Fredrick Harden v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 29, 2025
Docket09-23-00329-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Fredrick Harden v. the State of Texas (Fredrick Harden v. the State of Texas) 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
Fredrick Harden v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

________________ NO. 09-23-00329-CR ________________

FREDRICK HARDEN, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee ________________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. F21-36557 ________________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted Fredrick Harden of murder, a first-degree felony.1 See Tex.

Penal Code Ann. § 19.02. In three issues, Harden challenges the sufficiency of the

evidence arguing the State failed to disprove self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt,

The trial court’s judgment lists Harden’s name as “FREDRICK 1

HARDEN[,]” “FREDERICK CARNELL HARDEN[,]” and “FREDERICK CORNELL HARDEN[.]” 1 challenges the trial court’s evidentiary rulings, and argues that fundamental error

occurred when the State misstated the law of self-defense to the jury. We affirm.

Background It is undisputed by the parties that in the early morning hours of December 25,

2020, two fights broke out in the parking lot of a nightclub in Beaumont. It is also

undisputed that the victim, Christopher Brown was shot and killed by Harden in the

same parking lot.

Sean Tolley

Sean Tolley, who works for the Beaumont Police Department as the

supervisor of the 911 Operations Center, described how phone calls that come into

the center are recorded. Copies of 911 phone calls placed on December 25, 2020,

were admitted and played for the jury.

Alec Garcia

Alec Garcia is a narcotics detective with the Beaumont Police Department.

He previously worked as a patrol officer and was on patrol in the early morning

hours of December 25, 2020, when he received a call around 2:00 a.m. about a

shooting in the parking lot of a nightclub in Beaumont. Garcia confirmed he was

wearing a body camera that morning, and a copy of the body camera footage was

played for the jury. When Garcia arrived, he observed a large crowd in the parking

lot, which he estimated to be “a couple hundred people[,]” but noted that most people

2 were leaving the parking lot. Several people were attempting lifesaving measures on

the victim. Garcia testified that he can be heard telling people in the parking lot to

disperse because the victim was “50, 60 yards on the other side of the front door, …

[with] probably a good 40, 50 people” in front of him. He described the scene as

having some “pandemonium[,]” with people panicking, but noted that others were

“simply standing there.” Garcia then approached the victim and observed seven to

eight people huddled around him attempting CPR. According to Garcia, the crowd

was not being cooperative. Garcia had already asked if anyone had seen anything,

and he received no response from the potential witnesses. Garcia eventually

identified Brown and Brown’s cousin. Garcia also located a 9-millimeter cartridge

casing approximately ten feet away from Brown and collected it as evidence. Garcia

identified Harden as the shooter.

Carol Hargroder

Carol Hargroder testified that she is an ID technician, and processes crime

scenes with the Beaumont Police Department. She detailed her education and

experience and stated that she processed the crime scene on December 25, 2020.

Photographs Hargroder took at the scene were admitted into evidence. Hargroder

collected a spent 9-millimeter casing and a live .380 round from the scene. The

casing and the live round were processed for fingerprints. According to Hargroder,

she did not recover any fingerprints from the two pieces of evidence collected.

3 Donald Carson Burrell

Donald Carson Burrell is a police officer with the Beaumont Police

Department. Burrell was called to the scene on December 25, 2020, and performed

a “scene diagram[.]” He testified that a scene diagram involves a “total survey

station[,]” in which he uses survey equipment to map out the scene in what he calls

an “open air homicide[,]” such as this one which occurred in a parking lot. A copy

of his scene diagram was admitted at trial.

Erik “Kelly” Kvarme, Jr.

Kelly Kvarme is a sergeant with the Beaumont Police Department. He stated

that as a sergeant he is a “[s]upervisor, do[es] basic supervisory duties, for -- in terms

of the police department, running scenes, approving paperwork, things of that

nature.” He was called to the scene of the shooting on December 25, 2020. When he

arrived, he located the unresponsive victim, and when he ripped Brown’s shirt open,

he observed a wound to his chest. Kvarme rolled him over and did not see an exit

wound. He went back to his car to get first aid, but by that time, EMS had arrived.

Kvarme identified several pictures taken at the scene, and a copy of his body camera

footage was admitted as evidence. He described the potential witnesses at the scene

as “uncooperative[.]” No one approached Kvarme to tell him that Harden acted in

self-defense.

4 Christopher Price

Christopher Price was working as a nightclub bouncer on the night of

December 25, 2020. He stated that his job duties included keeping the peace, and

“mak[ing] sure nothing go[es] on inside the nightclub, as well as the money and

everything is accurate at the door.” Price stated that the club is open from 10:00 p.m.

to 2:00 a.m. He described the club’s procedures when it closes and his duties at

closing. Before December 25th, Price had never met Brown. Price knows Harden

because he is an extended family member.

At closing time in the early morning hours of December 25th, a fight broke

out between Harden’s niece and another woman in the parking lot of the nightclub.

Price broke up the fight between the two women and observed Harden “take the

phone [of an unknown individual] and throw it on the ground to break it up because

he thought somebody was recording.” Price did not know the person who Harden

took the phone from, but Harden was punched by that person after breaking the

phone. Harden then turned and shot Brown. Price testified that he was “pretty

close[,]” approximately 6 feet away from the shooting, and described the weapon

used as a “silver 9 millimeter with a…green marble handle.” He testified that Harden

was the shooter and that he did not observe Harden to be in any apparent danger of

being attacked by anyone before the shooting. “It was -- it was literally, like,

seconds. After he got punched, [Harden] just turned around, looked, and then just

5 shot.” According to Price, after the phone was smashed by Harden and the first

punch was thrown by an unknown individual, Brown was observed holding back the

unknown individual. He did not believe there was any reason for Harden to have

shot and killed Brown. After the shooting, Harden “just like, disappeared[,]” but

Price did see him again at the same club a week later. This was noteworthy to Price

because by this time Harden was already wanted. Price notified the police because

he knew there was a warrant for Harden’s arrest, but Harden continued to come to

the club several times. Price notified the police each time Harden appeared at the

club.

During cross-examination, Price testified that he did not remember another

fight in the parking lot besides the one between the two women. According to Price,

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