Deondre White v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 29, 2025
Docket03-23-00600-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Deondre White v. the State of Texas (Deondre White 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
Deondre White v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-23-00600-CR

Deondre White, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE 331ST DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY NO. D-1-DC-23-904005, THE HONORABLE BRAD URRUTIA, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Deondre White was convicted of murder and sentenced to thirty-years’

imprisonment. Tex. Penal Code §§ 12.32, 19.02. In his sole issue, White alleges that the

evidence was legally insufficient to support the jury’s rejection of his self-defense and defense-

of-others claims. 1 Based on the reasons stated below, we will modify the judgment to correct a

clerical error and affirm the trial court’s judgment as modified.

BACKGROUND

The incident

Detective James Eichenholz testified that he was one of the detectives assigned to

investigate a mass shooting on 6th Street, an entertainment district in Austin. He collected and

1 Because the evidence for both of White’s defense claims is the same and he addressed them together and interchangeably in his appellate brief, we will address them both collectively as his self-defense claim. reviewed all the available video recordings of the incident to create a timeline of the events and

edited the videos together into a compilation format that “told a story.” He used multiple police

officers’ body camera footage, surveillance video from restaurants and bars in the area, HALO

footage from overhead cameras that are monitored and operated remotely in real time, and

footage recorded by a witness. Although the shooting was not captured on film, Detective

Eichenholz worked with two other detectives, whose investigations helped identify the suspects.

Detective Eichenholz used their information to highlight the movements of two groups believed

to be involved in the shooting. “Group one” was made up of Majyran Jackson, Mahkalen

Jackson (collectively “the Jackson brothers”), and Tyshaun Degrate. “Group two” was White,

Carlos Latimer, Jeremiah Tabb, and “two black females.” Detective Eichenholz also highlighted

one of the victims of the shooting, Douglas Kantor, throughout the video. Kantor was walking

along the street and was not part of either group one or two.

Detective Eichenholz testified, and the video corroborated, that prior to the

shooting, group two arrived at 6th Street and group one quickly noticed them and started

following. The two groups stopped on the sidewalk near each other but still separated. Group

one was watching group two. Latimer noticed that group one was watching them. As group two

started walking towards the Mooseknuckle Pub, group one followed them but kept walking a

little past where group two stopped walking. Group one then turned around and came back

toward group two. Group one “angled” towards group two, with Degrate going to the left and

the Jackson brothers going to the right to go around different sides of parked motorcycles.

At this point, the two groups were out of view of any cameras. However, a

YouTube content creator that was doing an interview down the street, captured the sounds of

gunshots and the beginning of the crowd starting to disperse and run away from the gunfire.

2 Detective Eichenholz described the sound as “rapid, distinct, steady gunfire, [that] sounds like

it’s coming from one weapon.” Surveillance video from multiple businesses captured the

evacuation routes of both group one and group two as they fled 6th Street in different directions.

The video then focused on the first aid that was rendered to the victims.

Multiple surviving victims of the shooting who were not associated with either

group one or group two testified at trial. Jessica Ramirez testified that she was waiting in line to

get into a bar on 6th Street when she was shot. She testified that she did not hear any raised

voices or arguing before she heard the shots fired. Jesse Sepeda testified that he was shot in the

arm while walking down the middle of the street and his friend was shot in the “lower buttocks”

while admiring a parked motorcycle. Sepeda heard more than five gunshots, which he thought

were spaced out. He also heard yelling right before the gun shots started, but he thought that the

people fighting sounded like a man and a woman.

Dominique Herrera testified that he was waiting in line to enter a bar about 15 to

20 feet away from the shooter that night. He described the shooter as a black male wearing a

black hoodie with his hair in either “dreadlocks,” “twisties,” or “twistlocks.” He testified that he

saw sparks coming from the gun. He did not see anyone else with a gun or hear any other

gunshots. The shooter was on the sidewalk shooting towards the street “where the people were

walking.” When asked if the shooter was shooting at a specific person, Herrera responded,

“No,” and explained that the shooter was shooting “just the crowd.” Although on cross, he

agreed that he was focused on the shooter at the time and there may have been a person who was

the target of the shooting. Herrera did not hear any yelling or fighting before the gunshots.

3 The initial response

Officer Tommy Lester testified that he was on patrol on 6th Street when multiple

gunshots were fired at about 1:25 am on June 12, 2021. He explained that it had been a more

crowded than usual night downtown because it was the weekend of the annual motorcycle event

called “ROT Rally” and the motorcycles parked along the street caused the pedestrians to be

more crowded together than usual. He described the crowds as “shoulder to shoulder, bumping

into one another.”

Earlier in the night, he had noticed two young-looking people wearing hoodies

although it was a hot and humid evening. Officer Lester’s description of these two people

matched Detective Eichenholz’s description of the Jackson brothers. Officer Lester testified that

right before the shooting, he noticed the two people wearing hoodies again, but they were no

longer joking and chatting with each other while walking and they had zipped up their hoodies

and were pulling up their pants as if about to get into a fight. They started moving to the left and

did what Officer Lester described as “triangulating,” which is when one person splits off from

the other and they approach a targeted person from different sides. Officer Lester testified that

about 30 seconds after noticing the hoodie-wearing individuals again, he heard seven or eight

shots that were fired from his left. He did not see the shooter or anyone with a gun. He never

saw the two people in hoodies with a gun. He testified that based on his police and military

experience, that he did not believe there was any return fire and that he “was pretty confident it

was one weapon firing the rounds.” At the time of the shooting, he thought the shooter was one

of the hoodie-wearing individuals, but he did not see the shooting. After determining that the

shooter was no longer firing into the crowd, Officer Lester began rendering first aid to one of

the victims.

4 Senior Police Officer Joseph Spees testified that he provided a security role for

the officers who were rendering aid to the victims. Once the victims were evacuated and the

crime scene secured, he began focusing on evidence collection. He found eight shell casings on

the sidewalk and the street. He preserved the location of the shell casings by placing traffic

cones near them.

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