Walter Lee McCreary v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 17, 2012
Docket01-10-01035-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Walter Lee McCreary v. State (Walter Lee McCreary 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
Walter Lee McCreary v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Opinion issued May 17, 2012.

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

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NO. 01-10-01035-CR

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walter lee V. mccreary, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 178th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 1227912

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Walter Lee V. McCreary was certified to stand trial as an adult for the felony offense of capital murder.[1] A jury found him guilty, and the trial court assessed punishment at confinement for life. In his sole issue on appeal, McCreary contends that the trial court erred by failing to suppress his oral statements obtained in violation of the Family Code. We affirm.  

Background

          Officers from the Webster Police Department (WPD) responded to a report of a shooting at the Nasa Liquor Store. They discovered the body of the store owner, Thanh Pham, in a pool of blood behind the store’s counter and a nearly empty cash register. Pham died from gunshot wounds to his head, torso, and upper extremity. Police recovered .45 caliber shell casings, a bullet fragment, and latent fingerprints from inside the store. Three of the fingerprints lifted from the store’s counter belonged to McCreary. A firearms identification expert determined that the shell casings and bullet fragments could only have come from a limited number of firearms, including a Taurus brand .45 semiautomatic pistol.  

          When Joseph Rock, a Webster-area resident, learned of Pham’s death, he informed WPD that he had shopped at the liquor store shortly before the shooting. As he pulled into the store’s parking lot, Rock observed a young man wearing a light gray or white hoodie and blue shorts outside of the store listening to an I-Pod. The young man was in the same location when Rock left the store after making his purchases. Rock identified McCreary in a photo array.

          Having no other suspects and also having received two anonymous tips about McCreary’s involvement in Pham’s death, WPD Detectives Quintana, Palermo, and Latham made contact with McCreary, then 15 years-old, at his mother’s home. There, police recovered a pair of blue shorts and an I-Pod. According to McCreary’s mother, McCreary wore the blue shorts on the day of Pham’s death. Although it was his opinion that probable cause did not yet exist to arrest McCreary, Detective Latham asked McCreary to make a voluntary statement at the police station. Detective Latham informed McCreary that he was “not being placed under arrest . . . not being charged with the crime. And that he’s going to be able to leave whenever he wants and that [the detectives would] be glad to give him a ride back.” Both McCreary and his mother consented.

Due to the cold weather, the detectives suggested that McCreary bring some warm clothing to the police station. McCreary responded: “Let me get my white hoodie -- I mean, my black hoodie[.]” McCreary sat in the front passenger seat of the detectives’ vehicle on the way to the police station. He was not handcuffed or restrained. He inquired en route whether the detectives’ service weapons were “four fives.” 

At the police station, Detective Latham reaffirmed that McCreary was still free to leave at any time, and, without answering any questions, McCreary asked to leave. McCreary walked out of the police station’s back door, jumped a fence, and “shot” the detectives his “middle finger.”

          The next day, McCreary telephoned police and requested a second opportunity to give a voluntary statement. Detectives Quintana and Palermo picked McCreary up from his home. This time, however, McCreary’s mother was not there. En route to the police station, McCreary again sat in the front passenger seat of the detective’s vehicle without handcuffs or other restraints.

Detective Latham took McCreary to an interview room and shut the door. Just as he did the day before, Detective Latham began the interview by asking McCreary whether he was at the police station of his own free will and whether he understood that he was not under arrest. McCreary responded affirmatively, and no admonishments were given. Detective Latham characterized the one-hour interview that followed as “an intense interview, a tactical interview” during which McCreary laughed, cried, got angry, and made incriminating statements about the amount of money stolen from the store and the manner in which Pham was shot. The interview was video-recorded. Although Detective Latham exaggerated the evidence and repeatedly accused McCreary of murdering Pham, Detective Latham never expressed an intent to arrest McCreary. And, when McCreary indicated he was ready to leave, Detective Latham did not arrest McCreary. Instead, he and Detective Quintana gave McCreary a ride home.

          The State accepted a capital murder charge against McCreary at a time when he was being held in a juvenile detention facility on an unrelated aggravated assault charge. Detectives Palermo and Quintana retrieved McCreary from the juvenile detention center and transported him to another facility for the purpose of entering his fingerprints in the Automatic Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS). McCreary did not receive any admonishments. While the detectives were processing McCreary’s information, McCreary observed a deputy walking by and stated, “You got a chrome .45, man, that’s nice.” The detectives returned McCreary to the juvenile detention center.

          Over the course of the eight-day trial on guilt-innocence, the State presented physical evidence and the testimony of twenty-one witnesses, including the investigating officers, medical and forensic experts, and Rock.

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