Kylan Deion Bazile v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 1, 2024
Docket09-22-00337-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Kylan Deion Bazile v. the State of Texas (Kylan Deion Bazile 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.

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Kylan Deion Bazile v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-22-00337-CR __________________

KYLAN DEION BAZILE, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. F20-33887 __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Kylan Deion Bazile (“Bazile”) appeals his conviction for murder,

a first-degree felony. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.02(b)(1), (c). In three issues on

appeal, Bazile complains about jury charge error, the sufficiency of the evidence,

and ineffective assistance of counsel. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the

trial court’s judgment.

1 BACKGROUND

A grand jury indicted Bazile for murder, alleging he “intentionally and

knowingly cause[d] the death of an individual, namely: DESHANDRIC JISHAUN

CLAYTON (“Clayton” or “Complainant”), by shooting Complainant with a deadly

weapon, to-wit: a firearm[.]” See id. The case proceeded to a jury trial, where the

State offered testimony from thirteen witnesses about the murder and subsequent

investigation and presented ballistics and firearms evidence, photographs, and video

recordings.

Dr. Tommy J. Brown (“Brown”), a retired forensic pathologist, testified he

performed an autopsy on Clayton, who had a gunshot wound to the right of his right

nipple, and Brown stated that Clayton was shot at a distance. Brown explained

Clayton’s cause of death was a perforating gunshot wound to the chest, and the

manner of death was homicide. Brown testified that Clayton’s toxicology shows he

had methamphetamine in his system when he died and that sometimes,

methamphetamine can cause aggressive behavior, irrational reactions, and

hallucinations. Brown also testified that there were shell casings found around

Clayton’s body.

Tonya Toson (“Toson”), Clayton’s mother, testified she told police she

believed Kaleb Angelle and Jarrell Joseph were suspected to have been involved in

Clayton’s murder. Toson explained that there was a crowd when she was at the scene

2 of the murder at Avery Trace, and “somebody” said they saw Jarrell Joseph and

Kaleb Angelle shoot Clayton. Toson further explained that she heard two cars were

involved in the shooting and that Jospeh and Angelle were in the “first car[,]” and

Bazile was the driver of the second car, which also contained “[s]omeone by the

name of Kam[,]” which was short for Kamron Fennell. Toson testified that shots

came from both cars, and she agreed that Bazile did not shoot Clayton, who also

went by the name “Deejayye.” Toson explained Clayton identified himself as

Deejayye on his Facebook page. Toson testified that she never knew Clayton to have

a gun and that he was visiting his cousin, Ecstasy Toson (“Ecstasy”), at Avery Trace

Apartments when Clayton was murdered.

Ecstasy testified that on the day of the murder, Clayton and Tyron Banks were

at her apartment, when Keith Page came over. Soon after Clayton, Banks, and Page

left her apartment she heard gunshots and learned Clayton had been shot. Ecstasy

testified that based on her knowledge Clayton did not know Bazile. Ecstasy also

testified that she had a gun in her apartment, which remained there during the

murder, and she knew Page had a gun. Ecstasy explained that after the shooting, she

saw shell casings in the area where Clayton was found.

Dillan Halliburton (“Halliburton”), a former police officer with the City of

Port Arthur Police Department, testified that when he responded to an emergency

call regarding a shooting at Avery Trace, he observed a large group of people

3 surrounding the victim, who was laying on the ground covered in blood. Halliburton

explained that although there was a crowd of thirty to forty people, everyone came

outside after they heard gunshots, and that from his experience, it was common not

to have eyewitnesses to shootings at Avery Trace. Halliburton identified Clayton as

the victim and determined he had a gunshot wound on the right side of his chest.

Halliburton testified he saw five spent shell casings near Clayton’s body, which

indicates someone was shooting from that area, and he found spent shell casings on

a nearby street. Halliburton explained that Tyron Banks reported that he was inside

Toson’s apartment when the shooting occurred and that an empty handgun magazine

was found in Banks’s vehicle.

Halliburton testified that none of the evidence showed Bazile shot Clayton,

and he explained that Jacory Reynolds, Ardajour Jimmerson, and Kamron Fennell

were also indicted for Clayton’s murder. Halliburton explained that during his

investigation, he obtained video camera footage from residents in the area, but none

of the footage included the suspect’s vehicle. Halliburton also explained that after

he left Avery Trace, he went to Prince Hall Apartments, where he located the

suspect’s vehicle, a 2018 Kia passenger car that appeared to have a bullet hole on

the passenger side of the car.

Shelby Harper (“Harper”), a sergeant with the Port Arthur Police Department,

testified that she was assigned to the crime response team when she responded to the

4 shooting. Harper explained she obtained security video footage from a restaurant

located across the street from Avery Trace, and the video showed a maroon car that

passed by, and you could hear shots fired and then see the victim fall. Harper also

explained that she recognized the maroon car from previous dealings based on it

having certain chrome door handles, chrome along the windows, a piece of duct tape

on the back trunk, and a dent on the driver’s side door. Harper testified that Bazile

owns the Kia car, and she had seen him driving it before the shooting. Harper also

testified that the duct tape on the trunk of the car was clearly visible in the security

video because it reflected with the sun.

Harper explained they located the car at Prince Hall, where they knew Bazile

lived, and they found another individual driving the car. Harper testified she obtained

video footage from Prince Hall, showing that several people jumped out of the car

when it returned, including Reynolds, but it was hard to tell if Bazile was driving.

Harper further testified she had no evidence showing Bazile shot Clayton. Harper

explained she obtained a search warrant for Reynolds’s cell phone, but due to a

problem, the data from his cell phone dump was never reviewed.

Leesa Bigelow (“Bigelow”), a forensic specialist/ID technician with the Port

Arthur Police Department, testified that she processed the Kia car related to the

homicide. Shortly after the incident, Bigelow collected DNA swabs from the car’s

interior, specifically the driver’s side pull handle and armrest handle, steering wheel,

5 and passenger’s side pull handle and armrest, to determine who had been in the car,

who was driving, and who was shooting. Bigelow explained that her job only

involved collecting the DNA swabs and logging them into evidence. Bigelow

testified she also collected and viewed video footage from the Mexican restaurant

and the Valero gas station across the street from Avery Trace.

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