Jones, Virginia Estell v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 10, 2005
Docket14-03-00650-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Jones, Virginia Estell v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed March 10, 2005

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed March 10, 2005.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-03-00650-CR

VIRGINIA ESTELL JONES, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 12th District Court

Walker County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 19,968

________________________________________________________________

M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N


Appellant Virginia Estell Jones challenges her conviction for introducing implements of escape into a correctional facility.  She asserts ten issues on appeal, alleging: (1)B(2) the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support her conviction; (3) the trial court erred when it denied her motion to suppress custodial statements; (4) the jury charge failed to require a unanimous verdict; (5) the trial court erred in admitting evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts in violation of Texas Rules of Evidence 403 and 404(b); (6) the jury charge and statements made by the State misled the jury as to the meaning of Areasonable doubt;@ (7) the jury engaged in misconduct by deliberating before the close of the evidence and the reading of the jury charge; (8) her trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance; (9) the trial court defined the offense improperly and improperly enhanced punishment; and (10) the trial court committed constitutional error by failing to properly instruct the jury on the law of parole.  We affirm.

I.  Factual and Procedural Background

Appellant and Mark Stallings, an inmate in the Holliday Unit of the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice in Huntsville, Texas, shared a romantic relationship.  Appellant regularly visited Stallings in prison, and they corresponded regularly by mail.  In this correspondence, appellant and Stallings, using code words, discussed appellant acquiring a gun.  On or about August 2, 1998, appellant allegedly supplied Stallings with a gun.  Five days later, Stallings used the gun to threaten and to hold a prison guard hostage in an attempt to escape.  Prior to trial, Stallings signed a written confession in which he stated that appellant brought the gun to him in prison during a contact visit on August 2, 1998, and another inmate, Jerry Dale Stanley, helped him smuggle it past the guards in the visitation room.

At trial, the State asserted that appellant gave the gun to Stallings during the August 2, 1998 contact visit, although no one saw appellant deliver the gun to Stallings.  At that time, prison visitors were not patted down, searched for contraband, or required to pass through metal detectors.  Stanley and another inmate, Joseph Kellerman, testified that Stallings=s escape plan included appellant smuggling a gun into the prison and giving it to him during visitation.  Stanley testified that when he and Stallings left the visitation room on August 2, Stallings handed him a heavy item, wrapped in cloth, and asked him to hold it.  The item was successfully smuggled past the guards supervising the visitation. 

Stanley gave a second version of events.  In contrast to the account given in his first written confession, in a second written confession and at trial, Stallings testified that he received the gun from a corrupt corrections officer.


Appellant testified that she acquired the gun for her own protection.  She also testified that she did not give Stallings the gun during visitation, but that she gave the gun to a man sent by Stallings to pick it up from her at her home.  Felix Garza, appellant=s ex-boyfriend, testified that he bought the gun for appellant.  Although the gun used by Stallings had the serial number filed off, a firearms expert was able to restore the serial number.  The custodian of records for the pawn shop where Garza purchased the gun testified that Garza purchased a gun with the same serial number as the gun used by Stallings.  Prison records indicate that Stallings had no visitors other than appellant between the date the gun was purchased and the date of Stallings=s attempted escape.

Appellant was charged by indictment with introducing implements of escape into a correctional facility.  Appellant pleaded Anot guilty.@  A jury found appellant guilty and assessed punishment at ten years in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division and a $10,000 fine.

II.  Analysis and Discussion

A.        Is the evidence legally and factually sufficient to support appellant=s conviction?

A person commits a felony if the person, with the intent to facilitate escape, introduces into a correctional facility, or provides an inmate with, a deadly weapon or anything that may be useful for escape.  Tex. Pen. Code Ann. ' 38.09(a) (Vernon 2003).  A person is criminally responsible for an offense committed by another if that person, acting with intent to promote or assist the commission of the offense, solicited, encouraged, directed, aided, or attempted to aid the other person to commit the offense.  Tex. Pen. Code Ann. ' 7.02(a)(2) (Vernon 2003). 

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