D'Angelo Taylor v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 14, 2002
Docket11-01-00380-CR
StatusPublished

This text of D'Angelo Taylor v. State (D'Angelo Taylor 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
D'Angelo Taylor v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

                                                             11th Court of Appeals

                                                                  Eastland, Texas

                                                                        Opinion

D=Angelo Taylor          

Appellant

Vs.                   No. 11-01-00380-CR B Appeal from Dallas County

State of Texas

Appellee

The jury convicted appellant of capital murder.  TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. ' 19.03 (Vernon 1994).  Because the State did not seek the death penalty, appellant was sentenced to confinement for life.  TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. ' 12.31 (Vernon 1994).  We affirm the conviction.

                                                                Background Facts

Cory Jones, an accomplice, testified that around 9 or 10 p.m. on May 4, 2000, appellant had noticed a woman sitting in a green Explorer.  Appellant told Jones that he wanted to Ahit a lick,@ meaning commit a robbery.  Appellant walked to the Explorer, pulled out a gun, and tapped the driver=s side window with the gun.  Appellant demanded money from the driver, the victim.  The victim  told appellant that she did not have any money.  Appellant forced the victim into the backseat of the Explorer and drove away.  Jones rode in the backseat with the victim.  Appellant drove to a secluded place and switched places with Jones.  Jones drove the car while appellant sexually assaulted the victim.  Appellant switched seats with Jones and drove to a secluded spot.  Appellant bound the victim=s arms behind her back with her shirt.  Appellant then pulled the victim out of the vehicle and shot her in the head.  Appellant and Jones dumped the victim=s naked body over a railing and covered it with a piece of plywood lying nearby. 


Later that night, appellant and Jones met two friends, and they all went to a restaurant. One of the friends, Richard Allen Wilson, noticed blood on appellant=s shoes.  Wilson asked appellant about the blood on his shoes, and appellant told him that they had Ajacked the woman that had the Explorer,@ that he also had had sex with the woman, and that he had shot her in the head.  After eating, the four drove to Jones=s sister=s house.  Appellant drove alone in the Explorer; and Wilson, Jones, and a fourth person drove in another vehicle.  While Jones and the others went into the house, appellant drove the Explorer down a side road.  Later, appellant ran into the house with burns on his body and clothes.  Appellant told them that he had burned the Explorer on the train tracks. 

Early the next morning, the police received a call regarding a vehicle on the railroad tracks.  The police found the burning Explorer.  On May 6, the police received an anonymous call regarding the location of a body.  The police investigated and found the victim=s naked body with a gunshot wound to the head.  The victim=s arms had been bound behind her back with a shirt.

The police, while investigating an unrelated crime, arrested Jones who told police that he and appellant committed the murder in question.  Wilson, who was also arrested with Jones, gave the police his statement and told them where appellant lived.  Later, the police arrested appellant.  After appellant=s indictment, the police obtained several search warrants.  One of the warrants was to search appellant=s father=s apartment.   The police recovered a pair of bloodstained tennis shoes from the apartment.  The tennis shoes belonged to appellant.  The police later matched the blood on the tennis shoes to the victim=s DNA.  The police subsequently obtained a search warrant to obtain a DNA sample from appellant.  Appellant=s DNA matched the sample from the rape examination performed on the victim.  At the time of the offence, appellant was 16 years old, and Jones was 17 years old.

Appellant presents ten points of error on appeal.  The first seven points challenge the validity of two search warrants.  The eighth and ninth points of error contend that the trial court erred by admitting crime scene photographs into evidence.  The last point contends that the trial court abused its discretion in admitting the testimony of Jones.

                                                      The Apartment Search Warrant


Appellant lived with his father in the apartment where his bloodstained tennis shoes were found.  Appellant complains in his first point that the evidence collected pursuant to the search warrant of the apartment should be excluded under TEX. CODE CRIM. PRO. ANN. art. 38.23 (Vernon Pamph. Supp. 2002) because it was illegally obtained under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution and under Article I, Section 9 of the Texas Constitution.  Appellant contends that:  (1) probable cause contained in the affidavit was obtained by an unlawful warrantless search; (2) the affidavit did not reflect sufficient probable cause; (3) the issuing judge was not a magistrate authorized to issue a search warrant pursuant to TEX. CODE CRIM. PRO. ANN. art. 2.09 (Vernon Supp. 2002);  (4) the police exceeded the authority of the warrant; and (5) the allegations contained in the warrant were either intentionally false or were made with reckless disregard for the truth.   We shall address each contention in turn.[1]

The affidavit consisted of six paragraphs, and the information contained in it arises from the police investigation and from the voluntary statements given by Wilson and Jones to the police.  There is no evidence in the record to support appellant=

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