Jerry Dwight Shinard v. State

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 2017
Docket01-16-00333-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jerry Dwight Shinard v. State (Jerry Dwight Shinard v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jerry Dwight Shinard v. State, (Tex. 2017).

Opinion

Opinion issued May 11, 2017

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-16-00333-CR ——————————— JERRY DWIGHT SHINARD, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 176th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 1357910

MEMORANDUM OPINION The State charged Appellant, Jerry Dwight Shinard, with capital murder.1 The

jury convicted Appellant of the lesser-included offense of felony murder2 and

assessed punishment at ten years’ confinement. In one issue on appeal, Appellant

argues that the trial court abused its discretion by denying his motion to suppress.

We affirm.

Background

Appellant and Quincy Moss had been close friends until April 2012, when

they stopped communicating over a dispute. In August of 2012, Appellant reached

out to Moss, and they resumed their friendship.

A week later, on August 15, Appellant found Moss at Moss’s uncle’s house.

Appellant asked to use Moss’s apartment for a drug sale. Moss refused. The two

discussed the matter until Moss finally agreed. Appellant and Moss drove to meet

some others that would participate in the drug sale. All told, there were two women

and four men. The six drove over to Moss’s apartment complex in two cars. At this

time, Appellant revealed to Moss that he and his friends intended to steal the drugs,

instead of paying for them.

1 See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 19.02(b)(1) (Vernon 2011), § 19.03(a)(2) (Vernon Supp. 2016). 2 See id. § 19.02(b)(3). 2 Moss and the two women remained in the cars during the time at the apartment

complex, except for a moment shortly after arriving when Moss and one of the

women briefly got out of the cars. Video surveillance of the apartment complex

show Appellant and two other men moving around the complex.

At one point, Appellant was by the cars when the security guard for the

complex walked by. As the guard approached the cars, Appellant walked up to him,

greeted him, and shook his hand. The guard returned the greeting and continued to

patrol the premises.

Around 5:50 that evening—about an hour after Appellant and his friends

arrived—three Hispanic men arrived at the complex. Appellant and one of his

friends came to the parking lot to meet them. The five men walked to Moss’s

apartment.

One of the Hispanic men, Robert Villalobos, would later testify at trial about

what happened next. Villalobos testified that the five of them walked into the

apartment. One of Villalobos’s friends had brought 2-3 pounds of marijuana,

packaged and then wrapped in packing tape. Villalobos and one of his friends were

standing in the kitchen area of the room, while the other friend stood near the door.

After one of Appellant’s friends opened the package and announced the marijuana

was good, Appellant’s other friend rushed out of the bedroom, brandishing a firearm.

The man by the door attempted to flee. The man with the gun attempted to stop him.

3 In the struggle, the gun fired, striking the fleeing man and ultimately killing him.

Appellant and his friends took the marijuana and fled.

Video surveillance of the apartment complex show Appellant and his two

friends running towards their cars. As one of the cars is about to exit the complex,

Appellant jumps in and drives away.

While in the car, Appellant discussed his involvement in the robbery.

Appellant claimed to have fired a gun at a pillow but later dropped the gun.

Appellant, Moss, and the woman in the car—Appellant’s live-in girlfriend—drove

to Appellant’s apartment. While there, Moss learned that police were at his

apartment and that someone had been killed there. Appellant swore to Moss that he

did not shoot anyone.

Moss went to his uncle’s house later that evening. While there, he talked to

Appellant on the telephone. Appellant told Moss that, if Moss told the police what

happened, Appellant would have to “ice” someone else. Moss testified that to ice

someone means to kill them and that he understood the “someone else” to be him.

Police were able to obtain information about the fleeing vehicles from the

surveillance videos. The day after the shooting, Lieutenant R. Blain and Sergeant J.

Robles of the homicide division of the Houston Police Department watched

Appellant’s apartment complex. At one point, they saw the car Appellant had driven

during the shooting leave Appellant’s apartment complex. They arranged for patrol

4 officers to follow the car and ultimately pull it over. Appellant was driving the car

when it was pulled over. The police arrested Appellant and drove back to the

apartment complex with him.

At the complex, Lieutenant Blain, Sergeant Robles, and two patrol officers

approached Appellant’s apartment. Appellant’s live-in girlfriend, Kristane Samuel-

Curry, answered the door. The police asked for permission to search the apartment,

and Curry consented. After doing an initial sweep to verify no one else was in the

apartment, Lieutenant Blain and Sergeant Robles asked Curry to sign a written

consent to search. Curry signed it.

Curry was taken to a patrol car in front of the apartment as the police searched

the apartment. They found approximately 1.82 pounds of marijuana. They also

seized a pair of shorts matching what Appellant had worn the day before.

After a while, the police left the apartment, locking it behind them. Some

officers took Curry and Appellant to the police station while Lieutenant Blain and

Sergeant Robles went to the apartment complex where the shooting had occurred.

They watched the surveillance video. While watching the video, the officers recalled

seeing shoes in Appellant’s apartment that matched what he wore during the

shooting.

Based on this, Lieutenant Blain and Sergeant Robles returned to Appellant’s

apartment complex. They showed the apartment manager the signed consent to

5 search. The apartment manager gave them a key to open Appellant’s apartment.

Lieutenant Blain and Sergeant Robles recovered the shoes they had seen and left.

They left about two hours after Curry had signed the consent to search.

Dried blood was found on one of Appellant’s shoes. DNA testing established

that the blood came from the man shot in Moss’s apartment. Before trial, Appellant

filed a motion to suppress evidence of the shoes and the DNA testing on them.

Appellant argued that Curry’s consent to search the apartment terminated when

Lieutenant Blain and Sergeant Robles left it the first time. Accordingly, Appellant

argued, they did not have consent or a valid warrant to enter the apartment the second

time. The trial court denied the motion.

At trial, the State offered other DNA evidence linking Appellant to the

robbery and shooting. A cigar butt had been found in Moss’s apartment. DNA

testing revealed a major contributor and minor contributor on the cigar. Appellant

was the major contributor.

Testimony at trial established that a blunt is a cigar with at least some of its

tobacco removed and replaced with marijuana. Moss testified that he had smoked

blunts with Appellant before. He also testified that he and Appellant had not smoked

any marijuana together in the week between when the two had reconnected and when

the shooting took place.

6 Standard of Review

In his sole issue, Appellant argues the trial court abused its discretion by

denying his motion to suppress.

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