Erik Jamal Jackson v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 5, 2015
Docket05-12-01413-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Erik Jamal Jackson v. State (Erik Jamal Jackson 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
Erik Jamal Jackson v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

AFFIRMED; Opinion Filed December 31, 2014.

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-12-01413-CR

ERIK JAMAL JACKSON, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court No. 1 Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F-1163319-H

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices FitzGerald, Fillmore, and Stoddart Opinion by Justice Stoddart A jury convicted Erik Jamal Jackson of aggravated robbery and sentenced him to 15

years’ confinement. In two issues, Jackson argues the trial court erred by failing to instruct the

jury on the lesser-included offense of theft and by failing to instruct the jury on the accomplice

witness rule. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

The State alleged Jackson intentionally and knowingly, while in the course of committing

theft of property and with the intent to obtain or maintain control of the property, threatened and

placed the victim in fear of imminent bodily injury and death, and Jackson used and exhibited a

firearm. At trial, the victim of the crime was the State’s first witness. Ramiro Adame testified

that on December 23, 2011, he left a bar about 1:00 a.m. He saw a “girl” in the parking lot and,

because it was cold outside, Adame asked the girl if he could help her. The girl told Adame she

was waiting for a friend, but accepted Adame’s offer to wait in his car until her friend arrived. Adame testified that once the girl was in the car, she was texting with someone on her

phone. Adame stated “she kept saying that she had a friend coming by or close by, and he’s

going to pick me up.” After about 10 minutes, her friend still had not arrived. The girl asked

Adame for money. When he said he was not going to give money to her, she offered to have sex

with Adame for money; he declined this offer.

A gas station was down the street from the bar. Adame wanted to go to the gas station

and get something to drink and the girl rode in the car with him. During this time, the girl

continued texting on her phone.

When they returned to the car after going into the gas station, Adame offered to take the

girl back to the bar. Instead, as they drove back, she instructed him to turn on to a side street and

said her friends would pick her up there. At some point, the girl told Adame to park. He

described the area where he parked: “There’s a small convenience store, kind of like a gas

station, and there’s a warehouse there and there’s a parking lot. Eventually there’s a lot, a

parking lot, so she told me to park right behind there or right just kind of like behind the gas

station at the warehouse, and I parked right there where she told me to.” No other cars were in

the parking lot.

As soon as Adame parked, someone opened his car door. Adame testified: “So they pull

me out and say get out of the car. I kind of tried to turn around, and I didn’t have a chance

because they told me to don’t [sic] look at them, and they had a gun pointed at me, so they told

me to don’t [sic] look at them so I just followed their directions.” Adame thought there was

more than one attacker. The people who took him out of his car, took everything he had in his

pockets, including his wallet and iPhone. They also took some items from the car.

–2– Adame testified the girl was not robbed and did not seem scared; she left with the people

who robbed him. Adame stated he did not see his attackers well and would not be able to

identify them.

Demone Butler testified as the State’s second witness. He was charged with aggravated

robbery along with Jackson and Monique Adley, the “girl” who was in the car with Adame.

Adley was Jackson’s girlfriend. Butler testified he attempted to go to a club with Jackson,

Adley, Jackson’s brother, and some other people on December 23, 2011, but they were not

admitted because they were underage. Butler and Jackson’s brother each had a gun.

Butler testified that after they were turned away from the club, Jackson said “he’s about

to go make some money.” Butler believed this meant Jackson planned to have Adley prostitute

herself. They left the club and Jackson drove his car (carrying Butler and Adley) to a parking lot

where they dropped off Adley.

Butler testified he and Jackson drove away after dropping off Adley and went to a vacant

“road next to some office buildings.” Jackson said the location was where they would pick up

Adley. When they parked near the office buildings, a car carrying Jackson’s brother and his

friends parked alongside them. Jackson, his brother, and his brother’s friends all got out of their

cars. Butler testified that when Jackson was exiting the car, he asked Butler for Butler’s gun.

Butler refused to give it to him.

Butler stayed in Jackson’s car and the other men retreated into the darkness. He did not

see where they went or what happened, he did not see a robbery occur, he did not see whether

anyone had a gun. After a couple of minutes, the men and Adley returned to the cars and the

cars drove away. When Jackson and Adley got back into the car, Adley was “going through

some cards,” credit cards. They also had an iPhone with them. No one talked about what

happened.

–3– Jackson drove to a restaurant and then a gas station. Butler testified that at the gas

station, a “cop car started pulling up, and one of the cops gets out, and he was like we tracked her

right here or whatever and I think he’s like that. And then [Jackson] grabbed the phone from her,

and he hands it to me and he told me to put it up.” Butler testified he put the phone in the

armrest in the back seat. The police arrested Jackson, Butler, and Adley.

Officer Donald Ritchie was a Dallas police officer on December 23, 2011. On that night,

he received a call at 2:28 a.m. about a robbery. He met Adame at a gas station. Adame told

Ritchie he had been robbed by several black males and a black female; they took his money,

wallet, phone, and property. When Ritchie learned Adame’s phone was an iPhone, Ritchie used

his own iPhone to track it. Ritchie was “able to see that the phone was still active and moving at

that time.” Ritchie began driving and following the iPhone; he followed the iPhone to a gas

station. The iPhone signal was stationary at the gas station for a while. When the signal moved

again, Richie was able to determine which car the phone was in. Ritchie relayed the vehicle’s

information to another officer who stopped the car. The officer found the iPhone, several other

cell phones, a gun, a Halloween mask, and cash in the car. He did not find a wallet or credit

cards. Jackson, Butler, and Adley were in the car. The iPhone was located in the backseat of the

car where Butler had been sitting.

Jackson testified in his defense. Jackson stated he and Adley went to a club that was in

close proximity to the club where Adame met Adley. Butler was with them. Jackson and Adley

had an argument. After they were unable to get into the club, Jackson testified he told Adley “I

wasn’t going to waste no more gas or time on taking her nowhere else.” Adley got out of the car

and began pacing back and forth in front of the car. Adley then retrieved her purse from the car

and walked away. Jackson said he did not leave the parking lot because he was expecting his

brother to come to the club. Ten to fifteen minutes later, his brother and two friends arrived.

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