Jermiah Issac Glenn v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 1, 2024
Docket14-22-00922-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jermiah Issac Glenn v. the State of Texas (Jermiah Issac Glenn 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
Jermiah Issac Glenn v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed August 1, 2024.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-22-00921-CR NO. 14-22-00922-CR

JERMIAH ISSAC GLENN, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 405th District Court Galveston County, Texas Trial Court Cause Nos. 20-CR-1594, 20-CR-1595

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found appellant Jerimiah Issac Glenn guilty of aggravated robbery and capital murder. Appellant received a sentence of confinement for ninety-nine years for the robbery conviction and an automatic sentence of life imprisonment for the capital murder conviction. See Tex. Penal Code §§ 12.31(a)(1), 12.32(a). In a single issue, he contends that the trial court erred by admitting evidence of an extraneous theft. We affirm. I. BACKGROUND

The State indicted appellant for an aggravated robbery against Yeiser Ramirez and for a capital murder predicated on a robbery against Curtis Lee, which occurred later in the same day and less than a mile from the Ramirez robbery.

A. Ramirez Robbery

Ramirez testified that around dusk on October 6, 2019, he was loading groceries into a Honda minivan outside a grocery store in Texas City. A young Black man approached and asked for a ride. When Ramirez refused, the man pulled out a revolver, pointed it at Ramirez’s face, and demanded Ramirez’s keys and phone. The assailant threatened to kill Ramirez. Ramirez complied.

Ramirez testified that he could not see clearly because it was nighttime. He could not remember the color of the revolver but described it as metal or metallic- looking. He admitted that he may have told the police it was a silver revolver. He testified that the assailant was wearing a white hooded jacket with a pocket in the front. He admitted telling the police that the assailant was wearing blue jeans. He identified the assailant on surveillance videos from nearby businesses.

A patrol officer with the Texas City Police Department responded to the scene. He testified that surveillance videos, which were admitted as exhibits, show the assailant wearing a white hooded sweatshirt, black pants with white trim on the sides, and white plastic slide sandals. A screenshot from one of the videos appears below:

2 A little more than an hour after the officer was dispatched to the robbery, he was dispatched to another scene about five minutes away—less than a mile from the first scene.

B. Lee Capital Murder

That evening, Curtis Lee was arriving home at his apartment complex. Lee’s live-in girlfriend testified that she heard a loud noise and looked out a window. She saw someone wearing a white hoodie get into the driver’s side of Lee’s Nissan Maxima. She went to the bottom of the exterior stairway and saw Lee. He had been shot and was later pronounced dead at the scene.

A neighbor testified that her dogs started barking at about 8:20 p.m. She heard a big boom and looked out a window. She saw one person standing and another on the ground. She described the standing person as a young, skinny, Black man wearing dark jeans and a white t-shirt. She testified that the shirt could have had long sleeves pulled up. It was possible the person was wearing a hood. The man was digging through the fallen man’s pockets. When the neighbor yelled for the man to stop, he got into a car and drove off.

3 C. Crime Scene Processing and Investigation

Police officers did not find any shell casings at the scene of Lee’s murder, which was consistent with the use of a revolver. About 250 feet from Lee’s body, police found Ramirez’s Honda minivan. Later investigation showed appellant’s fingerprints on a water bottle collected from the minivan. Testing of a DNA mixture recovered from the minivan’s steering wheel was consistent with Glenn being a possible contributor to a DNA mixture—the probability of obtaining this mixture profile to include appellant was 11.8 million times greater than the probability of obtaining the mixture profile with unknown persons.

Lee’s Nissan Maxima was found, still running, near the Gulf Breeze Apartments in La Marque. Ramirez’s lanyard of keys was found inside the Nissan.

Surveillance video and a license plate reader from Gulf Breeze showed the Nissan entering the parking lot on the night of the murder. An associate of appellant’s testified that he let appellant stay the night on October 6. The associate identified appellant in a surveillance video from Gulf Breeze. The video shows appellant wearing a white hoodie, dark pants with white trim on the side, and white slip-on sandals. Several screenshots appear below:

4 The associate testified that they went through the trunk of the Nissan to retrieve money and weed. The associate testified that he had seen appellant with a gun three days before.

D. Appellant’s Flight and Capture

On the following day, October 7, a group of detectives went to Gulf Breeze to look for appellant. The detectives spoke with the associate and appellant’s brother, among other residents. With help from several residents, the detectives found paperwork with Lee’s name on it and a wallet with Lee’s identification on the ground near a fence. A detective recovered a light gray hoodie inside a barbecue pit.

A detective arranged for the brother to call appellant, who said he was walking to the apartment. When the detective spotted him, appellant turned and ran. The detective yelled for appellant to not run because the detective just wanted to talk. Appellant responded by climbing over an 8- or 9-foot fence and running

5 away; he jumped two more fences before getting away. As appellant fled, he lost a pair of white Nike slides or slippers, which officers recovered.

Several officers went to another apartment complex that was nearby. A resident of that apartment complex testified that as he was getting into his car, he saw a young Black man in the back seat of a neighbor’s car. The man asked the resident for a ride; the resident declined. The resident was stopped by police officers in the parking lot and directed them to appellant’s location. A detective testified that the vehicle’s rear door was open, and he saw appellant jump out and run. The detective lost sight of appellant.

The neighbor testified that she was coming down the stairs of the apartment complex towards the detectives when appellant “Spidermaned” down the outside of the railings of the stairs. Appellant held a big, shiny, silver revolver and pointed it at the neighbor. She screamed, “He has a gun.” The officers heard the neighbor scream and saw appellant jump down from a level above them. They saw appellant held a gun in his hand. They chased appellant, but appellant jumped a fence and got away. Surveillance video from the apartment complex showed appellant wearing dark pants with white trim on the side:

6 After about an hour or an hour and a half, officers found appellant hiding underneath a nearby house. Appellant surrendered eventually. He was wearing black pants with thick white stripes from the pocket area to the waist. He wasn’t wearing any shoes.

Officers found a fully loaded Taurus .357 revolver under the house. DNA testing on the grip of the revolver indicated support for the proposition that appellant was a possible contributor—the probability of the DNA profile coming from appellant was 26.7 sextillion times greater than the probability of obtaining the DNA profile from an unrelated, unknown person.

Because appellant was sixteen years old, he was brought to a Juvenile Justice Center facility. When an intake officer who was familiar with appellant began the intake, appellant told the officer, “I killed somebody with a .357.”

E. Extraneous Offense

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Jermiah Issac Glenn v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jermiah-issac-glenn-v-the-state-of-texas-texapp-2024.