Jason Lynn White v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 16, 2009
Docket13-08-00473-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Jason Lynn White v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-08-00473-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

JASON LYNN WHITE, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 156th District Court of Live Oak County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Justices Yañez, Rodriguez, and Benavides Memorandum Opinion by Justice Rodriguez

Appellant, Jason Lynn White, was found guilty of murder and sentenced to forty

years' confinement, plus a $4,000 fine. See TEX . PENAL CODE ANN . § 19.02(b)(1) (Vernon

2003).1 By three issues, appellant contends that the trial court abused its discretion by

1 Pursuant to section 19.02(b)(1) of the penal code, a person com m its the offense of m urder by (1) intentionally or knowingly, (2) causing the death, (3) of an individual. T EX . P EN AL C OD E A N N . § 19.02(b)(1) (Vernon 2003). denying his motion for new trial and that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient

to support the jury's rejection of his self-defense claim. We affirm.

I. Background

On April 28, 2007, appellant visited Charlotte Barrera. While he and Barrera sat

outside talking and drinking beer, Barrera’s boyfriend, David Earl Logan, stayed inside.

Appellant shot his 32.20 caliber gun several times just to pass the time. Logan then

stepped outside and turned off the outside lights and the radio. Barrera decided that it was

time to go inside and told appellant that Logan “gets angry and he has hit me before.”

According to Barrera, she entered the house and assumed appellant was "getting

ready to leave." When the dog started barking, Logan got up and went outside to check

on the dog. Barrera told Logan not to "mess with" or "kick" the dog. Logan responded by

slapping her. Barrera started crying and walked toward Logan, who then "shoved" her,

causing her to fall and roll on the floor. As she stood up, Logan "was walking to the

kitchen . . . and [she] heard him say . . . . And what the f---- are you going to do, mother

f---er." Barrera testified that Logan was standing at the front door, and "he was reaching

out the door, reaching out, next thing I know he went – he fell backwards, fell completely

backwards."

When asked if Logan threatened appellant, Barrera stated that "David may have –

David may have said something, I don't know. Like I said, he cussed out the door, I

thought he was cussing at the dog, and I wasn't paying much attention. . . ." Barrera stated

that she did not hear Logan tell appellant that he was going to kill him.

Pattie Teague, appellant's live-in girlfriend, testified that appellant told her, "I shot

[Logan] . . . . Because he came after me; he said he was going to kill me." However,

during the investigation, she told a Texas Ranger that appellant told her that he shot Logan

2 "[b]ecause she [Barrera] wanted me to." Teague explained that appellant was initially

trying to defend Barrera and that he "stepped into a domestic problem, if you want to know

the truth of the matter. . . . He did tell me he did try to leave, and she asked him not to."

Richard Russell, a highway patrolman for the Texas Department of Public Safety,

testified that he drove to the scene in response to an emergency call and found Logan's

body by the front door of the residence. Trooper Russell then proceeded to appellant’s

residence after being advised that appellant had informed a dispatcher that he had shot

Logan. Trooper Russell handcuffed appellant and read Miranda warnings to him.

According to Trooper Russell, appellant stated, "You don't have to read that to me, I shot

him." Trooper Russell informed appellant that he had to read the Miranda warnings, and

appellant stated, "Don't worry about it, I shot him." After Trooper Russell finished reading

the Miranda warnings, appellant took Trooper Russell to his closet and showed him the

gun he used to shoot Logan.

Desiree Deleon, a dispatcher, testified that she received the call from appellant

regarding the shooting. Appellant told her that he had “shot a guy” because he was scared

for his life. Appellant told Deleon, “I couldn't defend myself with a broken arm and he was

threatening me. He said he was going to kill me. So I went to my truck and got my gun

and shot him."

Reynaldo Fernandez, M.D., testified that he recovered a bullet from the body that

was from a 32.20 caliber rifle. The bullet went into Logan's chest and punctured the aorta.

When asked if a person with that type of injury could still walk around, Dr. Fernandez

replied, "This injury didn't hit the spinal cord, it didn't hit the brain, so without hitting the

spinal cord or the brain[,] you'd expect them to still be able to walk around or move their

3 arms and legs." When asked whether Logan's body had been moved, Dr. Fernandez

replied that he had not viewed the scene and did not have an opinion on that issue.

Oscar Rivera, a Texas Ranger, assisted with the processing of the crime scene. He

testified that Logan's body was found lying on the floor inside the residence by the front

door. According to Ranger Rivera, when Logan was shot, the shooter was standing

outside of the residence at the base of the front porch. Ranger Rivera testified that there

was no indication of any weapons around the deceased, and there was no indication that

Logan was outside the residence when he was shot. Ranger Rivera stated that he knew

Logan was not outside because a hole in the glass door was “consistent with [Logan]

standing behind the door." When asked whether Logan's body had been moved after he

was shot, Ranger Rivera testified that it had not because there were no blood smears

around the body and the splatter on the refrigerator was consistent with a conclusion that

Logan fell where he had been shot.

Ranger Rivera testified about inconsistencies in Barrera's, appellant's, and Teague's

versions of the events. Ranger Rivera stated that Barrera first told him that on the night

of the shooting, "she was asleep, the dog woke them up, that they went to investigate,

there was a noise, and Logan fell down back on top of her shot." Barrera claimed she had

never heard of appellant; however, Barrera later told Ranger Rivera "[t]hat she now knew

who [appellant] was, that he had been to the residence before, and he in fact was at the

residence that particular night and was drinking beer at that residence, [and] that he fired

some shots." When Ranger Rivera interviewed Barrera on the night of the shooting, she

did not tell him that Logan had assaulted her. According to Ranger Rivera, approximately

seven days after the shooting Barrera told him that Logan assaulted her. Ranger Rivera

4 believed that Barrera changed her story because she was trying to protect appellant.

Ranger Rivera testified that appellant's stories were inconsistent because he first told the

dispatcher that he was "fearing his life." When the officers arrived at the scene, he did not

tell them that he shot Logan because he was fearful. According to Ranger Rivera,

Teague's testimony that appellant "got in between" Logan and Barrera because they were

fighting was inconsistent with the evidence at the scene.

Appellant testified on his own behalf. He stated that he had his gun with him

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