Rex Lane Jr. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 26, 2012
Docket01-11-00055-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Rex Lane Jr. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Opinion issued April 26, 2012

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-11-00055-CR

———————————

Rex Lane Jr., Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 230th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 1271497

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          A jury convicted appellant, Rex Lane Jr., of the felony offense of aggravated robbery and, after finding the allegations in an enhancement paragraph true, assessed his punishment at forty years’ confinement.[1]  In two points of error, Lane contends that (1) the evidence is insufficient to support his conviction, and (2) the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress his videotaped confession.  We affirm.

Background

          The complainant, Gabrel Garcia, was robbed at gunpoint by two men while waiting in his hotel room for a female companion, Christi Tucker, to arrive.  Garcia testified that he had been waiting for about an hour when Tucker called to tell him that she would be there shortly and asked him to let her in.  Thinking Tucker was there, Garcia opened the motel room door, but was greeted instead by a young man standing in the doorway pointing a gun at Garcia’s head.  The gunman pushed Garcia back into the room, instructed him to turn around and lie on the bed, and took Garcia’s property.  Approximately two minutes later, a second man entered, tied Garcia’s hands behind his back with an extension cord, and then tied his feet to his hands.  According to Garcia, the men then pulled him off the bed into a standing position, pushed him into the bathroom, and left.  Although told to stay in the bathroom, the extension cord was so loosely tied that Garcia was able to reach the window in time to write down the license plate number of the Trail Blazer in which the men drove off, and he immediately called the police.       

          Garcia testified that, although instructed not to look at them, he could easily see both men because the lights were on in the motel room.  Garcia later identified Lane from a photo-spread as the second man who entered the motel room and tied him up.  Garcia also identified Lane in court as one of the men who robbed him.

          Detective Lori Roberts, a twenty-seven year veteran of the Houston Police

Department assigned to the robbery unit, investigated the robbery.  She testified that Lane was first identified as a suspect based upon information HPD received from the motel clerk.  According to Roberts, the motel’s records, which contained Lane’s driver’s license information, indicated that Lane had rented the room next to Garcia’s and that the Trail Blazer with the license plate number Garcia had recorded was linked to Lane’s room registration.  Roberts prepared a photo-spread from which Garcia identified Lane as the second man who tied him up.  Roberts then obtained a warrant for Lane’s arrest.

          After his arrest, Lane was interviewed by Detective Roberts and her partner, Officer Steve Hooper.  That videotaped interview was admitted into evidence at trial over Lane’s objection.  During the interview, although Lane initially denied any involvement in the robbery, he ultimately said that he and Tucker lived in the same apartment complex and were friends.  He also said that Tucker had met Garcia at a gas station and had arranged to meet him at the motel with the intent to rob him.  Tucker thought Garcia had money because he owned his own business and had business cards.  Lane drove Tucker, another woman, and that woman’s boyfriend to the motel in his sister’s Trail Blazer the night of the robbery, and he rented a room close to Garcia’s.  Lane also admitted that he went into Garcia’s room, tied him up and put him in the bathroom, because he did not want Garcia to see them leave in his sister’s Trail Blazer.  They took Garcia’s wallet and his cell phone and tried to use one of his credit cards at an ATM.

Motion to Suppress

          We begin by addressing Lane’s second point of error.  Arguing that the confession was involuntary because the circumstances of the interrogation were inherently coercive, Lane contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress the videotaped confession.  Specifically, he argues that the totality of the circumstances—the excessive length and cramped conditions of his interrogation, coupled with the fact that the officer “cursed” at him—were such that his free will was overborne, rendering his confession involuntary.

Factual Background

          At the suppression hearing, Lane testified that he was interrogated for over an hour in a small room by two officers sitting between him and the door.  Although for the first thirty-nine minutes he denied any involvement in the robbery, Lane claimed that he was nervous and afraid and that the officers badgered him until he confessed.  Lane also accused the officers of screaming at him and neglecting to give him his Miranda warnings.  Lane acknowledged, however, that the officers never hurt him or threatened him and that he never asked to end the interrogation or requested an attorney.

          The State controverted pertinent portions of Lane’s testimony with the testimony of Officer Hooper, one of the officers present during the interrogation. 

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