Jason Michael Sorrells v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2011
Docket02-10-00128-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jason Michael Sorrells v. State (Jason Michael Sorrells 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
Jason Michael Sorrells v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

02-10-127&128-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NOS. 02-10-00127-CR

          02-10-00128-CR

Jason Michael Sorrells

APPELLANT

V.

The State of Texas

STATE

----------

FROM THE 355th District Court OF Hood COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

Introduction

          Appellant Jason Michael Sorrells asks us to reverse his convictions for unlawful possession of a firearm, evading arrest, deadly conduct, and nine counts of aggravated assault of peace officers, claiming that the evidence is insufficient and that his trial counsel was ineffective.  We affirm.

Background Facts and Procedural History

          Appellant moved out of Lesley Arterburn’s trailer house on the outskirts of Granbury sometime around Thanksgiving 2008.  One night just before Christmas, he went back to retrieve some of his belongings.  Friends were visiting Lesley that night, and one of them, Darla Jorden, walked outside to meet Appellant when he arrived.  Darla asked him what he wanted; he said his tent; she gathered it from the porch, tossed it into the back of his pickup truck, and asked him to leave.  He refused, claiming there still were more things he wanted.  Darla replied that she did not see anything else, repeated her request that he leave, and suggested that he could deal with the other things later.  Appellant got upset, which resulted in his yelling, swearing, and revving his engine.

          Lesley and her other guests came out of the house.  Randea Cowen, who had known Appellant for a couple of years, thought she could persuade him to come back for the rest of his things some other time.  While she talked to him in the doorway of his truck, Lesley walked up behind her.  Appellant and Lesley started arguing, and their argument escalated to Appellant’s reaching past Randea and grabbing Lesley by the neck.

          John Ahnson stepped in at that point and engaged Appellant in a fist fight.  The two tussled in the grass, on the concrete, and inside the bed of Appellant’s pickup truck before Appellant retreated behind the steering wheel.  He gunned the motor and plowed through the yard, swerving at the others as they dodged and scattered.  After he left, Lesley and her guests retired to the house and called the sheriff’s department.

          Appellant stopped briefly at the trailer park where he was staying and then went to Curtis Proctor’s house.  He asked Curtis if he could borrow a gun to take “deer hunting” in the morning.  Curtis lent him a rifle with a scope and four rounds of .30–06 ammunition.  Appellant took the rifle and hid in the woods across from Lesley’s home.

          Peering through the rifle scope from his hiding place, Appellant watched Patrol Sergeant Michelle Berry and Deputy Toby Fries arrive and take statements from Lesley and her friends. The deputies also photographed Lesley’s and John’s scrapes and bruises.

          When the deputies left, Beverly, who had ridden with Randea, went outside and waited in Randea’s car parked beside the trailer.

          Randea, Lesley, Darla, and Billy Wiley were in the kitchen laughing and joking with John, who sat facing them on the living room couch.  Appellant slipped into the trailer through the back door, crept into the living room, and lowered the rifle to the back of John’s head, taunting, “You think this is f---ing funny?  I’ll show you how funny it is.”

          Lesley and Darla grabbed their cell phones.  Lesley dialed 911 on hers, handed it to Billy, and walked toward Appellant while he tried to chamber a round.  The rifle jammed.  Shaking the rifle, Appellant backed toward the front door.  When he reached the door, Lesley shoved him through.  Appellant pushed back to get inside, but Lesley and Darla held the door and locked it.  Randea ran to lock the back door.  Lesley slid to the floor and sat there while Billy and Darla spoke with the 911 operator.

          Appellant climbed off the porch, ran several steps alongside the trailer, still shaking the rifle.  He finally dislodged the jammed cartridge, which dropped to the grass in the front yard.  Appellant chambered another round, aimed at the trailer, and opened fire.

          The first bullet pierced the wall so close to Darla that she could smell it.  She dropped to the floor and started crawling to the back of the trailer.  Appellant fired two more shots.  By the third one, Darla’s ears were ringing badly, but she managed to stay on the line with the 911 operator.  As her friends scrambled for cover, Lesley remained planted by the front door.

          When he stopped shooting, Appellant ran into the dark toward the road.  Bullets had punched eight entry holes in the front of the trailer and nine exit holes out the back, leaving shattered windows and Christmas ornaments, bent and broken blinds, and a perforated couch in between.

          The 911 operator dispatched Sergeant Berry and Deputy Fries back to Lesley’s trailer to investigate the “shots fired call.”  They were joined by Sergeants James Cromwell and William Watt and by Deputies Brad Duckett and William Drake.

          Granbury Police Sergeant Cliff Clemons was on patrol when he heard 911 dispatch the deputies.  He drove to the city limits and waited near the back entrance of Lesley’s subdivision.  After a few minutes, he saw Appellant’s truck run the stop sign and go south on Highway 51 “at a fairly good pace.”  Within a few minutes, Clemons had closed the gap.  Appellant then made a U-turn and drove toward Clemons’s car, causing the officer to swerve into the ditch.

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Jason Michael Sorrells v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jason-michael-sorrells-v-state-texapp-2011.