Larry Kevin Bonner v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 25, 2011
Docket02-10-00059-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Larry Kevin Bonner v. State (Larry Kevin Bonner 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.

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Larry Kevin Bonner v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 02-10-00059-CR

LARRY KEVIN BONNER APPELLANT

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS STATE

------------

FROM THE 432ND DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION1

I. INTRODUCTION

Appellant Larry Kevin Bonner appeals his conviction for three counts of

aggravated robbery with a firearm. In three issues, Bonner contends that the trial

court abused its discretion by not allowing him to question a State‘s witness

regarding the witness‘s prior conviction for possession of marijuana and deferred

adjudication regarding the delivery of a controlled substance; that the trial court

1 See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. erred by not granting a mistrial at the punishment phase after the trial court

sustained his objection to one of the prosecutor‘s closing remarks; and that he

received ineffective assistance at trial. We will affirm.

II. BACKGROUND

Tamika Jones and her husband were loading their car for a trip on the

morning of April 18, 2008. Jones observed a silver Monte Carlo quickly pull into

her neighbor‘s driveway across the street—Curtis Bailey‘s driveway. Three men

dressed in black with bandana-covered faces jumped out of the car, went to the

door of Bailey‘s home, banged on the door, and yelled that they were the police.

Frightened, Jones told her husband to close the garage door. She then went

upstairs and watched Bailey‘s home from an upstairs window as she called 911.

Jones observed the three men kick in the door. Next, Jones heard five or six

gunshots. She then saw the three men run outside, get back in the car, and

drive away. Jones recalled that Bailey, ―came out of his house, and he was all

bloody and he had been shot.‖

Bailey testified that he was home sleeping that morning. Bailey‘s girlfriend,

Angel Chapman, was with him in the bedroom, and Bailey‘s cousin—Kevin

Johnson—and Johnson‘s son were in the front of the house. Bailey said that he

heard banging on the front door and yells of ―task force.‖ Next, Bailey heard

Johnson say, ―Let my son go.‖ Bailey also heard an unknown person demand,

―Where is the money?‖ Bailey said that at that time he knew the intruders were

not the police: ―[W]hen I heard them say where is the money, I knew it wasn‘t the

2 police.‖ Bailey next heard Johnson yell, ―My mom and dad [are] in their room.

Please don‘t kill them. There‘s some money on top of the dresser.‖

Bailey said that he knew this was Johnson‘s cryptic way of warning him.

Bailey recalled that he told Chapman ―to go to the restroom and call 911‖ and

then someone ―knocked on the door, was trying to come through the door, and I

started shooting rapidly.‖ The intruders shot back, and Bailey was shot.

Bailey said, ―It just got quiet all of a sudden.‖ At that point, Bailey left his

bedroom and looked for Johnson and Johnson‘s son, but they were no longer in

the house. Bailey continued his search outside when Jones and her husband

came over to help him. Emergency personnel took Bailey to the hospital. Bailey

admitted that he initially lied to police about owning and firing his gun and,

because he feared Johnson had a warrant out for his arrest, he told police that

Johnson‘s name was Clarence. Bailey said he never saw the perpetrators‘

faces.

The prosecutor asked Bailey if he ran a snow cone stand. Bailey said that

he ran a snow cone stand and did lawn work. Bailey testified that he did not

know why the perpetrators chose his house. On cross-examination, defense

counsel asked whether Bailey had ever had any other occupations besides

running the snow cone stand and his lawn business. Bailey answered no.

Defense counsel then asked to approach the bench. The trial court then asked

the jury to step out of the courtroom.

3 Defense counsel stated that he wanted to impeach Bailey‘s testimony.

Defense counsel‘s argument was that he should be allowed to introduce

evidence admitted in a prior case where Bailey received deferred adjudication in

a delivery of a controlled substance charge. Specifically, defense counsel

contended that Bailey‘s prior admission for delivering a controlled substance was

an inconsistent statement with his testimony that he had never held any other

occupations besides the two testified to. The trial court sustained the State‘s

objection.

Defense counsel then took Bailey on voir dire, where Bailey confirmed that

he did judicially admit to delivery of a controlled substance in 1997. Defense

counsel then asked the court for a ruling regarding his desire to address, in front

of the jury, an outstanding warrant that Bailey had at the time of trial. The

warrant was in relation to an unpaid fine regarding a prior conviction Bailey had

for possession of marijuana. The trial court ruled that defense counsel could not

introduce evidence of the marijuana conviction or the warrant because the

conviction was indeed a past final conviction that is neither a felony nor a crime

of moral turpitude.

Chapman testified that she and Bailey were in the bedroom that morning

when she heard a loud noise. She said that she heard men yelling ―police‖ but

warned Bailey that she did not believe it was the police and advised Bailey to get

his gun. She went into the bathroom to call the police, and then she heard

4 gunshots. Bailey came into the bathroom, saying that he had been shot, and

Chapman noticed a hole in his shirt and blood.

Johnson testified that he and his son had spent the prior evening at

Bailey‘s house. The next morning, Johnson heard banging on the front door and

saw three guys burst into the house, yelling that they were part of a task force

and ordering everyone to the ground. Johnson‘s three-year-old son was sitting at

the table eating cereal. Johnson initially thought that the men were coming to

arrest him, but then Johnson noticed that the men were not police because of

their attire. At that time, one of the men, who was unmasked, pointed a gun at

Johnson and demanded to know where the money was. Johnson replied he

didn‘t have any money. While pointing the gun toward the three-year-old‘s head,

the gunman, whom Johnson later identified as Bonner, told Johnson that if he did

not tell him where the money was, he was going to ―blow‖ the ―noodles and

cereal out of‖ the child‘s head.

Johnson explained that in order to free his son from Bonner‘s grasp, he

told Bonner that his ―mom and daddy‖ had money with them in the bedroom. As

one of the other intruders went down the hall to the bedroom, Johnson heard

gunshots. Johnson grabbed his son and ran out the back door. Once the police

arrived, Johnson returned to Bailey‘s home. But, because he had a warrant out

for his arrest, Johnson told the police his name was ―Clarence.‖ Once the police

determined who he was, they arrested him.

5 Ryan Aust, a paramedic at Harris Southwest Hospital, testified that he was

working that morning when Bonner told him that his friend had been shot and

needed his help. Aust took a wheelchair to an injured man in the passenger seat

of Bonner‘s car. The man was bloodied, unconscious, and barely breathing. The

man, later identified as Edward Robinson, died a short time later. Dr. Gary L.

Sisler, who performed the autopsy on Robinson, said that Robinson had been

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