Frederick Dewayne Malone A/K/A Frederck Dewange Malone v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 11, 2010
Docket02-08-00360-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Frederick Dewayne Malone A/K/A Frederck Dewange Malone v. State (Frederick Dewayne Malone A/K/A Frederck Dewange Malone 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
Frederick Dewayne Malone A/K/A Frederck Dewange Malone v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 2-08-360-CR

FREDERICK DEW AYNE APPELLANT MALONE A/K/A FREDERCK DEW ANGE MALONE

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS STATE

------------

FROM THE 396TH DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION 1

A jury convicted Appellant Frederick Dewayne Malone a/k/a Frederck

Dewange Malone of capital murder, and, the State having waived the death penalty

option, he received an automatic life sentence. In five points, Appellant contends

that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction and

complains about the admission of his oral confession and the State’s closing

1  See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. argument at the guilt-innocence phase. Because we hold that the evidence is legally

and factually sufficient to support Appellant’s conviction and that the trial court did

not err, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Facts

Mrs. Eloida Marin testified that on December 21, 2006, she and her husband,

Antonio, arrived in Fort W orth to visit with their son, Ruben, and his family. On

December 30, after 8:00 p.m., Mrs. Marin, Antonio, Ruben, and Ruben’s two children

were sitting in the living room when Mrs. Marin heard a knock on the door. Ruben

got up to answer the door. He did not see anyone through the peephole. He

opened the door about six inches, and then two young African-Americans slammed

it open and forced him to the floor. Mrs. Marin described the men as each having

“a little bit of beard” and stated that one was tall and the other one was short. She

clarified her earlier testimony about the two men slamming the door open, explaining

that the short one had come in first and had taken Ruben to the ground. The tall one

had pointed a gun at her husband and her. By this time, she and her husband had

stood up. Mrs. Marin testified that the first shot occurred when the short man shot

Ruben; the tall man was pointing his gun at her husband and her. Her husband

moved to help Ruben, and then the tall man shot her husband. But neither Mrs.

Marin nor her husband realized that he had been shot until the paramedics had

removed Ruben from the apartment. The paramedics took both men to the hospital,

where Antonio later died.

2 Mrs. Marin testified that she did not identify the two intruders from a photo

spread. In court, she tentatively identified Appellant as the person who had shot her

husband, stating that she was not sure.

On cross-examination, Mrs. Marin indicated that she had initially told the police

that the short person had shot both her husband and her son. She also admitted

when asked, “And do you remember indicating or telling Ms. Reyes that you thought

maybe the tall one shot your husband, but then you later told Ms. Reyes that you

didn’t see who shot your husband because you were nervous and your eyes were

on your son?”, that “[she] always ha[d] said that, [but had] recalled very well that the

taller one shot [her] husband.”

Ruben Marin testified that on December 30, he arrived home about 8:00 or

8:30 p.m. He had more than $1,000 in his wallet. He was sitting on the love seat

close to the front door, talking with his parents and children, when he heard a knock

on the door. He looked through the peephole and saw an unfamiliar African-

American man. Ruben then opened the front door about three or four inches to see

what the stranger wanted. The stranger tried to get into the apartment. Ruben tried

to close the door, but the stranger put his foot down and wedged his hand in to

prevent the door from closing. Ruben recalled that the stranger had a medium-sized

black revolver in his hand. Ruben tried to take the gun away from the stranger.

Ruben testified that they struggled for the gun but that he let go when he realized

that his children were nearby. Ruben testified that during the struggle, he noticed

3 that another unfamiliar African-American man had come in and had moved toward

his parents. Ruben testified that the second man had a silver gun, like a square, and

that the second man pointed the gun at the elderly Marins. Ruben testified that

when the second man came in, the first man shot Ruben in the side. The first man

then ripped Ruben’s left pocket, removing a magazine, and took Ruben’s wallet from

his right pocket. Ruben’s dad moved closer to Ruben to help him, and then Ruben

heard but did not see another shot. The second intruder was beside Ruben’s dad,

and the first intruder was still behind Ruben, near the front door, when Ruben heard

the shot. Ruben testified that the second man was taller than the first, with a fuller

face, and that the second man had a shaved head.

Detective Billy W . Randolph testified that a few days after the Marin robbery,

he began to suspect Desmond Brooks, a resident of Ruben Marin’s apartment

complex who had committed a robbery earlier in December. Detective Randolph

testified that Desmond Brooks was about five feet, six inches tall or five feet, seven

inches tall and weighed about 160 pounds. Detective Jose Hernandez testified that

Brooks was five feet, seven inches tall and weighed 140 pounds. The police

arrested Brooks on outstanding warrants and interviewed him for several hours.

Detective Randolph testified that during the Brooks interview, Appellant’s name

came up (the detective testified that Brooks said that Appellant was his next-door

neighbor), and Brooks also told the police where to find evidence of the Marin

robbery.

4 Officer Bill Yeager testified that he participated in the search of Apartment 229

at Ruben’s apartment complex and collected two weapons, ammunition, and

personal effects. Relying on information gleaned from the Brooks interview, the

police found one of the weapons, a firearm, in a sock in a laundry basket in the

bedroom closet. Officer Yeager also found a wallet in the air conditioning unit. At

trial, Detective John Livesay identified the firearm found in the sock, State’s Exhibit

37, as a .22 caliber revolver, and he identified the wallet as Ruben’s.

Detective Livesay searched the car of Brooks’s girlfriend. He found receipts

showing that Appellant rented Apartment 228, the apartment next to Brooks’s, which

Detective Livesay confirmed with the apartment’s management. Officer Yeager also

searched Apartment 228.

Appellant was subsequently arrested for the Marin robbery in Austin County.

Detectives Hernandez, Livesay, and Randolph went to that county to interview

Appellant, who Randolph testified was about six feet, two inches tall and weighed

about 175 pounds. All three detectives identified Appellant at trial. During the

interview, which was recorded, Appellant admitted to knowing that his cousin,

Brooks, was going to rob someone, agreeing to be Brooks’s driver, entering the

apartment with a gun at his side, and ushering the two wounded men and the elderly

woman into the bathroom after the robbery and shootings. He denied shooting

anyone and claimed that he had purchased the .22 recovered upon his arrest from

Brooks after the robbery. He also stated that he was a psychopath, saw a

5 psychiatrist, and was on Trazadone and Restidol. The interview took place in the

wee hours of the morning, and Appellant yawned occasionally during the two–three

hour interview.

After the interview, Detective Randolph took custody of Appellant’s

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Related

Jackson v. Virginia
443 U.S. 307 (Supreme Court, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
Frederick Dewayne Malone A/K/A Frederck Dewange Malone v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frederick-dewayne-malone-aka-frederck-dewange-malo-texapp-2010.