Jitender Singh v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 5, 2018
Docket05-16-00610-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jitender Singh v. State (Jitender Singh 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
Jitender Singh v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

AFFIRM; Opinion Filed February 5, 2018.

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-16-00610-CR No. 05-16-00611-CR

JITENDER SINGH, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 219th Judicial District Court Collin County, Texas Trial Court Cause Nos. 219-81690-2014, 219-82997-2014

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Bridges, Myers, and Schenck Opinion by Justice Schenck Jitender Singh appeals his convictions of burglary of a habitation and fraudulent use or

possession of identifying information. In his first issue, Singh challenges the sufficiency of the

evidence to support his conviction of burglary of a habitation. In his second issue, he urges that

the trial court improperly limited defense counsel’s voir dire examination of the jury panel. In his

third issue, Singh contends the trial court failed to properly charge the jury. In his fourth and final

issue, he challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction of fraudulent use or

possession of identifying information. We affirm the trial court’s judgment. TEX. R. APP. P. 47.4. BACKGROUND

I. Singh’s obsession with P.A. begins

Singh met P.A. in Delhi, India, where both individuals were pursuing their undergraduate

studies. The two never dated, but in November 2006, Singh proposed to marry P.A. She declined,

explaining that she had no feelings for him. From that day forward, Singh began stalking P.A. and

making her life miserable.

Singh began by following P.A. to her parents’ home and sitting in a nearby courtyard to

watch her. P.A.’s parents called the police when his behavior escalated to knocking on their door.

Although he spent that night in jail, he continued his pursuit of P.A. In February 2007, Singh gave

P.A. a Valentine’s Day card. P.A. repeated to him that she had no feelings for him and that she

did not want him to contact her. Singh responded by tearing the card up and throwing it in her

face in front of others. Around that same time, P.A. and Singh were attending the same class. One

day, after a break in class, Singh asked to sit next to P.A., and she refused. Singh reacted by

holding her face in his hands and asking her: “Do you think you’re very beautiful that you could

decline my proposal?” He then threatened her: “I’m going to get somebody to put acid on your

face and spoil this face of yours.” On another occasion, Singh asked one of P.A.’s friends to move,

so that he could sit next to P.A. in class. P.A. stood up and told him she did not want to sit next to

him. Singh reacted by punching his fist into the window next to P.A.’s desk with such force that

the glass broke and cut his fist. P.A. reported these incidents to the dean of the school. Singh

wrote a letter to the school, acknowledging his wrongful conduct and promising to cease further

harassment of P.A. The school took no action toward Singh, and he continued harassing P.A.

Because of these multiple threats and harassments, P.A. ceased attending classes for nearly two

months, only returning to take her exams to complete her degree.

–2– II. Singh continues his harassment of P.A. in the United States

In August 2007, P.A. moved to the United States to pursue her master’s degree in New

York. Soon after, Singh applied to universities in the United States, including the same school in

New York that P.A. planned to attend. In the spring of 2008, Singh visited P.A.’s parents’ home

in Delhi more than once to tell them he wanted to attend the same school as P.A. and threatening

to kill them if they did not secure his admission. In the summer of 2008, Singh visited P.A.’s

father’s work and physically assaulted him by shoving him against a wall and breaking his glasses.

At that point, the Delhi police began providing security for P.A.’s parents and filed criminal

charges against Singh for assault and harassment.1 In December 2008, an Indian court signed a

protective order that permitted Singh to travel to the United States so long as he refrained from

contacting P.A. while he was in the United States.

In 2009, P.A. accepted a job in California and moved there. Singh tracked her down there

and—without P.A. providing her phone number or the name of her employer or permission to

contact her—began leaving voicemails at her office in violation of the Indian court order. He

escalated his harassment by showing up uninvited to P.A.’s apartment, knocking on her door, and

announcing, “You cannot run away from me, I will come back again.” At that point, P.A. felt it

was necessary to obtain a restraining order against Singh, and in December 2009, a court in

California granted a protective order against Singh. In retaliation, Singh called P.A.’s mother,

informed her that P.A. had obtained a restraining order against him, and said, “I am going to kill

her now.” Throughout 2009 to 2012, P.A. discovered multiple accounts created in her name

containing false information about her and worded in such a way as to convince her Singh was

responsible. Additionally, someone hacked P.A.’s emails, an action she attributes to Singh. In

1 Despite court orders prohibiting him from contacting P.A. or her family, Singh never stopped making harassing phone calls to P.A.’s parents.

–3– October 2011, Singh left voicemails for P.A., calling her names, threatening to physically attack

her father in India, and accusing her mother of having an affair with police officers.

III. Singh’s burglary of P.A.’s apartment in Texas

In October 2012, P.A. moved to Collin County. The restraining order P.A. had obtained

in California expired in December 2012, and when she applied for a renewal, her request was

denied. About a year after the California restraining order expired, Singh became concerned that

the charges against him, particularly those in India, would prevent him from traveling back and

forth between his work in the United States and his family in India. Singh decided to visit P.A. in

Texas to see if he could convince her to drop the charges in India against him or if he could obtain

evidence that the allegations against him were false.

Singh flew to Texas, rented a car, and drove to P.A.’s apartment. When he arrived, she

was not there, so he checked into a hotel room to stay for the night. The next day, Saturday,

February 8, 2014, Singh went to the apartment leasing office and represented to a leasing agent

that he was there to deliver papers to a resident. Singh asked to be admitted to the building and

began asking for personal information about P.A. When the agent refused to allow Singh to enter

or to answer any of Singh’s questions, Singh left the leasing office. He saw the gate to the building

was open, so he went inside and knocked on P.A.’s apartment door. When no one answered, he

then knocked on the door across from P.A.’s apartment, and the resident of that apartment (the

“neighbor”) answered. Singh asked her if she had seen P.A. She responded that she had not and

that he should contact the leasing office or the police with any concerns he might have about P.A.

When the neighbor asked for a name to give P.A. if she happened to see her, Singh gave the name

“Rakesh.”

Later that afternoon, the neighbor heard a drilling sound outside her apartment and looked

through the peephole in her door to see a locksmith drilling to open the door to P.A.’s apartment.

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