Gerald Tomlinson v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 14, 2021
Docket09-19-00331-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Gerald Tomlinson v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-19-00331-CR __________________

GERALD TOMLINSON, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 356th District Court Hardin County, Texas Trial Cause No. 25070 __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Charlie Daniel Jr. died from gunshot wounds he received on November 2,

2018. A grand jury indicted Appellant Gerald Wade Tomlinson for “intentionally

and/or knowingly caus[ing] the death of [] Charlie Daniel, Jr., by discharging a

firearm in the direction of the said Charlie Daniel, Jr.” Tomlinson pleaded “not

guilty,” and a jury found Tomlinson guilty of murder and assessed punishment at

fifteen years of confinement. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.02. Tomlinson

appealed, and in two issues he challenges his conviction. We affirm.

1 State’s Case in Chief

Testimony of Katherine Parker

Katherine Parker testified that she is the dispatch supervisor in the Hardin

County Sheriff’s Office, and she receives 911 calls. Parker identified State’s Exhibit

1 as a recording of a 911 call from November 2, 2018, pertaining to the case against

Tomlinson, and the recording was published to the jury.

In the recording, the caller identifies herself as Connie Lindsey with Basil

Oilfield Services, and she reported that a woman named Jacklyn Sanders was in the

Basil office with a gunshot wound to her leg. Lindsey told the 911 dispatcher that

Sanders said her friend, Charlie Daniel, who was coming to pick her up, was shot

twice and was still in his truck. The dispatcher asked who shot them, Lindsey asked

Sanders, and Sanders replied, “Wade Tomlinson.”

Testimony of Sergeant Grant McDowell

Sergeant Grant McDowell, with the patrol division of the Hardin County

Sheriff’s Office, testified that on November 2, 2018, he was dispatched to Basil

Oilfield Service in Saratoga about 3:30 p.m. When he arrived, another deputy was

already on the scene, and first responders were tending to a woman with a gunshot

wound. McDowell and Deputy Leviner went to the Tomlinson residence nearby on

Cotton Road, he helped secure the scene where people had arrived, and he checked

inside the residence, but he did not find Tomlinson inside. McDowell found a work

2 truck with “a deceased individual in the passenger side -- half in, half out.” A while

later, dispatch advised that Tomlinson’s vehicle had been located at a residence on

Flowers Drive. McDowell went to the location on Flowers Drive about two hours

after the initial call, he agreed he wore a body camera, and a recording from his body

camera was admitted as State’s Exhibit 3 and published to the jury. McDowell

testified he found Tomlinson in the house, on the floor, and covered with a blanket.

On cross-examination, McDowell testified that he had not dealt with Tomlinson

before this incident, McDowell thought Tomlinson sounded “apologetic” after he

was handcuffed, and McDowell recalled that Tomlinson said he “told her not to

bring anyone else to his property[.]”

In the bodycam video, Tomlinson tells McDowell that he had been robbed

four times since February losing about $12,000 worth of property, but because his

son was the legal owner of the property, law enforcement had told him his son

needed to make the complaint about the thefts. Tomlinson also tells McDowell he

did not know where his pistol was and “that girl had that pistol last time I saw her.”

Tomlinson also states, “I don’t know how many times I shot[,]” and “she got hit in

the crossfire.” Tomlinson states “that guy” came at him with a pipe or a piece of

metal, and Tomlinson told him to “get in his truck and get the h--- off my property.”

Tomlinson tells McDowell “I had every intention of turning myself in as soon as I

could get an attorney,” and that he was at the house on Flowers Street “to hide out”

3 until he could contact an attorney because he could not find his phone. He also tells

McDowell, “I’m not even supposed to have a gun, my son loaned me that gun.”

Testimony of Kendra Simmons

Kendra Simmons testified that she is an investigator with the Hardin County

Sheriff’s Office, and she was assigned as the lead investigator in this case. Simmons

responded to a call where she found Jacklyn Sanders, who was bloody, upset, and

excited. Sanders had already been treated and had her leg bandaged, and she was

later taken to the hospital by helicopter. Sanders said she was shot closer to

Tomlinson’s house and that a second victim was shot in a vehicle. After Sanders was

transported to the hospital, Simmons went to an RV on Tomlinson Road off Cotton

Road where Tomlinson lived, and she then prepared two sketches of the area, which

were drawn and measured by Simmons. The sketches were admitted as State’s

Exhibits 6 and 7. Charlie Daniel was deceased when Simmons arrived at the

property. Simmons also testified that the sketches depicted where Simmons found

shell casings in front of and next to the truck as well as “blood and flesh” in front of

the truck. Simmons agreed that the photograph in State’s Exhibit 21 depicts Daniel

“falling out of the truck[,]” and she testified that Daniel was moved to the ground,

as depicted in Exhibit 22, after the Justice of the Peace had arrived at the scene. She

also testified that Exhibits 21 and 22 depict Daniel holding a metal pipe in his right

hand, and she included that detail in her report. Simmons testified that the

4 photographs in State’s Exhibits 22 through 24 show four bullet wounds on Daniel

that went “through and through.” She also agreed that she took photographs of the

autopsy, and the photographs show bullet wounds to Daniel.

Testimony of Jacklyn Sanders

Sanders identified the defendant as Wade Tomlinson, and she testified that he

was a friend. She testified that she cleaned his house and washed his clothes, and she

lived at Tomlinson’s house twice. She also testified that she knew Charlie Daniel Jr.,

who was her boyfriend and her best friend. She and Daniel had been together for

about a year, then broke up, and got back together the day before the incident, but a

few days before the incident, she had been sleeping in a cemetery.

Sanders testified that Tomlinson lived in a camper trailer and had a washer,

dryer, and refrigerator in another building on the property. Sanders recalled that on

November 2, 2018, she was doing Tomlinson’s laundry and the incident occurred as

she was carrying Tomlinson’s clothes from the dryer into the home. Sanders testified

that she and Daniel had gotten back together, and the night before the incident she

had stayed with Daniel. She was going to move in with him, and Daniel had come

to pick up her things from Tomlinson’s camper. Sanders recalled that Tomlinson had

told her “[d]on’t bring anybody on my property[,]” so Daniel had to drop her off

while she did Tomlinson’s laundry and she packed. Sanders testified that State’s

Exhibit 35 was a copy of texts and messages between Sanders and Tomlinson,

5 including a text she sent to Tomlinson on November 2, 2018, that said “Hello, friend.

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