Desmond Lewayne Miles v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 25, 2022
Docket09-21-00064-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Desmond Lewayne Miles v. the State of Texas (Desmond Lewayne Miles 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
Desmond Lewayne Miles v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-21-00064-CR __________________

DESMOND LEWAYNE MILES, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 435th District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 19-03-03069-CR __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Desmond Lewayne Miles was indicted for aggravated robbery. See

Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 29.03(a)(2). Miles waived his right to a jury trial, and after

a bench trial, the trial court found Miles guilty of aggravated robbery, assessed

punishment at seven years of confinement, and entered a deadly weapon finding.

Raising two claims of ineffective assistance of counsel, Miles appeals. We affirm

the trial court’s judgment.

1 Evidence at Trial

Justine1 testified that in 2016, she was at home where she lived with her adult

brother Evan, her two school-aged children, and her young niece, and she heard

someone “banging on the door really hard.” Justine and the children were in the

living room and Evan was in his bedroom sleeping. According to Justine, she looked

out the window and saw a stranger, screaming for her to let him in the house, and he

told her that if she did not let him in, he would break the window. She was shocked

and scared and told him she would not let him in. The man, later identified as Miles,

kicked the window in, and she unsuccessfully tried to block him from entering.

Justine testified that Miles looked confused and like “somebody was after him[,]”

and he kept saying, “I’m sorry.” The children were screaming and praying, and

Justine was telling him to get out, but he refused. Miles asked for a cup of water, and

Justine sent her daughter to get him water because Justine did not want Miles to get

upset.

Justine testified that Evan came out of his bedroom and was telling him to

leave, and Justine was trying to get the children to call the police. While Evan stayed

with Miles, Justine got the children and barricaded herself and the children in her

We refer to the victims by pseudonyms to conceal their identities. See Tex. 1

Const. art. I, § 30(a)(1) (granting crime victims “the right to be treated with fairness and with respect for the victim’s dignity and privacy throughout the criminal justice process”). 2 bedroom. Justine testified that she did not realize that her cell phone was connected

to Bluetooth and that was why her children’s calls to 911 were not going through

and why the first time they were not able to speak with the 911 dispatcher.

A recording of a 911 call made from Justine’s cell phone that day was

admitted into evidence and played at trial. Justine testified that from the recording it

was “[v]ery chaotic[,]” and she could hear her brother saying “[g]et out[,]” her

daughter telling her the call was not going through, and her children praying.

According to Justine, Miles started pushing against the bedroom door, she screamed,

“You are not getting in here[,]” and he told her, “Do not call the police.” Miles was

able to push the door open a little as they were pushing against the furniture

barricade, and Justine saw a part of a kitchen knife with a sharp point and like the

kind used to cut meat come through the opening of the door and then go out. Justine

testified that she heard Miles leave and she stayed where she was and called the

police a second time.

Justine testified that the next day she found her kitchen knife outside by the

trampoline. According to Justine, she did not think to call the police to tell them she

found the knife because she was shaken up over the incident and was only thinking

about keeping her children safe and not thinking about the case against the intruder.

Justine testified that Miles must have cut himself when he came in the window

because he left blood around the house.

3 Evan testified that he was awakened by the noise and came into the living area

where he saw Justine and the children screaming and asking an intruder (later

identified as Miles) to leave them alone. Evan testified that Miles seemed distressed,

like he was running away from someone. He tried unsuccessfully to push Miles out

of the house and Justine took the children into her bedroom. According to Evan,

Miles was pacing around trying to look out the window to see if anyone was

approaching, and he tried to see if Justine was calling 911. According to Evan, Miles

grabbed a knife and said, “This is a robbery.” Evan asked Miles what he wanted, and

Miles asked for car keys. Before Evan had time to locate the keys, Miles found

Evan’s car keys somewhere in the kitchen or living area. Miles then left in Evan’s

car. Evan testified his car was recovered that day or the next day from DeMontrond

RV, which is located less than a mile from his house. The vehicle had no damage,

and no items were missing from inside the vehicle. According to Evan, Miles did

not try to take any money from the home, and pictures of his recovered car showed

that items such as suits, sunglasses, and bank statements with private information

were still in the vehicle and unharmed.

Blood samples from inside the house were submitted for DNA testing. After

years of no leads in the case, in 2019, law enforcement obtained a “hit” for the blood

samples from the house through the CODIS system that matches potential DNA to

unknown suspects. Based on that “hit,” law enforcement prepared a search warrant

4 for a DNA sample from Miles, who was incarcerated at the time for a different

offense. A buccal swab from Miles was compared with the DNA from the blood

samples from the house. A forensic scientist testified that “[o]btaining this profile is

50.9 septillion times more likely if the DNA came from suspect Miles than if the

DNA came from an unrelated, unknown individual[,]” and Miles could not be

excluded as a possible contributor of the DNA profile.

Miles testified that he was sober on the day he entered Justine and Evan’s

home. According to Miles, that morning he was meeting a friend at a nearby park

and his friend did not show up. He testified that while walking away from the park

he felt like someone was watching or following him, and when he turned around, he

saw two males, one in all black clothing and the other in “camo gear” in the nearby

woods trying to get closer to him like they were trying to apprehend him. Miles

testified that he has been through traumatizing experiences like being stabbed, and

those events affected his perception and made him anxious but not paranoid. He

testified that he started running to keep the two men from capturing him. According

to Miles, he saw a lady sitting on her porch and he “needed her to call the police”

for him but she did not have a cell phone or landline. He continued running and went

to another house to get help and to get someone to call the police for him.

Miles testified he “bang[ed] really hard to get somebody to come to the door”

at a house, and when he saw Justine come to the door, he asked her to call the police.

5 When he realized she was not going to let him in, he kicked his way through the

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