Ex Parte: Charles Edward Turner

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 27, 2003
Docket08-02-00355-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Ex Parte: Charles Edward Turner (Ex Parte: Charles Edward Turner) 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
Ex Parte: Charles Edward Turner, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS

                                                                              )

                                                                              )               No.  08-02-00355-CR

                                                                              )                    Appeal from the

EX PARTE:  CHARLES EDWARD TURNER     )                 70th District Court

                                                                              )             of Ector County, Texas

                                                                              )                  (TC# W2540-A)

O P I N I O N

Appellant Charles Edward Turner is charged with murder and his bail was set at $250,000.  Appellant petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus, complaining of excessive bail and lack of probable cause for his detention.  The writ issued and after a hearing, the trial court found probable cause existed to detain Appellant and that bail was excessive, reducing Appellant=s bail to $100,000.  On appeal, Appellant asserts that bail is still unduly excessive and requests that this Court reverse the trial court=s order and reduce his bail to $25,000.  We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND


At the habeas corpus hearing, State witness Detective Buzzy Abalos of the Odessa Police Department testified that he was the lead investigator of the homicide, which is the basis of this prosecution.  According to Detective Abalos, on July 29, 2002 at about 10:30 p.m., Appellant shot eighteen-year-old Christopher Blair in the chest during a confrontation between the two in the parking lot between buildings in the Spanish Oaks Apartments complex.  The victim died in route to the hospital.

Detective Abalos conducted interviews with several witnesses at the scene.  The victim=s fourteen-year-old brother, Dexter Drennan, told Detective Abalos that he, his mother, and a family friend went to his brother=s apartment after receiving a telephone call from Blair and that either Blair or his mother were concerned that something was going to happen that night.  They were in Blair=s apartment when Appellant knocked on the door.  Blair=s brother witnessed the confrontation between Appellant and Blair and saw Appellant shoot his brother with a semiautomatic gun.  Another witness, Daniel Morgan, saw Appellant and Blair arguing outside the apartment complex and observed Appellant push Blair.  According to this witness, Blair put his arms up and Appellant shot him one time in the chest.  Mr. Morgan also saw Appellant standing over Blair=s body and then heard Appellant say, AI just killed his ass.@  The police apprehended Appellant in Octavia Moseley=s apartment in the complex.  The officers saw Appellant in the apartment and the female who had opened the door told the officers that Appellant did not belong in the apartment.  From that information, Detective Abalos gathered that Appellant was attempting to hide from the police.  Appellant refused to tell the officers where the gun was, but they were able to locate it in Appellant=s apartment behind one of the doors in his apartment.


Apparently, there were two confrontations between Appellant and Blair that day.  Detective Abalos testified that in additional witness interviews, he learned that sometime prior to the shooting, Blair allegedly burglarized Appellant=s apartment and had taken $300.  Witnesses also told the detective that Blair was doing drugs throughout that day and had threatened an eleven-year-old girl with a knife.  In the first confrontation, Appellant confronted Blair about taking the money.  Blair was armed with a butcher knife and a smaller butterfly knife, which is an illegal weapon.  After this initial confrontation, Appellant left the apartment complex with his friend Marquett Wilburn and went to the house of another friend, J.J. Jones, to get the gun.  When Appellant came back the second confrontation occurred, which resulted in Blair=s death.  At the time of the shooting, Appellant was twenty-two years old.

Connie Turner, Appellant=s mother, testified that her son had lived in Ector County all his life, except for the year he spent in the Job Corps Program.  Appellant had attended Permian High School, completing the tenth grade.  Appellant went into the Job Corps to try to earn his G.E.D. and obtain job training.  While in the Job Corps, he was living in Roswell, New Mexico for a little while, before being transferred to McCamey, Texas.  While attending Job Corps in McCamey, Appellant worked part-time with his mother=s uncle cleaning offices in Dallas.  Appellant left the Job Corps program at age twenty.  Appellant worked for a few months in Dallas and then decided to return to Odessa, Texas.  Since returning, Appellant had been looking for full-time regular employment.  In the meantime, Appellant had been doing some maintenance work for his apartment complex, cutting yards to make money, and watching his five-month-old son while his girlfriend, the baby=s mother, worked at a daycare center.

Regarding Appellant=s family ties in the community, Ms. Turner testified that she lived and worked in Odessa.  Both sets of Appellant=s grandparents live in Ector County.  Appellant=s two brothers still live at home and Appellant has uncles and aunts who live in Ector County.


Ms. Turner stated that to her knowledge, Appellant has no assets that can be sold or used as collateral in raising money for a bond.  Appellant does not own a vehicle nor any real estate.  Appellant has no stocks or bonds and has nothing of value to pawn or sell.  Any ability to make bond would come from his family members.  Ms. Turner works as a correctional officer at the Civigenics Ector County Correction Center and earns $8.65 per hour, with net pay of $590 biweekly.  Appellant=

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Ex Parte: Charles Edward Turner, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-charles-edward-turner-texapp-2003.