Jonathan Ray Shepherd v. State

489 S.W.3d 559, 2016 WL 1534754, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 3958
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 18, 2016
Docket06-15-00064-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 489 S.W.3d 559 (Jonathan Ray Shepherd 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
Jonathan Ray Shepherd v. State, 489 S.W.3d 559, 2016 WL 1534754, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 3958 (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by Justice Moseley

During his elder son’s football game, Jonathan Ray Shepherd shot and killed Cheyenne Green, the mother of his youngest son, in the parking lot of the Gilmer High School football stadium. After an Upshur County jury found Shepherd guilty of the capital murder of Green, the trial court sentenced him to the mandatory punishment of life imprisonment without parole. 1 In his appeal to this Court, Shepherd asserts that the trial court erred (1) in admitting out-of-court statements of Green in violation of his right to confront and cross-examine witnesses under the Sixth Amendment, (2) in refusing his request to charge the jury on the lesser-included offense of felony murder, and (3) in admitting into evidence his videotaped statement to the police. We find that (1) the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting Shepherd’s second videotaped statement, (2) the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting Green’s out-of-court statements, and (3) the evidence did not support the submission of a felony murder charge. Since we find no error, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

I. Background

A. The Night of the Shooting

On the night of September 26, 2013, Shepherd attended his elder son’s eighth-grade football game with his wife, Susan Bates, and her parents. Shepherd’s two-year-old son by Green, Teddy, 2 was also attending the game with Shepherd. By pre-arrangement, Green was waiting in her car in the parking lot waiting for Teddy, and Shepherd left the stands about halftime to deliver the little boy to his mother. According to Shepherd, 3 when he got to the parking lot, he saw Green’s car parked beside his truck, and he observed Green walk from her car, pick Teddy up and kiss him, and then place the child in Shepherd’s truck to change his diaper. As Green changed Teddy’s diaper, Shepherd retrieved his Glock .357 pistol from his truck’s back seat and put it in his pocket. After the diaper had been changed, Green put Teddy in his car seat in her car and instructed him to bid farewell to his father. Shepherd walked to the passenger side of Green’s ear, leaned into the car to kiss Teddy, and told him goodbye. Shepherd then leaned down and told Green that his chest was hurting and asked Green if she knew what a heart attack felt like. Green *564 responded negatively, and Shepherd asked her to take him to the emergency room, getting into the back seat of Green’s car and shutting the door. Nevertheless, Green refused to drive him to the hospital and began dialing on her cell phone. Shepherd asked the identity of the person she was calling, and Green told him that she was calling Bates, Shepherd’s wife. Although Shepherd protested that Bates was still in the stands and that he needed to go immediately to the hospital, Green still refused to transport him there.

In his statement, Shepherd related that he then became frustrated and believed Green' to have mistreated him several ways, despite what he characterized as his kind and generous treatment of her. He related,

I’m doing all these good deeds and then like, she don’t even appreciate it[. ]I’m sitting there crying out for her help so I got upset, you know, and so that’s when I leaned over the seat with the gun and said, “Hey, just go. We need to go now. I don’t feel good — I’m telling you that.” Well, when I — when she seen that it scared her and freaked her out, you know, and so by that time, you know, she’s sitting there fidgeting with the phone. I said, “Drive the car,” okay. She didn’t — she sat there — “Jonathan, put it away. Put it away.” I — “Drive the car.” “Put it away. Put it away,” so she made a — she opened up her door to get out and I guess run or whatever and I — I’m not certain 100% but I don’t know if I fired off a shot then but — but I was never ever intending to hit her.
[[Image here]]
I was all trying to get her attention. Well when she got out of the car then I remembered getting out of the backseat, going around the other side of the car— she’s sitting on the ground, kinda like screaming and crying.
[[Image here]]
... [Sjhe’s sitting there screaming and crying so I discharged my firearm— I know once that I know of — I if I did more than that, then I don’t remember.

Shepherd also stated that Green was sitting on the ground on her buttocks screaming after the first shot and after the second shot, she reclined on the ground and was mumbling. He maintained that he could not say for certain that he had the gun pointed straight at her, but that it was pointed in her direction. He then jumped in his truck, called Bates, told her he had messed up, and asked her to get Teddy, telling her that he did not know what happened, but that it was bad. Bates asked him if he had beaten Green to death, and he responded that he had not but told her that he had shot his gun and was unaware if he had hurt Green. After several hours and several telephone calls with his family, he turned himself in to the Gilmer police.

Bates admitted that on the night of the murder, she had told the investigating officer that Shepherd had told her that when Green would not take him where he wanted to go, she got out of the car and he went around and shot her. In her statement to the investigator that night, Bates said that Shepherd had told her that Green was giving him all kinds of problems, that he just could not take it anymore, and that Green was dead. Bates also related that Shepherd told her that Green was being short and stupid and not giving him the answers he wanted to hear and that when she got out of the car, he got out and shot her. Bates also testified that when she first learned that Green was dead in the parking lot, her first thought was that Shepherd had finally beaten her to death. She acknowledged that when she talked with Shepherd that night, Shepherd had not expressed any concern for *565 Green, for her, or for his sons, his only apparent concern being that he did not want to get caught.

Connie Ward testified that on that night, she was taking her niece to the car when she first heard a gunshot followed immediately afterward by a terrifying female scream, which lasted until she heard a second gunshot, after which she heard no more screams. After a very short pause following the second gunshot, she heard a third.

Dr. Robert Lyon, a forensic pathologist, testified that Green had been shot three times. He testified that one bullet entered the back of her right shoulder and exited the front of that shoulder. This wound would not have been fatal, Lyon opined, and Green would have been able to scream. Another bullet entered the left side of her face, went through her left lower jaw, and exited the right side of her neck just below the right part of the lower jaw. Lyon testified that the second shot broke her jaw in such a fashion that she would have been unable, to scream but would be able to mumble. He also testified that the strippling 4

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
489 S.W.3d 559, 2016 WL 1534754, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 3958, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jonathan-ray-shepherd-v-state-texapp-2016.