Jason Lynn McKnight A/K/A James Green A/K/A James McKnight v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 24, 2023
Docket13-22-00453-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Jason Lynn McKnight A/K/A James Green A/K/A James McKnight v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-22-00453-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

JASON LYNN MCKNIGHT A/K/A JAMES GREEN A/K/A JAMES MCKNIGHT, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 252nd District Court of Jefferson County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Chief Justice Contreras and Justices Benavides and Longoria Memorandum Opinion by Justice Benavides

Appellant Jason Lynn McKnight a/k/a James Green a/k/a James McKnight appeals

his conviction for failing to stop and render aid in an accident involving death, a second-

degree felony for which punishment was enhanced due to the jury’s finding that McKnight

was a habitual offender. See TEX. TRANSP. CODE ANN. §§ 550.021(C)(1)(A), 550.023; TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 12.42(d). The jury sentenced McKnight to 27.5 years in prison. By

three issues, McKnight contends that: (1) the evidence was insufficient to show that he

acted with the necessary mens rea; (2) the trial court inappropriately allowed a witness to

speculate about McKnight’s subjective mental state; and (3) the evidence was insufficient

to show that McKnight used or exhibited a deadly weapon during the commission of the

offense. We affirm as modified.

I. BACKGROUND1

It is undisputed that on March 29, 2020, at around 9:00 a.m., McKnight, driving his

Chevrolet truck, struck and fatally injured cyclist Edward Stedman. According to Barrett

Lindsay, an eyewitness to the accident, he was driving that day on Delaware Street in

Beaumont about “[a] hundred yards” behind a “red or maroon” Chevrolet truck. It is

undisputed that this was McKnight’s truck. Lindsay observed the truck in “[t]he right

lane . . . . driving very close to the curb.” Because Lindsay “was doing about 30 miles an

hour,” he estimated McKnight “was doing about the same.” Lindsay then noticed “this

lump, helicopter spinning up into the air. It bounced on the hood of the maroon truck, and

I think it . . . hit his windshield and then slid off.” Lindsay initially “thought it was debris or

a trash can,” but when he was close enough to discover that the “lump” was actually a

person, he called 911. Lindsay testified that it was “[v]ery” apparent that this person

needed medical treatment.

Lindsay summarized McKnight’s actions after the accident as follows:

Immediately after he hit the bicyclist, he turned on his hazards, slowed down 1 This appeal was transferred to this Court from the Ninth Court of Appeals in Beaumont by order

of the Texas Supreme Court. See TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 73.001 (granting the supreme court the authority to transfer cases from one court of appeals to another at any time that there is “good cause” for the transfer). 2 to about 5 miles an hour . . . . He drove—again, I’m not great with distance, but ballpark 100 yards [and] stopped. He stayed stopped for 20, 30 seconds, maybe a minute and then started going again at about 5 miles an hour. He drove for about another 100, 150 yards. I remember he was—you know, at that part of Delaware there comes around a turn and a curve, so he was coming up on the curve in the street, and he stopped a second time and stayed stopped I think a little longer the second time if I remember right, or maybe a minute and then he proceeded—and then he started driving and proceeded on down the road.

Lindsay stayed at the scene and spoke with Officer Jarrett Pantallion of the

Beaumont Police Department. Body camera footage from this interaction was admitted

into evidence. In this footage, Lindsay states that he was about “thirty yards back” at the

time of impact. He explained he did not see anything prior to the collision, but he observed

the collision itself. Following the collision, he saw that McKnight drove “100 yards down

the road, and turned his hazards on, uh, and then, crept forward at 5 miles an hour

another 100—100 yards and then kind of stopped for a minute . . . and then went on

forward, but still with his hazards on.”

The 911 call Lindsay made was also admitted into evidence. In this call, Lindsay

tells the 911 operator that the driver responsible for the accident is about “100 yards”

down the road. He then explains that he “can’t tell if it’s stopping or not” and asks whether

he should “go after the vehicle.” Later in the call, he explains that the driver of the truck

“turned his hazards on 200 yards down the road,” but that the driver had since “gone on.”

At the conclusion of the call, Lindsay can be heard speaking with an unidentified person

about the maroon truck and its driver. This unidentified person says, “He knew he hit it,”

to which Lindsay responds, “Yeah—oh, yeah.”

Dr. Orlando Schaening, another eyewitness, testified that McKnight’s truck had its

3 hazards on prior to the accident. Dr. Schaening explained that he was about “60 to 70

feet” in front of McKnight when he heard a “very loud thumping sound.” Dr. Schaening did

not observe the accident in question, but he noticed that “the cyclist was down and he

wasn’t moving,” so he pulled over to render aid.

Jasmine Durst also testified about the collision and the events that followed.

According to Durst, she observed “a man’s bike flip and he hit the ground.” She then

noticed that “the driver of the truck, the maroon truck, he kept going, but he kept veering,

like, to the right side of the—by the curb, but he kept going. So, we kind strayed [sic]

behind him because we w[ere] in shock.” Durst said the driver “kinda stopped,” and she

thought “he was gonna stop and go back,” but he eventually “kept pursuing towards the

Eastex Freeway area.” Durst believed that it was “[v]ery apparent” that McKnight had

been involved in an accident, and it was also apparent that the bicyclist needed medical

care.

Demitri Oliver was the driver of the vehicle in which Durst was a passenger. He

testified that he observed the driver of a truck hit the back tire of the bicycle and then the

truck ran directly over the cyclist. Oliver explained the driver “wasn’t really going that fast.

Like 25, 35 miles an hour.” Oliver testified that following the accident, the driver did not

stop or slow down, “[h]e kept going.” Oliver and Durst both testified that they initially

followed McKnight for a short period of time, turned back to check on Stedman, and then

attempted to catch up with McKnight again. However, police had already stopped

McKnight by the time the two located him.

Dash camera footage from Detective Amber McMichael’s police unit was admitted

4 into evidence. In this footage, McKnight’s truck is straddling two lanes of traffic while

stopped at the intersection of Delaware and Eastex Freeway. McKnight then pulls up next

to a pump at a gas station and Detective McMichael begins conducting a traffic stop.

Portions of Detective McMichael’s and Officer Ryan Callesto’s body camera

footage were also admitted into evidence. In this footage, McKnight tells the officers that

his vision is impaired,2 so he ordinarily utilizes a driver. However, he stated that he was

on his way to deliver food to his driver, as she had not had anything to eat recently. He

stated that he was watching the “white lines” between the lanes of traffic to avoid hitting

another car. He acknowledged that he “heard something,” and knew he “hit something,”

but explained that he believed it was a garbage can and “just kept going.” When the

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Jason Lynn McKnight A/K/A James Green A/K/A James McKnight v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jason-lynn-mcknight-aka-james-green-aka-james-mcknight-v-the-state-of-texapp-2023.