in the Matter of X.J.T.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 27, 2014
Docket02-13-00176-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Matter of X.J.T. (in the Matter of X.J.T.) 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
in the Matter of X.J.T., (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 02-13-00176-CV

IN THE MATTER OF X.J.T.

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FROM THE 323RD DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION 1

X.J.T. appeals a jury verdict adjudicating him guilty of delinquent conduct

by committing two counts of aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon and the

trial court’s order committing him to the Texas Juvenile Justice Department for

five years. We modify the trial court’s judgment in part and affirm as modified.

Motion to Suppress

In his first issue, appellant, who was a sixteen-year-old eleventh-grader at

the time of the offenses, contends that the trial court erred by denying his motion

1 See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. to suppress statements he made to Texas law enforcement officers while he was

in Mississippi. Appellant argues that the statements were inadmissible because

they were taken in violation of section 51.095 of the Texas family code and the

State did not introduce any alternative evidence that the statements were taken

in compliance with Mississippi law.

Section 51.095 of the family code provides that a juvenile’s statement to

officers during a custodial interrogation is admissible only if it complies with a

laundry list of safeguards. Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 51.095(a), (d) (West Supp.

2013). However, section 51.095(b)(2)(B)(i) provides that a statement may

otherwise be admissible if it was recorded by an electronic recording device in

another state in compliance with that state’s laws. Id. § 51.095(b)(2)(B)(i). The

State does not dispute that appellant was in custody when he made the

statement at issue and that the statement was not taken in compliance with

section 51.095(a). However, the State contends that appellant has pointed to no

evidence showing that the statement was not taken in compliance with

Mississippi law.

Testimony Regarding Statement

At a hearing outside the jury’s presence, Detective Edward Raynsford from

the Fort Worth police department testified that he and Detective K.D. Koralewski

interviewed appellant in Mississippi in January 2013 at the Leflore County

Correctional Facility. An officer from the Greenwood, Mississippi police

2 department, Sergeant Byars, was also present. They recorded a statement from

appellant that was about an hour long.

Before the officers obtained the statement, a deputy brought appellant to

them from the secured part of the correctional facility. Detectives Raynsford and

Koralewski, and Sergeant Byars, walked with appellant into a courtroom and sat

in the jury box while appellant appeared before the judge. The judge asked them

to approach; Detective Raynsford showed his paperwork and placed a recorder

between the judge and appellant. According to Detective Raynsford, everything

that took place in the courtroom was recorded. The judge read appellant his

rights. The detectives were then “shown out of the back of the courtroom” and

went into an interview room. Detective Raynsford testified that the officers had

taken their guns off before entering the courtroom, did not have them in the

interview room, and were never armed in front of appellant.

Detective Raynsford denied threatening appellant, depriving him of

anything he asked for, or making promises to elicit a statement. But he did admit

that he told appellant that his brother had made some statements that Detective

Raynsford believed “were true at that time” to see how appellant would react.

Detective Raynsford explained that he had told appellant truthfully what he had

been hearing from other people. Detective Raynsford did not remember

appellant’s asking for a lawyer or a parent, nor asking to terminate the interview.

Judge Palmer, the justice court judge of Leflore County, testified that his

understanding when the detectives visited him was that they were in Mississippi

3 to extradite appellant and transport him back to Texas. Judge Palmer confirmed

that appellant would have been considered a juvenile under Mississippi law but

that a juvenile charged with armed robbery––the Mississippi equivalent of

aggravated robbery––would be treated as an adult. He testified about the initial

appearance a person charged with armed robbery would face:

And at that initial appearance, they are read the charge or charges against them, whatever the matter -- it may be one or several counts. And they also go through basically a checklist of rights that have to be read to that person who is charged with that felony. The judge makes sure they understand those rights.

They are asked whether or not they can afford an attorney. If they cannot afford an attorney, one is provided with -- for them through the public defender’s office. And also the bond is also set at that particular proceeding.

He characterized appellant’s appearance before him with Detectives Raynsford

and Koralewski as such an initial appearance. Judge Palmer confirmed that he

read appellant his rights as set forth in exhibits 75 and 76 and that appellant

initialed each box, indicating “that he understood his rights . . . based upon the

form.”

Judge Palmer testified that neither detective made “any moves toward”

appellant or threatened him while in the courtroom. He verified that the

conversation was recorded. The judge did not remember the officers being in the

jury box; he said he thought they were nearby but did not barricade appellant.

He also did not remember whether the officers had their weapons, but he said

law enforcement officers were allowed to carry weapons in the courtroom.

4 Judge Palmer did not recall setting a bond and thought appellant was

before him only to read him his rights. It was the judge’s understanding that

Texas had a hold on appellant at the time. Judge Palmer also testified that it was

possible appellant was being held without bond because of the hold, but he did

not know if that was the case. He said during cross-examination that “based

upon this situation, it was not requested a bond be set due to the fact that this

young person was being extradited.” However, Judge Palmer also testified that,

regardless, whether appellant was being held without bond did not bear upon the

voluntariness of the statement.

Appellant testified that he had been held in a holding cell with “the other

grown people” and that he was transported before the judge in handcuffs and

shackles. Although Detective Raynsford had denied talking to appellant outside

the courtroom other than to say hello, appellant testified that the officers told him

how to respond to the judge, that they needed him to sign some papers, and that

they needed a statement from him. According to appellant, one of the detectives

was armed in the courtroom, the other took out his gun when they came out of

the courtroom, and they were both armed in the interview room. Appellant said

they had a conversation outside the interview room about what appellant had

been involved in and who the officers believed had been involved.

Appellant testified that he felt that he had to talk to the detectives because

he had to ride all the way back to Texas with them and they had a “Class A”

warrant out for him, which appellant explained meant that he was not supposed

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