Paul Edward Johnson v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 9, 2019
Docket08-17-00156-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Paul Edward Johnson v. State (Paul Edward Johnson 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
Paul Edward Johnson v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

PAUL EDWARD JOHNSON, § No. 08-17-00156-CR Appellant, § Appeal from the v. § 41st District Court THE STATE OF TEXAS, § of El Paso County, Texas Appellee. § (TC# 20150D05061) §

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found Appellant, Paul Edward Johnson, guilty of the felony offenses of murder1 and

aggravated assault,2 and it assessed his punishment at confinement for forty years and confinement

for ten years, respectively. It also recommended that his ten-year sentence for aggravated assault

be suspended and he be placed on community supervision. The trial court sentenced Appellant to

confinement for forty years for murder and, in accord with the jury’s recommendation, suspended

his ten-year sentence for aggravated assault and placed him on community supervision for ten

years, with the sentences to run concurrently. In two issues, Appellant contends that the trial court

erred in not compelling a witness to testify and excluding the testimony of another witness during

1 See TEX.PENAL CODE ANN. § 19.02(b), (c). 2 See id. § 22.02(a). the guilt-phase of trial.

We affirm.

Background

Indica Anderson testified that at 1:29 a.m. on August 5, 2015, she and her roommate,

Ashley Harris, went to the “Player’s Club,” a bar located in Northeast El Paso. Upon their arrival,

they spoke with Cortez Thomas, wearing a navy-blue hat and black shirt and whom Anderson

knew only as “Flex,” before entering the bar.

Upon entering the bar, Anderson and Harris saw two male friends. The first was the

complainant in the murder case, Toris Knight, also known as “Five-Five,” and the second was a

man that Anderson knew only as “Ruga.” After Knight and Ruga bought the women some drinks,

Anderson, Harris, and Ruga walked out the back door of the bar on to a balcony, where “a good

number of people” were drinking, talking, laughing, and smiling. “And there wasn’t any bad

vibes.”

Later, from the balcony, Anderson saw Knight, who had previously left the bar, drive up

in a car with another person and park “in the back” of the bar. After he exited the car, Knight went

to a “smoking” patio where he spoke with “some of the people that was over there already.”

Anderson further testified that shortly thereafter, there was “a lot of commotion going on,

so I know there’s going to be a fight . . . .” She, while still on the balcony, saw Knight and Rashad

Chisholm, the complainant in the aggravated assault case, “moving backwards” while some other

men walked toward them. At that point, a “bunch of different guys” fought with Knight, “throwing

blows,” “some were trying to get ahold to him and some couldn’t. So it was like, basically, they

were all trying to jump on him, but they couldn’t hold him.” And they “were doing the same

thing” to Chisholm.

2 After the fight “moved out to the road,” “further in the road,” Anderson heard five to six

gun shots that sounded the same. She saw, “lined up from where [she] was standing on the

balcony,” a man wearing a “red-and-black-and-gray striped shirt” with a small “shiny silver” gun

“lifted” up and “aimed” in the “direction” of Knight. Although “other people [were] standing

around,” the man had “really a straight shot” at Knight, who “was moving back away from the

fight,” “standing off by himself when shots were fired.” Chisholm was also “in the road,” but “not

standing beside” Knight.

Harris, noting that Knight “was hit,” “jumped over the balcony.” So Anderson went “down

to see, also.” She “started walking towards the road when [she] came out from the balcony.”

When Anderson got to Knight, “he was crawling” and Harris “was crawling behind him by the

time he fell on the ground.” He then turned over while the two women tried “to see where the

bullet holes were.” Because law enforcement officers had not arrived “fast enough,” Anderson

told Harris to “go get [her] car” from in front of the bar. As soon as Harris left, Knight “took his

last breath.”

Subsequently, Harris and Anderson drove to a police station and gave statements to a

detective. Anderson described the man she saw shoot Knight as a “tall, skinny” man in his

twenties, with a “box haircut,” and wearing a red and black striped shirt. What stood out most to

Anderson about the man she saw shoot Knight was his shirt. And Anderson later identified

Appellant as the man she saw shoot Knight in a photographic line-up and in still-frame images

from the Player’s Club security camera videotapes.

Shannon Walker testified that at about 11:00 p.m. on August 4, 2015, he went to the

Player’s Club with his friends D’Andre Wilford and Eddies Sims. At some point, they visited and

shot pool with their friends, Appellant, Cortez Thomas, Dianco Murray, and two men Walker knew

3 as “G” and “Gutta.” Later, while Walker had his “back turned towards the back . . . entrance,”

around the bathroom area, someone punched him “in the back of the head.”

Although Walker did not see who had punched him, Wilford told him that it was Chisholm

who had punched him. Walker “stumbled” outside and told his friends, “I’ve just been hit.” And

he “planned” to fight Chisholm; however, Murray ended up fighting with Chisholm and G ended

up fighting with Knight. After about two minutes, the four men “basically just stopped fighting”

because there were “just so many people out there” and Thomas “had come up with a gun, Flex.”

Thomas had apparently retrieved G’s gun, a “MAK 90,” which looked like “a small

machine gun,” “[f]rom the car.” Walker saw Thomas point the gun and shoot one round at

Chisholm, who “took off running.” Knight backed up and ran away “backwards.” The gun

“jammed,” and Thomas tried to remove the clip. Walker told Thomas to “chill out” and “calm

down,” but “it didn’t take effect.”

Walker further testified that he then saw Appellant, whom Walker had known for

approximately three weeks as a cousin of Gutta, point a “small,” “shiny” silver gun at Knight and

shoot “three times.” At this point, Walker “took off,” he jumped into a car with a girl named

Jenny, and they went to the apartment of D’Andre Langley, where Walker was staying. Later,

Walker heard “a commotion,” “a couple cars that pulled up with . . . the people [he] was with at

Player’s.”

Walker, Appellant, Thomas, Wilford, G, Gutta, Eddie Sims, and “a girl named Purp” then

proceeded to Thomas’s apartment in the same building. Once inside, Walker asked Appellant and

Gutta “[w]hat happened” at the bar. Gutta replied, “My lil cousin. He got his stripes. He – he did

it. You know, he killed him.” And Appellant, who was standing “right next to” Walker and Gutta,

acted “nonchalant.” Walker subsequently asked, “Who did it?” and Appellant replied, “I did it.”

4 Later, in the kitchen, G told Walker, “My little cousin left that N word stanking.” That is, he “left

him dead.” After about ten minutes, Walker left the apartment.

D’Andre Wilford testified that just after 12:00 a.m. on August 5, 2015, his friend, Eddie

Sims, drove him to the Player’s Club to “pick up” some money from Walker. While standing at

the back door of the bar, Wilford saw a fight start outside “in the back of Player’s in the parking

lot.” He walked outside where he saw “about four people” involved in the fight, and then he saw

Thomas with a MAK gun in his hand. Wilford then heard a gunshot and saw Walker and Thomas

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