Frank LaMarcus Rogers v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 2, 2013
Docket14-12-00546-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Frank LaMarcus Rogers v. State (Frank LaMarcus Rogers 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
Frank LaMarcus Rogers v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed May 2, 2013.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-12-00546-CR

FRANK LAMARCUS ROGERS, Appellant V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 344th District Court Chambers County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 15965

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, Frank Lamarcus Rogers, pleaded guilty to aggravated robbery without an agreed recommendation on punishment. The trial court sentenced appellant to twenty years’ confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice-Institutional Division. Appellant appeals his sentence, claiming that (1) the trial court abused its discretion by denying his motion for continuance of the punishment hearing; and (2) his attorney rendered ineffective assistance of counsel at the punishment hearing. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

On November 2, 2011, appellant pleaded guilty to aggravated robbery without an agreed recommendation for punishment. The trial court took the matter under advisement, deferred a finding of guilt, and ordered the preparation of a presentence investigation report (―PSI report‖). The punishment hearing was set for March 8, 2012. Appellant filed a motion for a thirty-day continuance the morning of the hearing and, at the start of the hearing, appellant’s attorney informed the trial court that he was moving for a continuance because he had just obtained a copy of the PSI report that morning. The trial court denied the motion, and proceeded to take the following evidence from the State and appellant.

At approximately 10:00 p.m., on November 29, 2010, as Maricela Garcia and her daughter drove into the subdivision where they lived, Garcia noticed a car that did not look like it belonged there. Garcia described the car as white with ―rims‖ and very dark tinted windows, ―[l]ike a Crown Victoria.‖ Garcia’s subdivision, which has only one way in and out, is small with only about twelve homes, and she knows most or all of her neighbors. Garcia called 911 to report the other car because she wanted the police to ―monitor the area and make sure everything was okay.‖

Garcia passed the other car as it was coming back from the end of the street. Garcia was still talking to the 911 operator when she turned into her driveway. Garcia watched the other car as it made a U-turn and park ―in front of a house across the street a little ways down in a vacant lot that’s next to our home.‖ Garcia saw five or six males, wearing masks and bandanas over their faces exit the car and walk toward her car. They surrounded her car, started banging on the doors, and tried to open the doors. Garcia saw a gun outside the passenger’s side of her car. 2 Garcia’s daughter said, ―[M]om, they’re going to kill us, we need to leave.‖ Garcia started honking the horn and put her car in reverse, hitting a neighbor’s truck across the street. The group of males ran back to their car, and Garcia waited until they were driving down the street before she got out of her car to ask the neighbors for help. Garcia was on the phone with the 911 operator during the entire incident.

Officer Benny Simpson of the Mont Belvieu Police Department received a call from his dispatcher regarding a suspicious car in a subdivision. While he was en route, his dispatcher told him that the occupants of that car had attempted to rob someone and left the subdivision. The car turned out of the subdivision in the direction from which Simpson was coming. Simpson saw the car, called for backup, turned around, and followed it until he was able to stop it in secure location away from any individuals. Simpson conducted a felony stop, which ―basically means no approach to the vehicle,‖ i.e., the officer maintains his distance, and calls the occupants from the vehicle one at a time. There were six occupants in the car. Officer Blanchard arrived immediately after that to assist.

Another officer spoke to the victims to gain better knowledge about the suspects in the car and informed, via phone conversations, Simpson and Blanchard that the suspects were masked, armed, and wearing hoodies. Simpson recovered masks, bandanas, hoodies, a loaded black 9 millimeter Smith & Wesson pistol, cell phones, and tools from the suspects’ car.

Detective Robin Koch of the Mont Belvieu Police Department took statements from each of the suspects, including appellant. Appellant told Koch that they had gone to Dayton earlier that night to see some girls. When they got to Dayton, the girls stood them up, so they headed back towards Baytown. Appellant told Koch they pulled into the subdivision and approached Garcia because they

3 were having car trouble. Appellant told Koch that he knocked on Garcia’s car window with a cell phone. Appellant did not tell Koch that a gun was involved in the incident. Koch was concerned about the truthfulness of appellant’s statement because he never mentioned a weapon. Koch did not think it was appellant’s idea to carry out the robbery, but appellant was not forthcoming regarding the weapon. Koch had no reason to believe that they were having car trouble, and Officer Simpson similarly testified that it did not appear to him that there was anything wrong with the suspects’ car.

The PSI report, which included appellant’s account of events he gave to the community supervision officer during the PSI interview, was admitted into evidence. According to appellant, the car ―messed up‖ on the way to Baytown from Dayton, and they turned into a subdivision to work on the car. There was no conversation during the drive from Dayton about robbing anyone. One of appellant’s companions approached Garcia’s car intending to ask to borrow a hammer or other tool to work on their car. Appellant stated that the driver ―went crazy‖ when he knocked on her window with a cell phone. Appellant further stated that Garcia overreacted when she ―saw some black men‖ in her driveway. Appellant also explained that the weapon found in the car belonged to another occupant, Christian Earvin, and he was not aware of the weapon until the police stopped them, and Earvin asked him to hide it under the seat.

During the punishment hearing, appellant testified that there was something wrong with their car, and they approached Garcia for help. Appellant claimed that it was not his intention to rob anyone, but he was influenced by the rest of people in the car. Appellant was wearing a mask, and he had a loaded gun, but it was on ―[his] waist, right [his] pocket.‖ Appellant stated that he tapped the driver’s side window with his cell phone, but he did not try to open the car door.

4 The court also considered evidence of appellant’s background and criminal history. The PSI report set forth appellant’s criminal history. It showed two juvenile offenses, one for criminal mischief and one for burglary of a vehicle; appellant was age 13 and 15, respectively, when he committed the juvenile offenses. At the time of the current offense, appellant was 17 years old. The PSI report further showed that appellant was (1) arrested for failure to appear for the instant offense on April 14, 2011; (2) arrested for failure to attend school on August 3, 2011; (3) charged with assault on August 27, 2011, but the Harris County District Attorney rejected the case due to the victim’s refusal to cooperate; (4) questioned by police and identified as a suspect in two burglary of habitation cases that occurred on August 29, 2011, and September 27, 2011; and (5) arrested for evading arrest on September 28, 2011, and sentenced to six days in the Harris County jail. With the exception of the arrest for failure to attend school, appellant did not disclose these incidents during the PSI interview.

At the punishment hearing, appellant admitted that he was arrested for evading arrest in September 2011, and sentenced to six days in jail.

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Bluebook (online)
Frank LaMarcus Rogers v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frank-lamarcus-rogers-v-state-texapp-2013.