Mitchell Edward Templeton, Jr. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 24, 2019
Docket08-16-00018-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Mitchell Edward Templeton, Jr. v. State (Mitchell Edward Templeton, Jr. 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
Mitchell Edward Templeton, Jr. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

MITCHELL EDWARD TEMPLETON, § JR., No. 08-16-00018-CR § Appellant, Appeal from the § v. 34th District Court § THE STATE OF TEXAS, of El Paso County, Texas § Appellee. (TC#20120D05281) §

OPINION

Mitchell Edward Templeton, Jr., appeals his conviction on one count of aggravated

kidnapping. In three issues on appeal, Templeton asserts a due process violation related to his

competency to stand trial, an insanity defense, and a legal sufficiency challenge. We affirm the

judgment of the trial court.

BACKGROUND

Factual History

Because Templeton challenges only his aggravated kidnapping conviction on appeal, 1 we

focus our discussion of the factual record accordingly. The bulk of the evidence in this case came

1 Templeton was also convicted on two counts of aggravated sexual assault at the same trial. Templeton does not challenge his conviction on those counts on appeal. in through the testimony of three witnesses: a security guard, the victim, and the defendant.

Security Guard David Flores Ochoa testified that on October 18, 2012, he was a private

security guard employed to patrol an area around a copper field by Hawkins and North Loop. He

was patrolling by Tony Lama Street, when he saw a white car parked behind a business. Ochoa

testified that cars were not allowed in that area at night. He pulled up behind the vehicle and he

turned his lights on. A black male exited the driver’s side of the car; he was pulling his pants up

and was not wearing a shirt. The man approached Ochoa and told him that he had given a young

lady $20 for sex and that she had taken crack. The man repeated the same thing a couple of times

before a naked woman exited the car. Ochoa described the woman as being disoriented and having

visible injuries, with the side of her face looking like a “pumpkin.” She was bleeding, and her

eyes were shut. Ochoa called 911 and told the man to leave. Ochoa testified that he was afraid

the man had a weapon. The woman began yelling and came to the passenger side of Ochoa’s

vehicle, scratching at the vehicle and screaming “no, no, no, no, no.” Police later arrived on the

scene to treat the woman and take her statement.

The victim, Vanessa Stubbs Gwin, who was thirty at the time of trial, testified that when

she was seventeen, she was involved in a car accident and suffered a traumatic brain injury.

Although she was capable of walking on her own, she often used a walker to prevent her from

falling. She also testified that the brain injury left her with occasional memory loss. Stubbs

testified that on the day of the attack, she was living with her father, with whom she had had a

fight. She said that her father had gotten angry with her because she was being loud because she

was excited about having a boyfriend. She left the house to visit her friend Angel, but she left

Angel’s house after half an hour because he wanted to sleep with her and she did not want to

because she already had a boyfriend. She then went to a bar called the Bullpen, where she said

2 she had one drink and stayed for an hour and a half to two hours before she left. She did not bring

her walker with her and she was starting to fall, so she took a break and stopped at a bus stop bench

on her way back to the house. She saw a white car pass her, turn around, and then pass her again.

The car stopped. She asked the driver for a ride and he said yes. She got into the passenger seat

and told him her address, but she testified that “he was too messed up to even listen to it” and that

he was acting “strange,” not normal, and kept repeating himself many times. She testified that she

suspected he was on ecstasy. When the driver passed her house, she told him to stop, but he

“turned around rather fast so I couldn’t get out” and told her that he wanted to show her something.

Stubbs testified that the man kept driving even though she told him no until he drove the car back

behind a building.

Stubbs testified that once they were parked behind the building, the driver began beating

her and striking her on the left side of her head. She said he was taking off her clothes as he

continued to beat her, but that he had trouble unbuttoning her pants, so she offered to unbutton

them for him. He then raped her. She estimated that the man beat her for four to five hours. She

said that eventually a security guard arrived, and she escaped the car naked. She testified that she

did not want to remain in the car with the man during the attack.

Templeton took the stand in his own defense. During his disjointed, largely narrative-form

testimony, Templeton stated that he was driving near the Lakewood Shopping Center when he saw

Stubbs looking in the window of a federal halfway house at around 2:30 a.m. When he stopped,

she got into his car. He offered her crack cocaine, but she did not take any. He said that she

offered him oral sex, but then she bit his penis, at which point he reacted by hitting her, which led

to a physical fight “for a couple of minutes.” Templeton testified that after they stopped fighting,

he tried to kiss her. Templeton admitted to licking Stubbs’s vagina and touching her vagina with

3 his penis. He said he was unable to maintain an erection due to his “sickness.”

Templeton testified that he had been formally diagnosed as schizophrenic and that from

his own self-evaluation he believed he also suffered from depression, anxiety, and bipolar disorder.

Templeton testified that he had five hours of sleep in five days’ time and that he had drank ten

Four Lokos and smoked crack over an unspecified period of time. He had not taken his

schizophrenia medication for about two weeks. When describing his mental state that night,

Templeton said: “I’m not justifying saying what I did wasn’t wrong. I’m not saying that. All I’m

saying is my mind wasn’t right. I was evil. I was insane. I’m not saying I wasn’t wrong. I was

wrong. Assuming what happened, yeah, I was wrong. But by law, I was legally and mentally

insane.”

On cross-examination, the State questioned Templeton about a statement he made in a

previous proceeding in which he said, “I knew I was wrong.” Templeton admitted to making the

statement, but said he felt coerced and pressured into making the statement to receive leniency or

sympathy from the judge.

Procedural History

After the trial court appointed counsel for Templeton, counsel filed a motion to withdraw,

which was granted. Templeton’s second appointed counsel requested a mental health exam, which

the 384th District Court ordered on January 23, 2013. On February 14, 2013, Templeton’s second

counsel filed a motion to withdraw, stating that he and his client were “not communicating

effectively.” At this hearing, Templeton’s second counsel and the trial court referred to a report

finding Templeton competent to stand trial. The case then transferred back to the originating court.

Templeton’s second counsel’s motion to withdraw was granted, and the trial court appointed

Templeton a new lawyer. Templeton’s third counsel filed another motion for a mental health exam

4 and requested that the trial court have a psychologist give Templeton an IQ exam. The second

order was signed on May 20, 2013.

At a status hearing on December 5, 2013, Templeton’s third counsel asked for a

continuance to find a mental health expert to support Templeton’s anticipated insanity defense. At

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