Shane Allen Saunders v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 8, 2008
Docket03-04-00401-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Shane Allen Saunders v. State (Shane Allen Saunders 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
Shane Allen Saunders v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

ON MOTION FOR REHEARING

NO. 03-04-00401-CR

Shane Allen Saunders, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF WILLIAMSON COUNTY, 368TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 04-241-K368, HONORABLE BURT CARNES, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

The opinion and judgment dated August 18, 2006, are withdrawn, and the following

is substituted in its place.

A jury found appellant Shane Allen Saunders guilty of engaging in organized criminal

activity, found the deadly weapon allegation in the indictment “true,” and assessed punishment at

life imprisonment. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 71.02 (West Supp. 2005). Saunders asserts that the

evidence is legally and factually insufficient to sustain the guilty verdict. He also complains that the

indictment should have been quashed, and that the court erred in admitting irrelevant and unreliable

expert testimony regarding the results of gunshot residue tests. We will overrule these issues and

affirm the conviction. Background

Around 3:00 a.m. on July 22, 2002, law enforcement officers responded to reports

of gunfire and a high-speed automobile chase in a Georgetown residential neighborhood. Officers

set up a roadblock and stopped two speeding vehicles: a white Chevrolet pickup truck driven and

solely occupied by Kimela Trump, and a red Mazda driven and solely occupied by Shawn Forrest.

Forrest, who was bleeding from an injury on his hand, told the officers that someone in the white

truck had been shooting at him. Numerous bullet holes were found in the front and side of the

Mazda. There were no bullet holes in the Chevrolet pickup truck.

Participants’ Testimony

Forrest testified that a stranger came to the door of his apartment at about 2:00 a.m.

on the night in question and asked for “James.” Forrest told the man “there is no James here” and

ordered him to leave. As the man walked away, Forrest noticed figures moving about in the dark,

one of whom ran to a pickup truck parked in a neighboring parking lot. Forrest left his apartment,

got into his car, and drove toward the suspicious pickup. He could see a figure inside the pickup,

but was unable to tell the person’s gender. The pickup truck left the parking lot and began to drive

away. Forrest followed. Suddenly, the truck stopped and a figure at the side of the street stepped

into the light with an arm extended. Gunshots rang out, causing Forrest to duck down in his car.

He heard bullets striking his vehicle and felt something graze his hand. After the shooting stopped,

the pickup sped away. Forrest pursued, chasing the pickup through the neighborhood until both

vehicles were stopped at the police roadblock.

2 Forrest recognized Trump when she got out of the pickup. She was the girlfriend

of David Maynard, a leader of the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas, a prison-based gang. Forrest

acknowledged being a member of the group. He testified that earlier that year, he had refused to

obey Maynard’s order to transport a load of methamphetamine.

While some officers dealt with Forrest and Trump at the roadblock, other officers

began searching the area where the shots had been fired. Reports had been made about a person or

persons running through yards in that neighborhood. The officers were looking for appellant Shane

Saunders, whose driver’s license and ATM card had been found in the white pickup. At 7:00 a.m.,

Saunders and Wayne Confer, another Aryan Brotherhood member, were found walking in the

area and were taken into custody. Both men were perspiring heavily and covered with dirt and

grass burrs.

Shortly after Saunders’s arrest, Detective Bill Pascoe of the Georgetown Police

Department conducted a custodial interview of Saunders who stated that he had nothing to do with

the shooting. When asked whether he was a member of the Aryan Brotherhood, Saunders replied

“kinda sorta.” A series of recordings of telephone conversations between various members of the

Aryan Brotherhood were admitted during trial. In the recorded conversations, Maynard and Confer

discussed Saunders and his role in the Aryan Brotherhood, talking about “putting [Saunders] to the

test.” During another call, Trump told Maynard that, when she discussed the planned hit on Forrest

with Saunders, he “knew plenty about it.”

In a recorded conversation after the shooting, Saunders and Matthew Cox, a

“probationary” Aryan Brotherhood member, discussed attempting to evade capture by police after

the shooting and wiping down the weapons used during the shooting. In another conversation

3 between Saunders and Confer’s girlfriend Christina Allen, Saunders stated that he and various other

gang members who were directly or indirectly involved in the shooting were going to get a new

tattoo. Finally, Saunders told another Aryan Brotherhood member that he had told the police a

“b[]s[]” story about getting drunk and not knowing where he was.

Confer gave several statements to the police. He admitted membership in the Aryan

Brotherhood and ownership of the white Chevrolet pickup truck. He said that Maynard, in a

series of telephone calls, had ordered him to collect $800 from Forrest. The jury heard recordings

of these telephone calls, made by Maynard from the Travis County jail.1 On July 22, Confer drove

to Forrest’s apartment, accompanied by Trump, Saunders, and Cox. Confer knew that Trump,

Saunders, and Cox were armed, but he denied having a weapon himself. Confer said he sent

Saunders and Cox to Forrest’s door to ask for “Shawn.” Confer said that he was standing in the

parking lot as Forrest left his apartment, got into his Mazda, and followed Trump when she drove

away in Confer’s truck. Confer told the police that he saw Saunders and Cox shoot at Forrest’s

Mazda. Confer denied firing any shots that night, saying that he “jumped down” in the grass when

the shooting started.

Trump testified that she became romantically involved with Maynard after he

was released from prison in February 2002. Through her involvement with Maynard, Trump became

acquainted with the Aryan Brotherhood organization and learned it was involved in manufacturing

drugs, selling drugs, and selling weapons. She said that she served Maynard in the Aryan

1 At all relevant times, Maynard was in jail following his arrest for an unrelated shooting. The jail has a computerized system that records all calls made by inmates.

4 Brotherhood by making payments, writing letters, and other such tasks. Trump testified that, in

July 2002, she and Cox both lived with Confer and his girlfriend. While staying with Confer, Trump

learned of the existence of a violent plot by the Aryan Brotherhood against Forrest, a member.

Maynard, the architect of the plan, wanted to kill Forrest because Forrest owed him money from a

drug deal. At the time of the shooting, Maynard was involved in a power struggle within the gang

leadership. Trump testified that a man named “Dutch,” another high-ranking gang member, sent

Saunders from Houston to take part in Forrest’s shooting as well as another shooting that Dutch had

planned against someone in Austin.

Trump testified that she, Confer, Cox, and Saunders, all high on methamphetamine,

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