John Walter Raybon v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 15, 2013
Docket02-12-00071-CR
StatusPublished

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John Walter Raybon v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 02-12-00071-CR

JOHN WALTER RAYBON APPELLANT

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS STATE

----------

FROM THE 89TH DISTRICT COURT OF WICHITA COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION 1

In three issues, appellant John Walter Raybon contends that the evidence

presented at his trial is insufficient to support his two convictions for retaliation. 2

We affirm.

1 See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. 2 See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 36.06(a) (West 2011). Background Facts

Kevin Taylor, a manager with AT&T, was working at a store in Wichita

Falls on January 8, 2011, a Saturday, when appellant entered the store to seek

assistance with issues related to his account. Appellant brought his laptop into

the store. Taylor used the laptop to help appellant, but the laptop eventually fell

off of a counter, hit the floor, and sustained damage. Taylor said that he would

contact appellant two days later, on Monday, about helping appellant repair his

laptop.

Eventually, Taylor told appellant to get a price for repairing the laptop from

an electronics store, and Taylor said that AT&T would pay for the repair. 3

Nonetheless, appellant contacted Taylor on numerous occasions about the

laptop, becoming abrasive toward him. For example, on January 11, the

Tuesday after the laptop fell, appellant mentioned to Taylor that he “carried a gun

with him anywhere he went.” Appellant also told Taylor that he would get fired,

that a “shit storm [was] coming,” and that Taylor “was about to start receiving a

lot of unwanted visitors.” Officials at Taylor’s store advised him to begin taking

varied routes home from work. AT&T assigned security officers to work in the

store beginning January 12.

On January 13, during a phone conversation that appellant had about the

damage to his laptop with Brandon Haines, who was providing customer care

3 At some point, appellant received a payment of $625 from AT&T’s insurance company for the damage to his laptop.

2 support for AT&T, appellant became angry and told Haines that he would “take

care of the situation himself” by getting “his nine” and going to the store. Haines

believed that by referencing his “nine,” appellant meant his gun. Haines told

appellant that he took appellant’s threat seriously, ended the conversation, and

contacted Taylor to inform him about the threat.

Shortly after appellant’s conversation with Haines ended, Lane Akin, who

works with AT&T as an asset protection analyst, received information about what

appellant had conveyed to Haines, notified the Wichita Falls Police Department

about that information, and traveled to Wichita Falls to meet with Taylor. 4 On the

night of January 24, after speaking with Taylor, Akin called appellant, told him

that his “threats . . . were starting to frighten the employees,” and asked him to

make no further contact with Taylor but to instead contact only Akin with any

questions about issues related to the laptop. Akin advised appellant that Akin

had contacted the Wichita Falls police, and Akin told appellant that if he

continued to contact Taylor, harassment charges would be filed against him. In

the conversation, appellant referenced litigation, lawyers, and the media.

On January 28, appellant returned to the store. Outside of the store, in the

presence of Wichita Falls Police Department Officer John Ricketts, who was

providing security, Taylor barred appellant from the premises. In response,

4 Akin is a retired Texas Ranger. He spent thirty years in law enforcement before working for AT&T.

3 appellant became agitated, made statements about Taylor losing his job, took a

picture of Taylor, and said to Taylor, “[Y]ou’re going to regret this.”

After Taylor went into the store, as Officer Ricketts was trying to get

information from appellant so that appellant could be legally barred from the

store, appellant repeatedly placed his hands in his pockets even though Officer

Ricketts had told him not to. Officer Ricketts told appellant to turn around and to

place his hands on his head so that Officer Ricketts could pat him down for

weapons. Appellant eventually did so, and Officer Ricketts found a nine-

millimeter semiautomatic gun in appellant’s left jacket pocket. The gun had

several rounds in its magazine. Officer Ricketts arrested appellant for unlawful

carrying of a weapon.

On the way to jail, appellant expressed that it was Taylor’s fault that he had

been arrested. In jail, appellant told Officer Ricketts that he carried a gun at all

times, that he would use it, that “AT&T and Taylor had not heard the last of him,”

and that he would get his money one way or another. Taylor called Akin to

inform him about what had occurred that day.

Upon Akin’s direction, AT&T terminated its account with appellant. On

January 31, after appellant called AT&T’s customer service department to seek

reactivation of his service, a customer service employee transferred the call to

Akin. During appellant’s conversation with Akin, which lasted longer than twenty

minutes, appellant talked “about being upset over certain issues.” He also

mentioned that he had been in jail, that his gun had been taken from him, that he

4 was licensed to carry a gun in twenty-six states, that he was going to get the gun

back, and that he was “going to make a move to destroy [Akin’s] life and . . .

Taylor’s life.” According to Akin, appellant’s statement about getting his gun back

was made in “real close time proximity” to his statement about destroying Akin’s

and Taylor’s lives. Akin understood appellant’s statement as a definite threat of

violence toward him and Taylor; Akin testified at trial that he believed that there

was a “definite possibility” that appellant meant that he would kill them and

destroy their lives once he got his gun back. After the conversation ended, Akin

reported appellant’s statement about destroying his and Taylor’s lives to the

police.

A grand jury indicted appellant with two counts of retaliation. The

indictments alleged that appellant had intentionally or knowingly threatened to

harm Akin and Taylor by shooting and killing them “in retaliation for or on account

of the[ir] service or status . . . as . . . prospective witness[es], informant[s], and as

. . . person[s] who had reported the occurrence of a crime.”

Appellant pled not guilty to both counts, and the parties litigated the counts

through one trial. After considering the evidence and the parties’ arguments, a

jury convicted appellant of both counts. The jury then listened to evidence and

arguments concerning appellant’s punishment and assessed ten years’

confinement on each count. Appellant brought this appeal.

5 Evidentiary Sufficiency

In his three issues, appellant argues that, respectively, the State failed to

prove that any threats he made accompanied a retaliatory intent, the State failed

to prove that he threatened harm by an unlawful act, and the State failed to prove

that he threatened to shoot or kill Akin or Taylor. In our due-process review of

the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction, we view all of the

evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict to determine whether any

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