Jeremiah Addon Curry v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 24, 2010
Docket01-08-00935-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jeremiah Addon Curry v. State (Jeremiah Addon Curry 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
Jeremiah Addon Curry v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion issued June 24, 2010

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NOS. 01-08-00934-CR & 01-08-00935-CR

———————————

Jeremiah Addon Curry, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 248th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 1122699 & 1165117

MEMORANDUM  OPINION

          A jury convicted appellant, Jeremiah Addon Curry, of two charges[1] of aggravated robbery.[2]  The jury assessed punishment at 25 years’ imprisonment and a fine of $5,000 for one offense and 40 years’ imprisonment and a fine of $10,000 for the other offense, both sentences to run concurrently.  In three issues, appellant argues: (1) that the evidence was legally insufficient to establish his guilt; (2) that the evidence was factually insufficient to establish his guilt; and (3) that he was denied effective assistance of counsel.

          We affirm.

BACKGROUND

          On the night of June 25, 2007, the complainants, Lakisha Roberts and Antoinette Breed, who had lived together for four years, were in their apartment in Baytown, Texas with Roberts’ ten-year-old son Kailen Arceneau, Roberts’ two- year-old god-daughter Daniesha, and Lakeisha Brown, Roberts’ niece.[3] The complainants and Kailen were in one bedroom watching a movie, Daniesha was in the other bedroom asleep, and Brown was in the living room watching television.  Between midnight and 1:00 a.m., there was a “loud knock” at their door.  After hesitating, Roberts went to the door.  The door did not have a peephole, but a person on the other side of the door identified himself as “Mike.”  Roberts opened the door and almost immediately thereafter was struck with the handle of a gun.  Five people—three men and two women—burst into the apartment and ordered everyone to be quiet and to get on the floor.  The intruders wore black bandanas over their faces, but Roberts and Kailen recognized one of them as their next door neighbor, Isaiah Thomas.  Appellant entered the bedroom where Breed and Kailen remained, pointed a gun at Breed, and ordered them into the living room.   

The intruders used duct tape to restrain, to silence, and to blindfold the complainants.  After the complainants were restrained and silenced, the intruders beat them.  Kailen, who remained on a couch during the entire event, was unrestrained and not blindfolded. 

          After the complainants were restrained and silenced, appellant and his accomplices began to search the apartment.  As they did so, Roberts and Breed heard Thomas address appellant by his first name, Jeremiah, and they heard appellant reply.  Roberts then heard appellant speak with Kailen.  Later, during the robbery, Roberts heard appellant report that Roberts’ god-daughter, two-year-old Daniesha, was still asleep.  Breed heard appellant ask where the complainants had hidden their guns and money.  After remaining in the apartment for twenty or thirty minutes, appellant and his accomplices prepared to leave.  Before they left, Breed and Roberts heard appellant state that they should take a waterfall picture from the wall.  In addition to the waterfall picture, appellant and his accomplices took a flat-screen television, keys, a DVD player, a VCR, a PlayStation 2 game console, cellular phones, jewelry, and children’s clothing.  As he left the apartment, appellant threatened the complainants, stating, “You better not call the police because if you call the police we will be back for you.” 

After appellant and his accomplices had left the apartment, Roberts and Breed freed themselves, closed the apartment door, and found an old cell phone.  Breed dialed 911 from the bedroom.  Although the cell phone continually disconnected from emergency services, the police were dispatched to the complainants’ apartment. 

When the police officers arrived at the complainants’ apartment, Breed identified two of the intruders, Derrick Tillis and Isaiah Thomas, by name.[4]  After speaking with the officers, Roberts discovered that her new car had been scratched severely and its four tires punctured.  Between 30 minutes and an hour after the officers arrived at the complainants’ apartment, the police officers transported the two complainants, Kailen, Daniesha, and Brown to the police station for formal statements.  There, Roberts and Breed related the details of the robbery and then identified appellant as one of the robbers.

The police officers interviewed the complainants separately for approximately an hour.  During the interview, Breed told S. Latta, the interviewing detective, that appellant had been among those who had robbed her and that appellant had “put a gun in [her] face.”  The detective showed Breed a photo spread, from which she identified Tillis as one of the men who had robbed her.  Both complainants later identified appellant in a photo lineup.  The State obtained two indictments against appellant, one for the armed robbery of Lakisha Roberts and one for the armed robbery of Antoinette Breed.  The indictments both alleged that appellant used or exhibited a handgun during the commission of the theft.  The cases were tried together. 

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