Wade Steadman Stafford v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 28, 2010
Docket14-08-00862-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Wade Steadman Stafford v. State (Wade Steadman Stafford 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
Wade Steadman Stafford v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed January 28, 2010.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-08-00862-CR

Wade Steadman Stafford, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 185th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1128682

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted appellant Wade Steadman Stafford of aggravated robbery.  Appellant elected for the trial judge to assess punishment.  The trial court assessed punishment at confinement for life.  In nine issues, appellant challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction, asserts that the trial court erroneously admitted hearsay testimony, and contends he was identified through a tainted identification procedure.  We affirm.

Background

On February 25, 2007, Sarah Butard, a clerk at a smoking accessories shop called Smoke Toys located in Houston, was robbed at knifepoint.  Numerous items from the shop were stolen, as well as Butard’s wallet and cell phone.  Butard identified appellant as the perpetrator of the robbery.  Appellant had previously been to the store on three occasions and had purchased a lighter on his second visit.  He had returned to the store a third time to replace the lighter, which he told Butard was not working properly.  Butard explained that appellant returned to the store on the day of the robbery and waited until several other customers left.  When she went to assist him, he asked to see a specific lighter.  She opened the display case and took out the lighter; he looked at it and said he did not want it.  Butard started to put the lighter back into the case, and appellant came around the counter, grabbed her by the shoulder, and squeezed very hard.  Appellant then threatened Butard with a knife, warning her, “Do not scream or I will slit your throat.”

Appellant pulled Butard into the back room of the shop; he again threatened to “cut” her when she explained that because of a back injury she could not lie on her stomach.  Appellant forced her to lie on her stomach, cuffed her hands behind her back using “zip ties,” and gagged her with a scarf.  He then briefly returned to the front of the store, but came back into the back room and asked Butard how to open the cash register.  He also tried to take Butard’s wedding ring off her finger, but was unable to remove it.  Butard heard appellant return to the front of the shop, open the cash register, and open the locked display cases where the more expensive lighters were stored.  She then heard appellant leave the building, but he came back about five minutes later yelling that he could not find his cell phone.  Butard heard him leave the store, but he told her he would be back. 

Lance Losey, an employee with an insurance agency located next door to Smoke Toys, reported seeing appellant running back and forth in front of the strip mall in which the companies were located around the same time that the robbery was taking place.  Losey stated that appellant “jerked” on the door to his office, which was locked.  Losey completed his work and left his office, but decided to check on Butard before he went home.

Meanwhile, in the Smoke Toys shop, Butard lay in the back room for about ten minutes, and then she started attempting to scoot into the front of the store.  She heard the door chime and thought it was appellant returning, but it was Losey.  She yelled for help and told Losey, “I’ve been robbed. . .  Call the cops, call the police.”  Losey cut the ties off Butard’s wrists and called the police.  Houston Police Department Officer Madrid arrived at the scene and took down details of the robbery from Butard and Losey.  Although Officer Madrid did not mention or describe the knife in the narrative portion of his offense report, he noted at the beginning of the report that the offense was “aggravated robbery, elderly, over 65, by a cutting instrument.”  Further, Officer Madrid noted that Butard stated she had “dealings” with the perpetrator prior to the robbery. 

An officer from the Crime Scene Unit, Officer Nunez, arrived at the scene and took several photographs.  Officer Nunez also collected several pieces of evidence, including zip ties, a scarf, several empty lighter boxes, and a cellular telephone.  Nunez did not recover a knife from the crime scene.  After the initial on-scene investigation, Sergeant Green was assigned to continue investigating the incident.  Sergeant Green explained that no identifiable prints were discovered either at the robbery scene or on the cell phone recovered from the scene.  During the investigation, Sergeant Green called a number found on the cell phone; the individual who answered the number identified herself as “Marge Stafford.”  Green then created a photo array including appellant’s photograph because he had determined that appellant was a possible suspect.  In early May 2007, Green showed the photo array to Butard, and she immediately identified appellant as the robber.  A supplemental police offense report was also completed sometime after the robbery, which contains Butard’s description of the knife.

At appellant’s trial, Butard and Losey testified regarding the details of the robbery described above.  During Butard’s testimony, appellant’s counsel objected to the reliability of Butard’s identification of appellant.  The trial court overruled his objection, but granted a running objection regarding the reliability of Butard’s in- and out-of-court identifications of appellant.  Butard testified that she had recognized appellant from her previous interactions with him and stated that she identified him in the photo array prepared by Sergeant Green.  She stated that none of the other individuals in the photo array had ever come into the Smoke Toys shop.  Butard identified appellant as the person who had robbed her using a knife and stated that her in-court identification was based only on the events that occurred the day of the robbery.  She also stated that she was “positive” that appellant had a knife in his right hand when he initially grabbed and threatened her.  Finally, a video of an individual outside the strip mall who attempted to open a door to one of the shops was admitted into evidence, and Butard stated that appellant is the person depicted in the video.

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Wade Steadman Stafford v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wade-steadman-stafford-v-state-texapp-2010.