Marcus Glen Williams v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 23, 2005
Docket08-04-00198-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Marcus Glen Williams v. State (Marcus Glen Williams 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
Marcus Glen Williams v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS

MARCUS GLEN WILLIAMS,                             )

                                                                              )               No.  08-04-00198-CR

Appellant,                          )

                                                                              )                    Appeal from the

v.                                                                           )

                                                                              )                 23rd District Court

THE STATE OF TEXAS,                                     )

                                                                              )           of Brazoria County, Texas

Appellee.                           )

                                                                              )                     (TC# 44364)

                                                                              )

O P I N I O N


Appellant Marcus Glen Williams was indicted for attempted sexual assault, enhanced by three prior felony convictions.  Over his not guilty plea, the jury found Appellant guilty of the offense as charged in the indictment.  Upon Appellant=s plea of true to the enhancement paragraphs, the trial court found them to be true and assessed punishment at 15 years imprisonment in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.  In seven issues, Appellant contends that:  (1) the trial court erred in granting the State=s challenge for cause to three venire persons during voir dire; (2) the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to sustain his conviction; (3) the trial court erred in refusing his request for a jury instruction on a lesser-included offense; (4) the trial court erred in admitting extraneous offense evidence; (5) at the punishment phase the State improperly admitted details of his prior convictions that were alleged for enhancement; and (6) the State made an improper jury argument during its closing argument.  We affirm.

On December 11, 2002, Deborah Morales was living at the Arbors Apartments in Lake Jackson, Texas with her three children.  That morning, Ms. Morales took her oldest daughter to school.  As they walked around a corner in the complex, Ms. Morales saw a black man wearing a knit cap and a checkered blue and white jacket.  When they got into her car, Ms. Morales observed that the man was looking around and pacing a little bit.  She had never seen him before, but Ms. Morales believed that she got a good look at him. 

When Ms. Morales returned from taking her daughter to school, about ten minutes later, the man was still standing near the parking area.  The man was acting like he was looking for somebody or waiting, moving around, looking in her direction and then turning away.  Ms. Morales was scared to exit, so she stayed inside her car.  Ms. Morales pretended that she was reading a piece of paper in her car and was hoping that he would leave, but he did not.  Instead, the man walked to the edge of the sidewalk towards the passenger side of her car.  As he was walking, Ms. Morales locked her doors.  Ms. Morales watched the man in her rear view mirror as he just stood there looking around.  For a second, she lost sight of him and then he reappeared at the back of her car on the driver=s side.  The man had opened his pants and Ms. Morales saw that he was walking up to her door, holding his penis in his hands masturbating and rubbing his penis against her car to the driver=s door.  When he got to her door, he tried to open it.  Because the door was locked, it made a clicking noise, which she heard more than once.  Ms. Morales started her car and backed out of the parking space, striking the man in the groin area with her side mirror in the process.  The man stepped in front of her car in the space where she had been parked and smiled at her as he zipped or buttoned up his pants.


Ms. Morales drove to the police department and reported the incident.  Officer Gabriel Villanueva took her complaint.  Ms. Morales returned to the apartment complex with Officer Villanueva and another detective to identify a suspect who was being held, but she told them he was not the same man.  They returned to the police station and then Officer Villanueva escorted her home.

A few days later, Officer Villanueva came to Ms. Morales= apartment to show her a photo line up of six individuals.  Ms. Morales initially narrowed the line up down to two photographs.  She looked at the two photographs again and identified one individual, Appellant.  On a certainty scale of one to ten, Ms. Morales rated her certainty as an eight and a half that the individual pictured was the man from the December 11 incident.  Ms. Morales signed and initialed Appellant=s photograph in the photo line up.  Officer Villanueva then showed her a larger picture of Appellant and Ms. Morales was very certain that he was the same man.  Ms. Morales identified Appellant in the courtroom as the man who approached her car on December 11. 


On cross-examination, Ms. Morales recalled telling Officer Villanueva that the man was a dark-skinned black male, six feet, three inches tall.  She remembered that the man=s teeth were white and she did not see any gold teeth.  Defense counsel asked Ms. Morales to look at the Appellant=s teeth and to identify whether these were the same teeth.  Ms. Morales replied, AI don=t know, sir.@  She agreed that during the incident, the man who approached her did not say anything to her and did not touch her.  She conceded that her December 14 statement to the police did not say anything about the man masturbating.  On redirect, Ms. Morales explained that she had told the police that the man had his penis in his left hand and in her mind what she described to the police was the same as masturbation.  Ms. Morales maintained that on the day of the incident, Appellant had white teeth and again identified Appellant as her assailant. 

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Marcus Glen Williams v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marcus-glen-williams-v-state-texapp-2005.