Harold Manning v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2006
Docket01-04-00866-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Harold Manning v. State (Harold Manning 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
Harold Manning v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion issued August 31, 2006 



In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01-04-00866-CR





HAROLD MANNING, Appellant


V.


THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee





On Appeal from the 182nd District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 960731





MEMORANDUM OPINION


          A jury convicted appellant, Harold Manning, of capital murder, and the trial court assessed his punishment at life in prison. The State did not seek the death penalty. See Tex. Pen. Code Ann. § 19.03(a)(2) (Vernon 2003). We determine (1) whether the trial court erred in allowing the State to question a panel of prospective jurors on the law of parties; (2) whether the trial court erred in giving a jury charge that included the law of parties; and (3) whether the evidence was legally sufficient to support the conviction. We affirm.

Background

          On the night of November 25, 2002, at approximately 11:40 p.m., Pasadena Police Department (“PPD”) Officer Chris Sadler responded to a priority call at a townhome in the East District of Pasadena. Upon finding the townhome’s front door wide open, Officer Sadler discovered a man—later identified as James “Jimmy” Wilson—lying on his stomach in a four-to-five-foot-wide pool of blood. One of the townhome’s three residents—later identified as Diana Sanchez—was attempting to hold Wilson up out of the pool of blood and was yelling for help. A second victim—later identified as Randal Ainsworth and also one of the townhome’s three residents—was found dead in the kitchen area.

          As Officer Sadler entered the residence, he saw Albert Mata—Sanchez’s boyfriend and one of the townhome’s three residents—and Glen Kuykendall, a friend of Ainsworth’s, attempting to flee the residence out of a back door. Both men were detained before they could leave the scene. It was learned that, upon finding Ainsworth’s deceased body in the townhome, Sanchez and Mata had immediately left because they were uncertain if the perpetrators were still inside the residence. After leaving, they went to a nearby store to call Kuykendall. Sanchez and Mata then returned to the townhome where they discovered Wilson alive. Sanchez rendered assistance to Wilson while Mata called “9-1-1.” At some point, Kuykendall arrived to offer assistance. The police arrived approximately 15 to 20 minutes after Sanchez had entered the townhome. Both Wilson and Ainsworth were found bound with duct tape around their wrists, head, and mouth. Wilson was later loaded onto a helicopter and life-flighted to receive medical care. He had suffered a slashed neck and 19 stab wounds. As a result of these injuries, Wilson underwent surgery to retrieve a piece of a metal knife that had been left in his body, as well as to repair the lining around his spinal cord. Ainsworth’s autopsy revealed that he died from multiple sharp-force injuries.

          Earlier on the night of the murder, Wilson had gone to the East Pasadena townhome to watch television and to smoke marihuana. While there, he saw appellant negotiate to purchase 10 pounds of marihuana from Ainsworth. After the deal was complete, appellant left, and Wilson and Ainsworth went to eat at a nearby restaurant. Shortly after Wilson and Ainsworth had returned to the townhome, appellant re-entered the townhome with a gun and ordered Wilson to lie on the dining-room floor. Appellant then began questioning Ainsworth as to the location of money and marihuana. Ainsworth directed appellant to an upstairs closet. Appellant then went upstairs twice and, on the second trip down, was carrying bags of marihuana.

          During this sequence of events, there was a second, unidentified intruder who stood to Wilson’s left as Wilson lay on his stomach in the dining room. Because Wilson could not see the intruder’s face and because the intruder did not speak, Wilson was unable to identify him or her. At that point, Wilson’s throat was cut; two people, whose faces Wilson could not see, taped him up; and, after having lain taped up for a few minutes, Wilson heard one of the two intruders say, “Let me do this white boy.” Wilson then felt someone straddle his back, punch him in the back of the head, and, finally, Wilson felt a tingling sensation across his whole body.

          Two days prior to Ainsworth’s murder, Ainsworth and his neighbor had been returning from buying groceries when they encountered appellant waiting outside of Ainsworth’s townhome. Appellant told Ainsworth that he was “slipping,” that he needed to watch himself because he had been leaving his townhome unlocked, and that somebody could get him.

          At some point in November of 2002—the month of the murder—appellant told his girlfriend, Laveka Montresse McNeil, that he wanted to rob Ainsworth and Mata. Appellant even admitted to contacting his co-conspirator, an individual known as “D.D.” or “D.Lo.,” in order to enlist his assistance with the robbery. On the night of the murder, prior to the robbery, appellant and his co-conspirator gathered several items in preparation for the robbery, including duct tape, a gun, a knife, and black clothing. After having left his residence with these items and having been gone for three hours, appellant and his coconspirator returned to appellant’s residence at approximately 1:00 a.m. with 40 pounds of marihuana, which they divided among themselves.

          Perhaps the most damaging evidence against appellant came from appellant’s own girlfriend, McNeil, who testified that on the day after the murder, while she and appellant were watching the news on television, a story came on regarding a murder and robbery in which one of the victims had been life-flighted to the hospital to receive medical care. McNeil testified that appellant, in reaction to this news story, declared, “Damn, he lived.”

          

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