Demarcus Devonte Johnson v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 22, 2022
Docket05-19-01487-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Demarcus Devonte Johnson v. the State of Texas (Demarcus Devonte Johnson v. the State of Texas) 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
Demarcus Devonte Johnson v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion Filed August 22, 2022

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-19-01487-CR

DEMARCUS DEVONTE JOHNSON, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 291st Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F18-00812-U

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Myers, Partida-Kipness, and Pedersen, III Opinion by Justice Pedersen, III Appellant Demarcus Devonte Johnson was indicted for the capital murder of

a child under the age of ten. A jury found him guilty of the lesser included offense

of injury to a child and found that he used or exhibited a deadly weapon in the course

of that offense. Jurors assessed his punishment at fifty years’ confinement. Appellant

raises three issues on appeal, contending that the evidence is insufficient to support

his conviction and arguing that the trial court erroneously admitted a chart created

by the prosecutor and erroneously denied appellant’s motion for continuance. We

affirm. Background

The complainant in this case, A.F., was born in February 2016. At all relevant

times, A.F. was primarily cared for either by her mother, (Mother) or by her father

(Father) together with his mother (Grandmother). Father lived with Grandmother,

and at times Mother also lived with them.

Mother and appellant had been friends during high school and reconnected

around February of 2017. During the summer of that year, the two began spending

more time together, and at times Mother stayed at appellant’s home and left A.F. in

his care while she worked.

On Wednesday, August 30, 2017, appellant was taking care of A.F. He called

and told Mother that A.F. had fallen off the bed where he had put her to sleep and

she had a “busted lip.” Mother came home from work to check on the child, but A.F.

would not stop crying, so Mother called Grandmother and asked her to come and get

A.F. Grandmother was given directions to appellant’s house, and Mother brought

A.F. out to her. Grandmother had not been aware that Mother or A.F. had been

staying at appellant’s home. Indeed, Grandmother only learned later that Mother was

not present when A.F. fell off the bed. Grandmother testified that A.F. was “very

whiny” and had a swollen lip and a scratch by her nose, but she recovered.1

1 The medical examiner testified that A.F. had suffered bruising to her liver and her brain approximately three to five days before her fatal injuries were inflicted, but those injuries had begun to heal and did not cause her death. –2– A.F. stayed with Grandmother and Father through Monday, September 4,

which was Labor Day. According to Father, over the weekend A.F. was “[b]ack to

being herself, playing, moving around, jumping, energetic.” The trial court admitted

a video taken by Grandmother on Labor Day, in which A.F. rolled around, laid on

her belly, and responded to Grandmother’s requests for the child to speak her name

and to point to various body parts.

Mother asked Father to bring A.F. to appellant’s home the next day.

According to Father, he fed and bathed A.F. that morning; she had no marks or

bruises on her body. He also testified that she behaved normally on the way to

appellant’s house: initially she sang along with music on the car ride, and

subsequently, she fell asleep. Mother took her, sleeping, from the car. A.F. was

awake and playing with Mother until she left for work at approximately 3:00 p.m.

During the rest of the day, A.F. interacted with a number of different people.

Their testimony included the following observations:

 Karena Graham, a friend of appellant’s, came by the house. She arrived

around 10:00 a.m. and watched A.F. for about twenty minutes while appellant

walked Mother to her bus stop. The child cried when her mother left, and

Graham held her across her chest. When appellant returned he fed A.F.

noodles, and she choked. Graham patted her back and cleared the noodles

from the child’s throat. Graham testified that other than the brief choking

–3– episode, A.F. seemed fine: she observed the child sitting, standing, walking,

and watching videos. Graham left the house shortly after 5:00 p.m.

 Morgan Hackney, a neighbor and friend of appellant’s arrived at appellant’s

house at about 6:00 p.m. Appellant, his two-year-old son Carter, and A.F.

were there, and the group planned to go to Chipotle’s for dinner. A.F. walked

to Hackney’s car, and Hackney picked the child up and put her in the car.

They got back to appellant’s house about 7:15 p.m., and Hackney left.

 Appellant’s sister (Dominiqua) came to his house around 8:00 p.m. to work

on a homework assignment. She testified that when she arrived, A.F. and

Carter were sitting on the couch, watching a video on a laptop. She said they

“looked like a normal one-year-old and two-year-old just watching TV.” They

looked perfectly fine to her. She listened to music and worked on her

homework in the living room.

 Appellant’s younger brother (Deonte) lived with appellant. He arrived home

from football practice after his sister arrived, and he put his football equipment

away in a back room. Then he borrowed appellant’s phone, got some chicken

from the kitchen, and stretched out in the living room to eat and watch

something on the phone.

Sometime after Dominiqua arrived, but before Deonte arrived, appellant

picked A.F. up off the couch to change her diaper and to put her down to sleep for

the night. Dominiqua gave A.F. a quick kiss and hug, and appellant took her to a

–4– bedroom. Just before 9:30 p.m., appellant re-entered the living room and asked

Deonte for the phone, saying he needed to call someone. Appellant then asked

Dominiqua to come help him because A.F. was not breathing. Dominiqua initially

believed appellant was joking, but then she responded that she didn’t know how A.F.

could have stopped breathing “if she was just fine like 20 minutes ago.” When

Dominiqua went with appellant she saw A.F. lying flat on her back on the floor;

Dominiqua described the child’s skin as “blue.” Appellant called 911, and

Dominiqua performed CPR on A.F. until the ambulance arrived and a paramedic

took over.

A.F. was transported by ambulance to Baylor Hospital. Her heart beat was

restored, and, shortly after midnight, she was transferred to Dallas Children’s

Hospital. However, she was not able to sustain breathing on her own, and she was

attached to life support systems. Hospital personnel subsequently explained that

there was nothing more they could do for the child, and Mother and Father agreed

to remove her from life support. A.F. died at 4:52 a.m. on September 6.

Two experts testified at trial. Dr. Suzanne Dakil is the Director of the Reach

Clinic at Children’s Hospital and a professor of pediatrics at the University of Texas

Southwestern Medical School.2 She reviewed all of A.F.’s medical records from

Baylor and Children’s, and explained them to the jury. Dr. Stephen Lenfest, a Dallas

2 According to trial testimony, the Reach team is the child abuse team at Children’s Hospital.

–5– County medical examiner, also testified concerning the autopsy he performed on

A.F.

The experts identified three areas in which A.F. had sustained injuries: her

abdomen, her head, and the bottom of her feet.

 The abdominal injuries included a severely torn liver and a transected

pancreas.

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