Simmons, Jimmy Lee

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 29, 2009
DocketPD-0791-08
StatusPublished

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Simmons, Jimmy Lee, (Tex. 2009).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS NO. PD-0791-08

JIMMY LEE SIMMONS, Appellant

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

ON STATE’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW FROM THE THIRD COURT OF APPEALS MILAM COUNTY

HERVEY , J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.

OPINION

Article 38.14, TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC., provides that a defendant cannot be convicted of an

offense upon the testimony of an accomplice without other corroborating evidence “tending to

connect” the defendant to the offense. In this case, the court of appeals, with one justice dissenting,

reversed appellant’s aggravated-robbery conviction and acquitted him after deciding that the non-

accomplice evidence did not tend to connect appellant to the offense.1 We decide that a rational

Simmons v. State, No. 03-06-00379-CR slip op. at 7-8 (Tex.App.–Austin, delivered April 10, 2008) (unpublished memorandum opinion). Simmons--2

juror could have found that the non-accomplice evidence did tend to connect appellant to the offense.

Appellant, Jimmy Lee Simmons, was convicted of aggravated robbery and sentenced, as an

habitual offender with a prior robbery conviction, to serve twenty years in prison and to pay a $1,000

fine. The evidence shows that Justin Mendoza and his pregnant girlfriend were robbed at around

1:00 a.m. on November 15, 2005, by an individual whom Mendoza knew and identified to the police

as Lamar Johnson (the accomplice witness) and a gun-wielding, masked man who said various

things to the robbery victims during the robbery. Mendoza was unable to visually identify the

masked man. He did, however, tell a police investigator (Smith) that the voice of the masked man

sounded like the voice of a “Jimmy Lee,” who had asked Mendoza and his friend for a ride the

afternoon before the robbery, but that he was not “sure” or “positive.”2

Q. [STATE]: Now, Mr. Mendoza, were you ever able to identify or tell the police who the man in the mask was?

Mendoza’s friend, who went unnamed at appellant’s trial, did not testify. We also note that Mendoza was never asked whether, and therefore never testified that, appellant was the “Jimmy Lee” who asked for a ride the day before the robbery. We further note that the defense argued to the jury that no evidence showed that appellant was this “Jimmy Lee.”

[THE DEFENSE]: [The State] brought up something and a light bulb goes off. I didn’t sleep very well last night thinking about this. Mr. Mendoza said he thinks the next day they gave a guy a ride and he didn’t know the guy, but the friend said, “That’s Jimmy Lee.” And the voice–and he says, “I’m not sure”–sounded like that guy Jimmy Lee. You know what? Where’s that friend who was in the car that could sit right there and say, “When I said Jimmy Lee, I meant him”? Where’s that guy? How many Jimmy Lees are there? “It sounded like Jimmy Lee, but I’m not sure it was Jimmy Lee,” and he never said it’s this Jimmy Lee.

And it just went off when [the State’s] talking about the friend said that’s Jimmy Lee. [Mr. Mendoza] didn’t know the guy. Where’s that guy to say Jimmy Lee equals Jimmy Lee Simmons equals the man in that chair? Simmons--3

A. [MENDOZA]: No, ma’am, not at the time that it had happened. But the next day, I was able to talk with Officer Smith and we–how do I say–we kind of was going through some names and whatever and then some voices, and then I noticed that a voice had sounded very familiar to me.

Q. So you told Officer Smith that you thought you might be able to–you recognized the man’s voice?

A. Yes, ma’am.

Q. Okay. Can you tell the jury a little bit about the man with the gun, his voice and who you thought it might be.

A. Okay. Well, earlier that morning, I was giving a friend a ride, and another guy flagged us down wanting a ride to Sonic. And his exact words were, “Can you give me a ride to Sonic? My order is already called in.” And I didn’t ever speak to the man; my friend did. So after we left, I asked him who that was, and he said it was Jimmy Lee.

Q. Okay. And there was something about--

A. Yes. Whenever we were in the house and I was telling him to let my girlfriend go, the man with the mask on said, “Stop pleading, stop pleading.” And then I told Officer Smith–I said that that voice sounded like Jimmy Lee’s whenever he said that.

Q. Okay. But you’re not sure?

A. Yeah. No, I’m not sure. *** Q. [DEFENSE]: You said the next day, you went through some names and some voices, but you said it might be Jimmy Lee?

A. Yes, sir. I said--
Q. But you’re not positive?
A. No, I wasn’t positive, sir. I said it might be.

Johnson was arrested and told the police that appellant, who dated Johnson’s mother, was

the other robber wearing the mask. This information resulted in appellant’s arrest. Johnson testified

at appellant’s trial that he pled guilty to aggravated robbery in exchange for a non-aggravated, five- Simmons--4

year sentence and that appellant was the gun-wielding, masked man. Johnson claimed that his

participation in the offense was minimal.

Johnson also testified that, while he and appellant were in jail awaiting trial, appellant wrote

Johnson a letter. This letter was admitted into evidence and it states:

Mor, I don’t know what the fucc is on your mind. What the fucc kind of shit or you doing. You talking to tha laws. So now you work for them. That’s so ho ass shit my case is beat im not doing know trippin. I was tring to make a way so yours would be beat, but you go in snitch on your self and others. You claim to be a Gangsta but you don’t even realize what the “G” stand for. I’m going to handle my legal work so after I write up a alphadavit im going to need you to read and sign it. Why would you bring me down if you had any love for me. You put my name in this shit and only you. You only care about you and that’s bullshit man–that type of shit gets people killed. You put my life on the line cause you trippin. Holla bacc at me.

(“sic” omitted throughout).

Johnson testified that he felt threatened by this letter. The evidence also shows that Johnson

refused to sign an affidavit that appellant prepared stating that appellant was not involved in the

robbery. Other evidence showed that appellant presented an affidavit purportedly bearing Johnson’s

signature to two jail employees and asked them to sign the affidavit attesting that they witnessed

Johnson sign it. They declined to do so because they did not see Johnson sign the affidavit.

Appellant also declined an offer by one of these jail employees to prepare another affidavit and

witness Johnson sign it in her presence.

The court of appeals decided that Mendoza’s testimony that the masked man’s voice sounded

like the voice of the “Jimmy Lee” who asked Mendoza and his friend for a ride the day before the

robbery was insufficient to connect appellant to the robbery because Mendoza was “not sure” that

these voices belonged to the same person and also because the evidence did not show that appellant

was this “Jimmy Lee.” See Simmons, slip op. at 5-6. The court of appeals also decided that Simmons--5

appellant’s letter to Johnson did not tend to connect appellant to the offense because this letter

merely chastised Johnson for giving appellant’s name to the police and contained no admission by

appellant to any involvement in the robbery. See Simmons, slip op. at 6. The court of appeals also

decided that appellant’s attempt to get Johnson to sign an affidavit exonerating appellant “could be

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