John C. Theus v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 2, 2009
Docket01-08-00284-CR
StatusPublished

This text of John C. Theus v. State (John C. Theus 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
John C. Theus v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion issued July 2, 2009




In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01-08-00284-CR





JOHN C. THEUS, Appellant


V.


THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee





On Appeal from 263rd District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1070888





MEMORANDUM OPINION

          A jury convicted appellant, John C. Theus, of murder, found that he had used a deadly weapon, i.e., a firearm, and assessed punishment at life in prison. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.02(b)(1–2) (Vernon 2003). Appellant challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence, arguing that there were no eyewitnesses to the crime. In addition, appellant contends that the trial court abused its discretion by admitting certain hearsay statements.

          We affirm.

                    Background

          Leon Jones shared an apartment with David Lipps, Andre Stewart, and Anthony Harbour. Around May 5, 2006, appellant reported a burglary from his friend’s apartment. Appellant, who is an acknowledged member of the 59 Bounty Hunter “Bloods” gang, reported that some clothing and electronics had been stolen. On the same day, Harbour gave one of appellant’s stolen shirts to Jones. Appellant and several other people came looking for Harbour at the apartment complex where he shared an apartment with Leon Jones. Appellant saw Jones wearing one of his stolen shirts, and appellant and the others attacked Jones. Appellant repeatedly asked Jones where Harbour was, threatened to kill both Harbour and Jones, and took the stolen shirt.

          Two days later, appellant returned to the apartment complex, again with a group of people. Jones was in the stairwell talking to a neighbor who lived a floor below him. Jones testified that appellant and the others acted like they were on a mission. Appellant aimed a black handgun at Jones, who, feeling scared and threatened, fled the area on foot. At trial, Jones described the gun as a .380. A few minutes later, Jones saw Harbour climb out of the apartment window. After Harbour climbed out of the window, Jones heard a shooting noise. At trial, Jones identified appellant as the person who threatened him with a gun that night on the stairwell. Jones’s neighbor, Catina Stewart, also testified that she saw the gunman that night and that appellant “resemble[d] the guy standing at the base of the stairs holding the gun.”

          Meanwhile, Andre Stewart was also present that night. He reluctantly testified that a gunman and three other people forced him into the apartment. Harbour was there, and the gunman questioned him about the burglary, in particular another of his stolen shirts, which Harbour was wearing at the time. Harbour removed the shirt, shoved it at the gunman, and slammed the door, locking himself and Stewart, who had stepped into the apartment, inside. Someone kicked the door, Harbour ran to the back bedroom, and Stewart stayed near the door “because in my mind if somebody is running, they’re guilty, so they’re shot.”

          When appellant burst through the door, Stewart told him that he had nothing to do with the burglary. Appellant walked to the back bedroom, and one of appellant’s associates held Stewart at gunpoint with a shotgun. Unbeknownst to Stewart, David Lipps was in the back bedroom. Stewart heard about five gunshots coming from the bedroom. Stewart and the people who had held him at gunpoint all fled the apartment. When Stewart returned later, he found Lipps dead, slumped near the window, through which he had apparently been trying to escape.

          Although Stewart positively identified appellant as the gunman in a photographic lineup, noting that appellant looked exactly like the person who held the gun and that he could identify appellant by the prominent line across his forehead, he vacillated at trial, saying that appellant was the closest match of the photographs provided in the lineup. Stewart testified at trial that appellant did not look like the man who held the handgun. Stewart also said that he did not want to testify and that he had no choice about testifying in this case.

          Houston Police Department Detective M. Waters testified that Stewart had positively identified appellant in a photographic lineup. Detective Waters also testified that this was a gang-related crime, that stealing clothing with a gang member’s colors is “tantamount to stealing their heart” and that the gang member “has a responsibility to . . . get them back from the person who actually stole them.”

          Anthony Harbour, who was incarcerated at the time of trial, also testified reluctantly, and the trial court permitted the State to treat him as a hostile witness. Harbour stated that someone kicked in the door that night, and he jumped out of the bedroom window. He denied knowing either appellant or Leon Jones. He said that he was not a good reader and that the police officers lied, wrote his statement, and made him sign it, without his knowing what was in it. He testified that appellant was not the gunman.

          K. Downs, a firearms examiner for the Houston Police Department, testified that she examined the firearms evidence collected from the crime scene and determined that the evidence came from a .38 caliber class firearm of revolver type. The assistant medical examiner for Harris County, who conducted the autopsy on David Lipps’s body, testified that the cause of death was a gunshot wound through the heart and that Lipps’s body had two gunshot wounds.

          Both appellant and his girlfriend testified on his behalf at trial. Appellant’s girlfriend, Kristen Williams, said that appellant was with her the entire weekend that complainant was murdered. She said that she clearly remembered the details of that weekend because it was the weekend of a birthday party for appellant’s younger brother, which they did not attend, and because it was about two weeks before her senior prom. She also testified that appellant was commonly mistaken for other people. She denied that appellant was a member of a gang or that he had any prior convictions or any weapons convictions. Appellant also testified that he was with Williams and denied belonging to a gang, but he admitted that he had a prior weapons conviction. He also admitted making a police report about a burglary two days before the shooting, although Williams denied that he had done so.

Legal and Factual Sufficiency

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