Keyo Kershun Kingsley v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 25, 2010
Docket01-09-00156-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Keyo Kershun Kingsley v. State (Keyo Kershun Kingsley 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
Keyo Kershun Kingsley v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 25, 2010

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


NO. 01-09-00156-CR


KEYO KERSHUN KINGSLEY, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee


On Appeal from the 338th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1093652


MEMORANDUM OPINION

The trial court found appellant, Keyo Kershun Kingsley, guilty of the offense of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon[1] and assessed his punishment at confinement for 10 years.  In his sole issue, appellant contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction.

          We affirm.

Background

After hearing the evidence presented in two separate cases tried together in a single proceeding, the trial court found appellant guilty of assaulting the complainant, Pate Muse, with a deadly weapon, but not guilty of assaulting Sir Bell with a deadly weapon.

The complainant testified that on the night of November 18, 2008, he attended a party at the Best Western Inn on FM 1960.  When the party had ended, the complainant, driving his white SUV, attempted to exit the parking lot by way of a private drive that ran from the motel to FM 1960, but a car, driven by Sir Bell, stopped in front of the complainant and blocked the exit.  When the driver of a blue Buick Park Avenue, which was in the line of cars behind the complainant, tried to go around him on his passenger’s side, the complainant accidentally caused his SUV to collide with the blue Park Avenue.  The blue Park Avenue “swerved in the ditch a little bit,” went a little farther, and then stopped.  Unsure if the two cars had collided, the complainant looked at his passenger, Daniel Giles.  Hearing gunshots, the complainant turned and saw the gunshots, one of which struck his left arm, coming from the direction of the blue Park Avenue.  When the complainant looked up, he saw the blue Park Avenue speeding away.  On cross-examination, the complainant conceded that he could not identify the person who had shot him “because it was dark that night.” 

Sir Bell testified that before going to the party, he had gone to appellant’s home, where he saw two cars parked in appellant’s driveway, a purple Chevrolet Caprice and a Buick Park Avenue.  Bell explained that about five cars, “three” of which belonged to appellant, left appellant’s house to go to the party.  Appellant drove a “black [C]aprice,” and Bell drove a “gray truck.”  When the group arrived at the motel, the party was ending, and they stayed only briefly as appellant remained in the black Caprice.  As Bell was leaving, he stopped his gray truck just before exiting the parking lot to talk to someone in another car, and he blocked the white SUV driven by the complainant from leaving the parking lot.  Bell then saw a “blue car” in the group of cars trying to exit, but he did not recognize the “tall, dark skin person,” who was driving the blue car, “as one of the people that [he] had seen that night.  “The blue car swung around the white [SUV,] [and] [t]he white [SUV] hit the blue car.”  As the blue car drove towards FM 1960, the driver, from about “30 feet – 35, 40 feet” away, “started shooting back towards the rest of the vehicles.”  Although he could not identify the driver of the blue car, Bell saw the driver “holding a gun out the window shooting.”  

Bell admitted that in his statement previously made to Harris County Sheriff (“HCS”) Sergeant M. Schmidt, he had identified appellant as the driver of the blue car from which the shots were fired.  However, Bell denied previously telling Schmidt or Giles that he was “concerned about retaliation” from appellant or his family.  Bell explained that he had identified appellant as the shooter to Schmidt because Giles had, on the day before Bell gave his statement to Schmidt, told Bell that appellant shot him.

On cross-examination, Bell stated that he identified appellant to Sergeant Schmidt as the shooter because he was “heavily medicated” and Giles “had already told [him] that it was [appellant],” not because he actually saw appellant shooting at him.  Bell conceded that he had seen appellant’s black Caprice at the party, but he did not see it again after he had been shot.

Dewarence Abbs, a friend of appellant’s, testified that he, Giles, and appellant’s two brothers, Demetries Amos and Kristian Williams went to the party in different cars, three of which belonged to appellant, and one of which belonged to Williams and Giles.  Abbs drove a blue “Park Avenue,” Williams another “Park Avenue,” “blue . . . with black rims,” and Giles yet another “Park Avenue.”  Abbs explained that appellant left the party in the blue Park Avenue that Abbs drove to the party and Abbs left the party in a “bluish-purple” Caprice, which belonged to appellant.  As he was leaving the party, Abbs saw the white SUV hit the blue Park Avenue that appellant was driving.  Moments later, he then saw appellant “start[] shooting” back at the vehicles from “outside” the blue Park Avenue.

On cross-examination, Abbs explained that the car from which the shots came “looked like [appellant’s car]” and he “[assumed] it was [appellant] because  . . . [he] thought that [the car] was one of [appellant’s] cars.”  On redirect examination, Abbs again identified the blue Park Avenue that appellant had been driving when he left the party as the car from which the shots were fired and said, “I saw [appellant]” shooting. 

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Keyo Kershun Kingsley v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keyo-kershun-kingsley-v-state-texapp-2010.