Justin Raveon Tryon v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 18, 2024
Docket01-23-00403-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Justin Raveon Tryon v. the State of Texas (Justin Raveon Tryon v. the State of Texas) 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 Raveon Tryon v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Opinion issued July 18, 2024

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-23-00402-CR NO. 01-23-00403-CR ——————————— JUSTIN RAVEON TRYON, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 209th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case Nos. 1711621 & 1711624 MEMORANDUM OPINION

Justin Raveon Tryon was charged with second degree aggravated assault with

a deadly weapon1 and possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance,

namely cocaine.2 A jury convicted Tyron of both offenses. He was sentenced to

12 years’ confinement for aggravated assault and 10 years’ confinement for

possession with intent to deliver—with the recommendation that he be placed on 8

years community supervision. In three issues on appeal, Tryon challenges the

sufficiency of the evidence to support his convictions.

We affirm.

Background

Shaquinta Meador and Tryon began dating around August 2020. On February

21, 2021, Tryon called Meador and asked if they could talk. Meador met Tryon that

afternoon and they went to Hermann Park in Meador’s Chevy Tahoe. When they

arrived, Tryon asked Meador if they could move in together. Meador told Tryon no,

because they were on two different paths, and Meador did not want her daughter,

who was living with Meador at the time, “to be around the situation where harm

could be brought to her.”

1 See TEX. PENAL CODE §§ 22.01, 22.02(a)(2). Appellate cause number 01-23- 00402-CR is trial court case number 1711624. 2 See TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE § 481.112. Appellate cause number 01-23- 00403-CR is trial court case number 1711621.

2 Meador and Tryon then left the park to eat at Texas Roadhouse. They left the

restaurant without eating, however, because Meador wanted to go home. Meador

could tell Tryon was upset that she wanted to go home, but he still wanted something

to eat. Tryon drove to Chacho’s, a restaurant in Houston and attempted to order food

through the drive-thru. The male employee taking their order started “being smart,”

and Tryon started “going off on him” and “cuss[ing] him out.” As they pulled up to

the drive-thru window, a male employee exited the restaurant “trying to fight”

Tryon.

Meador got out of the vehicle and tried to deescalate the situation. Eventually,

the male employee went back inside the restaurant and a female employee, Maisha

Williams, came out to take their order. Tryon “pulled out a gun,” “cocked it

upwards,” and told Williams to “send him back out.”

Williams testified that on that evening she was working as a cashier at

Chacho’s and became aware of a verbal altercation between an employee and a

customer. She made contact with the customer outside the drive-thru, while the

customer was inside his vehicle, which Williams described as “like a Suburban.”

The customer appeared to be in his 30s, African American, and had a female

passenger.

Williams walked outside, and up to his vehicle, and noticed that the customer

seemed angry, “like he just got into it with someone.” When she tried to resolve the

3 issue, the customer pulled out a gun and cocked it. After he pulled a gun on her as

she was standing at his window, Williams rushed back inside. The following day,

Williams met with a detective and identified Tryon from a photo array.

After Williams went back inside the restaurant, Meador told Tryon that they

needed to leave because the police were going to come. Tryon “spe[d] off real

quick,” and was driving erratically. According to Meador, Tryon was upset that she

had told him he had to go home and could not stay the night with her, and every time

she said something to him, “it seemed like he just got angrier.” Tryon “smashed on

the brake real hard,” causing her to hit the dashboard with her chest. She then

reached over and grabbed the keys and told Tryon he had to get out of the vehicle.

As she reached over him and opened the driver’s door, Meador then “slid[] over

from the passenger’s side so [she] could get into the driver’s seat to try to go.” Tryon

got out of the vehicle and stood “[d]irectly outside the driver’s door.” Meador

testified that the driver’s door was open slightly and that the windows in the vehicle

were up. As Tryon was standing just outside the vehicle, Meador testified that he

said: “So you think I’m playing about you? You think I’m playing about you?”

Meador turned her head around as she tried to start the vehicle, and although

she did not see Tryon shoot her, she “hear[d] the gun go off.” At first, Meador did

not realize that she was shot. She thought Tryon had “shot in the air or something

just to shoot to scare [her].” However, once her arm started tingling, Meador realized

4 the “bone busted” in her arm. She later realized she had also been shot in the neck.

Meador turned to Tryon, saw him holding a gun, and said to him: “You shot me.”

Meador testified that Tryon appeared to be “shocked,” denied shooting her,

and told her, “let me take you home and take care of you.” Meador, who could not

find her phone, asked Tryon if she could call the police. Tryon said no, but

eventually, after Meador told him he could make up a story to tell the police, he

agreed to call 9-1-1. While they were waiting for police to arrive, Meador testified

that she saw Tryon “putting his bag and stuff in the woods.” She further described

Tryon’s bag as a backpack.

Once Houston Fire Department (HFD) and Houston Police Department

(HPD) arrived on scene, Meador stated that she initially told an officer that they were

shot at by someone in a silver Malibu, but that she said this because Tryon could

hear her. However, Meador testified that as soon as she left the scene in the

ambulance, she told the paramedics that Tryon was the one who shot her.

HFD Paramedic D. Lopez confirmed that, as soon as the ambulance began

transporting her to the hospital, Meador told Lopez: “It was him; he shot me.” She

explained that she was referring to the male suspect who was still on scene, i.e.,

Tryon, as the person who shot her. Lopez further testified that when he arrived on

scene, no one else was present except Meador and Tryon. Lopez told his partner to

5 radio HPD, who was still on scene with Tryon, to tell them that Meador had

identified Tryon as the shooter.

HPD Sergeant M. Mendez and Officer E. Camacho also responded to the

scene. Officer Camacho testified that when she arrived, she saw paramedics treating

Meador in the ambulance and a male standing very near the open ambulance doors.

Officer Camacho attempted to get a statement from Meador, but she was in pain and

“had an urgency to leave.” Officer Camacho identified Tryon in the courtroom as

the male standing near the ambulance doors.

Sergeant Mendez testified that after the ambulance left to transport Meador to

Ben Taub Hospital, he received information about the identity of the possible

shooter, i.e., Tryon. Sergeant Mendez instructed Officer Camacho to handcuff

Tryon and search him. In conducting the pat down search, Officer Camacho located

a handgun. Officer Camacho then asked Sergeant Mendez to complete a full

systematic search, which consisted of searching his clothing for any weapons or

narcotics before he was placed in the patrol car. In doing so, Sergeant Mendez

discovered a small clear bag of narcotics, a white powdery substance, in Tryon’s

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