Medel Jerry v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 21, 2007
Docket14-06-00334-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Medel Jerry v. State (Medel Jerry 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
Medel Jerry v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed June 21, 2007

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed June 21, 2007.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-06-00333-CR

NO. 14-06-00334-CR

NO. 14-06-00335-CR

NO. 14-06-00336-CR

JERRY MEDEL, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 180th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause Nos. 1026203, 1026204, 1026205, & 1026206

M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N

In this consolidated case, appellant Jerry Medel contends the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction as a party to three counts of aggravated robbery and one count of aggravated kidnapping.  We affirm.


I.  Factual and Procedural Background

At approximately 3:00 a.m. on May 7, 2005, Veronica Armendariz, Jeffrey Escobar, Natalie Goffney, and Hugh Ausobsky went to a restaurant located near Richmond and Fondren in Houston.  The group left the restaurant about an hour later, and as Escobar later testified, he noticed a champagne-colored Toyota Matrix in the parking lot.  According to Escobar, a man whom he later identified as appellant Jerry Medel exited the car and asked Escobar for a cigarette.  Escobar gave appellant a cigarette and lit it for him.  Appellant thanked Escobar and returned to his car.  Escobar then drove to his  townhouse at 9595 Pagewood or 9797 Pagewood in Houston, followed by Armendariz, Goffney, and Ausobsky.  As the two couples exited their vehicles, Escobar noticed that the champagne-colored Matrix had followed them inside the gates of the complex.  According to his trial testimony, Armendariz was removing things from her car and the remainder of her group was walking toward Escobar=s townhouse when appellant exited the Matrix and approached Escobar, Ausobsky, and Goffney.  Escobar testified that Medel pointed a gun at him and demanded that he and his friends give him all of their belongings.   Medel was joined by a black male later identified as Eric Smith, and a Hispanic female subsequently identified as  Leslie Rodriguez.  Escobar testified that the men took a pocket knife from him, and Smith pointed the knife at Escobar and Ausobsky.  According to Escobar, Rodriguez tore off Goffney=s shirt before the three were ordered to lie on the ground.  Escobar testified that one or more of the strangers kicked and hit him as he lay on the ground. 


Escobar also  testified that after he heard the Matrix leave, he, Goffney, and Ausobsky got up from the ground, and he immediately saw that Armendariz was not with them.  According to Escobar, he knew the Matrix would have to pass his townhouse again to exit the gated complex, so he led Goffney and Ausobsky inside to wait until the car had passed.  There was no phone in the townhouse, and all of their cell phones had been taken, so Escobar then ran toward a club where he believed he could find a police officer.  He found an officer and reported the crime, and the officer drove him back to the townhouse.  According to Escobar, they arrived at the townhouse at about the same time the officer received word that suspects had been detained.  Escobar testified that the officer drove Ausobsky, Goffney, and him to another location where he was reunited with Armendariz and identified Medel, Smith, and Rodriguez as the perpetrators.

Ausobsky offered similar testimony.  Like Escobar, he testified that Medel was the first to approach the group, and that Medel pointed a gun at Escobar.  He similarly testified that Smith held Escobar=s knife to his side.  According to Ausobsky, Rodriguez ordered them to lie on the ground, where Medel kicked Escobar.

Goffney did not testify that Medel pointed a gun at anyone; instead, she testified that Smith lifted his shirt and showed the gun to the group.  She also testified that it was Rodriguez rather than Smith who held the knife to Ausobsky.  In addition, she testified that as Medel and his companions were leaving, she heard him say something indicating that he Ajust wanted to leave [Armendariz] there.@


Armendariz testified that while she was removing things from her car, she saw Medel approach her friends with a gun.  She stated that as her friends lay on the ground, Rodriguez ran to her, pulled off her shirt, and told her to lie on the ground.  Armendariz heard Medel Atell[] them to hurry up and let=s go.@  According to Armendariz, Smith pulled her by the arm,  said that she was going with them, and pushed her into the backseat of the Matrix.  She testified that as she sat in the middle of the backseat, Smith pushed her head into an empty box on the seat beside her.  She stated that she felt something against her ear that she believed to be a gun.  According to Armendariz, Smith touched her breasts and told her that he was going to AfC the sC out of [her],@ and Rodriguez Awas agreeing with him that they were going to fC the sC out of me.@  Armendariz testified that Medel Awas asking where they were going next.@  Armendariz further testified, AWhen we were trying to find a way out of the apartment [complex], the light-complected male was saying just to let me out and the black male was telling him no, that I was staying.@

Armendariz testified that the car stopped once and she heard the two men discussing whether to stop or keep driving.  According to Armendariz, Smith told Medel Ajust to go,@ and Medel agreed.  When the car stopped a second time, a police officer approached, and Armendariz lifted her head enough to mouth Ahelp me@ to the officer. 

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