Mitchell Conrad Jones v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 5, 2020
Docket05-19-00503-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Mitchell Conrad Jones v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

AFFIRMED and Opinion Filed October 5, 2020

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-19-00503-CR

MITCHELL CONRAD JONES, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 366th Judicial District Court Collin County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 366-81320-2018

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Chief Justice Burns and Justices Molberg and Carlyle Opinion by Chief Justice Burns A jury convicted Mitchell Conrad Jones of capital murder and the trial court

sentenced him to life imprisonment. In two issues appellant argues the evidence is

insufficient to support his conviction and the trial court erred in overruling his

motion to suppress oral statements by appellant to investigating officers. We affirm

the trial court’s judgment.

In July 2009, Richard Robinson stayed briefly with his daughter Angela in

Lewisville while having “an issue with a girlfriend.” One afternoon, on July 19,

2009, Robinson left his daughter’s apartment and said he would be back. He never returned. After hearing nothing from Robinson for a couple of days, Angela and her

brother attempted to file a missing persons report with the Lewisville Police

Department, but the police declined the filing because Robinson was “able bodied”

and not elderly. Finally, a week after his disappearance, police entered Robinson’s

name into a missing persons database, including a description of Robinson’s car. A

couple of days later, two Texas Rangers came to Angela’s apartment and told her

Robinson’s body was found in the trunk of his car. Appellant was not arrested for

almost nine years after Robinson’s death.

Melissa police sergeant Michael Groettum was on patrol with Officer Michael

Hagood on July 27, 2009, when he was called to a vacant building in Melissa, Texas,

to investigate a vehicle associated with a missing person report. The vehicle was

parked along the grassy median area, and there was “a very distinct decay odor

coming from the vehicle.” There was “a liquid that was leaking slowly out of the

trunk that looked suspicious in nature.” Groettum opened the trunk and discovered

an “[a]lmost fully decayed body that was mostly liquefied.”

A couple of weeks after Robinson’s body was found, Angela and her mother

met with Sergeant Babcock at the Melissa Police Department. The police did not

have much information, their investigative leads had dried up, and Babcock said “we

may never know what happened” to Robinson. Over the next eight years, Angela

“never received one phone call from the police department.”

–2– In 2017, the Robinson family inquired with the Melissa Police Department

and the Collin County District Attorney’s Office about the status of their father’s

case. Texas Ranger Reuben Mankin became involved in the cold case and pulled

the file on Robinson’s case with persons of interest being appellant, Stacy Maloney,

and Jasmine Salaz. In looking at the file from the previous investigation, Mankin

saw there was “a lot done from the identity or the identification of the three

individuals” and “cell phone records that had been obtained on each individual,” but

the case had “pretty much come to a halt.” Mankin agreed with the prior

investigator’s assessment that appellant, Maloney, and Salaz “were somehow

involved with the death of Richard Robinson,” and Mankin’s opinion was “based

mostly on the phone records” he reviewed and Maloney’s statement. In the

investigation in 2009, Maloney was interviewed twice and Salaz was interviewed,

but she “was detached and was not being fully open about what happened.” Mankin

found out that appellant had not been interviewed.

By comparing the phone records with Maloney’s statement, Mankin saw that

“based on the mapping . . . it was not consistent.” The mapping had been done after

the prior investigation in 2009. Mankin found that the prior investigator had gone

to Maloney’s house to interview her, and appellant answered the door. The

investigator asked appellant if he had ever met Robinson, and appellant said he had

not. Mankin “determined that we need to get a formal statement from [appellant].”

Mankin located appellant, who was living in Kenner, Louisiana. After making –3– contact with Louisiana state police and telling them of his plan, Mankin went with

Ranger James Holland to Louisiana to interview appellant. Mankin did not intend

to arrest appellant, he did not have probable cause to arrest appellant, and he only

expected to get “more pieces to the puzzle” from appellant. However, Mankin knew

that text messages had been sent between Maloney and appellant, and “it was

imperative to interview [appellant] and see what his side of it was.”

Once he arrived in Louisiana, Mankin met with Louisiana state police and

developed a plan for making contact with appellant. On the first day, March 6, 2018,

Mankin established surveillance outside appellant’s residence but did not see

appellant. The next day, a state police agent was able to locate appellant at a

laundromat in Kenner.

Mankin went to the laundromat, where he made contact with appellant and

said he wanted to talk to him. Appellant “knew he was free to leave at that time,”

and he “got in his vehicle and followed [Mankin] to the station.” Mankin did not

tell appellant he was under arrest and did not tell him what Mankin was there to talk

to him about. Mankin “did tell him that I was from Texas.” Mankin was “seeking

[appellant’s] cooperation” and “didn’t want to restrict his movements or anything

like that.” Appellant followed Mankin to the police station where “he was brought

in to the station and he was sat down inside of a room.” The police station did not

have a “formal interview room that’s set up with audio/visual capability,” so Mankin

activated audio recorders to capture the interview. Throughout the course of the –4– interview, Mankin told appellant “he could leave anytime he wanted to” multiple

times. Appellant never indicated that he wanted to leave.

Ranger Holland, whose specialty is “interview and interrogation,” reviewed

all the information in the case and led the interview of appellant. At the beginning

of the interview, Holland told appellant “he could leave, or we would drive him

home.” Holland had been waiting at the police station and did not know that

appellant had driven himself there. During the first part of the interview, Holland

repeatedly told appellant, “Tell me this was a mistake.” Holland testified he told

appellant this because “it’s really not best to start calling it murder and say that they

were the primary perpetrator or anything like that” if you want someone to

“communicate what occurred with you legitimately.” Also, there was a “belief at

that time that [appellant] wasn’t the primary perpetrator, that he could have simply

been a witness.” During the interview, Holland offered appellant refreshments and

the chance to use the restroom.

Appellant eventually admitted to “making a mistake.” Holland took a break

in the interview and offered appellant more refreshments. When he restarted the

interview, Holland confirmed with appellant that appellant knew he was not under

arrest, he was still free to leave, and he was continuing the interview voluntarily.

In response to Holland’s questioning, appellant stated he was living with

Maloney in Dallas, and it could have been 2009. Maloney approached appellant and

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