Ronald McEarl Williams v. State
This text of Ronald McEarl Williams v. State (Ronald McEarl Williams 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.
Opinion
IN THE
TENTH COURT OF APPEALS
No. 10-92-036-CR
RONALD McEARL WILLIAMS,
Appellant
v.
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
Appellee
From the 272nd District Court
Brazos County, Texas
Trial Court # 20,802-272
O P I N I O N
Appellant Williams appeals his conviction by a jury on two enhanced counts of burglary of a motor vehicle enhanced. The State sought to prove that on September 11, 1991, at about 4:30 A.M., two vehicles in a Bryan apartment complex parking lot were burglarized during a police stakeout and that Appellant was guilty as a party to the burglaries. The State introduced evidence that Appellant drove a car which brought the burglar to the scene, departed briefly after dropping its passenger, and returned to the scene a short time later, as if to retrieve his passenger, only to then flee police. The person who actually broke into the vehicles escaped. The court sentenced Appellant to fifteen years confinement and a $1000 fine for count one, and ten years' probation and a $1000 fine for count two.
Appellant brings two points of error. He complains that the evidence was insufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he had aided or attempted to aid an unknown person in burglarizing two motor vehicles. Appellant asserts in point two that the court erred in allowing the State's improper jury argument which allegedly injected new and harmful facts outside the record and invited jurors to speculate about harmful facts not in evidence. We will affirm the judgment.
Our standard of review in determining the sufficiency of the evidence is whether, viewing both the direct and circumstantial evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. See Turner v. State, 805 S.W.2d 423, 427 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991). While mere presence in the vicinity of a crime, even when accompanied by flight, is not alone sufficient to uphold a conviction, the evidence in this case supportive of Appellant's conviction is more than circumstantial. See Moore v. State, 532 S.W.2d 333, 337 (Tex. Crim. App. 1976); Ysasaga v. State, 444 S.W.2d 305, 308-09 (Tex. Crim. App. 1969). Moreover, flight by the accused is probative, circumstantial evidence from which an inference of guilt may be drawn. Ysasaga, 444 S.W.2d at 308.
The record reflects that in the early morning hours of September 11, 1991, four Bryan police officers were staked out in their personal cars in the parking lot of an apartment complex called The Oaks. They were attempting to apprehend the persons responsible for numerous auto burglaries at similar apartment complexes.
At about 4:30 A.M., a maroon car, later identified as a Pontiac Grand Prix, drove into the south entrance of The Oaks parking lot, circled the lot slowly, and returned to the south entrance, where it stopped. The officers observed that the car was occupied by two black males, a driver and a front seat passenger. As the car circled the lot, two of the officers were able to see the car's license plate and noted the number as 955-GUF or 955-GHF. Officer Wager, who had been staked out near the south entrance, positively identified the license plate of the car as 955-GUF. When the car stopped at the south entrance, its passenger alighted and the car then drove out of the south entrance away from the lot. Officer Wager followed the passenger as he walked into the lot itself. Within five minutes, Officer Wager heard a thumping noise followed by glass shattering and saw the passenger leaning inside the driver's window of a Mazda pickup. Two vehicles parked side-by-side had been broken into, and a stereo was removed from one of them. Officer Wager attempted to catch the burglar, who threw down the stereo he held and ran past the officer to the south entrance. As the officer chased the burglar, the same maroon car reentered the parking lot at the south entrance. The driver was the only person in the car when it returned to The Oaks. The burglar initially ran toward the car, hesitated briefly, then took off into the woods near the south entrance.
Officer Wager drew his gun and ordered the driver of the car to stop; however, the driver immediately accelerated, turned, and sped out of the north parking lot entrance. Although Wager was able to get what proved to be the correct license number for the car, he testified that he did not get a good enough look at the driver to identify him.
The speeding car barely avoided two marked patrol cars (which had not been a part of the stakeout) blocking the north entrance. Officer Duane Hill, who occupied one of the two patrol cars, testified that he had been on his regular 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. shift and had been unaware of the apartment complex stakeout. However, when he first heard "radio traffic" from that area and then heard that an officer was involved in a foot pursuit, he headed for The Oaks. Hill and another officer pulled their cars into the north entrance, with overhead lights on. According to Hill, the maroon car, which was attempting to exit the north entrance, turned in front of Hill's patrol car and drove along the shoulder of the road. Hill testified that he saw only one person, the driver, in the car. Officers Hill and Smith chased the car north for approximately a mile before it missed a right turn onto a highway exit ramp and slid into a ditch. The driver then jumped from the car and began running. Hill jumped from his patrol car and pursued the driver on foot. Hill, who had a flashlight, described the driver as wearing a white or light-colored shirt, shorts and black shoes. He chased the driver approximately 150-200 yards through an open field, over a barbed-wire fence and into a wooded area where he finally caught him. At one point during the chase on foot, the driver disappeared over an embankment and was briefly out of the officer's sight. When Officer Hill reached the top of the embankment, he stated that the defendant was approximately fifty yards ahead of him. The officer apprehended Appellant, his body covered with scratches, after he stumbled and fell on a fire ant bed. At trial, Officer Hill unequivocally identified Appellant as the man he had chased from the maroon car and finally apprehended.
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