Green II, Johnny v. State
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Opinion
Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed July 14, 2005.
In The
Fourteenth Court of Appeals
____________
NO. 14-03-01371-CR
JOHNNY GREEN II, Appellant
V.
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
On Appeal from the 179th District Court
Harris County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. 942,335
M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N
Following a jury trial, appellant Johnny Green II was found guilty of aggravated armed robbery.[1] The jury assessed punishment at ten years in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division, and the trial court sentenced him accordingly. In a single issue, he argues the evidence is factually insufficient to support his identity as the person who committed the offense. We affirm.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
On February 6, 2003, after Alfred Branch left a local smoke shop, he entered his pick-up truck and placed the keys in the ignition. Before Branch could start the engine, a man holding a chrome revolver appeared next to the truck. The man opened Branch=s truck door, put the gun to Branch=s head, and ordered him to Ascoot over.@ The man then sat in the truck. Branch tried to crawl out of the passenger side of the truck, but the man, still holding the gun to Branch=s head, began to pull him back inside. Another man came to the passenger side of the truck and tried to Adrag@ Branch into the truck. Branch struggled with the two men and fell, head first, from the truck.
Jack Abbott, Eduardo Longoria, and two other men, were on their way to lunch together when they decided to stop at the smoke shop. Abbott and Longoria observed a man fall head first from a truck parked nearby. Trained in CPR and believing Branch was having a heart attack, Abbott went to Branch=s aid. Abbott approached Branch=s truck and observed a man seated in the driver=s set. The man exited the truck and walked toward the rear. On seeing Abbott, the man jumped back into the truck.
Abbott approached the passenger side of the truck and saw a man holding a gun and pulling Branch. Abbott looked Aeye to eye@ at the man, whom he later identified as appellant. Abbott ran into the smoke shop and yelled for someone to call the police.
Both Branch and Longoria observed a black Honda in the smoke shop parking lot.[2] The two men in Branch=s truck drove out of the parking lot, and the black Honda followed. The men in the truck had the keys to Branch=s house and security gate, as well as the keys to his truck.
Branch=s housekeeper, Ruth Petty, was cleaning Branch=s house when she heard the security gate open. Petty looked outside and saw a man, later identified as Charles Taplin, fumbling and trying to open the door with a set of keys. Taplin then rang the doorbell, but Petty refused to open the front door and asked Taplin who he was and what he wanted. Taplin told her Branch sent him to the house. Petty, however, knew something was wrong because Branch would never give his keys to anyone. Taplin kicked the front door with his foot, and it flew open, striking Petty in the face. He then hit her in the face with the butt of a pistol and subsequently ordered Petty to lie on the ground. Taplin hollered at someone to Ahurry up,@ and a second person entered the house as Petty lay on the floor, face down. Petty did not have a chance to look at the face of the second person. After looting the house, the two men left.
On February 7, 2003, appellant reported his car, a black Honda, had been stolen the previous day, but that he subsequently found it. He explained to the police that he had been the victim of an armed robbery, but did not want to file an incident report or have the police look for the perpetrators. The officer to whom appellant reported the robbery found appellant=s story Astrange.@ Detective Dwayne Henderson, who was investigating the robbery in the smoke shop parking lot, believed appellant was involved in that robbery and tried to contact him, but appellant refused to meet with the police.
A little over a month after the robbery, Henderson compiled a photographic spread containing appellant=s photograph and presented the spread to Abbott. Abbott positively identified appellant. Petty was unable to identify appellant in a photographic spread, but identified Taplin as one of the robbers at Branch=s house. Longoria was also shown a photographic spread but was unable to identify anyone. Henderson learned that Taplin and appellant were known associates who referred to each other as cousins.
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