Malcolm Jamar Strickland A/K/A Malcolm J. Strickland v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 22, 2012
Docket02-10-00073-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Malcolm Jamar Strickland A/K/A Malcolm J. Strickland v. State (Malcolm Jamar Strickland A/K/A Malcolm J. Strickland 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
Malcolm Jamar Strickland A/K/A Malcolm J. Strickland v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 02-10-00073-CR

MALCOLM JAMAR STRICKLAND APPELLANT A/K/A MALCOLM J. STRICKLAND

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS STATE

----------

FROM CRIMINAL DISTRICT COURT NO. 2 OF TARRANT COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION1 ----------

I. Introduction

In one issue, Appellant Malcolm Jamar Strickland a/k/a Malcolm J.

Strickland asserts that the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to

support his capital murder conviction. We affirm.

1 See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. II. Procedural Background

The indictment alleged that Appellant intentionally killed Michael Myers by

shooting him with a firearm while in the course of committing robbery. See Tex.

Penal Code Ann. ' 19.03(a)(2) (West Supp. 2011). The State did not seek the

death penalty. Appellant pleaded not guilty to capital murder, but the jury found

him guilty of that offense. The trial court sentenced Appellant to life

imprisonment without parole. See id. ' 12.31 (West 2011).

III. Analysis

In his sole issue, Appellant asserts that the evidence fails to establish that

he had the requisite intent to murder Myers in the commission of a robbery.

Appellant contends that he intended to commit theft and that he shot Myers ―not

with the intent to murder [him], but out of fear because Myers was attacking him

with weapons.‖

A. Applicable Facts

In the early morning hours of April 21, 2008, fifty-nine-year-old Myers, the

night clerk at a Tarrant County Best Western motel, was found shot to death

behind the check-in counter. Hotel surveillance video cameras inside and

outside the motel captured the assailant’s actions before and after the offense.

News channels aired portions of the video, and the police received a crime

stoppers tip the next day. The police arrested Appellant two days after the

offense.

2 The video footage showed that two individuals (later identified as Appellant

and Jay Allen) entered the Best Western at approximately 1:39 a.m. They

approached the check-in counter and then immediately exited the motel.

Approximately two hours later, Appellant appeared back inside the motel alone

wearing sunglasses and different clothes, and he roamed the halls for several

minutes holding a silver handgun by his side. He then entered the front lobby

from an inside hallway and jumped over the check-in counter into the workspace

behind it. Less than thirty seconds later, Appellant jumped back into the lobby,

waited a few seconds, and then jumped back over the counter. Approximately

two minutes later, Appellant jumped over the counter, into the lobby, and exited

out the front door. The surveillance camera above the check-in counter that

could have captured Appellant’s actions, was not working at the time.

Appellant gave two statements to investigators. During his interview three

days after the offense, Appellant claimed that when he entered the lobby alone

the second time (after selling drugs to a motel guest), he did not see anyone

behind the counter, saw the open cash register, and decided to ―steal

something.‖ When he jumped over the counter, he saw a man lying on the

ground with a gunshot wound to his throat, still alive but ―dying slowly.‖ He

immediately left the scene and did not call 911 because he did not want to get

involved.

Approximately one month later, Appellant admitted to lead investigator

Detective Frank Serra that after he returned to the Best Western alone, jumped

3 the counter, and put the cash register money into his pocket, Myers ―rushed‖

toward him with a three-hole punch, ―pushed him,‖ and was about to ―whoop [his]

ass.‖ Appellant ―froze,‖ closed his eyes, and ―just shot and ran.‖ When asked

about the other two shots, Appellant stated, ―I think I hit him once, and I guess I

kept shooting.‖ Appellant also stated that he ―pulled the trigger‖ but that he did

not remember how many times. Appellant explained that Myers was ―just going

to beat me up or something and hold me until the police come.‖ Appellant stated,

―I told [Myers] I didn’t want to shoot him when he pushed me on the ground. I

know I tried to talk to the dude.‖ Appellant explained that he was ―on too many

pills‖ and that it ―just happened.‖ When asked about Myers’s missing wallet,

Appellant denied taking it. When confronted with evidence that he did, however,

he stated he did not remember taking it.

At trial, Appellant’s longtime friend Antonio Smith testified that Appellant

came to his apartment (at the Sun Ridge Apartments near the Best Western) the

morning of the offense. Appellant was panicky and pacing, had small blood

spots on his shirt, and had a gun in his back pocket. Appellant tossed a wallet on

the bed containing Myers’s identification, other ―cards,‖ and two dollars.

Appellant repeatedly stated, ―I just shot somebody,‖ and ―The dude got up and it

went wrong.‖2

2 A maintenance man at the Sun Ridge Apartments found the wallet in the trash can and turned it in to his manager, who turned it in to the authorities.

4 Shakitha Titus testified that Appellant was a friend and that she picked him

up at the Sun Ridge Apartments the morning of the offense. Titus drove

Appellant around that day and at one point asked him what happened at the

motel. Appellant explained that he had been ―high‖ at the time, not in his right

mind, and had gotten scared when the man, who was bigger than he was,

grabbed at him; Appellant thought the man was going to take the gun from him.

Appellant told Titus, ―It was an accident. It was self-defense,‖ and Titus testified

that Appellant was very remorseful.

Ashley Williams testified that she saw Appellant the evening after the

offense when she was standing outside her apartment talking to her friend Briana

Petite. Appellant walked up, talked to them, and stated he had killed the man in

the motel. Williams recounted Appellant’s statements that the man had come up

on him like he was going to punch him in the face and that Appellant had shot

him in the neck, head, and chest. Appellant also stated he had taken more than

one Xanax before the offense and had acted in self-defense.

Tim Franklin testified that he had been at Williams’s apartment that

evening and had overheard Appellant talking on a phone. Franklin heard

Appellant say that he killed ―the dude,‖ that he did not want to do it, that he

watched ―the dude die,‖ and that he had to ―get away‖ because he did not want

anyone to know what he had done.

Kim Simon, the mother of Appellant’s girlfriend Laquita Reaves (with whom

Appellant had a child), testified that she recognized Appellant from a recording of

5 the video on the nightly news. She stated that Appellant came to her home

within a day or two of the offense. When Appellant watched the video footage of

the offense, he cried and claimed he did not know what happened. Simon

advised Appellant to turn himself in to authorities but drove him to the Trinity

River so he could ―throw away a gun.‖ Simon assumed it was the gun he used at

the Best Western, and she saw Appellant throw the ―wrapped up‖ gun into the

water. Simon did not initially call the police but eventually showed them the area

where she believed Appellant had thrown the gun. The gun was never

recovered.

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