Gary Wayne Bryant v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 19, 2012
Docket02-11-00029-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Gary Wayne Bryant v. State (Gary Wayne Bryant 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 Wayne Bryant v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

02-11-029-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 02-11-00029-CR

Gary Wayne Bryant

APPELLANT

V.

The State of Texas

STATE

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FROM THE 371st District Court OF Tarrant COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

I.  Introduction

          A jury convicted Appellant Gary Wayne Bryant of aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon and sentenced him to fifty-five years’ confinement.  In two points, Bryant argues that the trial court erred by admitting evidence of an extraneous offense and by refusing to exclude identification testimony.  We will affirm.

II.  Background

          On Saturday morning, February 27, 2010, Elida Salas was at her home with her ten- and twelve-year-old daughters and her three-year-old nephew when someone knocked on the front door.  Salas eventually answered the door, and a nicely dressed lady asked for Maria Gonzalez.  When Salas told the lady that Maria Gonzalez lived across the street, an individual who Salas identified at trial as Bryant appeared from behind the lady with a gun, forced his way into Salas’s house, grabbed her by the neck, and hit her head with the gun.  Bryant, who was wearing a black bandana and a white cap, asked where Salas’s husband and where “the money” was, and he locked two of the children in the bathroom and hit one of them on the head.[2]  Bryant returned to Salas; asked about the combination to a safe in the house, which Salas did not know; hit her with the gun several more times; and searched the rest of the house while the lady who initially knocked on the front door watched over Salas.  Bryant collected several items from around the house; took the keys to Salas’s SUV; pulled the SUV up to the front door; and loaded the items, including a flat-screen television, into the SUV.  When Bryant and the lady drove away, the television fell out of the back of the SUV and onto the street, and Bryant ran over the television several times with the SUV, leaving it in the street.  Police later discovered the SUV at an apartment complex located about four or five blocks from Salas’s residence.

          Later in the day, Salas returned to her home after visiting the police station and the hospital and discovered a white cap in one of the children’s bedrooms.  A police officer collected the cap, and a major DNA profile that was discovered after testing genetic material found inside of the cap was later compared to the DNA profile from a buccal swab obtained from Bryant.  The profile from the buccal swab matched the major profile from the cap, and a supervisor for the laboratory that conducted the DNA testing opined that the probability of finding a random individual with the same DNA profile as Bryant is one in 1.86 quadrillion.

          Detective Ernie Pate interviewed Salas about six months after the robbery and showed her a photographic spread that included Bryant’s photo.  Salas identified Bryant as the person who had robbed her and was 100% sure of her choice.

          At trial, Laura Montemeyor, an assistant manager at a pawn store, testified that Bryant pawned a gold men’s ring on March 2, 2010.  Salas identified the ring as belonging to her husband and said that Bryant took it during the robbery.

          Authorities who investigated the robbery were also able to lift several prints from a few items at Salas’s house, including the frame of the flat-screen television discarded in the street.  Deborah Smith of the Fort Worth Police Department Crime Laboratory testified that a palm print lifted from the television matched Bryant’s left palm.

          During the punishment phase, Sarah Kind testified that in November 2009, she was working alone at a Subway restaurant in Rhome when a man entered the store, pulled out a gun, climbed over the counter, and demanded money from the register, a safe, and a cash box.  Kind recalled that the man ripped a phone cord from the wall and tied her up with it before leaving.  Kind did not identify Bryant as the assailant, but Amber Moss, a forensic scientist, testified that she obtained a partial DNA profile from the telephone cord, that Bryant’s DNA profile matched nine of fifteen “locations” on the partial profile from the telephone cord, and that Bryant could not be excluded as a contributor to the DNA profile from the telephone cord.

III.  Irrelevant Extraneous-Offense Punishment Evidence

          In his first point, Bryant argues that the trial court abused its discretion by admitting evidence at the punishment phase of trial related to the November 2009 Subway armed robbery.  Bryant contends that the trial court should not have admitted a video taken from the store security system, still photographs of the video footage, and photographs of the crime scene because the State failed to prove that he was the person responsible for committing the armed robbery.

          Relevant evidence means “evidence having any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.”  Tex. R. Evid. 401.  During the punishment phase of trial, the State may offer evidence as to any matter the court deems relevant to sentencing, including evidence of an extraneous crime or bad act that is shown beyond a reasonable doubt to have been committed by the defendant or for which he could be held criminally responsible.  Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 37.07, § 3(a)(1) (West Supp.

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Gary Wayne Bryant v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gary-wayne-bryant-v-state-texapp-2012.