James Deron Smith, Sr. v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 29, 2023
Docket01-22-00471-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
James Deron Smith, Sr. v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Opinion issued June 29, 2023

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-22-00471-CR ——————————— JAMES DERON SMITH, SR., Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 56th District Court Galveston County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 19-CR-1367

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found Appellant James Deron Smith, Sr. guilty of Aggravated

Assault Causing Serious Bodily Injury, a second-degree felony, and sentenced him

to fifteen years’ confinement in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department

of Criminal Justice. In his sole issue, Appellant argues “the trial court committed jury charge

error by filing a jury charge in this cause that contained handwritten markings on

it, specifically: certain sentences were underlined, and certain phrases were circled

and there was a handwritten bracket placed in the margin.” Appellant argues he

was harmed as a result of the jury charge error because his contention that he was

acting in self-defense “was diminished by the[] markings on the charge.”

We affirm.

Background

Appellant James Deron Smith, Sr. (“Smith”) and the complainant, Maurice

Williams (“Williams”), were inmates in the Galveston County Jail. Smith and

Williams were in the same jail pod, awaiting disposition of their respective

criminal charges. Their bunks were side by side, and they played cards most days.

On October 20, 2018, Smith was playing poker with Williams and several

other inmates.1 At around midnight, Williams accused Smith of cheating.

Williams and Smith exchanged words at the game table. Williams proceeded to

his bunk. Smith remained at the table for a short period and then returned to his

bunk. At that point, a fight ensued. Smith’s and Williams’ versions of events

differ as to who started the fight and whether Smith struck Williams in self-

1 The poker game began on October 19, 2018 but the fight occurred early on October 20, 2018.

2 defense. Williams sustained significant injuries, including the loss of sight in one

eye and a broken nose.

Smith was charged with Aggravated Assault Causing Serious Bodily Injury.

He pleaded not guilty.

A. The Trial

The following witnesses testified for the State at trial: Lieutenant Scott

Finlaw, Detective Smitty Hill, Lieutenant Shawn Lozica, Williams, and Deputy

Eusebio Alvarez.

B. Lieutenant Finlaw2

Lieutenant Scott Finlaw with the Galveston County Sheriff’s Office

(“Lieutenant Finlaw”) testified that he supervises forty to forty-eight staff members

at the Galveston County Jail. Those staff members collectively supervise up to

1,150 inmates. The inmates are housed in “pods.” Each pod has bunks,

bathrooms, and showers.

On October 20, 2018, Smith and Williams were assigned to the same pod.

Lieutenant Finlaw was working as a jail supervisor that night when he responded

to a report of an “inmate fight” in Smith’s and Williams’ pod. He arrived at the

pod to find Williams and Smith “in an altercation.” Williams appeared to have

“significant” injuries and was taken to the jail’s medical facility. Smith arrived at

2 Lieutenant Finlaw was a Sergeant at the time of the fight.

3 the medical facility soon after. He had some injuries on his hand. Lieutenant

Finlaw testified that during his twelve years at the jail, he has responded to

“hundreds” of inmate fights, and Williams’ injuries were the most severe he has

seen.

Lieutenant Finlaw testified that another deputy at the jail handed him a

bloody eyeglass lens found near the bunk area in Smith’s and Williams’ pod after

the fight. Lieutenant Finlaw gave the lens to another deputy who was going to the

hospital with Williams because Lieutenant Finlaw “wanted to show them if the

injury had come from that.” The deputy transported the lens to the hospital and

then returned it to Lieutenant Finlaw, who kept the lens for approximately a month

and then discarded it. On cross-examination, Lieutenant Finlaw agreed the lens

should have been preserved and photographed at the scene. He testified that no

cameras had captured the fight, and he did not write a report after the fight.

Lieutenant Finlaw interviewed Smith, who told him Williams started the

fight. Lieutenant Finlaw believes Smith may have said his glasses were knocked

off during the fight. Lieutenant Finlaw did not interview Williams. He treated the

episode as an “inmate fight.” He testified that charges were not filed immediately

after the fight because he had to go through the administration.

Lieutenant Finlaw testified that gambling is prohibited in the jail. If inmates

get caught fighting, they go to lockdown or a segregation cell.

4 C. Detective Hill

Detective Smitty Hill (“Detective Hill”) with the Galveston County Sheriff’s

Office testified that he was brought into the investigation in February 2019, about

four months after the fight. He was brought in to help with paperwork to facilitate

the filing of charges. Detective Hill determined that before filing charges,

additional investigation was required, including interviews of the victim,

witnesses, and the offender.

Detective Hill interviewed jail supervisors and obtained their reports to

ascertain what happened. He tried to interview three witnesses who were in the jail

pod that night, but two had been released and the third declined to participate.

Detective Hill and his supervisor, Lieutenant Shawn Lozica (“Lieutenant Lozica”),

also interviewed several jail deputies who were on duty the night of the fight.

After gathering medical records, interviewing Williams, and attempting to

interview Smith, Detective Hill and Lieutenant Lozica believed they had probable

cause to file a warrant. Based on the statement from Deputy Eusebia Alvarez

(“Deputy Alvarez”), who witnessed the fight, Detective Hill determined Smith

assaulted Williams.

Detective Hill testified the investigation should have been handled by a

detective, not in-house by the jail, because it was a “major crime,” which is how

the Sheriff’s Office classifies an aggravated assault. He felt little to no

5 investigation had been conducted when charges originally “were being filed,” and

he felt it was better to have “as complete of an investigation as possible . . . before

filing charges.” Detective Hill recalled that someone tried to get the videotape of

the fight, but it was no longer in existence because several months had passed

between the day of the incident and his involvement.

Detective Hill testified that there was no information reflecting Williams had

started the fight. His investigation indicated instead that Smith had been the

aggressor. Detective Hill testified that Smith’s eyeglasses were damaged and that

the glasses had been slapped off his face. The glasses were recovered in a puddle

of blood in the pod. Detective Hill believed the glasses were used as a weapon, but

he acknowledged that this was speculation on his part.

D. Lieutenant Lozica

Lieutenant Lozica works in the Galveston County Sheriff’s Organized Crime

Task Force, where he supervises thirty-eight detectives in various units. The Task

Force investigates narcotics, violent crimes, gang members, and assists with other

investigations as necessary. Lieutenant Lozica became involved with the

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