Gary Bernard Norwood v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 2, 2007
Docket14-06-00754-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Gary Bernard Norwood v. State (Gary Bernard Norwood 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
Gary Bernard Norwood v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed October 2, 2007

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed October 2, 2007.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-06-00754-CR

GARY BERNARD NORWOOD, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 338th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1038313

M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N

A jury found appellant, Gary Bernard Norwood, guilty of the felony offense of robbery and assessed punishment at confinement for life in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.  See Tex. Penal Code Ann. ' 29.02 (Vernon 2003).  Appellant appeals his conviction, and in his sole point of error, he contends the evidence is factually insufficient to sustain the conviction for robbery.  We affirm. 


Factual and Procedural Background    

On the afternoon of July 30, 2005, a man wearing a dark colored Sean-John t-shirt, a motorcycle helmet, sunglasses and a do-rag, entered the Prosperity Bank at 15050 Fairfield Village Drive in Cypress, Harris County, Texas and announced he was robbing the bank.  The robber ordered everyone to hit the floor and threatened to shoot them if they did not comply.  He then demanded that Jennifer Flores, a Prosperity Bank employee, fill up a cardboard box with money.  Feeling Flores was going too slow, the robber jumped over the teller counter and instructed Flores to hurry.   In addition to two drawers of money, Flores was able to slip bait money into the robber=s box.[1]  After Flores filled the box, the robber jumped back over the counter and left the bank.          

The police were contacted through the use of a silent panic alarm and arrived after the suspect fled the bank.  Maureen Murphey, an FBI special agent on bank robbery standby duty, also arrived at the scene.  Murphey testified she interviewed each witness separately, received a copy of the bait money taken during the robbery, and then canvassed the neighborhood.  While canvassing the surrounding area, Murphey located a dark blue Sean-John t-shirt in the parking lot of the Fairfield Baptist Church just less than a mile from the bank.  Murphey testified one of the witnesses told her the suspect left the bank and turned to the right heading toward the side parking lot.  She also testified that another officer discovered a black do-rag near the side parking lot.  Both the shirt and the do-rag were collected as evidence.  On cross-examination, Murphey testified none of the witnesses actually saw the robber throw the do-rag to the ground.


During the investigation of the robbery, Robert Sharp, an FBI agent with the bank robbery task force, developed a potential suspect.  Sharp testified he received an anonymous tip through Crime Stoppers that appellant was the robber.  After receiving the tip, Sharp put together a photo spread, which included appellant=s picture and five other pictures.  Sharp testified he properly admonished each witness and then showed the photo spread to both Lea Babb, a bank employee present at the time of the robbery, and Flores.  Neither witness could positively identify the robber.  After the photo spread, Sharp, with the help of Detective Demetrius Lemonitsakis of the Harris County Sheriff=s Department, conducted a videotape lineup, which included appellant and four other men.  Appellant=s lawyer was present at the time the lineup was conducted.  Sharp showed the videotape lineup to Babb and Flores, and once again, they were unable to positively identify any of the lineup participants as the bank robber.  However, Sharp also showed the videotape lineup to Cameron Giddings, another eyewitness, and Giddings identified appellant as the bank robber.  Sharp did not show the photo spread or videotape lineup to any other witnesses.  

On August 4, 2005, Officer Robert Pali of the Houston Police Department arrested appellant.  After taking appellant into custody, Pali conducted an inventory of the property in appellant=s vehicle and located $1,017 in cash in the front seat of the vehicle underneath a wallet.  Pali testified the wallet belonged to appellant.  He also testified once the money was discovered, he immediately turned it over to Lemonitsakis.  Lemonitsakis then turned the money over to Sergeant David Ryza with the Houston Police Department Robbery Division and asked him to compare the bills to the bait list provided by Murphey. Ryza testified five of the twenty-dollar bills provided to him by Lemonitsakis matched bills on the bait list.  On cross-examination, Ryza testified he made no inquiries into whether the bait money had been disturbed before the bank robbery or whether the bait money list was up-to-date.


During trial, the State called four eyewitnesses to the stand:  three bank customers and a bank employee.  Flores was the bank employee who turned the money over to the robber.  Flores testified the robber was an African-American man who wore a dark-colored helmet, a black or navy blue Sean-John shirt, and sunglasses.  Flores also testified she never got a good look at the man because she was too scared to look at him for any length of time.  She testified the reason she was so scared was because the robber asked her if she had ever been shot before and she took this to mean he would shoot her.  Even after the robber jumped over the counter and stood next to Flores, she testified she did not look at him very closely or for very long.  Flores stated A[i]f I looked at him too long, I would try to remember what he looked like and it scared me.@  During cross-examination, Flores admitted she did glance at the robber a few times but also said she did not concentrate on him too much.  Flores was unable to positively identify anyone in both the photo spread and videotape lineup.

Mary Katherine Graves was a customer in the bank the day the robbery occurred.

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