Jeremiah Jordan Brown v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 2, 2025
Docket04-23-01003-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jeremiah Jordan Brown v. the State of Texas (Jeremiah Jordan Brown v. the State of Texas) 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 Jordan Brown v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Fourth Court of Appeals San Antonio, Texas MEMORANDUM OPINION

No. 04-23-01003-CR

Jeremiah Jordan BROWN, Appellant

v.

The STATE of Texas, Appellee

From the 454th Judicial District Court, Medina County, Texas Trial Court No. 22-03-14361-CR Honorable Daniel J. Kindred, Judge Presiding

Opinion by: Lori I. Valenzuela, Justice

Sitting: Irene Rios, Justice Lori I. Valenzuela, Justice Velia J. Meza, Justice

Delivered and Filed: April 2, 2025

AFFIRMED

A grand jury indicted appellant Jeremiah Jordan Brown on one count of murder, one count

of tampering with physical evidence, and one count of unauthorized use of a motor vehicle.

Following a trial on the merits, the jury found Brown guilty on all three counts and assessed

punishment at thirty years’ confinement. In four appellate issues, that we construe as three, Brown

argues: (1) the trial court erred by denying him the opportunity to call a specific witness at his

motion for new trial hearing; (2) the trial court erred by applying the rules of evidence in a 04-23-01003-CR

suppression hearing; and (3) the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to reject his sudden

passion claim. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

Before the events at the center of Brown’s trial, Brown had reconnected with his sister,

Alexis Cunningham. Cunningham was in a romantic relationship with Elijah Chandler, and the

couple had a child together. When Cunningham and Chandler’s relationship started to fall apart,

Cunningham began seeing Troy Viana.

On February 5, 2022, Cunningham was at Viana’s house watching TV. Unhappy with the

circumstances, Chandler tracked Cunningham and drove to Viana’s house. Brown accompanied

Chandler. When Chandler and Brown arrived and saw Cunningham’s car, the pair exited

Chandler’s car and deflated Cunningham’s passenger rear-side tire. Around this time, Cunningham

and Viana exited the house and saw Chandler and Brown near Cunningham’s car. Chandler and

Brown returned to Chandler’s car and left.

Close to midnight, Cunningham and Viana drove to a nearby gas station on the east side of

San Antonio to inflate Cunningham’s tire. As Viana inflated the tire, Chandler, with Brown still

as a passenger, drove into the gas station parking lot. After Cunningham rejected Chandler’s

requests to walk over to talk with him, Chandler rolled down his window and began shooting at

Viana—striking him. Chandler and Brown quickly drove away.

As February 5 turned to February 6, 2022, Chandler and Brown drove towards Castroville.

The pair found a wooded area and navigated Chandler’s car down the long entrance to find a place

to bury the gun used by Chandler to shoot Viana. Although the manner in which what happened

next is disputed, it is undisputed that Chandler’s life ended with seven gunshots to the head—three

of which would have been individually fatal. Brown left Chandler’s body and drove Chandler’s

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car to a gas station, where he was picked up and taken home. Chandler’s body was found by a

hiker in the morning hours.

Brown was indicted for Chandler’s murder, tampering with physical evidence, and

unauthorized use of a motor vehicle. Brown’s trial began on August 7, 2023. The State’s principal

witness was Texas Ranger Chad Matlock. Matlock testified to how he became involved in the case

and to his investigation, including learning that Brown was present when Chandler shot Viana in

San Antonio the night before. The jury was shown a video recording of Matlock interviewing

Brown. In the video, Brown initially stated he was just present at Viana’s house; however, Brown

later confessed to helping Chandler deflate Cunningham’s tire and that he killed Chandler in the

early hours of the following day.

Through the testimony of Matlock, the jury was also shown a video recording in which

Brown and Matlock were in Castroville at the location where Chandler’s body was found. During

the video, Brown alleges that when he began digging a hole with a rock to bury the gun used to

shoot Viana, Chandler discharged the gun to scare him, pointed the gun at him, and told him that

if he did not say anything, he would not hurt him. Brown further stated in the video that he then

grabbed Chandler’s right arm to get the gun, Chandler reacted by swinging his left hand at Brown,

but Brown was still able to wrestle the gun away. Brown contended that as he began to walk

backward with the gun, Chandler came towards him, so he fired two shots at Chandler, hitting him

in the chest. After he shot Chandler, Brown claimed he ran to Chandler’s car and drove off. Brown

further expressed in the video that he called his mother, Shelica Alvirez, to have her pick him up

and told her he had left Chandler at a gas station. On direct examination, Matlock testified:

Brown’s version of events was inconsistent with the way Chandler’s body was found and the lack

of injury to Brown; that before they had gone to the crime scene, Brown had not made any

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statements to him regarding Chandler discharging a gun in Castroville; and Chandler did not use

deadly force towards Brown, but that Brown used deadly force towards Chandler.

On cross-examination, Matlock testified that he did not investigate the shooting at the gas

station in San Antonio and left that investigation, if any, to the San Antonio Police Department.

Matlock also told the jury that by looking at the contents of Cunningham’s cell phone, he

determined that some domestic violence may have occurred between her and Chandler and that

Cunningham’s new relationship with Viana was the catalyst for the gas station shooting.

The State’s next witness was Cunningham. She testified: that Brown and Alvirez moved

in with her and Chandler after she became pregnant; that Chandler put his “hands on her” once or

twice during their relationship; that Chandler previously threatened to kill their baby several times,

including threatening to crash the car when she and the baby were riding with him; and that the

night before the gas station shooting, Chandler had choked her during a fight. Regarding the events

of February 5, 2022, Cunningham told the jury that she saw Chandler and Brown near her car

when she exited Viana’s house, that she noticed something wrong with her backside passenger

tire, and that she and Viana drove to a nearby gas station to inflate the tire. Cunningham stated that

when they arrived at the gas station, Viana exited the car and began fixing the tire. At that point,

Chandler and Brown pulled into the gas station, and Chandler kept trying to get Cunningham to

exit her car and talk to him. During this time, Cunningham explained to the jury that Chandler

moved within about five feet of her and Viana. When Cunningham again told Chandler she would

not walk over to speak with him, Chandler shot at Viana, striking him three times. After he fired

the shots, Chandler and Brown drove off. Cunningham testified she tried to get a hold of Chandler

that night but did not hear from him or Brown. When she finally spoke to Brown the next day,

Cunningham stated Brown acted normal and said nothing about Chandler.

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The State’s final witness was forensic pathologist Dr. Suzanna Danna. Danna testified that

three of the seven bullets fired by Brown that struck Chandler were considered lethal and that the

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