Roderick Cooper v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 28, 2004
Docket01-03-00835-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Roderick Cooper v. State (Roderick Cooper 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
Roderick Cooper v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Opinion issued October 28, 2004






In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


NO. 01-03-00835-CR

__________


RODERICK KEITH COOPER, Appellant


V.


THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee


On Appeal from the 184th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 887,345


MEMORANDUM OPINION

          A jury found appellant, Roderick Keith Cooper, guilty of capital murder. Based on the jury’s affirmative answers to the three special issues, the trial court sentenced appellant to confinement for life.

          In six points of error, appellant contends that the trial court erred in denying appellant’s motion to suppress statements that he made to police officers while he was in custody; the trial court erred in sustaining the State’s objection to testimony from appellant’s brother that appellant’s accomplice had admitted to having shot the victims; and the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support the jury’s verdict.

          We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

          Houston Police Officer M. Batiste testified that, while he was on patrol sometime after 10:00 p.m. on September 4, 2001, he parked his patrol car in the parking lot of a Hollywood Video store on Fondren. As Batiste was completing some paperwork, a man came up to his patrol car and told him that he thought that something was wrong inside the video store. Batiste looked inside the store and saw that the lights were on, but he did not see any employees. He then radioed for additional Houston Police officers to assist him, and, after two more officers arrived, Batiste and the other officers entered the store. Once inside the store, the officers did not see anyone and, when they called out, received no response. The officers searched the store–with the exception of the manager’s office, which was locked–and found no one. Through their dispatcher, the officers contacted the store director, Vonda Morales, who brought an office key to the store. When the officers opened the office door, they found the bodies of two store employees, Angela Sanchez and Kola Osemwengie. Batiste then requested medical assistance and subsequently notified the Houston Police Department’s homicide division. Batiste further testified that he had known the complainants by name from having seen and spoken to them during his patrols of the store area, and he identified appellant as someone he had seen working at the store before September 4, 2001.

          Harris County Assistant Medical Examiner Dr. Paul Shrode testified that, based on the findings of the autopsies performed by Dr. Delbert Van Dusen, both of the complainants had died from fatal gunshot wounds to the head. Sanchez had been shot once in the back of the head. Osemwengie had been shot twice: the first bullet had traveled through the palm and out the back of his right hand, and then into his forehead; the second bullet had entered his brain from the right side of his head. Dr. Shrode noted that the evidence of stippling on the palm of Osemwengie’s right hand was consistent with a weapon having been fired between six and 18 inches from his hand. When asked whether he thought it was possible that the person who had shot the complainants could have done so while standing in the doorway of the store office, Dr. Shrode testified that he did not think that it was a “reasonable option.”

          Houston Police Department Sergeant W. Wendel testified that he and his partner, former Houston Police Officer F. Hale, were assigned to investigate the shootings. In his investigation of the crime scene, Wendel found that a surveillance tape was missing from the VCR located in the manager’s office and that the complainants’ keys were missing. Wendel also noticed that the store cash registers showed that the last entry had occurred at about 11:00 p.m.

          Houston Police Officer E. Aguilera testified that, as a member of the crime scene unit, he investigated the scene of the shootings. No shell casings were recovered from inside the video store office, which Aguilera testified was consistent with someone having used a revolver to shoot the complainants. Houston Police Department Firearms Examiner K. Downs testified that she examined the three bullets and their fragments removed from the complainants, and she determined that the bullets had all been fired from the same weapon–either a .38 special or a .357 magnum revolver.

          Morales testified that appellant had worked at the store for about 90 days and had been fired on August 27, 2001, about one week before the shootings. She explained that the store was equipped with a video surveillance camera that recorded events inside the store onto a tape in a VCR in the manager’s office. Only a manager or a shift leader has a key to the manager’s office, and, during the time that appellant was employed at the store, he did not have such a key. The store office also contained a safe–used to keep the store’s “house money”–which was found to be empty at the time that the police officers discovered the complainants’ bodies. Morales noted that this safe could have been opened only by Osemwengie. Morales also testified that, sometime between 7:30 p.m and 8:00 p.m. on the night of the shootings, she had called the store and had told Osemwengie that she had left appellant’s final paycheck in the cash drawer at the front of the store. Wendel testified that, during his inspection of the store, he had not found appellant’s paycheck.

          Batiste testified that the complainants’ cars were not found in the parking lot of the video store, but that Osemwengie’s car was recovered the following day in the parking lot of a grocery store.

          Appellant’s twin brother, Broderick Cooper, testified that, at the time of the shootings, he and appellant were living in an apartment together, along with their cousin, Michael Walls. On the morning after the shootings, appellant and Walls came to the apartment, and Broderick noticed that Walls was carrying a backpack containing a gun, some money, and a videotape. Appellant and Walls counted the money and gave $400 to Broderick, who used the money to pay the rent. In Broderick’s opinion, as between appellant and Walls, Walls was “the leader,” “the stronger individual,” and “the only one that talked about what [had] happened” at the video store the night before.

          Lynn Fisher, a former co-worker of appellant’s, testified that she knew appellant because they had previously worked together.

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