Joshua Jamal Green v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 23, 2011
Docket13-09-00394-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Joshua Jamal Green v. State (Joshua Jamal Green 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
Joshua Jamal Green v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-09-00394-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG 

JOSHUA JAMAL GREEN,                                                           Appellant,

  v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS,                                                      Appellee.

On appeal from the Criminal District Court

of Jefferson County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Justices Garza, Vela, and Perkes   

Memorandum Opinion by Justice Perkes

            Appellant, Joshua Jamal Green, appeals his conviction for murder, a first-degree felony.[1]  See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.02(b)(2) (West 2003).  Appellant pleaded not guilty.  After a jury trial, appellant was found guilty, sentenced to sixty years of confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, ordered to pay a $10,000 fine plus court costs.  By two issues, appellant argues (1) the evidence was factually insufficient to sustain his conviction and (2) the trial court erred in denying his challenge for cause to a prospective juror.[2]  We affirm. 

I.  FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

One Saturday night in February 2008, two groups of high school students with a longstanding rivalry encountered one another at Mardi Gras in Port Arthur, Texas.  Around midnight, when Mardi Gras was about to close, police separated the two groups to prevent a fight from ensuing.  The groups then met at a nearby “bus barn” for school buses where police once again intervened.  This time, the police stopped and frisked members of both groups and the groups dispersed.  Shortly after midnight, the two groups reconvened at the Barbara Jacquet Park at Gilham Circle in Port Arthur for a fight.[3]  Using cellular phones to spread word that a fight was about to take place, a crowd gathered to watch the fight.  Suddenly, near the basketball court at the park, there was gunfire and the victim, Rory Parker, was shot. 

At the park, the victim was still alive, though his speech was too slurred to be understood.  A group of the victim’s friends placed him in the bed of a pick-up truck and dropped him off at an area emergency room.  The victim’s friends left the hospital quickly, even though a police officer asked them to stay to provide information about the shooting.  The victim died shortly after his arrival at the hospital and an autopsy showed a single gun-shot wound caused his death.

A.   The State’s Fact Witnesses

i.      Two Witnesses Positively Identified Appellant as the Shooter

At trial, two witnesses for the State—Tabatha Hicks and Mercedes Lopez— positively identified appellant as the person who shot the victim.  A Port Arthur police officer testified Hicks and Lopez voluntarily came forward and gave police statements during their investigation of the shooting. 

Hicks was seventeen at the time of trial and a recent high-school graduate.  She testified she was walking home with her four-year-old nephew and some girlfriends when she saw appellant shoot the victim.  Hicks testified appellant and his friends were near a Dollar General[4] store and then crossed the street to Gilham Circle.  Appellant was standing between “Patrick” and an unknown male, when he raised a gun and started firing toward the crowd.  Hicks estimated she was about ten feet away from appellant when she saw this.  She testified she had known appellant since the seventh grade and that she was certain he was the shooter.  After the shooting, the three males, including appellant, ran.  On cross-examination, Hicks admitted her cousin, Kenneth Swallow, was in the group that rivaled appellant and appellant’s friends.  Hicks also admitted Swallow and the victim were close friends and she considered both to be close friends of hers.  Hicks knew the victim from school.

Lopez testified Swallow was also a cousin of hers.  Lopez testified she was walking with Hicks, Hicks’s nephew, and her own five-year-old nephew, when she saw appellant and two other males walk over to the park from the vicinity of a nearby Family Dollar store.  According to Lopez, appellant and his cohorts walked toward the basketball goal and then appellant started shooting a gun.  Lopez testified that after shooting, appellant ran and jumped into a white Buick Le Sabre with “blades” or rims on the wheels.  Lopez estimated she was about ten feet away from appellant when she saw him shoot.  She identified appellant as a former classmate of hers and testified they had attended the same school for three years.  Lopez testified she is confident appellant was the shooter and stated she also recognized him by his clothing as she had seen him earlier in the day, prior to the shooting.  Lopez testified that at the time of the shooting, appellant wore all black, including a black “do-rag.”

ii.  The Victim’s Friends’ Testimony

The State also called four of the victim’s male friends as witnesses—Kory Stewart, Marcus White, Dizavian Sam, and JaQuail Miller.  Miller was an eighteen-year-old high-school student at the time of trial.  Miller had known appellant since the eighth grade.  He testified the plan was for him (i.e., Miller) to fight appellant that night and a crowd gathered at the park, with many people just wanting to see the fight.  Miller testified it was pitch black because the lights at the basketball court were off.  But he saw a tall figure whom he identified as appellant cross the street from the vicinity of the Family Dollar to the park.  Miller did not see the shooter’s face, but testified appellant was the tallest in appellant’s group of friends and it was the tallest person, standing in the middle of a group of three, who fired.  Miller testified he saw “flames” come from this person. 

Dizavian Sam testified he was the person nearest to the victim at the time of the shooting.  Sam and the victim were standing near illuminated lights in the parkway of Gilham Circle.  Sam testified the shots were aimed at him and his group, and came from approximately twenty yards away, from the direction of appellant, and Denzel[5]

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Joshua Jamal Green v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joshua-jamal-green-v-state-texapp-2011.