Myron Jamal Nash v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 20, 2018
Docket02-17-00236-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Myron Jamal Nash v. State (Myron Jamal Nash 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
Myron Jamal Nash v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth -------------------------------------------- No. 02-17-00236-CR No. 02-17-00237-CR --------------------------------------------

MYRON JAMAL NASH, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

On Appeal from Criminal District Court No. 1 Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court Nos. 1482186D, 1482194D

Before Sudderth, C.J.; Gabriel and Pittman, JJ. Opinion by Justice Gabriel MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Myron Jamal Nash appeals his convictions for sexual assault and for

tampering with physical evidence. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.011(a)(1) (West

Supp. 2017), § 37.09(a)(1) (West 2016). Nash argues in four points that (1) the

evidence was insufficient to support his sexual-assault conviction based on the

complainant’s trial recantation and (2) the trial court abused its discretion by admitting

extraneous-offense evidence, by failing to conduct a balancing test on the record, and

by giving an insufficient limiting instruction. Because we conclude that the jury had a

rational basis upon which to find Nash guilty of sexual assault, that the trial court did

not abuse its discretion surrounding the admission of the extraneous-offense

evidence, and that Nash failed to preserve any error arising from the trial court’s

limiting instruction, we affirm the trial court’s judgments. See Tex. R. App. P. 43.2(a).

I. BACKGROUND

A. RELATIONSHIP HISTORY

Nash and Vera1 married in 2001 and by 2011, they had five children. Their

relationship was volatile, with Nash repeatedly physically abusing Vera. Vera’s aunt

saw Vera’s injuries, including a swollen face. In 1999 while they were living together,

Nash attempted to suffocate Vera by putting a pillow over her face and was convicted

of assault. Based on this incident, Vera obtained a protective order against Nash. In

2003, Nash left with their oldest child and threatened to never return although he

1 As did the State in its briefing, we refer to the complainant by an alias.

2 eventually returned the child unharmed. When Vera was in the hospital in 2004 after

having her second child, she and Nash got in an argument, and Vera’s father told

Nash to “keep his hands off” Vera.2 When Vera was in the hospital after giving birth

to her third child with Nash, hospital staff asked Nash to leave after Nash apparently

hit Vera.3 After giving birth to her fifth child in 2011, Vera had a tubal ligation. Nash

became very angry and accused Vera of committing “a genocide.”

Nash and Vera divorced in 2015, but Vera allowed Nash to frequently stay with

her and the children so he could spend time with them. In 2015 during an argument,

Nash damaged one of Vera’s eyes such that she had to wear an eye patch and

permanently lost vision in that eye. In October 2016, Nash and Vera got into an

argument while the children were present, and Nash cut Vera’s neck with a knife.

Vera later stated that she fell down the stairs when Nash grabbed her arm in an

attempt to wrest her phone away, Nash “kind of sat” on her at the bottom of the

stairs “to try to make sure [Vera] was okay,” and Vera “felt blood” from a cut. Nash

took Vera to the hospital and told a nurse that Vera had fallen. Vera’s neck required

stitches. Two days later, Vera reported the incident to the police and got a second

emergency protective order against Nash.

2 Vera testified that she did “not recall” this incident. 3 At trial, Vera admitted that hospital staff asked Nash to leave. But when the State asked Vera if Nash was asked to leave because he had hit Vera, Vera stated, “I don’t think he hit me, no.”

3 B. OFFENSES AT ISSUE

On December 30, 2016, Vera called her sister at 7:00 a.m. and in a “shaky,

weird” voice asked how her sister’s children were, even though Vera had seen them

the day before, and asked if it was possible for her phone to be “clone[d].”4 The

conversation concerned Vera’s sister because of the early hour and because the

questions were unusual. Vera’s sister told Vera that she was calling the police because

she “had a feeling that Myron Nash was in her home” in violation of the protective

order. Vera did not try to stop her sister from doing so.

Officer Jack White, one of the officers who was dispatched to respond to

Vera’s sister’s 911 call, confirmed the existence of the protective order against Nash

before going to Vera’s house to check on her welfare. White knocked and waited

several minutes before Vera “barely open[ed]” the door. Vera denied that Nash was

there but she continually seemed to look at someone behind her, was crying, and

appeared frightened. Vera’s behavior convinced White that Nash was in the house.

Indeed, Nash was standing by the door where White could not see him while Vera

talked to White. Because White knew there were children in the home and because

Nash had a history of family violence, officers set up a barricade around the house

and a lengthy stand-off ensued with officers using a public-address system to

repeatedly order Nash to come out of the house to no avail.

4 Vera explained that she asked her sister about cloning because Nash was fixated on her relationship with another man and seemed to be intercepting her text messages.

4 During the stand-off, two of the children came outside but they denied that

Nash was in the house. In White’s experience, “if a child denies a person being in

there when it’s obvious that they’re there, when there’s a strong suspicion there, it’s

because they’re . . . trying to protect their father or the person that we were asking

about.” At some point, Vera, who was visibly upset, also came out of the house to

check on the children. When Vera confronted an officer and attempted to go back

inside the house, the officer handcuffed her and put her in the back of a police car.

White explained that officers do not allow anyone leaving a house during a stand-off

to return in the interest of officer safety and because the perpetrator has less leverage

with fewer people in the house.

Vera’s aunt arrived shortly thereafter to check on Vera’s children. Vera told

her aunt that Nash was still inside the house with one child and would not let that

child come out. Vera also said that she had woken up that morning to find Nash on

top of her having sex with her. Vera had insomnia and routinely took a sedative to

sleep, which Nash was aware of. Vera was upset and emotional as she told her aunt

about the assault. An officer overheard Vera’s allegations and began questioning her

about them. Vera later testified that she told the officer about the assault because the

officer threatened her, stating her children would be taken away, after Vera would not

say what the officer “wanted to hear.” Vera’s aunt, who was present during the

officer’s questions, later testified that the officer did not force Vera to make the

sexual-assault allegations against Nash. An investigating detective asked Vera to come

5 to the station and give a statement, which Vera agreed to do. An unnamed relative

drove Vera to the police station, where Vera repeated her allegations and gave details

about Nash’s assault, including him forcing her legs apart and her repeated attempts

to stop him.

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