in the Matter of E. B. S., a Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 19, 2019
Docket01-18-00005-CV
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
in the Matter of E. B. S., a Child, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Opinion issued February 19, 2019

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-18-00005-CV ———————————

IN RE E.B.S., A CHILD

On Appeal from the County Court at Law No. 1 Galveston County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 17-JV-0093

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, E.B.S., a juvenile, appeals from an order adjudicating her

delinquent for committing the offense of threatening to exhibit or use a firearm on

school property.1 After a disposition hearing, the trial court placed appellant on

1 See Act of May 23, 2007, 80th Leg., R.S., ch. 704, § 1, 2007 Tex. Gen. Laws 1331, 1331, amended by Act of May 24, 2017, 85th Leg., R.S., ch. 795, § 1, 2017 Tex. juvenile probation for twelve months. In her sole issue, appellant challenges the

legal sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s finding that she committed the

offense.

We affirm.

Background

In its first amended petition, the State alleged that appellant engaged in

delinquent conduct as follows:

[O]n or about the 6th day of March, 2017 in Galveston County, Texas, [E.B.S.] did then and there, in a manner intended to cause alarm to [M.B.] and/or [V.K.] and/or [T.O.] and/or [J.D.], intentionally threaten to exhibit and/or use a firearm at Dickinson High School, a public school, against the peace and dignity of the State, such alleged conduct constituting a Third Degree Felony pursuant to 37.125 of the Texas Education Code.

At the time of the conduct at issue, appellant was fifteen years old.

At the adjudication hearing, complainant M.B. testified that she and appellant

were classmates in their ninth-grade English class at Dickinson High School

(“DHS”). M.B. testified that, on March 6, 2017, she, appellant, and complainant

T.O. went to the school library together. While they were walking back to class,

appellant told M.B. and T.O. that she was “going to shoot up the school.” M.B.

Sess. Law Serv. 3349, 3349–50 (current version at TEX. EDUC. CODE ANN. § 37.125). We apply the version of the statute in effect at the time of the commission of the offense. See Act of May 24, 2017, 85th Leg., R.S., ch. 795, § 2, 2017 Tex. Sess. Law Serv. 3349, 3350. 2 testified that she was not worried about it until appellant also said that she had access

to a gun. M.B. told appellant that she was “crazy for doing something like that

because she could go to jail for it.” Appellant replied that “that was the point” and

laughed. M.B. noted that appellant’s laughter was not “the joking type.” M.B.

testified that she was alarmed and feared for her life. She was concerned that

appellant was “going to shoot up the school” and would shoot her or her friends.

M.B. further testified that, when she, appellant, and T.O. arrived back in class,

appellant sat down, asked how to spell certain students’ names, which included

complainant J.D., and wrote something in a book. Appellant told M.B. that she

would let her know when she was “going to shoot the school” and added that it would

occur during her Spanish class because students in that class had been rude to her.

M.B. did not report the matter to school officials because she was afraid that

appellant would discover that she had told. Rather, M.B. reported appellant’s

statements to her mother by text. M.B. also told another classmate, complainant

V.K., who was J.D.’s best friend, to warn J.D. that appellant had listed her as

someone whom she would shoot. After class, M.B. also went to find J.D.

T.O., who was also a student in appellant’s English class, testified that, on

March 6, 2017, while she, appellant, and M.B. were walking back to class from the

library, appellant was humming a song that appellant said was “about shooting the

school up.” At first, T.O. thought that appellant was joking. However, T.O. felt

3 nervous and feared for her life after appellant stated that, if given the chance, she

would shoot certain people, including J.D. She noted that she was the most afraid

that she had ever been. When T.O. and M.B. asked appellant whether she would kill

them, she replied that she would not because she liked them. When another student

opened the door to their classroom, however, appellant said, “Yes, him I would kill.”

T.O. further testified that, once she, appellant, and M.B. returned to class,

appellant said that, on the day that the shooting was to take place, T.O. would hear

appellant running down the hallway, hear the “sound of the gun going against the

locker,” and hear appellant saying, “I’m coming for you.” T.O. believed that

appellant intended to alarm her, and she feared for her safety and for that of the other

students. T.O. decided that, after class, she would report the matter to school

officials. However, before she got to the office, another student had reported it.

V.K., who was also a student in appellant’s English class, testified that when

appellant, M.B., and T.O. returned from the library on March 6, 2017, appellant

stated that she was “going to shoot up the school” and that she did not care whether

she went to jail. V.K. noted that she had known appellant since elementary school,

knew her well enough to discern when she was joking and when not, and V.K.

believed that appellant was not joking and intended to scare her. Immediately after

class, V.K. told J.D. about appellant’s threat. Although V.K. went to the principal’s

office because she was scared, she did not report the matter.

4 J.D., who was a student in appellant’s ninth-grade Spanish class, testified that

she had known appellant since the sixth grade. J.D. and her friends sometimes had

disagreements with appellant. On March 6, 2017, V.K. told J.D. about appellant’s

threat to bring a gun to school and to use it on her. J.D. took the comments seriously,

felt that appellant intended to scare her, and felt that her life was in danger. She

reported appellant’s comments to school officials.

DHS assistant principal, Joseph Trahan, testified that, on March 6, 2017, he

received a phone call from a concerned parent about a gun threat on campus. Trahan

obtained statements from M.B., T.O., V.K., and J.D., who each reported similar facts

regarding a threat to the campus involving a gun and a “possible hit list.,” i.e., the

list that appellant had made in class. After Trahan contacted law enforcement, he

called appellant to his office, where he searched her bag for weapons and a female

assistant principal searched appellant’s person. No weapons were found. Appellant

gave Trahan the following statement, which the trial court admitted into evidence:

What I said I me[a]nt as a joke. I had no intention of harming anyone. What I said is that I would help but it was a joke. I said I would help if anyone had the idea but it was a joke. I don’t want to harm anyone. I don’t like violence. I said I would help if anyone had the idea to shoot up the school.

Trahan asked appellant for the reported “hit list,” and she pulled a spiral

notebook from her bag and showed it to him. In the notebook, which the trial court

admitted into evidence, she had written the following note:

5 F–Freddy’s coming to get ya. U–You are screwed. N–Nowhere you can hide at all! From the Fazbear Arcade People I hate: 1. [J.D.] 2. [D.G.] 3. [J.M.]

Trahan noted that the names of the students on the list matched those given by

complainants as students whom appellant had threatened to shoot.

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