Erica Lane Brownlee v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 27, 2021
Docket03-19-00353-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Erica Lane Brownlee v. the State of Texas (Erica Lane Brownlee 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
Erica Lane Brownlee v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-19-00353-CR

Erica Lane Brownlee, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE 27TH DISTRICT COURT OF BELL COUNTY NO. 77236, THE HONORABLE JOHN GAUNTT, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted appellant Erica Lane Brownlee of felony murder. See Tex.

Penal Code § 19.02(c). In three issues, appellant contends that the evidence was insufficient to

convict her of felony murder and that the trial court abused its discretion when it admitted

autopsy photographs. For the following reasons, we affirm the judgment of conviction.

BACKGROUND

The jury heard evidence that on the evening of March 7, 2017, at an apartment

complex, Rocky Marsh was robbed, stabbed with a screwdriver, and struck with a saw. Marsh

sustained a fatal “penetrating wound” “on the upper left side of the chest” and “chop wounds on

the top of his head.” In response to 911 calls, EMS and the police were dispatched to the scene, but they were unable to resuscitate Marsh. Marsh’s front pants pockets had been pulled out, and

he did not have his phone or other belongings on his person.1

In their investigation, the police recovered a saw, a beer bottle, and a black bag of

the type used at a nearby convenience store, and they obtained surveillance-video footage from

the convenience store. A portion of the footage contained audio and video capturing a verbal

altercation between appellant’s boyfriend James Pinkard and Marsh, which occurred right

outside the store a short time before Marsh was killed. Although appellant is not seen on the

video, she was the driver of the vehicle in the video and pregnant with Pinkard’s child. The

footage shows Marsh walking behind the vehicle with his phone, Pinkard getting outside of the

vehicle from the front passenger seat and verbally confronting Marsh, saying “[y]ou don’t know

whose streets you’re on,” that Pinkard “[will] get somebody to come over and handle this shit,

bro,” and “[b]e here when [Pinkard got] back. Watch how many people are going to be here.”

Pinkard also told Marsh to “get away from [Pinkard’s] baby’s mama” and that Marsh “already

pulled [a] knife.” The video then shows Pinkard getting back into the vehicle’s front passenger

seat holding a crowbar and the vehicle driving away. Approximately fifteen minutes later, the

vehicle returned briefly before leaving again. From the footage, the police were able to identify

the vehicle and that it was registered to Pinkard. Following a traffic stop the following day, the

police arrested Pinkard and appellant. The police found a crowbar, knife, and a Phillips-head

screwdriver in the vehicle as well as blood stains that were later linked to Marsh through

DNA testing.

1 The responding officer who performed CPR on Marsh until EMS arrived testified at trial: “There was nothing in his pockets. The actual pocket, when you stick your hands, pull that lining out, I guess, where the pockets were pulled out, the material.”

2 The State subsequently indicted appellant for felony murder of Marsh, alleging

that she

did then and there, acting individually and as a party with James Pinkard, Elijah Jones, Shamar Lamar Lewis, intentionally and knowingly commit or attempt to commit an act clearly dangerous to human life, to-wit: by hitting and striking Rocky Marsh with a saw and hitting and striking and stabbing Rocky Marsh with a screwdriver, and the defendant, acting individually and as a party with James Pinkard, Elijah Jones, Shamar Lamar Lewis was then and there in the course of intentionally and knowingly committing a felony, to-wit: Aggravated Robbery, and the death of Rocky Marsh was caused while the defendant, acting individually and as a party with James Pinkard, Elijah Jones, Shamar Lamar Lewis was in the course of and in furtherance of or the immediate flight from the commission or attempt of the Aggravated Robbery.

Shamar Lamar Lewis is Pinkard’s brother, and he, Pinkard, and Elijah Jones, who was a juvenile

at the time of the crime, were members of the Long Branch Posse gang.

The State’s cases against Pinkard and appellant were joined and proceeded to a

jury trial in January 2019.2 The State’s witnesses were investigating officers and detectives, the

medical examiner who performed the autopsy, the store’s owner who testified about the

surveillance-video footage, a forensic scientist who provided DNA testimony, and Jones. Jones

testified that he pled guilty as a party to capital murder of Marsh, was sentenced to thirty years’

confinement, agreed to be a witness as part of the plea agreement, and was currently in the Texas

Juvenile Justice Department-Institutional Division. As to the events surrounding Marsh’s

murder, Jones testified that members of the Long Branch Posse did not like strangers taking their

pictures and that he was with Lewis when Pinkard called him and told him that a “dude” had

“threatened” him and his “baby’s mama” with a knife and took a picture of appellant’s vehicle’s

license plate on his phone. Pinkard then told Jones that “he was going to come get [them].” 2 The jury also found Pinkard guilty, and he has appealed from the trial court’s judgment of conviction in this Court’s cause number 03-19-00354-CR. 3 With appellant driving, they picked up Jones and Lewis, and they drove around to “find the dude

that threatened [Pinkard] with the knife” to “[b]eat him up” and “[t]ake his phone.” During the

drive, Pinkard told Lewis “what happened,” that Pinkard had a crowbar and that there was

another one in the trunk, and “when we find him, to tell [appellant] to pop the trunk so [Lewis]

can get the crowbar out of the trunk.” Appellant saw Marsh at the apartment complex and

“drove towards him.” After she stopped the vehicle and “popped” the trunk, Lewis took out a

“[s]aw and screwdriver” from the trunk, Pinkard got out of the vehicle with a crowbar and

confronted Marsh, Lewis hit Marsh “in the back of the head” with the saw and stabbed and

stomped on him, and Pinkard “came and went in [Marsh’s front] pockets” and “took [his] phone

and lighter” and a “knife.” They then left in the vehicle with appellant driving to take Jones

home, but they turned around to go back to the apartments because Lewis “told [them] he

dropped the saw.” They were unable to retrieve the saw because the police had already arrived.

The State’s exhibits included: (i) photographs of the scene, items recovered at the

scene including the saw, bottle of beer, and black bag, and items found in Pinkard’s

vehicle including the crowbar and screwdriver; (ii) 911 calls reporting the crime; (iii) the

video-surveillance footage from the store; (iv) the DNA laboratory report, and (v) the autopsy

report and photographs of Marsh’s wounds. The evidence showed that Marsh purchased a bottle

of beer at the convenience store shortly before the murder, and the black bag found at the scene

matched the type of bag that the convenience store used. DNA testing linked Marsh to the

“blade portion with the teeth” of the saw that was recovered from the scene and to stains found in

the vehicle. Appellant’s DNA also was linked to the knife that was in the vehicle when Pinkard

and appellant were arrested the following day.

4 Appellant did not call any witnesses during the trial’s guilt-innocence phase. The

jury found appellant guilty, and the trial court thereafter held a punishment hearing and

sentenced appellant to twenty-five years’ confinement. This appeal followed.

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