Fred Loualex Rodgers v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 30, 2021
Docket14-19-00216-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Fred Loualex Rodgers v. State (Fred Loualex Rodgers 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
Fred Loualex Rodgers v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Affirmed and Majority and Dissenting Opinions filed March 30, 2021.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-19-00216-CR

FRED LOUALEX RODGERS, Appellant

V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the County Court at Law No. 2 Fort Bend County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 18-CCR-206134

MAJORITY OPINION

In this single-issue appeal, appellant Fred Rodgers, complains that his misdemeanor failure-to-identify conviction was not supported by legally sufficient evidence at trial. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Appellant was apprehended at a Wal-Mart in Stafford, Texas on suspicion of theft of items that he failed to scan and pay for at the self-check-out register. He was detained in the Wal-Mart’s loss prevention office along with his brother and mother by the store’s loss prevention officer pending the arrival of Stafford police. He was later charged for that offense and his case was tried to jury. Based on a series of events that took place once Stafford police arrived, the State also charged appellant by information with a failure-to-identify offense. The two offenses were tried together.

The most significant evidence in the trial of appellant’s failure-to-identify case consisted of Officer Ryan Graves’s testimony and the video recording from his body-camera showing his interaction with appellant and others in Wal-Mart’s loss prevention office.

Officer Graves’s Testimony

Officer Graves testified that appellant identified himself as “Terrence Rogers,” which yielded no record in the police database. He later testified that appellant refused to provide his name. Officer Graves originally characterized his handling of appellant as a detention; explaining that he had not arrested appellant until after the value of the stolen property had been confirmed to exceed the minimum dollar-value consistent with the Stafford Police Department’s arrest policy. While testifying, Officer Graves revealed that he was under the impression that appellant was being tried for an offense under different subsection of the failure-to-identify statute, for providing him with a false name (rather than refusing to provide a name) following Graves’s lawful detention of appellant (rather than following Graves’s lawful arrest of appellant). But during his redirect examination, Officer Graves testified in support of the charged offense:

Q. In this case, did Mr. Rodgers refuse to give you his name? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did he do it more than once?

2 A. He did. Q. And for clarification, was he in handcuffs the entire time that he refused to give you his name? A. Yes, sir. Q. And at one point you read him what’s commonly referred to as his Miranda Rights, right? A. Yes, sir. Q. And he refused to give you his name again; is that right? A. Yes, sir. Q. And at no point during the entirety of his time in that loss prevention room did you let him out before y’all walked into it, right? A. No, sir -- Q. You testified he was trying to get out at the beginning, right? A. At the beginning, he was trying to walk out the front door. Q. Yes, sir. And did you guys let him walk out? A. No, sir, we didn’t. State’s Exhibit 3, the Body-Cam Video

States Exhibit 3, provided the jury with an objective look at the entire exchange at the store that forms the basis of the failure-to-identify charge. The video showed that upon entering the loss prevention office, Officer Graves immediately encountered appellant, requested that appellant remove his backpack, and recovered a knife from appellant. After appellant refused Officer Graves’s request to search his pockets, he was handcuffed, and told that he was being detained for theft. Appellant stated that he had not stolen anything. Appellant again asked why he was being detained. Officer Graves then stated:

Because you were acting aggressive when I came to talk to you. . . . So I detained you for officer safety. That doesn’t mean you’re arrested. That means you can come out of the handcuffs as soon as I figure out what’s going on.

3 Then Officer Graves requested appellant to provide his last name, first name, and date of birth. Appellant, whose correct name is Fred Rodgers, provided a false first name and misspelled last name, “Tearrance Rogers,” but provided his correct date of birth.

Officer Graves then spoke with the store’s loss prevention officer who reported details of witnessing appellant steal store items. As Officer Graves shuttled between suspects and the store employees he was told on his radio that the name appellant provided him was “not returning.” Officer Graves had a brief discussion with appellant and asked him again for some type of identifying information. Officer Graves then approached appellant’s half-brother and questions him about the theft, then reads his half-brother his Miranda rights. Officer Graves then shuttled back to appellant, read appellant his Miranda rights, then interrogated appellant about the theft. He suggests to appellant that store cameras would have captured any offense. Officer Graves was then alerted by a store employee about missing gloves in appellant’s backpack that the employee would like to re-shelve, and then searches the backpack. After discovering unpurchased gloves in appellant’s backpack, Officer Graves confronted appellant, accused appellant of lying to him and ordered appellant to sit down. Appellant resisted initially, but ultimately complied. Officer Graves then shuttled across the room to appellant’s half-brother, hand cuffed him, and asked that he sit down while stating that appellant was being “temporarily detained.”

Officer Graves returned to appellant and asked him if he had ever been arrested before. Appellant did not respond and appeared to act as if asleep. Officer Graves then stated, “You are not arrested right now, you are detained.” After a pause, Officer Graves then asked appellant to spell his name again, and appellant nodded his head in silence. Then Officer Graves stated, “So you are just

4 not going to talk to me now?” Appellant responded by reminding Officer Graves that he had been read his Miranda rights and his right to remain silent. Officer Graves responded, “Right now I’m just trying to identify you. I’m not asking you anything about what’s going on. I’m trying to identify who you are. . . Because this name’s not coming back and I feel like you’re not being truthful with me.”

Officer Graves then had a discussion with the loss prevention officer, who explained to Officer Graves his challenge identifying who, between appellant and his half-brother, stole which of the items identified as stolen. They agreed the loss prevention officer would add all up and then split the total in half.

Officer Anzalone arrived an hour after Officer Graves arrived to assist Officer Graves. By this point appellant’s mother had been excused from the loss prevention office. In the doorway of the loss prevention room, Officer Graves related to Officer Anzalone the problem identifying appellant. Officer Graves gave Anzalone the note pad on which he had written the name that appellant had provided earlier, and Anzalone approached appellant asked appellant if the name on the pad was correct. Appellant indicated that it was correct. Graves repeated the spelling of the first name appellant provided, “T-E-A-R-R-E-N-C-E, correct?”, to which appellant nodded affirmatively again. Later, Anzalone turned to appellant, stating, “You are aware it’s another charge, right?” Appellant nodded in response. Anzalone continued and told appellant that if he had any warrants that it would be easier to handle if he was not “caught up . . .

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Bluebook (online)
Fred Loualex Rodgers v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fred-loualex-rodgers-v-state-texapp-2021.