Patrick Hebner v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 28, 2016
Docket09-15-00047-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Patrick Hebner v. State (Patrick Hebner 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
Patrick Hebner v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

___________________

NO. 09-15-00047-CR ___________________

PATRICK HEBNER, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee __________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 252nd District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. 12-13396 __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This is an appeal from a conviction for aggravated assault, a second degree

felony. Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.02(a)(2) (West 2011). After Patrick Hebner1

pleaded not guilty to the indictment charging him with aggravated assault, a jury

found him guilty, sentenced him to a four-year sentence, and then recommended

that the court place Hebner on probation. Hebner contends the evidence is

1 The judgment indicates that Patrick Hebner is also known as Patrick James Hebner.

1 insufficient to support the jury’s verdict, arguing the evidence in the record that

supports the jury’s conclusion that he displayed a knife in the course of committing

the assault was unreliable. We disagree, as the evidence before the jury allowed the

jury to reasonably conclude that Hebner displayed a knife in the course of

committing the assault. Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Background

Hebner’s conviction arises from an incident that occurred on January 11,

2012, following Wednesday night services at a church, which is located in Port

Arthur, Texas. The indictment charging Hebner with the assault alleges that

Hebner assaulted B.J. 2 by threatening him with a knife. When the incident

occurred, B.J. was sixteen years old. On the evening of the alleged assault, B.J.

was leaving a meeting that had just concluded when he noticed a group of younger

children coming down the hall. The children were coming towards B.J., and they

needed to use the door of the building that B.J. had just used to leave the building.

According to B.J., he decided to play a joke on the children who were coming

down the hall, and while outside the building, he held a door shut to make the door

2 Because our constitution grants crime victims “the right to be treated with fairness and with respect for the victim’s dignity and privacy throughout the criminal justice process,” we use initials to identify the individual who the State alleged was the victim of the assault. Tex. Const. art. I, § 30.

2 appear to be locked. After B.J. had been holding the door for few seconds, the

testimony indicates that Hebner, who was inside the building, approached the door

to investigate why the door would not open. The testimony indicates that Hebner

cursed and then demanded that the door be opened. When B.J. opened the door,

Hebner pushed B.J. up against the wall next to the exterior door to the building,

and Hebner again cursed B.J. for playing a trick on the children who were

attempting to use the door to leave the building. B.J. and two of his friends that

were standing near the door testified during the trial to circumstances that tend to

indicate that Hebner displayed an open knife to B.J. while Hebner had B.J. pinned

to the wall. Hebner contends the testimony of these three witnesses was

insufficient to prove that he displayed an open knife when the altercation occurred.

The jury’s determination that Hebner displayed a knife during the altercation

relies in large part on the eyewitness accounts regarding the altercation that

occurred just outside the door the children used to exit the building. B.J. testified

during the trial that he felt a sharp object pressed against his abdomen while

Hebner had him pinned against the wall near the door. According to B.J., the

object against his stomach caused him to “fear for [his] life” because he thought

Hebner was going to “kill [him].” B.J. explained that immediately after Hebner

released him, Hebner held up an open knife and said: “‘Do you see this? I don’t

f*** around.’” 3 Hebner does not dispute the evidence showing that he had a knife with him

on the evening the assault is alleged to have occurred. The knife was admitted into

evidence, and other exhibits picturing the knife show that it is attached to a key

ring and has a blade that is approximately 2 3/4” inches long. The key ring also

contains several keys.

Micah Moore was standing near the door and testified he was present when

B.J.’s altercation with Hebner occurred. According to Micah, he and Hunter

Meziere had just left the building with B.J. when B.J. decided to play a trick on the

children who needed to use the door they had just come through to leave the

building. Micah testified that after B.J. began holding the door, he heard an adult

demand that the door be opened. When B.J. opened the door, Hebner came through

the door and pinned B.J. against the wall with his arm. Micah explained that while

Heber had B.J. pinned, he was facing Hebner’s back. Micah testified that he heard

Hebner say that he did not play around, and he also heard Hebner direct B.J. to

look down. Micah indicated that Hebner turned around after releasing B.J., and

that at that point he saw Hebner “closing his knife.”3 Micah recalled that Hebner

said “he would kill [B.J.] if he ever did it again.”

3 On cross-examination, Micah clarified that he first saw the knife in Hebner’s hand as Hebner backed away from B.J. after pinning B.J. to the wall. 4 Hunter testified at the trial that he was standing outside the door to the

building when the altercation between Hebner and B.J. occurred. Hunter explained

that as he heard the children inside coming down the hall, he saw B.J. crouch

below the window to the door used to exit the building, and that he saw B.J.

holding the door. Hunter stated that as B.J. was holding the door, he heard an adult

inside the building curse and demand that the door be opened. According to

Hunter, when Hebner came out, he saw Hebner pin B.J. to the wall outside the

door, and he heard Hebner say “Do you want to play?” Hunter explained that while

B.J. was pinned against the wall, Hebner told B.J. to look down. According to

Hunter, at that point he could not see whether Hebner had anything in his hand.

However, Hunter testified that when Hebner turned around, he saw “the knife was

in [Hebner’s] possession.” According to Hunter, he saw Hebner “folding the knife

back to a closed position” as Hebner turned towards him.

The State called three additional witnesses to develop whether Hebner had

displayed a knife during the altercation. Officer Timothy Dinger testified during

the trial that he investigated the incident at the church the night that it occurred.

According to Officer Dinger, during his investigation, he spoke to B.J. and Micah

who had witnessed the incident. Officer Dinger explained that he never spoke to

Hebner, because Hebner left the church before he arrived. According to Officer

5 Dinger, he learned in his investigation from the individuals that he spoke with that

night at the church that Hebner had threatened B.J. with a knife.

Brian French, the church’s youth minister at the time the altercation

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