Ronnie Jraun Otems, Jr. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 6, 2012
Docket02-11-00488-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Ronnie Jraun Otems, Jr. v. State (Ronnie Jraun Otems, Jr. 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
Ronnie Jraun Otems, Jr. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

02-11-488-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 02-11-00488-CR


Ronnie Jraun Otems, Jr.

v.

The State of Texas

§

From the 89th District Court

of Wichita County (51,235-C)

December 6, 2012

Per Curiam

(nfp)

JUDGMENT

          This court has considered the record on appeal in this case and holds that there was no error in the trial court’s judgment.  It is ordered that the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.

SECOND DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS


PER CURIAM


Ronnie Jraun Otems, Jr.

APPELLANT

The State of Texas

STATE

----------

FROM THE 89th District Court OF Wichita COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

I.     Introduction

In three points, Appellant Ronnie Jraun Otems, Jr. appeals his four convictions, complaining of the trial court’s actions before and during his trial.  We affirm.

II.   Factual and Procedural Background

In his appellate brief, Otems sets out the following background:

The facts surrounding Appellant’s charges here are the stuff of a Hollywood action film and are largely uncontroverted at trial.  On September 23, 2009[,] Mr. Otems was being held in the Wichita County jail awaiting trial on an unrelated charge.  He was placed in a single cell at the annex facility, a former warehouse retrofitted to serve as a jail.  After a series of altercations with staff which he described as abuse, Mr. Otems used his impressive strength to pry loose a metal table bolted to the cinderblock wall.  He then used the table as a tool to beat on and pry back a steel plate covering the internals of the cell’s shower.  Removing the plate exposed a small hole allowing access to a pipe chase behind the cell.  Two pieces of rebar blocked Mr. Otem[s]’s egress through the hole, but he was able to bend them out of place enough to allow access to the pipe chase.  Appellant entered the pipe chase and re-entered his cell multiple times, one time standing in the dark directly next to a detention officer investigating noise in the pipe chase.  Back in his cell, Mr. Otems removed several long screws that held the shower plate to the wall and sharpened them to a point.  He bound the screws to his hands with strips of his bed sheet and exited a final time into the pipe chase.  He climbed the pipes and was able to position himself on top of the cells, with room to walk below the tall ceilings of the jail.  He disabled a security camera and climbed hand over hand across a hallway on an electrical conduit and headed for the area he believed controlled the electrical power for the facility.  Mr. Otems had previously tripped the breakers in his cell by jamming a paperclip in the electrical socket and watched which direction the guard went to fix the problem.  When Mr. Otems arrived at an electrical box he began to flip switches and tear out wires causing the lights to go out and the electric doors to lock.

According to the record, Otems then attacked Officer Samuel Hankins, stabbing him four times.  When Officer Michael Bonnin went to help, Otems charged at him and punched him in the face three times.  During this struggle, Otems also lunged at Officer Dustin Lowery and swung at him several times.  At trial, Officer Bonnin testified that he did not feel any pain when Otems struck him, and based on this testimony, Otems moved for a directed verdict on the aggravated-assault-on-a-public-servant charge pertaining to Officer Bonnin, designated as Count II in the indictment.  The trial court denied the motion.

After a pretrial hearing on shackling, Otems was shackled, handcuffed, and attached to a large metal plate on the floor throughout the trial.  However, all of this was obscured from the jury’s view by a black curtain.  And after Otems complained about having supervised visits with his attorney, he was allowed private meetings in the courtroom with his attorney during breaks.

The jury found Otems guilty in Count I for aggravated assault on a public servant (Officer Hankins), in Count II for the lesser included offense of attempted aggravated assault on a public servant (Officer Bonnin), in Count IV for possession of a deadly weapon in a penal institution, and in Count V for escape.  The jury found Otems not guilty in Count III, attempted aggravated assault on a public servant (Officer Lowery).

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Ronnie Jraun Otems, Jr. v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ronnie-jraun-otems-jr-v-state-texapp-2012.