Kelly Denise Jamison A/K/A Kelly D. Jamison v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2006
Docket02-05-00053-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Kelly Denise Jamison A/K/A Kelly D. Jamison v. State (Kelly Denise Jamison A/K/A Kelly D. Jamison 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
Kelly Denise Jamison A/K/A Kelly D. Jamison v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

                                      COURT OF APPEALS

                                       SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                                   FORT WORTH

                                       NOS.  2-05-053-CR

        2-05-054-CR

        2-05-055-CR

KELLY DENISE JAMISON                                                      APPELLANT

A/K/A KELLY D. JAMISON

                                                   V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS                                                                STATE

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

           FROM THE 213TH DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

                                MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]


Appellant Kelly Denise Jamison appeals from her two life sentences for two counts of possession of a controlled substance and her twenty-year sentence for fraudulent use or possession of identifying information.  In a single point, Appellant argues that her trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance at her punishment hearing after the trial court revoked her deferred adjudication community supervision.  We affirm.

                             Factual and Procedural Background

In two separate cases, grand juries indicted Appellant for possession of more than one gram but less than four grams of methamphetamine, and both indictments contained habitual-offender notices.  In a third case, a grand jury indicted Appellant on five counts of possession or use of identifying information with intent to defraud, and the indictment included an enhancement paragraph. Pursuant to plea bargains in all three cases, Appellant pleaded guilty to the charges and pleaded true to the habitual offender notices and the enhancement paragraph, and the trial court placed her on deferred adjudication community supervision for ten years in each case.


The State moved to proceed to adjudication in all three cases, alleging that Appellant, within three months of having been released from jail on community supervision, violated the conditions of community supervision by using a controlled substance and failing to report, to which Appellant pleaded true, and committing a new offense and failing to submit an undiluted urine sample for drug testing, to which Appellant pleaded not true.  The alleged new offense was another instance of possession or misuse of identifying information with intent to defraud.  The State offered evidence that police apprehended Appellant while she was forging checks and identification cards with a scanner, computer, printer, and laminating machine in a motel room that she had rented using false identification.  The trial court found all of the alleged community-supervision violations to be true except for the alleged failure to submit an undiluted urine sample.

The trial court proceeded to adjudication in all three cases, finding Appellant guilty of each charge and finding the habitual-offender and enhancement allegations to be true.  The court offered each side the opportunity to present punishment-phase evidence.  Appellant offered no evidence.  The trial court then sentenced Appellant to life imprisonment for each of the possession charges and twenty years= imprisonment for the misuse-of-identification chargeBthe maximum sentence for each chargeCwith all of the sentences to run concurrently.


Appellant=s counsel filed timely notices of appeal.  Appellant filed a pro se AMotion for Substitution of Attorneys@ in this court, which we granted.  After Appellant=s new counsel filed Appellant=s brief asserting ineffective assistance of trial counsel, the State filed an unopposed motion asking this court to abate the appeal and remand to the trial court so that Appellant could file an out-of-time motion for new trial to develop her ineffective-assistance claims.  We granted the State=s motion and remanded the cases to the trial court.

Appellant then filed motions for new trial in the trial court, and the trial court held an evidentiary hearing on the motions.  Three witnesses testified at the hearing.

First, Appellant=s one-time community supervision officer, Stacy Pickett, testified that Appellant was rejected by the Nexus drug-rehabilitation program, which Appellant was ordered to attend as a condition of community supervision, because she was not a resident of Dallas County as required by that program.  Efforts to place Appellant in another program came to a halt when Appellant violated another term of her community supervision by testing positive for illegal drugs.


Appellant testified that after her arrest for violating the terms of her community supervision and before the trial court=s adjudication of guilt, she applied to and was accepted by two other drug-treatment programs, Homeward Bound and Cenikor.  She said that she told her trial counsel that she had been accepted by those programs, but he did not contact anyone at Homeward Bound or Cenikor regarding their willingness to testify on Appellant=s behalf at the punishment hearing. 

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Kelly Denise Jamison A/K/A Kelly D. Jamison v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-denise-jamison-aka-kelly-d-jamison-v-state-texapp-2006.