Larry Adams v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 14, 2012
Docket01-10-01107-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Larry Adams v. State (Larry Adams 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
Larry Adams v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Opinion issued June 14, 2012.

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

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NOS. 01-10-01105-CR

          01-10-01106-CR

          01-10-01107-CR

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Larry Adams, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 10th District Court

Galveston County, Texas

Trial Court Case Nos. 09CR3830, 09CR3831, & 09CR3832

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Larry Adams pleaded not guilty to three charges of aggravated robbery.  See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 29.03(a)(2) (West 2011).  The jury found him guilty and assessed his punishment at nine years in prison for one charge and six years for each of the other two charges.  On appeal, Adams contends that the evidence is insufficient to support his conviction under the law of parties.  We affirm. 

Background

          On December 19, 2009, Kelly Collins was working as an attendant at the Keno Castle game room in Bacliff.  The game room was open only to members, in part, because it was illegally awarding cash prizes.  Both the front and back doors to the game room were secured such that anyone seeking entry would have to knock or press a buzzer.  Collins could then check a camera, and if she knew the person, allow him to enter.  Around 11:30 a.m., a man knocked on the front door.  Collins did not recognize him, so she did not let him in. 

          At about 2:30 p.m., four people were playing in the game room: Terry Robinson, Raul Guiterrez, Sidney Brummerhop, and Linda Carman.  The back doorbell rang.  Collins checked the camera and saw Adams, who was a member of the game room and an acquaintance of Robinson.  Collins opened the door for Adams, he entered, and the two exchanged greetings. 

          The door was slowly closing behind Adams, but, before it shut completely, a man brandishing a semiautomatic pistol grabbed the door and burst inside.  Collins testified that this was the same man to whom she had denied entry earlier that day.  He was later identified as Michael McFarland.  Collins grabbed McFarland’s arm and forced it upwards to keep the pistol pointed away from herself and the patrons.  A second man, later identified as Jovan Wesby, came in, also with a semiautomatic pistol.  Wesby struck Collins in the head two or three times with the pistol.  She fell to the ground, but continued to struggle.  Wesby was reaching under Collins’s shirt, as though he knew she sometimes kept money in her brassiere.  Collins said that, while Wesby assaulted her, Adams jumped back and forth into the other room a few times and then just stood there.  When McFarland went into the main game room, Wesby hauled Collins to her feet and forced her to unlock the office and open the safe, pushing her to the floor after she had done so.  After emptying the safe and the register, Wesby ransacked the office, finding an additional stash of cash hidden under the bag in the trash can.  All told, he took between $5300 and $5500 from the office.   

          Meanwhile, McFarland robbed Guiterrez and Brummerhop at gunpoint.  McFarland, yelling, ordered the patrons to not look at him and to get on the ground.  All of the patrons followed McFarland’s commands except for Adams who got on his knees at one point, but then stood back up.  The surveillance video introduced at trial shows Adams, in response to a gesture from McFarland, checking the drawers of Collins’s desk, pulling her purse out of a drawer, and placing it on the desktop.  McFarland took the purse on his way out.  The surveillance video shows that, during the robbery, Adams and Robinson were located on one end of the game room, while Guiterrez, Brummerhop, and Carman were towards the opposite end.  When he entered the game room, McFarland rushed straight towards those three, passing but ignoring Robinson and Adams.  On his way out, McFarland passed Robinson and Adams, but made no apparent attempt to rob them.  Adams later said, in fact, he was robbed by McFarland, but claimed that it took place in an area of the game room that was not recorded by the surveillance camera.   

          When McFarland and Wesby left, Collins called 911 from her cell phone.    She went out the front door to try to improve reception, bringing the others with her.  Deputy Bryant with the Galveston County Sheriff’s Office happened to be nearby and arrived shortly after Collins reported the robbery.  As he was taking initial statements from Collins and the patrons, Adams told him that the robbers took $270 of Adams’s money as well as his car keys.  Adams also told Bryant that his car had been stolen.  Bryant reported this information over his radio, including a description of the car.     

          While Bryant was taking statements, he could hear the police radio broadcast about the search for the robbers.  At one point, Bryant heard that a car matching the description of Adams’s car had been found two blocks from the game room.  When officers ran the plates, they confirmed the car was registered to Adams.  Adams asked if he could leave to get his car, but Bryant asked him to stay.

          Deputy Bryant became suspicious of Adams for a variety of reasons.  He noticed that Adams behaved differently from the other victims and witnesses.  Where they were reserved and still “in shock,” Adams was very talkative. 

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Larry Adams v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larry-adams-v-state-texapp-2012.