Joseph Maurice Hampton v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 9, 2005
Docket02-04-00290-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Joseph Maurice Hampton v. State (Joseph Maurice Hampton 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
Joseph Maurice Hampton v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS
FORT WORTH

 

NOS. 2-04-290-CR

                                                      2-04-291-CR

 
 

JOSEPH MAURICE HAMPTON                                                 APPELLANT

 

V.

 

THE STATE OF TEXAS                                                                  STATE

 
 

------------

 

FROM CRIMINAL DISTRICT COURT NO. 2 OF TARRANT COUNTY

   

MEMORANDUM OPINION1

 

I. Introduction

        In a single point, Joseph Maurice Hampton alleges error on the part of the trial court in sentencing him to forty years’ incarceration because he asserts the sentence is grossly disproportionate to the severity of the criminal act of which he was convicted, burglary of a habitation with intent to commit aggravated assault with a deadly weapon.

II. Background

        The incident which lead to Hampton’s arrest began at approximately 2:25 p.m. on March 21, 2002 when he arrived at the residence of his wife, Kim Hampton, who was living in the home of her parents with her children M.J.H., age 14, E.H., age 12, and Skylar D’Ottavio, her 20-year-old son by a different father.  Kim heard Hampton’s 1966 Ford Mustang pull into the driveway and believed that he was there to harm her because of numerous threatening phone calls that she had previously received from Hampton.  When Hampton knocked on the front door, Skylar, the only one of Kim’s children who was at home, told him to leave.  Hampton’s response was to shatter a front bedroom window with a sledgehammer, but as he attempted to climb through the broken window he was confronted by Skylar with a handgun, and warned to leave.  Momentarily withdrawing, Hampton’s next response was to reenter the window through the broken glass and tell Kim and Skylar that “someone is going to die” and that “no one is going to make it out of here alive.”  Kim had called 911 when this incident began and these comments were overheard by the 911 operator.  The verbal and physical threats did not end there.  Hampton took a large kitchen knife from behind his back and backed Kim and Skylar down a hallway toward a bedroom, stating that “you better shoot me because I am going to kill your ass, Skylar.”  Slashing motions made by Hampton’s knife caused a cut to Skylar’s throat.  Forcing them into the bedroom and locking the door, Hampton forced Kim on the bed and repeatedly attempted to stab her, resulting in severe cuts to Kim’s hand when she grabbed the blade of the knife to avoid being stabbed.  Skylar fired three shots into the floor which had no effect on Hampton, so Skylar struck Hampton in the head with the gun.  Skylar was able to wrestle the knife away from Hampton and unlock the bedroom door, which was followed by the timely entry of police officers responding to the 911 call.  After a considerable struggle with police, including being sprayed with O.C. spray and being hit on top of his head with a gun, Hampton was finally subdued.  Kim was transported to Harris Hospital and treated while paramedics treated Skylar’s injuries at the scene.

        The foregoing, however, was but the culmination of a series of incidents perpetrated by Hampton. Kim had decided to divorce Hampton prior to the sledgehammer incident because he had again started using drugs and refused to move out of their home.  During the week prior to the break in, Kim had received numerous threatening phone calls from Hampton.  There had also been an incident with an automobile where Hampton used his car to chase Kim and her two younger children in her car. Hampton rammed Kim’s car several times and started to exit his vehicle with a baseball bat and Kim escaped by stopping a fire truck and asking firefighters to help her.  During this chase, M.J.H. was screaming “don’t let him get us” and was balled up on the floor of the vehicle.  Kim likewise described the whole incident as “really scary.”

        The threatening phone calls made prior to the sledgehammer incident were numerous and repetitive, coming “every couple of minutes, every minute for hours and hours.  All night long, all night long.”  As a result, Kim was unable to go to work.  In another incident, when she returned to her former residence, Hampton had cut up all of her clothing.

        As a result of all of the forgoing, Kim testified that she was “emotionally . . . shot” by Hampton’s conduct and that she no longer felt safe.  Skylar also testified that he was concerned for Kim’s safety if Hampton was ever released from custody.

        Hampton contended that at the time of the sledgehammer incident, he had been on a continual binge, having consumed three “fifths” of wine and smoked a hundred dollars of crack daily for a week prior to the incident and had been awake for three or four days with very little sleep.  On the day of the sledgehammer incident, he estimated that he had consumed a couple of fifths of Mad Dog 20/20 and smoked a half a gram of crack, felt suicidal, was depressed that his family was gone and wanted to talk to Kim about returning to their home.  He also claimed that he did not know what he said during the purported threatening phone calls because he was “so far out of it” and during the sledgehammer incident didn’t remember anything after he poked Skylar in the neck with the knife and until he was handcuffed on the floor.

        Hampton’s “excuse” for his behavior was that he has a bipolar disorder and had not taken his medication.  Instead, cocaine, hydrocodone pills, and alcohol became Hampton’s medication of choice in lieu of his prescription.  He acknowledged that he knew if he didn’t take his prescription medication that he would engage in “crazy behavior” and claimed that at times he became dillusional.

III. Procedural Background

        The grand jury indicted Hampton for two separate incidents of burglary of a habitation with intent to commit aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, with repeat felony offender allegations. He plead guilty to both indictments and true to both repeat offender allegations.  After having considered the evidence, and arguments from Hampton’s counsel and counsel for the State, wherein Hampton requested the minimum incarceration of fifteen years and the State requested not less than sixty years, based on a possible punishment range of not less than fifteen years nor more than ninety-nine years/life and a fine not to exceed $10,000, the trial court judge found Hampton guilty of both cases, found the repeat felony offender allegation in both cases true and sentenced Hampton to incarceration for forty years on each case to be served concurrently.

IV. Cruel and Unusual Punishment?

        

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Joseph Maurice Hampton v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-maurice-hampton-v-state-texapp-2005.