Jeremy M. Francis v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 25, 2015
Docket05-14-00218-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jeremy M. Francis v. State (Jeremy M. Francis 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
Jeremy M. Francis v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Affirmed as Modified; Opinion Filed June 23, 2015.

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-14-00218-CR

JEREMY M. FRANCIS, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court No. 5 Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F11-62030-L

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Chief Justice Wright, Justice Myers, and Justice Evans Opinion by Justice Myers Appellant Jeremy M. Francis was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to life

imprisonment without the possibility of parole. In one issue, he argues the trial court abused its

discretion by admitting evidence of extraneous offenses during the guilt-innocence phase of the

trial. As modified, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

During the early morning hours of Friday, September 16, 2011,1 Officer Aaron Tobkin of

the Dallas Police Department responded to a call at the Providence apartment complex about a

body. When he arrived at the complex, Officer Tobkin found a man lying face-down on the

sidewalk that ran by the pool area. The man, who was pronounced dead at the scene by Dallas

1 The Court takes judicial notice of the fact that September 16, 2011 was a Friday. Fire and Rescue, forty-six-year-old Martin Coronado, had two stab wounds to the chest. One of

the wounds went nine inches into the deceased’s body––through the chest wall, the left lung, and

the heart––and was fatal, according to the medical examiner. The examiner testified that the stab

wounds would have been caused by an instrument that was sharp on one side and blunt on the

other––like a single-blade knife. A receipt attached to a Whataburger bag that was found near

the deceased’s body showed a time-stamp of 5:17:06 a.m.

Detective Esteban Montenegro of the Dallas Police Department’s Homicide Unit was

assigned to the case. He testified that there was no physical evidence other than a bloody

footprint found at the crime scene, and no eyewitnesses. One resident testified that she “heard

some friction” in front of the window of her apartment, and she heard what sounded like a man’s

voice saying, “Stop. Get down. Shut up. Get down.” She looked out the window and saw a

man lying in front of her window; he was not moving. She called 911. But the resident never

saw the actual commotion and there was no video footage of the scene from the apartment

complex’s or nearby business’s surveillance cameras.

During his investigation, Detective Montenegro also contacted the deceased’s wife and

learned that the complainant’s bank card had been used at a 7–Eleven on Lemmon Avenue, a

Quick Trip on Mockingbird Lane, and a Dart vending machine between 12:16 p.m. on

September 16 and 10 p.m. on September 17. Surveillance video from the 7–Eleven, taken on

September 16, 2011, showed a white car with two black males pulling up to a gas pump.

On September 21, 2011, Officer Russell Barrett of the Dallas Police Department was

working in an undercover capacity driving down Douglas Avenue in an unmarked police car. He

saw two males, later identified as appellant and William Langrum, appellant’s uncle, involved in

an altercation with another male. Langrum had a knife and was swinging at the man, who fell

backwards. Barrett saw Langrum grab the man’s bag. Francis was “kind of jumping around,

–2– grabbing at the bag, too, looking around.”

Appellant and Langrum fled on foot to a vehicle in the nearby parking lot. Langrum

drove the vehicle and appellant was in the passenger’s seat. Officer Barrett followed them in his

unmarked vehicle from Douglas to northbound Maple Avenue, where a squad car got behind the

vehicle and attempted to stop it. From the radio traffic, Officer Barrett could hear officers saying

that the two suspects had gotten out of their car, been chased on foot by officers, and then got

back in the car and drove away. Police pursued the suspects as they drove northbound on Cedar

Springs to Mockingbird, and then northbound on Lemmon Avenue, where the vehicle was

disabled after hitting the curb. Appellant and Langrum got out of the car and fled. Barrett

chased the driver, Langrum, who was holding either a large butcher knife or a hunting-style knife

in his hand. Langrum dropped the knife near a car dealership and continued running. Officer

Barrett apprehended Langrum and then went back and recovered the knife, which was admitted

at appellant’s trial.

Officer Jeffrey Eggleston, who was working in plainclothes with Officer Barrett and two

other officers on September 21, 2011, testified that he assisted the other officers after he heard

about the chase. He saw the vehicle hit the curb and the two occupants get out of the car and

flee. He chased the passenger, whom he identified as appellant, and apprehended him.

Appellant’s and Langrum’s clothing was taken from them at the jail and tested. Alex

Nham, a forensic biologist with the Southwestern Institute of Forensic Sciences (SWIFS),

confirmed the presence of blood on swabs taken from Langrum’s T-shirt, underwear, shorts, and

a towel. The presumptive test for blood was positive for swabs taken from appellant’s T-shirt

and right shoe,2 but there was not enough of a sample to confirm the presence of blood.

2 In the reporter’s record, Nham described this as appellant’s “red” shoe, but his written report, which was admitted without objection, stated that it was actually appellant’s right shoe that tested positive using the presumptive test.

–3– Appellant’s shorts, left shoe, and blue and white T-shirts also tested positive for traces of blood.

Kenneth Balagot, a forensic biologist with SWIFS, tested the autopsy blood sample taken

from Coronado and DNA buccal swabs taken from Langrum and appellant. In a DNA swabbing

from the knife, Balagot found a mixture of at least two individuals, and Langrum was a possible

contributor to that sample. Coronado and appellant were excluded as contributors. A stain from

appellant’s blue T-shirt likewise contained a mixture of at least two contributors––one major and

the other minor. The major contributor matched the DNA profile of Langrum; Coronado and

appellant were excluded as the minor contributor. The swabbing of a stain from appellant’s right

shoe included a low level of DNA, but Balagot was able to do a comparison using that sample,

and he found that Coronado was a possible contributor of that sample. The conservative random

match probability with that sample for Coronado was one in 11.2 million, i.e., one would expect

to see that DNA profile or contribution once in a population of 11.2 million people. Balagot also

detected a single genetic marker that corresponded to the DNA profiles of appellant and

Langrum. But the random match probability for Langrum was 68 in 100; in other words, one

could include 68 percent of a population as being a possible contributor. As Balagot recognized,

one in 11.2 million is a stronger match or inclusion than 68 in 100.

Shaqundra Brown, appellant’s girlfriend, testified that around the time of her birthday,

September 14, 2011, appellant purchased a new pair of Converse tennis shoes to attend a high

school football game on Friday night. Appellant left his cell phone at her home on Thursday

night and later called her from Langrum’s phone at around 5:15 a.m. the following morning.

After talking briefly, appellant told her, “I’ll call you back. I’m fixing to go do something.” He

later retrieved his cell phone and walked Brown to school.

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