State v. Shelby Cole Moore

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 12, 2012
Docket04-11-00636-CR
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Shelby Cole Moore (State v. Shelby Cole Moore) 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
State v. Shelby Cole Moore, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Fourth Court of Appeals San Antonio, Texas

MEMORANDUM OPINION Nos. 04-11-00636-CR and 04-11-00637-CR

The STATE of Texas, Appellant

v.

Shelby Cole MOORE, Appellee

From the 216th Judicial District Court, Gillespie County, Texas Trial Court No. 5022 Honorable N. Keith Williams, Judge Presiding

Opinion by: Rebecca Simmons, Justice

Sitting: Sandee Bryan Marion, Justice Rebecca Simmons, Justice Marialyn Barnard, Justice

Delivered and Filed: December 12, 2012

AFFIRMED

Appellee Shelby Cole Moore was indicted for the murder of Trey Noah and tampering

with physical evidence. Moore filed a motion to suppress his statements to the investigating

officers. The trial court granted the motion to suppress in large part, and denied the remainder of

the motion. 1 The State appeals. We affirm the trial court’s order.

1 The trial court suppressed almost all statements and video recordings after Moore “talks about the involvement of ‘Marco from Hondo—of the Mexican Mafia’ and his (Defendant’s) presence at the scene of the murder and his involvement in moving and discarding of the body of Trey Noah in Gillespie County.” 04-11-00636-CR & 04-11-00637-CR

BACKGROUND

On April 18, 2010, Trey Noah’s body was found in a remote location in Gillespie

County, Texas. The medical examiner ruled Noah’s death a homicide resulting from a single

gunshot wound. Kendall County law enforcement officers spoke to several individuals regarding

the murder, including Moore, Noah’s first cousin. Weeks later, after being contacted by

telephone by Gillespie County Sheriff’s Deputy Brian Pehl, Moore agreed to be interviewed at

the Gillespie County Law Enforcement Center (LEC) in Fredericksburg, Texas.

A. Initial Questioning

1. Voluntary Beginning

On the afternoon of June 10, 2010, Moore drove his vehicle to the LEC where he met

with Pehl and Texas Ranger Wayne Matthews in a small interrogation room. Pehl thanked

Moore for coming, told him he did not have to talk to the officers, and that he could leave if he

wanted to. Moore replied: “Whatever I can do to help. I’m game. Whatever you need.”

2. Initial Questioning

Pehl began the questioning by asking Moore some general questions about his family,

and then asked questions about his relationship with Noah. He asked when Moore last saw

Noah, and other questions pertaining to Noah’s disappearance. Moore told Pehl he was Noah’s

first cousin and that they knew each other well, but he repeatedly asserted that Noah did not

show up at his house on November 30, 2009 (the day Noah was killed). Moore said he never

saw Noah that day, and he did not know what happened to him. Moore also insisted that, for

weeks after Noah’s disappearance, he tried to reach Noah by calling and texting him.

-2- 04-11-00636-CR & 04-11-00637-CR

3. Rebutting Moore’s Initial Answers

After listening to Moore’s answers to Pehl’s questions, Matthews challenged Moore’s

responses. Matthews told Moore to stop lying: he had phone records that proved Moore was the

only one who stopped calling Noah on the day Noah was killed. Matthews said that GPS

technology showed Moore’s and Noah’s cell phones were in the same place at the same time on

the day Noah was killed. Matthews told Moore that he believed Moore was a good person, and

that Moore could not live his whole life hiding a lie about Noah’s death.

B. Marco Confession

Approximately one hour and thirty minutes into the interview, Moore began to cry.

When he regained his composure, he changed his story. He admitted “I watched [Noah] die right

in front of me.” He said Marco shot Noah, and Moore swore he did not shoot Noah. Moore said

Marco was in the Mexican Mafia, came to Moore’s house, shot Noah, and then forced Moore at

gunpoint to move Noah’s body. Because the content and timing of Moore’s interview are

significant, we will refer to this segment of Moore’s interview as the Marco confession. Moore

also added that Marco threatened him and his family if he did not cooperate. At the conclusion

of his Marco confession, Moore asked Matthews to “watch out for my family.”

C. Harber Confession

After the Marco confession, Matthews challenged Moore’s account. He told Moore he

knows who Marco is, he investigated Marco, and Marco was not involved. At approximately

one hour and forty-five minutes into the interview, Moore again started to cry and then said that

the shooter was actually Brandon Harber. Moore said that on November 30th, Harber and Noah

argued, Harber shot Noah, and made Moore help him dispose of Noah’s body. Moore described

the exact location where they deposited Noah’s body. Moore insisted he did not call the police

-3- 04-11-00636-CR & 04-11-00637-CR

because he was afraid that Noah’s blood in his truck would make police believe he killed Noah.

Moore asked if he could text Harber. Matthews said no and took Moore’s cell phone.

D. Continued Questioning

Over the next two hours, Matthews again thanked Moore for disclosing what he had

revealed so far, but also repeatedly accused Moore of being the shooter. Moore continued to

deny that he killed Noah. At about three hours and thirty-two minutes after the interview began,

the officers left the room, and Moore laid down on the floor and slept for about thirty minutes.

1. Warned Statement

After he awoke, Moore knocked on the interrogation room door, asked to use the

restroom, and was escorted to and from the restroom by an officer. Matthews ordered some food

for Moore and then asked Moore to read aloud the Miranda warnings from a printed page and

then write down everything Moore had just told him. Matthews said “Fill this part out, and then

start on November 30th, 2009, at this time, my friend [Harber] whatever, and you run through

the whole story . . . . [I]nclude all of that, going to Marble Falls, seeing the movie, dumping the

phone, burning the clothes, trading the gun, washing the truck, all of that.” Moore read the

warnings aloud, initialed each one, and Moore and Matthews each signed the first page of the

form. Immediately thereafter, Moore hand wrote a statement on the succeeding pages of the

form. When Moore completed writing his statement, Moore and Matthews signed the final page

of the form. The State offered Moore’s written statement as State’s Exhibit 7.

2. Additional Disclosure

Moore continued to assist the officers including riding with them to the site where he

helped dispose of Noah’s body, and accompanying them to Moore’s residence where he gave

them permission to search his home. Moore was arrested and spent the night in the county jail.

-4- 04-11-00636-CR & 04-11-00637-CR

The next day when Pehl again interviewed Moore and told him that Harber identified Moore as

the shooter, Moore terminated the interview and asked for legal counsel.

3. Motion to Suppress

At the hearing on Moore’s motion to suppress his statements, Moore argued that his

statements prior to the Miranda warnings (unwarned statements) were inadmissible because they

were the products of custodial interrogation, and his post-Miranda warnings written statement

(warned statement) and additional disclosure were likewise inadmissible because the State failed

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