Koy Timon Moore v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 8, 2009
Docket14-08-00295-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Koy Timon Moore v. State (Koy Timon Moore 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
Koy Timon Moore v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed October 8, 2009.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-08-00295-CR

Koy Timon Moore, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 208th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1066922

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, Koy Timon Moore, appeals from his conviction for murder.  A jury found appellant guilty and assessed punishment at sixty years’ imprisonment.  In four issues, appellant contends that the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to sustain the conviction and that evidence of appellant’s drug dealing was admitted in violation of Rules 403 and 404 of the Texas Rules of Evidence.  We affirm.

Background

Sometime around midnight on April 25, 2006, Jermore Jones was shot and killed at the Miami Gardens apartment complex in Houston.1  Hortencia Martinez testified that around 11:00 or 11:30, she heard about eight or nine gunshots outside the window of her apartment.  She went to her grandchildren’s bedroom to check on them, and when she looked out the window, she saw a man lying on the ground but did not see anyone else.  About a minute later, after attending to her grandchildren, Martinez again looked out the window and this time saw two black men kneeling by the prone man and looking through his pockets.  She recognized the two men from having seen them around the apartment complex.  One of the men took a plastic bag out of the prone man’s pocket, and one of them also extracted “a white metallic” object, which could have been a cellular telephone or a small pistol.  Both men then left the scene.

Tiffany Preston testified that she is originally from New Orleans and came to Houston when her home was destroyed in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.  In Houston, she met appellant, who was also from New Orleans, and they entered a romantic relationship and eventually had a child together.  Preston admitted that at the time of trial, she was on probation for felony possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver.  Preston pleaded guilty and received probation on May 1, 2006, but she stated that she did not have an agreement to testify in the present case at the time she pleaded.  At some point while on probation, Preston was arrested for aggravated assault.  The pending charges, however, were dismissed about a week before appellant’s trial, and she was placed back on probation.  Preston again stated that there was no agreement between her and any prosecutor by which charges would be dismissed in exchange for her testimony.  She testified that in March 2006, she moved in with appellant at the Miami Gardens.  She said that during that time period, appellant was making money selling cocaine.  She identified photographs of two other men, whom she knew as “Shorty” and “Tyrone,” who purchased drugs from appellant at the complex.  She also stated that Jermore Jones, the murder victim, also sold drugs at the complex.  Appellant objected to Preston’s testimony regarding appellant’s drug-dealing based on her having given prior inconsistent statements and arguing that such testimony was more prejudicial than probative.  The trial court overruled the objection.

Preston stated that appellant left their apartment at around 11:00 p.m. on April 25, 2006.  About an hour and a half after appellant had left, Preston heard seven or eight gunshots.  She tried contacting appellant using the walkie-talkie function of her cell phone, but he did not answer.  She then heard someone running up the steps to their apartment.  She opened the door, and appellant entered, holding an automatic pistol, and sat on the sofa.  Appellant said that he “had just killed somebody,” and asked her to go on the balcony to see if the police had arrived.  When the police did arrive, an officer asked Preston whether she had seen anything, and she responded “no.”  Later, Preston asked appellant how he could sleep knowing he had just killed someone, and appellant replied that he would “just go to sleep.  They’ll go to sleep on [me], so [I’ll] go to sleep on them.”  Preston also asked appellant why he had shot the man, and appellant responded “reppin’.”  Preston explained that this meant that the other man had been making more money selling drugs.  She said that the next time appellant left the apartment, he took the gun with him.

In a subsequent conversation about the shooting, appellant told Preston that shortly before the shooting, he had had a conversation with someone named “Ugg.”  Ugg then began a conversation with Jermore Jones, whom Preston knew as “Ace.”  During this conversation, Ugg “talked Ace out of [his] gun.”  Ugg then flashed the gun so that appellant could see that Ace was no longer armed, and appellant “walked up and shot Ace.”  According to Preston, appellant told her that he shot complainant “three times in the back and five times in the front.”

            A few days after the shooting, police officers entered Preston’s apartment and arrested her for cocaine possession.  During the arrest, officers asked her if she knew someone named “T.”  They discovered crack cocaine in the apartment she shared with appellant.  While in custody, Preston was visited by Detective Brian Harris, who wanted to speak to her about the murder investigation.  According to Preston, Harris threatened to charge her with murder and take her children away from her if she did not tell him what he wanted to hear.  Harris also threatened to implicate Preston’s family members in the murder, including her younger brother.  She said it “[s]cared [her] to death.”  Preston said that Harris did not tell her what to say but that she then told him that appellant had confessed the murder to her.  She admitted that during that first meeting, she told Harris that appellant did not have a gun on the night of the shooting, and she did not tell him about the pre-shooting conversation appellant allegedly had with Ugg.  She told Harris that appellant sometimes went by the nickname “K.”

After pleading guilty to the possession charge, Preston remained in jail for some time.  When Harris returned to question her, she again related the events of the night in question and continued to deny that appellant had possessed a weapon that night.  She also again failed to mention the conversation with Ugg.  Preston stated that she did not tell everything she knew sooner because she was afraid that appellant would get in trouble.

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