrested. Scott

4 also said that appellant’s emotional response after being arrested—including saying “I’m sorry”

repeatedly—was consistent with an awareness of right and wrong. Scott testified that he could

not allocate how much of appellant’s conduct was due to intoxication and how much was due to

mental illness. Scott said that, while appellant’s mental challenges and illnesses contributed to his

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