Jonathan Maurice Williams v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 25, 2007
Docket14-06-00132-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Jonathan Maurice Williams v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed September 25, 2007

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed September 25, 2007.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-06-00132-CR

JONATHAN MAURICE WILLIAMS, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 228th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 990,259

M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N

A jury found appellant, Jonathan Maurice Williams, guilty of aggravated robbery.   The same jury assessed punishment at 23 years= confinement and a $600 fine.  On appeal, appellant complains about the sufficiency of the evidence, ineffectiveness of counsel, and trial court error regarding jury instructions and failure to grant a mistrial.  We affirm. 

Factual Background


On October 12, 2003, Lucas Jimenez was at home with his daughter, son-in-law, and their baby boy, Carlitos.  Jimenez heard a knock at the door, and went to open it, suspecting that his roommate had forgotten his key and had returned from doing laundry.  When he opened the door, two black males pushed the door open and forced their way inside.  One of them had a gun, which he pointed at Jimenez.  The two men forced Jimenez into the bedroom, where his daughter, Antoinetta Marcos, and her husband Candelario Hernandez were looking after their baby.  The men forced the family to lay down on the floor, leaving the baby where he had been in the middle of the bed, and the man later identified as appellant held the family at gunpoint while his accomplice ransacked the apartment. 

At some point during the robbery, Jimenez=s roommate, Benigno, did in fact return from doing his laundry.  The two men grabbed him when he came in and put him on the floor in the bedroom with the rest of the family.  The men then covered all four adults with a blanket, so they could not see what was happening.  The family remained under the blanket, not moving, until they did not hear the men in the apartment anymore.  Estimates of the amount of time spent under the blanket range from ten to forty minutes.

The family got up and surveyed the damage.  The apartment had been ransacked, and cash, jewelry, including Marcos=s wedding ring, and a video cassette recorder were stolen from the apartment.  At this point, the family called the police to report the incident.  The police arrived shortly thereafter, filled out a report, and gave Jimenez a card with a number to call in case he ever saw the robbers again. 


After the police left, Jimenez, having no money with which to buy food, went to a cousin who lived nearby and borrowed $100 to feed his family.  Jimenez, his son Alvarro, and Benigno took the $100 and went to the grocery store to buy food.  On the way home from shopping, Jimenez spotted the two robbers standing in front of a gas station.  Jimenez instructed Alvarro to get out and call the police from a pay phone.  When the police arrived, they talked to Jimenez, and he pointed out the two men to the police.  The police approached the men with weapons drawn, and appellant grabbed the pocket of his pants, and ran.  Both officers gave chase, and pursued appellant into the parking lot of a nearby apartment complex.  After calling for backup, officers eventually found appellant hiding under a vehicle.  He had ninety dollars in his possession, but no gun or loot from Jimenez=s apartment. 

The officers brought appellant back to their squad car, and after putting him in the back, had Jimenez, Benigno, and Hernandez separately approach the car and look at appellant to see if they would confirm that he was one of the men who had robbed them.  The men confirmed that appellant was one of the robbers. 

The single contested issue at trial was the identity of the robber.  The State began its case by calling Jimenez, Hernandez, and Marcos to the stand to testify to the events of the robbery, and to identify appellant as one of the robbers.  Jimenez took the stand first, and testified that he recognized appellant as one of the men who had entered his apartment. On cross-examination, Jimenez recounted the description he had given the police, which included black t-shirt, long black shorts, and a black rag on his head.  He described the robber as being of average height, with somewhat dark skin, and having a silver tooth.  He testified that when he saw the men at the convenience store that evening, they were wearing the same clothes they had worn during the robbery. 

Jimenez testified on cross-examination that the blanket was thrown over the family as soon as they were taken to the bedroom, but on re-direct, he clarified that the blanket obscuring the group=s view of the robbers was only thrown over them after Benigno came home and was brought into the bedroom.  On cross-examination, when defense counsel asked him whether he got a good look at appellant=s arms, Jimenez said Ayes.@  Jimenez stated he did not notice any tattoos on appellant=s arms.  On re-direct, he testified that he was the first person to see the robbers, and was the closest person in the apartment to the appellant, and that he Ajust saw [appellant=s] face,@ rather than his arms or body. 


Hernandez gave a similar description of the events in the apartment, and also made an in-court identification of appellant as being one of the robbers.  He testified to being in the doorway to the bedroomCsome 20 feet from the front door when the men forced their way in, and that from this vantage point he was able to see their faces as they came in.  They came forward until they were about two feet from Hernandez, at which point he could see their faces clearly.  He also testified to making an identification of appellant in the officers= patrol car, and that he was certain of his identification.  On cross-examination, Hernandez admitted that he only saw the gunman=s face for a brief time.  He also testified on cross-examination that he saw both of appellant=s forearms.  He did not notice any tattoos on appellant=s arms. 

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