Reed, Edgar v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 8, 2003
Docket01-01-01022-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Reed, Edgar v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Opinion issued May 8, 2003.





In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas



NO. 01-01-01022-CR



EDGAR REED, Appellant



V.



THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee



On Appeal from the 351st District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 848384



MEMORANDUM OPINION



Appellant, Edgar Reed, was indicted on one count of felony murder for the murder of Henry Mack Bailey. The indictment charged appellant with the felony offense of deadly conduct by recklessly shooting a firearm into a home without regard as to whether the home was occupied, thereby killing Bailey. A jury convicted appellant and assessed his punishment at 10 years' confinement and a fine of $10,000. Upon the jury's recommendation, the judge ordered appellant placed on community supervision. Among the conditions of appellant's community supervision was a requirement that appellant pay $5,601.12 in restitution to Bailey's mother.

In five points of error, appellant contends (1) the evidence presented was factually insufficient to sustain his conviction, (2) the trial court erred by denying appellant's motion for a mistrial on grounds of prosecutorial misconduct, (3) the trial court erred by overruling appellant's objections to improper jury arguments made by the prosecutor, and (4) the trial court erred by requiring appellant pay restitution to Bailey's mother. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Background

On the evening of June 23, 2000, several friends and neighbors gathered at the home shared by Helen Ruth Walker Wright and her brother, Jessie Walker. Wright testified that the guests had been there for most of the day, and that she and others had used cocaine earlier that day. By evening, the guests were playing dominoes, smoking marijuana, and drinking alcohol in the various rooms of the house. A fistfight began between one of Wright's guests, Travis Thompson, and another man from the neighborhood, Robert Knighten. Wright saw Knighten stab Thompson with a kitchen knife and run out of the house. After Knighten fled, Thompson called appellant. Approximately 20 minutes after Thompson called, a black luxury car pulled up in front of Wright's home. Wright saw Thompson walk over to the car and take a shotgun that was handed to him by someone in the car. Wright did not see who handed Thompson the gun, nor was she able to determine how many people were in the car. While standing next to the car, still parked in front of Wright's house, Thompson fired the shotgun twice into the air before the gun jammed. After the shotgun jammed, Thompson got into the backseat of the car behind the driver's seat. Wright next saw appellant, whom she called "Eddie," get out of the car using the backseat passenger's side door. Wright screamed to appellant that Knighten had already fled the neighborhood. Appellant, however, ran a short distance in the opposite direction from the direction in which Wright stated that Knighten had run. Wright saw appellant standing a short distance from the house of her neighbor, Mack Bailey, a few houses from her own. Appellant was repeatedly firing into Bailey's house with a long gun. After he finished shooting, appellant got back into the black car, which then drove away. Wright and other neighbors went to Bailey's house, where they found he had been fatally shot.

Sergeant Larry Foltz, a police officer for the Houston Police Department Homicide Division, testified that he and his partner arrived at the Bailey home at approximately 2:00 a.m. The officers conducted witness interviews and a crime scene investigation.

At the police station, Sergeant Foltz interviewed an eyewitness, Cynthia Simon. Sergeant Foltz testified that Simon identified appellant as the shooter and informed police of appellant's home address. When the police conducted a records search, they discovered that appellant had previously claimed ownership of a black Cadillac Seville, and that appellant had made a police report regarding items stolen from the Cadillac three months before the shooting. The next day, police obtained a photograph of appellant and showed both Simon and Wright a photo array containing appellant's photograph. Both Simon and Wright identified appellant as the person who had shot into Bailey's home.

The police obtained a warrant for appellant's arrest and attempted to execute that warrant the next day, Monday, June 25. Appellant was not at his home or at his mother's home. After obtaining a search warrant that same day, police searched appellant's mother's home and found a black Cadillac in the garage. Later that afternoon, appellant's attorney contacted police and informed them that appellant intended to surrender himself into custody. Appellant surrendered the next day.

In addition to Wright's testimony, the State presented testimony from Simon and another neighbor, Bobbie Ann Tillman. Simon testified that she lived in the same neighborhood as Bailey and Wright, and that she was a guest at Wright's house during the party. Simon's eyewitness testimony was very similar to that of Wright's--she stated that she overheard Thompson make a telephone call and that appellant arrived in a black luxury vehicle shortly afterwards. Simon saw appellant run down the street towards Bailey's house, and she saw appellant firing a gun into Bailey's house. Simon also admitted using cocaine and alcohol on the day of the shooting.

Wright's and Simon's statements differed regarding the exact details of appellant's clothing, the exact timing of events, and the type of car they saw pull up to Wright's house. The statement that Wright gave police on the night of the shooting was that the black car appellant drove was a Lexus, although Wright stated at trial that she had told the officers the car was a Cadillac. In her testimony, Simon stated that the black luxury car was a Lexus. Both Wright and Simon agreed, however, that appellant was in a black luxury car, that he was wearing dark clothing at the time of the shooting, and that the events in question took place sometime between 9:00 p.m. and midnight on the night of June 23, 2000. Both Simon and Wright also unequivocally stated that appellant was the person who fired the gun into Bailey's house. Simon testified that she had known appellant for approximately 15 years and that she had once had sexual relations with him. Simon stated that, although she only saw appellant's profile as he got out of the car, she maintained a clear view of his profile for several minutes and that she was certain it was appellant. Wright stated that she knew appellant as a friend of Thompson's, that she had known appellant for approximately nine years, and that she was completely certain that appellant had been the person who fired into Bailey's home.

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