Digbie, Sidney Robotus v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 26, 2002
Docket08-01-00066-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Digbie, Sidney Robotus v. State (Digbie, Sidney Robotus 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
Digbie, Sidney Robotus v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

                                                            COURT OF APPEALS

                                                    EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                                               EL PASO, TEXAS

                                                                              )    

SIDNEY ROBOTUS DIGBIE,                             )                    No.  08-01-00066-CR

Appellant,                          )                             Appeal from

v.                                                                           )                      243rd District Court

THE STATE OF TEXAS,                                     )                 of El Paso County, Texas

Appellee.                           )                         (TC# 980D11753)

O P I N I O N

Sidney Robotus Digbie appeals his robbery conviction.  A jury found Appellant guilty and assessed his punishment at a fine of $10,000 and imprisonment for a term of sixteen years.  We affirm.

FACTUAL SUMMARY


Jose Dominguez and Jose Rafael Pena met at El Paso Community College.  In late 1998, they began working together on an illegal drug transaction involving the purchase of 500 pounds of marihuana on behalf of individuals from out of state.  One of those men was Herman Lawson.  Dominguez contacted a person he knew as Chris Sainsbury[1] to provide the marihuana and they negotiated a price of $20,000 per 100 pounds.  On December 11, 1998, the buyers, including Lawson, arrived in El Paso with over $100,000.  One of Lawson=s friends, Derek Kennedy, flew into El Paso and rented a car for the purpose of transporting the marihuana back to the East Coast.        On the evening of December 11 at about 7 p.m., Dominguez and Pena met with two individuals, Joey Martinez and Chris Szczech, who were associated with Sainsbury.  They met at a Taco Bell for the purpose of showing the sellers the money.  After Pena showed them $20,000, Martinez and Szczech made a telephone call for the ostensible purpose of proceeding with the transaction.  Pena had the rest of the money with him.  The group then met at a house in northeast El Paso for the purpose of counting all of the money.  After they finished, the group went to a Whataburger and Martinez made some telephone calls to determine where they would meet to make the exchange.  While they waited, Martinez went over to a red minivan which had stopped in the street.  When he came back, Martinez told them that the marihuana would be ready in about five minutes.  A short time later, he made another phone call and then told Pena that they were ready.  Pena, Lawson, and Dominguez then followed Martinez and Szczech to a location for the exchange of the cash for marihuana.


Pena exited the vehicle first and Dominguez followed him.  Pena walked towards a rock wall and then came back, telling Dominguez to hurry up and get in the van so they could leave.  Pena got back out of the van and asked Martinez where were the drugs.  Dominguez saw two black males he had not previously seen walk over and begin talking to Pena and asking him what was the problem.  When Pena complained that they were Abullshitting@ them and called them Aniggers,@ one of the black males shot Pena.  Dominguez identified Appellant as the second black male who stood approximately one foot away from the shooter.  After the shooting began, Martinez jumped in his car and drove away.  Pena crawled into the van while Lawson drove.  Dominguez ran while the shooter chased him.  He could both see and hear bullets striking the road by his feet.  Dominguez=s buttock was grazed by a bullet but he made it to a house.  A woman opened the door and called the police for him.  The police picked up Dominguez and took him back to the crime scene.  Dominguez later identified Szczech, Appellant, and  the shooter from photo lineups.

Derek Kennedy and his wife, Ramona, flew to El Paso on December 11 for the purpose of driving a rental car back to Georgia for a friend, Herman Lawson.  Kennedy knew that the vehicle would contain marihuana but he did not know the exact amount.  Late that same evening, Lawson called Kennedy and told him he had been shot.  Kennedy and his wife got dressed and drove around looking for a Pizza Hut on Dyer Street.  After getting directions, Kennedy found the Pizza Hut and he saw paramedics at a Whataburger located adjacent to the Pizza Hut.  Kennedy went inside of the Whataburger and found Lawson on the floor of the restaurant=s kitchen being treated by the paramedics.  Lawson, who was in pain and appeared confused, had a bullet wound in his upper shoulder area and an exit wound in his back.  Kennedy attempted to follow the ambulance, but police officers wanted to interview him.  He spoke with the police officers on the scene for about forty-five minutes and then went to the police station to give a written statement.

Police officers discovered Pena seated in the front passenger seat of a minivan in the Whataburger parking lot.  Officer Anthony Weathersbee could not get a pulse so he began performing chest compressions.  After noticing his hands were wet with blood, Weathersbee lifted Pena=s shirt and found a small bullet hole in his chest.  Paramedics took over the efforts to revive Pena but he died as the result of his injuries.  During their investigation, police officers found beneath the minivan=s seat a box containing $1,000 wrapped in a rubber band but they did not find any other money in the van.  They also found an empty gym bag, packing and wrapping materials, boxes, and some scales. 

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