Parish v. State

488 S.W.3d 422, 2016 WL 1357522, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 3465
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 5, 2016
DocketNO. 14-14-00394-CR, NO. 14-14-00396-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 488 S.W.3d 422 (Parish 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
Parish v. State, 488 S.W.3d 422, 2016 WL 1357522, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 3465 (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

John Donovan, Justice

A jury convicted appellant, Robert Luches Parish, of murdering Curtis Wyatt and Beverly Parish. In each case,, the trial court, after finding enhancement paragraphs “true,” sentenced appellant to life imprisonment. In a single issue, appellant claims the evidence is factually and legally insufficient to support the murder convictions. We affirm.

I. Background

On the evening of February 23, 2011, Erica Morgan, who had recently been released from jail, spent time with friends drinking at a bar. At closing time, around 2:00 a.m. on February 24, 2011, Morgan returned to the home of her boyfriend, Michael Simons. After arguing with Si-mons, Morgan saw people in the front yard at appellant’s house, which was nearby, and she walked over to visit. Appellant lived in the house with his aunt, Beverly Parish and Curtis Wyatt, who were both home with appellant at that time.

Morgan gave appellant ten dollars and asked him to buy her some crack cocaine. Appellant -agreed, left Morgan inside his [424]*424house, and then returned with “a dime” of crack cocaine.. After smoking the crack, appellant “flipped out,” paced the room, cursed at Morgan and Wyatt that they were going to get him sent to the penitentiary, and ordered them to get out of his room.'

Morgan and Wyatt walked out of appellant’s bedroom and into the living "room. Wyatt sat on a chair in the living room and began cleaning the crack pipe. Appellant entered the living room and shot Wyatt in the mouth with a gun. Wyatt spit out some of his teeth that had been dislodged by the bullet and asked appellant why he shot him. Wyatt then crawled around a corner where appellant shot him multiple times before fatally wounding and killing him. Appellant also fired two shots through a bedroom door where Beverly was located. Both shots struck and killed Beverly. Appellant then turned toward Morgan and shot her in the mouth and again in the right hand. Morgan begged appellant not to shoot her anymore. Appellant stopped shooting, and Morgan ran back to Simons’s house, but he refused to let her inside. Not knowing what to do, Morgan initially lay down on a sofa on Simons’s porch and then walked over to a nearby street curb and sat down.

Jarrod Tolbert, who lived near Simons and around the corner from appellant, came outside after he heard a séries of at least five gunshots with a- pause in between rounds. Tolbert heard moaning and found Morgan sitting on the street curb; she appeared to be in shock. Morgan told Tolbert that appellant had shot her in the mouth. Morgan was making gurgling and giggling sounds. Tolbert initially did not believe Morgan had been shot until he saw the wounds and bloodstains at the back of Morgan’s neck. Tolbert paid a friend to drive Morgan to receive medical attention. Morgan was dropped off at a nearby Are station and, thereafter, was transported by ambulance to the hospital. . Morgan’s hands were not tested for gunshot residue at the hospital." 'J

After putting Morgan in his friend’s car, Tolbert went to appellant’s house to check on the occupants. Before going. inside, Tolbert called the police. Tolbert then knocked on appellant’s window and called out appellant’s name, but there was no response. Tolbert went, inside and found that Wyatt and Beverly were both dead. Tolbert called 911 and told the dispatcher that there had been a homicide, two people had been shot, and one person had been shot in the mouth. Tolbert named appellant as the shooting suspect to the 911 operator. Appellant was not in' the house when police arrived.

Morgan survived being shot twice, but injuries to her mouth and throat prevented her from speaking for several weeks. Nevertheless, Morgan communicated by writing notes to the officers ’who were investigating the murders of Beverly and Wyatt. Morgan identified appellant as the person who shot and killed Wyatt and then shot Morgan. Morgan also identified appellant from a photo array shown to her in the hospital. After providing the officers with extensive notes, Morgan signed ■ a sworn statement detailing the incident. Ultimately, after receiving a voice box, Morgan provided a recorded oral statement to the officers.

Detective Roy Swainson, one of the investigating officers, found Wyatt and Beverly dead in their home when he arrived within hours of the shooting. Officer Lorenzo Verbitskey, a crime-scene unit investigator, collected blood samples, teeth, and seven spent. 9~millimeter Winchester Luger shell casings from’ around the house. A crack pipe was collected from Wyatt’s pant pocket. Officer Verbitskey documented bullet holes in the door of the [425]*425bedroom where Beverly’s body was found and concluded that she was likely standing near the door' when the two bullets were fired. Officer Verbitskey saw no signs of a struggle in the 'house,1 and none of Morgan’s DNA evidence was found under the fingernails of Wyatt or Beverly. Ballistics testing conducted by Tammy Lyons, a firearms examiner, showed that, all bullets were fired from the same weapon. Morgan later identified the same gun that was determined to be the murder weapon as the gun that appellant used to shoot her and Wyatt. Detective Swainson found that the results of the DNA testing were consistent with his investigation, including Morgan’s account of events. .

After the shootings, appellant neither returned to his house nor contacted his sister, Patricia Parish. A few days after the shootings, on February 26, 2011, Patricia unlocked her grandmother’s house for a cleaning crew and, while speaking with a friend across the street, observed appellant entering appellant’s home; Patricia called the police. On that same day, appellant approached Tolbert in Tolbert’s front yard, and appellant showed Tolbert his gun; Tolbert contacted the police.

- Later that day, when, patrol officers spotted appellant walking in the street, appellant ran away as one officer pursued him- on foot and another in a patrol car; he refused to obey orders to stop. Appellant tried to jump a fence; the officer on foot caught up to appellant, and a confrontation ensued, causing the officer in his patrol car to exit and assist in subduing appellant. One officer handcuffed appellant’s left arm; however, appellant, freed his right arm, pulled out a gun, and threatened to kill the officers if they did not shoot him. Both officers struggled with appellant to obtain control over the gun, and it was only after a third officer" tasered appellant’s thigh that they-were able to take the gun from appellant. That gun, based on subsequent ballistic analysis and identification, was the same weapon that was used to kill Wyatt and Beverly.

Clay Davis, a DNA analyst, determined that there was DNA evidence 6f Morgan, Wyatt, and Beverly in the, house. Davis did not have a known DNA profile of appellant at the time of his testing and thus did not compare the DNA profile of appellant to DNA evidence'in the house. Davis testified that Morgan’s DNA was not found under the fingernails of either Wyatt or Beverly, demonstrating there was no physical contact between them at that time. Davis did not' test the gun retrieved from appellant for DNA evidence as he determined that the gun had been handled by too many people without gloves to allow for proper testing. Additionally, no gunshot-residue testing was performed on appellant because tod much time had passed between the shootings and his apprehension.

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Bluebook (online)
488 S.W.3d 422, 2016 WL 1357522, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 3465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parish-v-state-texapp-2016.