Jeromy Michael Jolley A/K/A Jeromy M. Jolley v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 26, 2006
Docket02-04-00503-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jeromy Michael Jolley A/K/A Jeromy M. Jolley v. State (Jeromy Michael Jolley A/K/A Jeromy M. Jolley 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
Jeromy Michael Jolley A/K/A Jeromy M. Jolley v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Jeromy Michael Jolley a/k/a Jeromy M. Jolley

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 2-04-503-CR

JEROMY MICHAEL JOLLEY APPELLANT

A/K/A JEROMY M. JOLLEY

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS STATE

------------

FROM CRIMINAL DISTRICT COURT NO. 2 OF TARRANT COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION (footnote: 1)

I.  Introduction

Appellant Jeromy Michael Jolley appeals his conviction for murder.  A jury found Jolley guilty and assessed his punishment at seventy-five years’ confinement.  The trial court sentenced him accordingly.  In three points, Jolley challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence and the trial court’s admission of allegedly hearsay testimony.  We will affirm.

II.  Factual Background

A. Accomplice Witness Testimony (footnote: 2)

Brian Taylor testified that on the night of July 31, 2003, he partied with his girlfriend and eventually drove her home in her car.  Taylor paged Jolley, and Jolley followed the couple in his truck to Taylor’s girlfriend’s home.  Taylor then joined Jolley in Jolley’s truck, and they went to run an errand.  

As Jolley drove, he asked Taylor if he wanted to smoke a blunt (footnote: 3) and handed Taylor a bag of marijuana.  Jolley was driving on Interstate 820, and Taylor was about to start making the blunt when Jolley’s truck hit the rear of a Chevy pickup traveling in front of them.  Taylor heard the brakes squeal and put out his hand in front of his head; Taylor’s hand and head cracked Jolley’s windshield.  Jolley’s truck died and coasted to the left-hand shoulder of the road.  Taylor said that Jolley tried unsuccessfully to restart the truck so that they could leave because they were both under the influence of alcohol.  Taylor described Jolley as “very mad.”

When Jolley’s truck would not start, Taylor and Jolley got out and approached the driver’s side window of the other pickup.  Jolley and the driver of the other vehicle—Juan Gallegos (footnote: 4)—began yelling at each other about who was at fault for the accident.  Jolley yelled that Mr. Gallegos had “brake-checked” him, and Mr. Gallegos said that the wreck was Jolley’s fault because he had been driving too fast.  Taylor hit Mr. Gallegos in the face through the open window of the truck.  Jolley then opened the door of Mr. Gallegos’s truck, (footnote: 5) and he and Taylor punched Mr. Gallegos.  Eventually, Taylor stepped back, but Jolley leaned almost all the way inside the truck and continued to strike Mr. Gallegos. (footnote: 6)

Mr. Gallegos exited his truck through the passenger side door and ran away.  Taylor commented that Mr. Gallegos did not appear to be mortally wounded because he saw Mr. Gallegos jump over a guard rail and hurry down an  embankment.  Taylor did not notice blood on Mr. Gallegos, but the 5 a.m. darkness limited visibility.  At that time, Taylor did not know that Mr. Gallegos had been stabbed.

Jolley’s truck still would not start, so Jolley got in Mr. Gallegos’s truck, Taylor got in Jolley’s truck, and Jolley pushed his truck with Mr. Gallegos’s truck while Taylor steered.  Taylor called Jeff Feaster and Kenny Gabel, who owned a nearby mechanic’s shop, to get them to unlock the shop so that Jolley could park his truck there out of view.  Jolley and Taylor successfully pushed Jolley’s truck to the mechanic’s shop.  Either right before they left the accident scene or right after they arrived at the shop, Jolley told Taylor that he—Jolley—had stabbed Mr. Gallegos.  Taylor asked where and how many times Jolley had stabbed Mr. Gallegos, and Jolley demonstrated the locations where he had stabbed Mr. Gallegos by patting Taylor’s left side from his knee to his armpit.  Jolley said that he did not know how many times he stabbed Mr. Gallegos.  Jolley did not say what he had used to stab Mr. Gallegos; Taylor assumed that Jolley had used a knife that he always carried.

Taylor knew that the Haltom City Police Department patrolled the area surrounding the mechanic’s shop, so he drove Mr. Gallegos’s truck some distance away and drove it into a ravine.  After Taylor disposed of Mr. Gallegos’s truck, he returned to the shop.  By that time, Gabel had unlocked the shop, and Gabel, Cody Clanton, Little Ronnie, and two other men were at the shop.  According to Taylor, Jolley broke the blade off of Jolley’s knife and threw the blade towards some weeds outside the shop.  Taylor noticed  blood on his knuckles and went to wash his hands.  When he returned, Jolley and Clanton had left the shop.  

That evening, Taylor, Jolley, and Jolley’s girlfriend Mary were all at Feaster’s and Gabel’s apartment.  Ultimately it was decided that Mr. Gallegos’s truck should be burned to eliminate any fingerprints.  Taylor, Jolley, and Mary went together to purchase gas and to locate Mr. Gallegos’s truck but decided not to burn it that night because they were worried about being seen by people outside at a nearby house.  The next day, Jolley attempted unsuccessfully to find the truck on his own to burn it.  He called Taylor, and Taylor helped him locate Mr. Gallegos’s truck.  

Taylor testified that he did not stab Mr. Gallegos, that he had never said that he had stabbed Mr. Gallegos, that Jolley had never accused him of stabbing Mr. Gallegos, and that he did not intend for Mr. Gallegos to be seriously injured.

B. Non-Accomplice Witness Testimony

On August 1, 2003, a truck driver discovered a man lying on the side of the road near some restaurants.  The truck driver could tell that the man had been stabbed and called 911.  Paramedics arrived and confirmed that the man was dead.

Robert Presney, the crime scene officer, testified that no weapon or cell phone was found at the scene.  Detective Sarah Jane Waters testified that after the medical investigator arrived, police were able to move the body, to go through the man’s pockets, to locate his driver’s license, and to identify the man as Mr. Gallegos.

Several days later, Detective Waters received a call that police had located Mr. Gallegos’s truck; it had been driven into a ravine and burned.  She obtained records of Mr. Gallegos’s cell phone calls and noticed a 911 call made on August 1, 2003, at 5:15 a.m.  She obtained a tape of the 911 call from Haltom City and cleaned the tape to remove static and background noise.  But she was still unable to determine the identity of the persons other than Mr. Gallegos whose voices were on the tape, so she decided to release the tape to the media in the hope of obtaining additional information about Mr. Gallegos’s death.  After the media published the tape of Mr. Gallegos’s 911 call, tips came in mentioning several suspects, including Jolley and Taylor.  Detective Waters spoke with several individuals who had discussed the offense with Taylor, and the information she gathered indicated that Jolley was the aggressor in the incident with Mr. Gallegos.  Approximately seven months later, police located a knife handle on the roof of a shop near Feaster’s mechanic shop.

Kenny Gabel testified that in 2003 he owned a mechanic’s shop with and shared an apartment with Jeff Feaster.  Gabel knew Jolley through Taylor.  Gabel said that Taylor called him at 5:24 a.m.

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Jeromy Michael Jolley A/K/A Jeromy M. Jolley v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeromy-michael-jolley-aka-jeromy-m-jolley-v-state-texapp-2006.