Justin Hambrick v. State

369 S.W.3d 535, 2012 WL 1065857, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 2445
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 29, 2012
Docket01-11-00083-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 369 S.W.3d 535 (Justin Hambrick 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
Justin Hambrick v. State, 369 S.W.3d 535, 2012 WL 1065857, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 2445 (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

*536 OPINION

TERRY JENNINGS, Justice.

A jury found appellant, Justin Ham-brick, guilty of the offense of felony murder 1 and assessed his punishment at confinement for forty years. In his sole issue, appellant contends that the evidence is legally insufficient to support his conviction.

We affirm.

Background

Van Cypress testified that on August 1, 2009, he was at his brother’s apartment watching a movie along with his mother, girlfriend, and brother’s friend, Vincent Sanders. Cypress and Sanders planned to go to a bar and later return to the apartment. As they were preparing to leave, Cypress noticed a “suspicious” car pull up in front of the apartment complex. The car contained appellant and another man, later identified as Eddie Williams. Cypress decided to “[w]ait about ten minutes” before leaving because “these guys just passed by in the car and something [did not] feel right.” After ten to fifteen minutes, Cypress and Sanders left the apartment, and Cypress noticed appellant and Williams standing in the apartment complex’s laundry room. Williams asked Cypress, “You know where I can get any weed at?” When Cypress replied that he did not, Williams and appellant both brandished firearms. Cypress “pulled [Sanders] out of the way” and ran between two nearby cars. Cypress then attempted to run away from the scene but was struck by several bullets, causing him to fall to the ground. When the gunshots had subsided, Cypress got up and noticed that Williams had been shot and was lying on the ground. Appellant grabbed Williams’s firearm and “tried to shoot at [Cypress] sóme more,” but the firearm “jammed.” Cypress then ran into a nearby convenience store, where a police officer noticed his injuries and called for emergency assistance.

Cypress was transported to Hermann Memorial Hospital, where . he received treatment for five gunshot wounds. A detective interviewed Cypress, who explained that he was not previously acquainted with appellant or Williams. Cypress also stated that neither he nor Sanders were carrying firearms that night, and he identified, from a photospread, appellant and Williams as his assailants. On cross-examination, Cypress admitted that he had previously been convicted of the offense of carrying a firearm without a license.

Sanders testified that Cypress was the younger brother of his “best friend,” Chris Banks, but Cypress was “more of an acquaintance than a good friend.” Because of his close relationship with Banks, Sanders wanted to become better acquainted with Cypress, so they decided to go to a bar together. After Cypress had left the apartment and walked into the parking lot, he returned to the apartment, explaining that it looked “suspicious” outside, and he asked if Sanders was carrying a firearm. Sanders stated that he did not have a firearm, and they opted to wait “about five minutes” before leaving. On their way to Sanders’s car, they passed two men, one of whom asked, Wall know where the weed at?” Sanders replied that they did not, and he and Cypress continued walking to Sanders’s car. Cypress then touched his shoulder and said, “Hey, Vincent, get down, get, down.” When Sanders turned around, he saw both men holding firearms, heard “two sets of shots” from both men, and noticed that Cypress had been shot several times. Sanders *537 took cover behind a car, and one of the men told Sanders, “It’s not for you.” After the shooting subsided, Cypress ran to a nearby convenience store while Sanders called for emergency assistance from his cellular telephone. On cross-examination, Sanders admitted that he possessed marijuana at the time of the shooting and had intended to sell it later.

Houston Police Department (“HPD”) officer D.C. Lambright, a crime scene investigator, testified that he was asked to investigate appellant’s car after the shooting. Lambright discovered a firearm and a “knit ski mask” on the back seat of the car, and he noted that the firearm was “unloaded” with “no rounds” and “no magazine.” Lambright swabbed the firearm for DNA evidence and attempted to “lift any possible fingerprints.”

HPD officer M. Miller testified that he was dispatched to Memorial Hermann Southwest Hospital to investigate a potential homicide, where he found the body of Williams, who was deceased. Miller interviewed appellant and Antoine Porter, who had transported Williams to the hospital. Appellant then took Miller to the car that he had driven to the hospital. On their way to the ear, Miller saw a red ski mask “discarded on the ground in the parking lot,” which appellant admitted belonged to him. Appellant told Miller that “they were at an unknown apartment complex in an unknown part of town when [Williams] ... saw somebody” who did not like him. Appellant stated that this person “opened fire on them,” but Miller noticed numerous “inconsistencies” between appellant’s and Porter’s accounts of the shooting. Appellant gave Miller consent to search his car, which Miller had transported to a “more secure facility.”

The next day, Miller received information “linking up a case that was similar to” his investigation concerning Williams, and he then interviewed William Banks, Cypress’s brother. Miller recovered from the apartment complex where Cypress had been shot a videotape recording, which revealed that appellant’s car entered the apartment complex “just before” Cypress was shot. Miller determined that Cypress and Williams had been shot during the same incident, so he visited Cypress at the Hermann Memorial Southwest Hospital in order to interview him. Cypress identified appellant and Williams as his assailants in two separate photospreads. Miller was then contacted by Williams’s mother, and he asked her to call appellant and record the telephone call. Miller, who was present during the telephone call, heard appellant say, “I told you I think it came from my tool,” which Miller interpreted to mean that appellant had shot Williams. Miller also noticed that appellant’s version of the events recounted to Williams’s mother “was completely different from” from his original statement to Miller. For example, appellant told Williams’s mother that Cypress and Sanders were unarmed. Miller also explained that police officers recovered a second firearm from a dumpster located in between the scene of the shooting and Hermann Memorial Southwest Hospital.

On cross-examination, Miller explained that, although Cypress identified appellant as having been at the scene of the shooting, he mentioned that appellant “was not ... who was shooting at him.” Miller admitted that he never tested Williams or appellant for “gunshot residue” and Sanders was never able to identify appellant in a photo spread.

Williams’s mother, Yvette Williams, testified that Williams and appellant had been friends since the sixth grade. After she learned that her son had been shot and killed, she eventually called HPD to inquire whether she could help with the *538 investigation. A detective suggested that she call appellant and record the conversation, and she complied. The prosecutor then offered Yvette’s recorded telephone conversation with appellant into evidence. In the conversation, appellant said, “I think it came from my tool,” and Yvette understood “tool” to mean a firearm.

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Bluebook (online)
369 S.W.3d 535, 2012 WL 1065857, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 2445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/justin-hambrick-v-state-texapp-2012.