Roy v. State

997 S.W.2d 863, 1999 Tex. App. LEXIS 5639, 1999 WL 549021
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 29, 1999
Docket2-98-499-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 997 S.W.2d 863 (Roy 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
Roy v. State, 997 S.W.2d 863, 1999 Tex. App. LEXIS 5639, 1999 WL 549021 (Tex. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

DIXON W. HOLMAN, Justice.

A jury convicted and sentenced Appellant Walter Roy, also known as Eddie Dwayne Moore, after finding him guilty of two counts of attempted murder and two counts of engaging in organized criminal activity. Appellant contends that (1) the court should not have denied his motion for a mistrial because the jury heard evidence of his extraneous offenses and unfairly tried him for being a “bad person” rather than for the crimes alleged in his indictment; (2) the jury was allowed to consider inadmissible hearsay evidence about his criminal street gang member *865 ship; (3) the jury only heard evidence that is both legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction; (4) the jury heard improper closing argument in the trial’s guilt-innocence phase when a prosecutor remarked about Appellant’s gang-related tattoos. Finding no reversible error, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

THE EVENT

Benjamin Robles was at Echo Lake Park, planning to sell nearly three pounds of marijuana to Edric Davis, also known as Troy Walker, when gunfire interrupted their encounter. Appellant had arrived with Edric. Interested bystanders present when the gunfire started included Arturo Rubicon, the marijuana supplier, and Santiago Baez, who came to collect money from Arturo. When the shooting stopped, Edric had been hit in the face by shattered auto glass, Benjamin had been shot in his shoulder, and Paula Lebrón had been shot in her toe while diving to the floor of her car to escape the gunfire. None of the others there, which included a two-year-old boy, were shot. Paula and the boy’s mother, Stephanie Soto, were passengers in the same car.

Shortly after the shooting, the police arrested Appellant nearby and found the gun in a drainage ditch. The police brought Appellant to the scene of the shooting, where Stephanie identified him as the shooter. The trial was more than two-and-a-half years later. There, Stephanie did not recognize Appellant in person, but did identify him in his photo taken by police on the day of the shooting after his arrest. Paula testified that she did not know who shot her toe. Benjamin and his girlfriend Venecia Saldivar, eyewitnesses to the shooting, both testified that Appellant was the shooter. Edric, Appellant’s companion at the park, testified that Appellant did not shoot anyone, and that instead, the shooter was a person known on the streets as “Little Crazy.” Edric could not confirm “Little Crazy’s” real name or suggest where he might be found.

DENIAL OF MISTRIAL

Count 4 of the indictment alleges that on the date of the shooting Appellant “did with the intent to establish, maintain or participate as a member of a criminal street gang [commit] aggravated assault of Benjamin Robles by shooting at him with a deadly weapon, to wit: a firearm.” Count 5 was substantially the same, except that Paula is the victim named in it. During the guilt-innocence phase of the trial, the prosecution called Fort Worth Police Officer Herman Young as a witness having expert knowledge of street gangs. At the time of trial, he was in his thirteenth year as a Fort Worth police officer and his eighth year as a member of the department’s gang unit. He testified without objection about his own training in street gang matters, his undercover narcotics work among gang members, and teaching at seminars in which he has trained thousands of other officers to do police work against street gangs. The officer knows Appellant from their past encounters, identified him in the courtroom, and testified that he had heard Appellant admit being a member of gangs known as the “Five Deuce Hoova Crips” and the “South Side Gangster Criminal Family.”

Without objection, the officer explained to the jury that the “South Side Gangster Criminal Family” was started by some members of the Crips:

[B]ecause gang members were starting to fight over drug territory. The Crips on the South Side Gangster Family decided, why don’t we all pool our resources, quit fighting each other, and do our main purpose, which is to sell drugs and to fight the rivals, which are the Bloods.
So you had Four Trey Gangster Crips, Five Deuce Hoova Crips, and 103rd Grape Street Crips, who all unified to become the South Side Gangster Criminal Family.
[[Image here]]
When you look at the gang structure and the gang territory, they have a main *866 territory, which is their main stronghold as far as the sales and distribution of drugs which is going to be considered the short south side; right in the Evans and Rosedale area, going back up to Berry, Echo Lake, around in those particular areas. It’s known as the short south side. It’s been divided up into what they call Hoovaland and Aggland, but that is still the Five Deuce Hoova Criminal territory....
[[Image here]]
[The Five Deuce Hoova Crips] involve themselves in offenses from as small as graffiti to petty thefts, to aggravated robberies, to murders, to rapes, to extor-tions. You name it. They’re a criminal enterprise.
[[Image here]]
Crip gang members could call themselves G’s as meaning soldiers. Could be BG’s, OG’s, YG’s. And what G stands for is gangster. And you have different status levels that you fall into with the gang. A BG would be a baby gangster, YG would be a young gangster, and OG would be an original gangster, which stands for a gang leader ... a status of what’s known as an OG license. And the way you get an OG license ... is you go out and kill a rival gang member and have a gang member witness this. And then you get to put a tear drop on your eye, and the tear drop tattoo gives you the status of an OG license....

At that point, Appellant, who has two tear drops tattooed under one of his eyes, objected that the officer had mentioned an extraneous offense. The trial court’s only response was to promptly instruct the jury “don’t consider that last statement. That’s not part of the evidence.”

Appellant immediately moved for a mistrial, and his first point on appeal is that the court erred by denying the motion. He argues in his brief that the officer was claiming “that Appellant had previously murdered two people.” The State maintains that a mistrial was not required because the court’s jury instruction cured any error. See Kipp v. State, 876 S.W.2d 330, 339 (Tex.Crim.App.1994); Kemp v. State, 846 S.W.2d 289, 308 (Tex.Crim.App.1992), ce rt. denied, 508 U.S. 918, 113 S.Ct. 2361, 124 L.Ed.2d 268 (1993). Counts 4 and 5 of the indictment allege that Appellant did the shooting while acting as a member of a criminal street gang. We are to allow trial courts considerable leeway in permitting juries to hear, as in this case, “background” contextual evidence that is relevant to a crime charged against the accused, for example, organized criminal activity by acting as a member of a criminal street gang. See Mayes v. State, 816 S.W.2d 79

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
997 S.W.2d 863, 1999 Tex. App. LEXIS 5639, 1999 WL 549021, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roy-v-state-texapp-1999.