James R. Thompson v. State

425 S.W.3d 480, 2012 WL 668937, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 1579
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 1, 2012
Docket01-10-00398-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 425 S.W.3d 480 (James R. Thompson 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
James R. Thompson v. State, 425 S.W.3d 480, 2012 WL 668937, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 1579 (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

MICHAEL MASSENGALE, Justice.

A jury found appellant James Russell Thompson guilty of murdering his former lover, Giselle Teapo, and sentenced him to life imprisonment. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.02(b) (West 2011) (establishing offense of murder). Thompson pleaded “true” to an enhancement paragraph which alleged a prior federal conviction for possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, and the judgment reflects an affirmative finding that a deadly weapon was used. Thompson raises four issues on appeal: (1) the evidence against him on the murder charge was wholly circumstantial and therefore legally insufficient; (2) the trial court abused its discretion when it admitted expert evidence regarding mobile phone records; (3) the trial court abused its discretion when it admitted evidence of an extraneous offense during the punishment phase, because the evidence did not show Thompson’s culpability beyond a reasonable doubt; and (4) the evidence concerning the extraneous offense was legally insufficient. We affirm the judgment.

Background

James Russell Thompson and Giselle Teapo lived together in Thompson’s rental home with Teapo’s minor children. The State presented evidence at trial that Thompson was obsessed with Teapo. A federal parole officer who monitored Thompson in connection with a prior conviction for dealing cocaine knew about the couple. He testified that Thompson was often frustrated and distraught about the relationship. Moreover, Teapo’s daughter told an investigating officer that her mother was being stalked by Thompson. Tea* po’s work supervisor similarly testified that he had to change Teapo’s extension number because Thompson called her workplace so much one day that it interfered with her duties.

Multiple witnesses corroborated an incident in which Thompson violently choked Teapo at their home. Officer D. Cannady responded to an early morning 911 call from the house. He arrived to find Teapo visibly upset, with blood smeared on her face and red marks around her neck. Tea-po told Cannady that Thompson choked her until blood came out of her nose and mouth. He said he would kill her before she could be with another man. Teapo’s sister testified that she received a contemporaneous phone call in which Teapo said *484 that Thompson had tried to kill her. When the sister arrived at Thompson’s house, she saw the blood and bruising on Teapo. Four other witnesses also testified to having seen Teapo’s injuries after the choking incident. Teapo and her children moved- out of Thompson’s house immediately afterwards.

Thompson’s anger apparently related to Teapo’s relationship with another man. D. Warren testified that he carried on a romantic relationship with Teapo while she was still cohabitating with Thompson. According to Warren, Teapo had accepted a marriage proposal from him. He also purchased a pickup truck for her use. Thompson apparently knew about Warren and once made a “disturbing” call to Warren’s cell phone.

Over the weekend prior to her death, Teapo told multiple relatives that she had received hundreds of harassing calls from Thompson on her mobile phone. She informed her sister and daughter that she intended to report Thompson’s harassment to his parole officer on Monday morning. According to Teapo’s daughter, Teapo told Thompson about her intention of reporting him. Sunday night of that same weekend, Teapo’s sister received a late phone call from Thompson saying that he had had his last conversation with Teapo.

On Monday morning, October 27, 2008, a “large, fair skin black man” was seen sitting in the driver’s seat of a dark blue Dodge Intrepid parked on the street where Teapo’s aunt lived and where Teapo was then staying with her children. Approximately one hour later, Teapo was shot to death in her aunt’s driveway. A witness testified that she had just arrived home when she heard a woman’s scream and shots fired. Upon darting outside, she saw a “tall” man “with dark skin” walking away from a parked truck toward a “dark” car. As she called 911, she peered out the window to see the dark-colored car return. She saw the man get out and walk back toward the truck, and the man fired more shots before driving off again.

Police, responding to the 911 call, arrived to discover Teapo’s dead body hanging out of the door of Warren’s pickup truck. She had been shot six times. A neighbor identified Thompson from a photo array as the man he had seen in the Dodge Intrepid before the shooting. Other testimony established that Thompson had recently purchased a blue Dodge Intrepid.

The State called R. Hicks of Boasso America to testify about Thompson’s unusual behavior on the morning of the shooting. Ten days beforehand, Thompson had come to Boasso America in Chan-nelview to apply for a job. A week after that, Hicks called Thompson to tell him to come to work at 8:30 a.m. the next Monday morning. Thompson was advised to wear work-appropriate clothing and steel-toe boots. At 8:29 a.m. Monday morning, the approximate time of the shooting, Thompson called Hicks from his mobile phone to say that he had been at the hospital with his grandchildren and that he would be running 30 to 45 minutes late. Hicks recalled that Thompson actually arrived at about 9:50 a.m. wearing a “very nice” pullover, which Hicks did not consider appropriate for the kind of work Thompson would do. Thompson used his mobile phone incessantly as Hicks filled out his paperwork. At about. 11:00 a.m., during an orientation, Thompson left Hicks’s office to take a call, and upon his return he said that he had to leave for a family emergency.

The State offered Thompson’s mobile phone records into evidence. Officer M. Rome of the Houston Police Department reviewed the records produced by Cricket Communications, Thompson’s mobile *485 phone service provider. According to Rome, who had been trained in interpreting such records, each entry indicated which antenna initially accepted a “communication event” from Thompson’s' phone. Rome testified that a mobile phone' call usually routes through the geographically closest antenna, but that a call may sometimes get “push[ed] off’ to another available tower nearby. Rome testified that Thompson’s phone accessed several Cricket antennas near the crime scene in southwest Houston around the time of the shooting, and then, during the next 20 minutes, it accessed. Cricket antennas along the route toward Thompson’s apartment in northeast Houston.

The jury convicted Thompson of murder and sentenced him to life imprisonment. Thompson appeals from this conviction. Analysis

I. Sufficiency of the evidence

Thompson argues in his first issue that the evidence' at trial was legally insufficient to convict him of murder, since the evidence was entirely circumstantial and depended upon “an impermissible stacking of inferences.”

In assessing legal sufficiency, we determine whether, based on all of the evidence viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, a rational jury could have found the essential elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 318-19, 99 S.Ct. 2781, 2788-89, 61 L.Ed.2d 560 (1979);

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
425 S.W.3d 480, 2012 WL 668937, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 1579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-r-thompson-v-state-texapp-2012.