Drummond, Adrian Rachod v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 28, 2013
Docket05-12-00294-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Drummond, Adrian Rachod v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

MODIFY and AFFIRM; and Opinion Filed May 28, 2013.

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas

No. 05-12-00294-CR

ADRIAN RACHOD DRUMMOND, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 195th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F11-58574-N

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Lang-Miers, Murphy, and Fillmore Opinion by Justice Lang-Miers

Appellant Adrian Rachod Drummond appeals his conviction for aggravated robbery with

a deadly weapon. After appellant pleaded not guilty, a jury convicted him and assessed his

punishment at twenty-seven years’ imprisonment and a $10,000 fine. In two issues on appeal,

appellant argues that the evidence was insufficient to support the conviction and requests that we

reform the judgment to reflect the correct names of the prosecuting attorneys in the trial court.

Because all dispositive issues are settled in law, we issue this memorandum opinion. TEX. R.

APP. P. 47.2(a), 47.4. We modify the trial court’s judgment and affirm as modified. BACKGROUND

Appellant was charged by indictment with aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon.

See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 29.03 (West 2011). At trial, the State presented the testimony of

complainant, an eyewitness, and a detective and officers of the Dallas Police Department.

Complainant testified that he was driving home after work one evening when he stopped at a

convenience store that he often visited during his commute to purchase a lottery ticket.

Complainant testified that he scratched off the lottery ticket in his car and found that he had won

fifty dollars, and then went back into the store, obtained his fifty dollars, and came out of the

store. When complainant was going into the store, two young men approached him and one

asked complainant if he would like to buy a CD. Complainant replied that he would like to

purchase a reggae CD. Complainant testified that, when the men told him that another person

would get the CD for him, he said that he could wait. Then a car approached and one of the two

men got into the car to talk to the person in the car. When he got out of the car, he carried a bag

that had something inside it. Complainant testified that the man asked complainant to go to the

corner of the store because they did not want to sell the CD in front of the store “[b]ecause he

said the store before had been harassing them for hanging around.” Complainant testified that he

spoke with the two men “[m]aybe 15 to 20 minutes or something like that” and that he was “able

to get a pretty good look at their faces[.]”

Complainant further testified that, when they walked to the corner of the store, “the one

that ha[d] the dreads” pointed a gun at his head and then both men began “hitting [him] down”

by striking complainant on his face. Complainant testified that he saw the gun, and that the man

with the gun was behind him and the other man was in front of him. Complainant attempted to

run, but “they threw [him] down” and “start[ed] hitting [him] down.” One of the men “was

struggling to get [complainant’s] wallet” but complainant could not recall which of the two men

–2– took his wallet “because [his] face was full of blood.” Complainant testified that, once the men

took his wallet, they ran “into the apartment [complex] close to where the gas tank” in front of

the convenience store was located. Complainant then tried to stop the person who had talked

with one of the men from driving away so that “we can get the arrest” but the car eventually

drove off.

Complainant testified that, during the attack, he was “in fear of serious injury or that they

might kill” him. He testified that he suffered cuts on his head so that his “face was covered in

blood[,]” requiring stitches on his cheek and forehead and inside his mouth. He also suffered

bruises and “[e]verything was swelled with blood.” He testified that he was sixty-one years old

at the time of trial, and the two men who attacked him were about twenty.

During direct examination of complainant, the State showed the jury a surveillance video

from the store taken before, during, and after the aggravated robbery. The video depicted the

events that complainant had described, but the faces of the assailants were not identifiable on the

video. Complainant testified that the video depicted the location and proximity of the apartment

complex to which the two perpetrators ran after the attack and that, “from where this [robbery]

had happened, you’re able to see the front gate area” of the apartment complex. 1

Complainant also testified that the police called him to observe a lineup and that he “felt

like [he was] able” to “identify the person with the gun” in the lineup. Complainant testified

that, although he signed the back of two photographs—exhibits 3 and 5—to indicate that he

identified the men in both photographs as the man with the gun, exhibit 5 depicted “the person

that [he] ultimately identified as the defendant” and “the person that had the gun[.]”

The State played the videotape of the lineup for the jury. In the video, complainant first

identified the person depicted in exhibit 3—who was not appellant—as the person who pointed a 1 Complainant testified that his employer called the next day to inform him that his wallet had been recovered. He testified that he lost “probably $55” but that his “ID and those kind[s] of things” were still in the wallet.

–3– gun, hit him, and stole his wallet. 2 When complainant made this identification, he stated that he

was “100% confident” that the person in exhibit 3 was the culprit based on “his face and the

dreads[,]” meaning the dreadlocks in his hair. But when shown exhibit 5, complainant clapped

repeatedly and stated, “I misplaced the other one and this one” and “misidentified the other one.”

He recanted his identification of the person in exhibit 3. According to complainant, exhibit 5

was “the perfect one,” “the correct one,” and “the best one.” He based his identification on “his

face and the dreads . . . the hair.”

After discussing the lineup on direct examination, the State asked complainant: “[I]s the

person that you identified as the person who attacked you in that lineup, is that person present in

the courtroom today?” Complainant responded: “No. The one with the gun is not here.”

Dallas Police Officer Streeter testified that he was the first officer to arrive at the scene,

and he spoke with complainant and witness Kenneth Mwangi, who was the security officer at the

next-door apartment complex. Streeter testified that the apartment complex where Mwangi

worked and was standing was “really close to where the offense took place” and “was probably

10, 15 feet away.” Streeter testified that Mwangi was “able to describe what he saw pretty

well[,]” that “[h]e was close” to the offense, and that he considered Mwangi an eyewitness.

Streeter also testified that “[i]t was pretty well lit right there in that area” and “it was still fairly

light out.”

On cross examination, Streeter testified that “[t]he convenience store parking lot bumps

right up to the driveway of the apartment complex” and that he met Mwangi where he was

standing “probably halfway up the drive” that goes “into the entrance of the apartment

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