Kevin D. Chaney v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 28, 2011
Docket01-09-01019-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Kevin D. Chaney v. State (Kevin D. Chaney 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
Kevin D. Chaney v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued April 28, 2011

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

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NO. 01-09-01019-CR

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Kevin D. Chaney, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 339th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 1163128

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          A jury found Kevin D. Chaney guilty of capital murder.[1]  The trial court assessed punishment at life imprisonment.  On appeal, Chaney contends the State presented factually insufficient evidence to convict him of capital murder under the theory that he was criminally responsible for the conduct of another as either a party to the murder under Texas Penal Code section 7.02(a)(2) or a co-conspirator under section 7.02(b).[2]

          We affirm. 

Background

          In June 2006, two men robbed a convenience store owned by Thi Nguyen and his wife Dung.  On the morning of the robbery, Thi was stacking beer in the back of the store and Dung was in the front of the store at the cash register while their 11 year-old son watched TV nearby.  Thi regularly carried a gun while working in the store.  Two men came into the store wearing stockings as masks.  The first man, later identified as Charles Jones, wore a wig and holding a gun went to confront Thi at the back of the store.  The second man, Chaney, pushed Dung to the ground behind the register and demanded money.  The Nguyen’s son ran across the street to get help from a nearby mechanic’s shop.  Jones shot Thi in the chest and then put the gun to Dung’s head and demanded money.  The men drove away from the store in a white car having stolen money from the register and a bank deposit bag, lottery tickets, and several packets of cigarettes.  One of the mechanics from across the street saw the robbers drive away and followed the white car at a distance.  He saw them park at an abandoned house and run away on foot, leaving the car.  Thi died at the scene. 

          Law enforcement officers arrived and investigated the scenes at the convenience store and the abandoned car.  Detective Alan Brown found a variety of objects in the grass trailing away from the car including a baseball hat, 2 stockings, five latex gloves, a polo sweatshirt, a black wig, a black t-shirt, a pair of stained cargo pants, and a workman’s style button-up shirt.  Law enforcement officers showed several of these items to a television crew reporting at the scene.  Carolyn Mims, the grandmother of Chaney’s former girlfriend Kendra Bonner, saw the TV report, recognized the cargo pants and wig as belonging to Bonner, and called the police.  Detective Brown interviewed Bonner and her family members, who said they were familiar with the items and had seen Chaney with a lot of cash around the time of the murder, even though he was unemployed. 

Detective Brown interviewed Chaney while he was in prison for an unrelated crime.  After informing him of his rights and that he was a suspect in a capital murder investigation, Detective Brown recorded Chaney’s statement denying any involvement in the crime.  Detective Brown then stopped the recorder and told Chaney that DNA evidence linked him to the scene and Bonner had told law enforcement that he was involved.  After again reading Chaney his rights, Detective Brown recorded a second statement in which Chaney admitted to being present at the robbery, knew Jones stopped to get money from the store, and watched Jones “suit up” in a wig and a hooded sweatshirt.  Chaney stated that he put on gloves so that he would not leave fingerprints and stayed at the front of the store while Jones went to the back.  Chaney stated he heard a gunshot and was trying to calm Dung when she gave him the bank bag.  He told Detective Brown that Jones told him Thi had shot himself while trying to pull a gun on Jones.  Chaney denied seeing Jones go into the store with a gun. 

The State indicted Chaney for capital murder.  At trial, the State called Dung, her son, and the mechanic to testify as eyewitnesses to the robbery.  Dung testified Jones had a gun clearly visible as he entered the store.  She stated that the gunshots startled her, but Chaney did not appear startled at the sound.  She also testified that Chaney’s behavior did not change and that Chaney continued to demand money from her after the gun shots and when Jones put the gun to her head.  The State called several law enforcement officers to detail their investigation.  The State also presented DNA experts who testified that Chaney’s DNA matched samples from one of the stockings and a glove found by the car.  One expert stated that the possibility of the DNA on the glove belonging to someone other than Chaney was one in 16 million.  They also testified that Jones’s DNA appeared on the cargo pants and the work shirt which were also stained with Thi’s blood.  Finally, the medical examiner testified that Jones used “extra lethal” ammunition designed to break apart on impact.

Chaney testified in his own defense and stated that he lied in his second statement to Detective Brown admitting his involvement in the crime.  He testified that Detective Brown promised he would not be prosecuted for capital murder if he gave evidence implicating Jones.  He also testified that law enforcement interviewed him an additional time before January 2008 in which he again denied any involvement in the crime.

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Kevin D. Chaney v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kevin-d-chaney-v-state-texapp-2011.