Richard Jerry Breuer v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 29, 2014
Docket03-13-00681-CR
StatusPublished

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Richard Jerry Breuer v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-13-00681-CR

Richard Jerry Breuer, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BELL COUNTY, 27TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 69844, HONORABLE MARTHA J. TRUDO, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted appellant Richard Jerry Breuer of the offense of aggravated assault

with a deadly weapon on a public servant.1 Punishment was assessed at twenty years’ imprisonment.

In two points of error on appeal, Breuer asserts that the evidence is insufficient to support his

conviction and that the district court abused its discretion in denying his motion for new trial based

on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. We will affirm the judgment of conviction.

BACKGROUND

The jury heard evidence that on April 6, 2012, Breuer had shot Jimmy Smitherman

during an incident at Breuer’s home in East Bell County. The incident also involved Breuer’s then-

wife, Machele, who had formerly resided in the home but had since become estranged, departed the

home, and begun a dating relationship with Smitherman. By the time of the incident, Machele and

1 See Tex. Penal Code § 22.02(b)(2)(B). Smitherman had decided to move in together and had found a rental house in the nearby town

of Buckholts. However, some of Machele’s belongings still remained in the home she had shared

with Breuer. Prior to going to retrieve them, according to Machele, she had spoken by phone with

Breuer, who had indicated that he was out of town. During that same phone conversation, Machele

added, she had informed Breuer that she would be going to the home to “get some of her stuff.”

Smitherman, who had overheard the phone conversation, testified that Breuer had responded, “Okay.

Don’t touch none of my stuff and [] make sure you feed the animals while you’re there.” With

that prologue, Machele, with Smitherman accompanying her, had driven her pickup truck to

Breuer’s home on April 6 to retrieve her possessions. To summarize the ensuing events, it turned

out that Breuer was in the home when they arrived, violence erupted, and the State sought to portray

Breuer’s actions as evidencing a murder-suicide plot.

At all relevant times, Smitherman has served as an officer with the Police Department

of the City of Rogers,2 and the key contested issues at trial included not only competing accounts of

the violence but Breuer’s awareness of Smitherman’s law-enforcement status and whether the officer

had been acting within his official duties at the time of the incident. Machele testified that she had

previously informed Breuer, shortly after she had started dating Smitherman, that she was dating

another man who was a police officer. On the other hand, it is undisputed that Smitherman was off-

duty at the time he accompanied Machele to Breuer’s home. Smitherman recounted that he was

wearing “civilian clothes; blue jeans, boots,[and a] t-shirt.” He was, however, armed and wearing

his police badge on his belt directly in front of his weapon, in compliance with police department

2 Smitherman indicated, in fact, that he first met Machele while on patrol, when he found her sleeping in her vehicle in a Rogers parking lot after having fled the home she had shared with Breuer.

2 policy that required officers to carry a firearm and police identification during off-duty hours.

Further, the t-shirt had a police-badge logo printed on a left front pocket, with the text of a common

prayer in aid of law enforcement printed on the back.

When the pair arrived at Breuer’s home, Machele proceeded inside while Smitherman

waited outside in her truck. Machele testified that upon entering the bedroom, she “saw the barrel

of a .9mm” pointed at her by Breuer, who screamed at her, “Who do you think you are?” According

to Machele, Breuer then grabbed her by her hair, forced her down on her knees, and pointed the

gun at her head. Machele recounted, “I was pushing [the gun] away. He grabbed my hair harder.

He let go of it. He cocked the gun. He pulled the slide back and he said, ‘You’re not leaving this

house alive. I’ll see you in a minute.’”

Machele added that she, believing that Breuer was about to kill her, screamed

for Smitherman, yelling, “Jimmy, Jimmy, he has a gun.” At that moment, Machele indicated, she

noticed Breuer’s “eyes change[],” whereupon he grabbed her by the hair again and dragged her

into the living room. By that time, Machele claimed, she could hear Smitherman coming up the

front steps to enter the home and saw Smitherman “push[] the door open with his foot.” Then,

according to Machele, she heard Smitherman say, “Police officer, drop the gun, drop the gun.”

Machele testified that Breuer did not drop his weapon. Instead, she explained, “He doesn’t even

hesitate. He just started pulling the trigger.”

According to Machele, she witnessed Smitherman being hit by a bullet and retreating

backwards down the steps, with Breuer advancing toward and through the front entry door, “still

firing the gun.” Machele claimed she followed Breuer in an attempt to stop him and, through the

front entry, “could see Jimmy laying on his stomach in front of the truck.” Breuer proceeded down

3 the steps and, according to Machele, told Smitherman, “I don’t care if you’re a fucking cop, you will

fall like the rest of us,” proceeded to the fallen Smitherman, and stood over the officer pointing the

gun at him. Believing that Breuer was “going to shoot him again.” Machele claimed that she pushed

Breuer away from Smitherman, deterring Breuer momentarily and enabling her and Smitherman to

flee into her truck. However, Machele had left her keys—including her truck’s ignition key—in the

front door of the house, preventing the pair from leaving the scene in the vehicle.

With Breuer continuing to shoot at them, Machele claimed, she exited the truck,

ran back to the front door of the home, retrieved her keys, made it back to the truck, and cranked

the engine. She further recalled that one of Breuer’s shots went through the truck’s windshield,

hitting Smitherman above his chest. As Machele attempted to put the truck in reverse, with Breuer

continuing his shooting, Smitherman was able to fire a shot from his weapon at Breuer, hitting

him in what appeared to be the side of his body. At that point, Machele was able to drive away.

Both Smitherman and Breuer subsequently received medical attention for their injuries and survived.

Smitherman also testified and generally echoed Machele’s account of the incident.

He explained that after hearing Machele’s screams for help, he had unholstered his weapon,

approached the house, and observed Breuer pulling Machele by the hair. Smitherman testified that

he told Breuer twice, “I’m a police officer, drop the gun. Police officer, drop the gun.” Immediately

thereafter, Smitherman recalled, Breuer “opened fire” and shot him, hitting him “more than once.”

Smitherman then described the events leading to their escape from Breuer’s house in a manner

largely consistent with Machele’s testimony.

Breuer testified in his defense and admitted that he shot Smitherman, but denied

that the shooting had occurred in the manner described by Machele and Smitherman. According to

4 Breuer, he had been sleeping in the bedroom when he heard someone open the front door and

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