Jemarcus Latron Green v. State

495 S.W.3d 563, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 7226, 2016 WL 3662435
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 7, 2016
DocketNO. 01-15-00280-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 495 S.W.3d 563 (Jemarcus Latron Green 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
Jemarcus Latron Green v. State, 495 S.W.3d 563, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 7226, 2016 WL 3662435 (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

Rebeca Huddle, Justice

Appellant Jemarcus Latron Green was charged by indictment with capital murder. A jury found Green guilty, and the trial court assessed punishment at life, without the possibility of parole, in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division. By four issues, Green contends that the trial court erred because (1) it failed to instruct the jury that his girlfriend, Kristan Daniels, was an accomplice as a matter of law; (2) its accomplice-in-fact charge failed to .instruct the jury that Daniels could be an accomplice as a co-conspirator; (3) .Daniels’s accomplice witness testimony was not adequately corroborated;- and (4) insufficient evidence supports Green’s ’conviction. We affirm.

Background

On August 6, 201-2, Jimmy Wooten was shot and killed outside his home. Green supplied the murder weapon and was tried for Wooten’s murder.

Wooten’s Murder

Wooten’s lifelong friend, Louis Hines, witnessed the shooting. Hines testified that he was sitting on the front porch of a nearby house with Kevin Mitchell, waiting for Wooten to go clubbing. When Wooten came out of his house a couple doors down, Hines saw two black men approach Wooten. Hines described one of the men as tall and dark-skinned and described the other as lighter-skinned and slightly shorter. Hines watched briefly as the men talked to Wooten, before turning back to talking with Mitchell. Hines testified that his attention only turned back to Wooten and the. two men when he .heard Wooten loudly say, “you got me fucked up.” Then Hines heard a gunshot, which he testified was fired by the taller, .darker man. Hines testified that Mitchell took off running at the sound of the first shot.- Hines saw Wooten fall to the ground, and then the shooter turned and started firing at Hines, leading Hines to conclude that he was using an automatic.

Hines testified that a friend drove up and “snatched [Hines into] the car.” As his friend drove away, Hines jumped out of the car and ran back to check on Wooten. As he turned the corner, he saw the shooter taking Wooten’s pants and shoes. Hines testified that he watched from a distance as the shooter then ran off between the houses.

*567 Wooten died’at Ben- Taub Hospital later that night. Dr. Sara Doyle with the Harris County Medical Examiner’s- Office performed Wooten’s autopsy and determined that cause of death was a single gunshot wound to his neck, which perforated his ceryical spine.- Dr; Doyle testified that she observed soot and stippling around- the wound, suggesting that, the weapon was held.within six inches of Wooten’s body when fired.

Officer N. Castillo-of the Houston Police Department (“HPD!’) responded to, the shooting. - Officer Castillo testified that HPD officers found four spent shell casings at the scene.. Officer E. Aguilera with the Crime Scene Unit added that the shell casings were all either 9-millimeter Luger Blazers or Luger1' Wins. Officer Aguilera testified that he had not determined whether air four shell casings were fired by the same weapon.

Officer B, Nabors of HPD’s Homicide Division investigated Wooten’s murder. After speaking with Wooten’s girlfriend, Regina Flakes, Nabors and his partner interviewed Kristan Daniels, who was Green’s girlfriend at the time. After their first interview with Daniels, they developed Green and a second man’ known as “KD,” as suspects.

Daniels’s Testimony

At trial, Daniels asserted her Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. The State moved to compel her testimony on the promise .of use immunity, and the trial court granted the motion.

According to Daniels, at the time of the charged offénse, she had bee,n living with Green at his father’s house for roughly six months. On the date of the offense, she and Green spent the daytime hours together watching televisioh and smoking marijuana. Later in the day, two of Green’s friends joined them: K.D. and Pac. Daniels testified that the four of them were driving around in her car that afternoon when Green, K.D., and Pac started talking about needing “some quick money.” According to Daniels, Green hatched the idea to make some quick money by robbing Jimmy Wooten. Daniels did not know Wooten, but Green knew him as a local drug dealer and reasoned that Wooten’s line of work would keep him from reporting a robbery. Daniels testified that K.D. and Pae agreed to rob Wooten, and Green started to drive the group back to his house. As they were driving, Green pointed. Wooten out to K.D. by saying, “There go Woo right there.” When they got back to Green’s house, Green went inside to get a gun and gave the gun to K.D.

Daniels' testified that she stayed at Green’s house while Green dropped K.D. off near Wooten’s, which took roughly three minutes. Shortly after Green got back to the house, Daniels heard four gun shots. Daniels testified that she and Green were both shocked to hear the gun shots. Green hopped back into her car, telling her that he was off to look for K.D. Green returned to the house alone sometime later, and the two waited at Green’s house.

Daniels testified that, later that night, K.D. arrived at Green’s house covered in dirt with $140 in cash. According to Daniels, K.D. said someone had shot at him and he shot back with the gun Green had given him. KD. explained to Daniels and Green that he had since been hiding in the crawl space under Wooten’s house. K.D. returned the gun to Green and, on Green’s suggestion, K.D. split the $140 stolen with Green.

Daniels testified that, the next morning, Green wanted to get rid of the gun, but Daniels’s car had broken-down, so Green called a “crack head” for a ride, Daniels testified that Green provided the di *568 rections and his Mend drove them out of the area to discard the gun. Green got out of the car alone and threw the gun into a pond.- The pond was a couple of blocks from where Daniels grew up, but she maintained that Green had directed his friend to drive to that location. On cross-examination, however, she testified that she had suggested they drive to that location to discard the gun.

Green’s Statements to Police

Nabors and his partner twice interviewed Green regarding Wooten’s murder, and both interviews were audio-recorded and admitted at trial. After initially denying any involvement in Wooten’s murder and denying knowing K.D., Green eventually told the officers that Wooten was killed by a “little wild young nigger” called “Loco,” “because he crazy man.” At the second interview, Nabors and his partner told Green that HPD had recovered the murder weapon and-that they knew “K.D.” was “Loco.” In response, Green admitted giving a weapon to K.D. and stated that K.D. robbed Wooten because he needed money. He also admitted that he received $60 of the $140 K.D. took from Wooten and that his mother’s “dope fiend” ex-boyfriend drove him to the pond near Daniels’s grandparents’ home to dispose of the murder weapon.

Accomplice Witness

By his first issue, Green contends that Kristan Daniels’s accomplice-witness testimony was not sufficiently corroborated, -as required by article 38.14 of the Texas Code, of Criminal Procedure.

A. Applicable Law

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Bluebook (online)
495 S.W.3d 563, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 7226, 2016 WL 3662435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jemarcus-latron-green-v-state-texapp-2016.