Jarrell Freeman v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 18, 2011
Docket14-09-00399-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jarrell Freeman v. State (Jarrell Freeman 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
Jarrell Freeman v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Reversed and Remanded; Opinion filed August 18, 2011.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

___________________

NO. 14-09-00399-CR

JARRELL Freeman, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 339th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1143833

OPINION

            Appellant Jarrell Freeman argues that his conviction for aggravated robbery must be reversed because he was egregiously harmed by the trial court’s failure to instruct the jury sua sponte that it could not convict appellant based solely on the testimony of accomplices.  Because we agree that rational jurors would have found the State’s case significantly less persuasive if they had been properly instructed, we agree.  We accordingly reverse and remand the case for a new trial.    

I.  Factual and Procedural Background

            Between 10:30 and 11:00 p.m. on November 29, 2007, Rebecca Arredondo noticed that a gold or brown four-door car had backed into the driveway of her duplex on Fresa in Pasadena.  As she watched, three male passengers exited the vehicle.  Arredondo could not describe the men, but she thought that they wore long pants and long-sleeved shirts.  The man nearest to her wore a blue or black bandana over his face and hid something under his arm.  When the men began walking toward the convenience store on the corner of Fresa and Lafferty, Arredondo feared that they were going to rob it, and she immediately telephoned 911.  Arredondo was still on the phone several minutes later when she heard and saw the car slowly pull out of the driveway.  She reported this to the 911 dispatcher.

            Officer Joseph Gonzales of the Pasadena Police Department was driving on Fresa when he heard the call about a suspicious four-door, gold-colored vehicle.  As he approached the convenience store, he saw three people crouched outside.  He pulled into the parking lot as the three people ran toward the front of the store.  Believing there was a possible robbery in progress, he called for assistance. 

            Store owner Abdul Seth and employee Eugene Manger were working at the convenience store that night when three black men with dark cloths over their faces entered.  Seth could state only that the cloths were a dark color, but Manger stated that they were blue.  Both Seth and Manger testified that one man wore jeans and a black long-sleeved t-shirt and another man wore a red long-sleeved t-shirt.  Seth did not know what the third man wore, but Manger testified that he wore black clothing as well.  Seth testified that he believed from the robbers’ voices that they were black.  The police did not ask Seth for physical descriptions of the men, but at trial he estimated that the perpetrators were 5'6" or 5'7", and one of them looked heavy.  While one of the men held the door and yelled at the others to hurry, another man pointed a gun at Manger and ordered him to lie on the ground.  The third man pointed a gun at Seth and ordered him to open the cash register.  The man stole cash from the register and grabbed cigars and cigarettes from behind the counter.  All three men then ran out of the store, past Gonzales’s patrol car, and down Fresa.  According to Gonzales, one of the men was wearing dark pants and a dark long-sleeved shirt, and another was wearing dark pants and a dark hoodie.  The third man wore long pants and a red shirt.  All three suspects had their faces covered.  Gonzales pursued them in his patrol car until the three people entered a wooded area.  Shortly thereafter, he joined other officers who had detained Alegra Coleman, the driver of the gold, four-door vehicle.  Coleman lived in the apartment complex on the other side of the wooded area where the three suspects who fled on foot disappeared from view.

            Meanwhile, police continued their efforts to track the remaining suspects.  The wooded area was muddy, and tracking dogs were unable to trace the suspects, but officers found and collected evidence that marked the suspects’ path.  They found a piece of black cloth and a baseball cap in the parking lot of the convenience store.  A trail of cigars and cigarettes was found along the suspects’ route down Fresa to the wooded area.  Someone had cut the bottom of the fence that separated the wooded area from the apartment complex where Coleman lived, and there were signs that someone had slid through the mud below the cut in the fence.  Near the fence, officers found a second piece of black cloth “tied in the shape of a bandana.”

            A little after 2:00 a.m., patrol officers went to Coleman’s apartment.  Through a window, they saw three black males in the living room.  Appellant was sleeping on the couch, while another man slept in a recliner and the third man lay on the floor.  The men with appellant were later identified as appellant’s brother Jonathan Freeman and Coleman’s live-in boyfriend Nickalus Roberts.  Police knocked and announced themselves, and appellant answered the door.  He was wearing a white shirt and dark blue pants or shorts.  When he opened the door, police saw a pair of shoes with fresh mud on them near the dining-room table, and a black hoodie was on the floor nearby.  Police handcuffed all three men and allowed them to sit on the couch while awaiting detectives. 

            After the three suspects were arrested and transported from the apartment, police sought and obtained Coleman’s consent to search the apartment.  They transported her back to her apartment, and she remained in the living room during the search.  In the apartment, officers found overalls and two pairs of pants with fresh mud on them.  Behind a panel used to access plumbing, police also found some damp, dirty shirts with grass on them and a 38-caliber gun with mud embedded in the backstrap.  On the couch in the living room, police found “some pieces of cloth, possibly of a shirt.”  Jonathan Freeman’s wallet containing fifty dollars was on the back of the couch.  In a closet, police found a $100 bill and a bill of sale for Roberts’s purchase of a car a year earlier.

            Coleman, Roberts, and the Freeman brothers were indicted for aggravated robbery, and Coleman and Roberts pleaded guilty.[1]

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