Weekley, John Kenneth v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 28, 2013
Docket05-10-01107-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Weekley, John Kenneth v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

AFFIRM; and Opinion Filed May 28, 2013.

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-10-01107-CR

JOHN KENNETH WEEKLEY, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court No. 1 Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F09-55995-H

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Bridges, O’Neill, and Murphy Opinion by Justice Murphy

John Kenneth Weekley appeals his robbery conviction, complaining in three points of

error that the prosecutor improperly commented on his failure to testify at trial. We affirm.

Background

In the early morning hours of June 6, 2009, Sarah Venable walked to her car after an

evening with a group at a nearby bar. She got in her car and turned on the overhead lights to

look for a cigarette. The next thing she knew, the driver’s side door opened, and she saw a man

standing there. Venable tried to pull the door shut, but the man kept it open and hit her in the

head with what she thought was his fist. The man got into her car, pushed her into the passenger seat, and hit her three more times in the face. Venable attempted to jump out of the car by

opening the passenger side door, but the man pulled her back in the car by her hair and arm.

Venable then turned in her seat and kicked the man; because her door was still open, she was

able to push her weight backwards and fall out of the car. The man drove off.

Officer Michael Perry responded to Venable’s 911 call. Perry asked if she needed

medical attention and then tried to find out what had taken place. Perry also asked Venable for a

description of her car and the suspect. Venable described the suspect as a heavy-set male, who

was approximately thirty-five years old. She said the man was about 245 pounds, five feet, nine

inches tall, and bald. She did not say anything about whether the man had facial hair. Perry put

the information about the car and suspect “out on the air” so other officers in the area could

locate the suspect.

The case was assigned to detective Ricardo Rodriguez, who interviewed Venable by

phone the Tuesday following the robbery. During that interview, Venable told Rodriguez that

the man was in his late 20s, which Rodriguez agreed was not consistent with the age range she

gave to Perry. On June 16, Rodriguez called Venable again and asked her to come to the police

station to view pictures of a possible suspect. Venable was told they found her car and that an

arrest had been made.

Venable’s car was located by detective Judy Fries, who saw Venable’s car enter the

parking lot of a pawn shop with two people inside the car. The driver fit the description of the

suspect. Fries described the driver as “a man in his mid 30s, heavy set, kind of a balding type.”

She identified appellant as the driver of the car. The other person was slender and “a little bit

older” with gray hair. Fries called for uniformed officers “to make a traffic stop or to identify

the occupants.” Appellant was arrested and initially charged with unauthorized use of a motor

-2- vehicle. Appellant was described in the police report as forty-two years old, five feet, eleven

inches, and 260 pounds.

Venable went to the police station on June 17 to view a photo lineup. The photo lineup

was created by Rodriguez, using one photo of the suspect and five “filler photos.” Rodriguez

chose pictures of people that looked like appellant for the filler photos; he said “[t]he way I do it

is, I match it to a suspect that’s in question.” He specifically chose pictures of men in their 40s,

despite Venable’s description of a suspect in his late 20s. He admitted, however, that he is

supposed to choose pictures that match the description provided by the witness. Rodriguez said

that because Venable had given multiple age descriptions of the suspect, he used his discretion to

determine that “she might have made a mistake” on his age.

Officer Jesus Lopez administered the photo lineup. Venable was shown the six photos

one at a time and asked whether the person was “the guy that hit [her] and took [her] car”; she

was instructed to answer yes, no, or “not sure.” Venable was not sure about one photo because

the person looked like someone she knew from high school. But when she saw appellant’s

photo, she “knew that they had the guy that attacked [her] and stole [her] car.” Venable

“immediately said, yes,” and she pushed the photo away from her. She said she was “[o]ne

hundred percent confident” about her identification and had no doubt that this was the same guy

who robbed her. Lopez said that when Venable identified appellant, she was emotional and

started crying. Lopez indicated on the lineup results report that Venable was “very confident” in

her identification.

Thereafter, appellant was charged by indictment with robbery. The indictment also

contained two enhancement paragraphs, alleging prior felony offenses. Appellant’s case first

went to trial in April 2010. That trial ended in a mistrial because the jury could not reach a

-3- unanimous verdict. Appellant pleaded not guilty at his second trial, and the jury found him

guilty as charged. He pleaded true to both enhancement paragraphs, and the jury sentenced him

to twenty-five years in prison.

Venable testified at both trials. During her testimony at the first trial, Venable described

appellant as having a mustache in response to a question about what the man looked like at the

time of the robbery. In the second trial, she explained she was mistaken in that testimony

because when she was asked to describe the man, she was staring straight at appellant who had a

mustache at trial; she said she “gave the description of what he looked like right [there] in the

court.” She testified at the second trial that the man did not have a mustache at the time of the

robbery. She said the only time she mentioned facial hair was after the photo lineup when she

commented that “he had more facial hair in that picture than he did in the car.” Venable testified

the dome light of the car was on the entire time and she got a good look at his face.

Fries testified on cross-examination that there are “lots of possibilities of what people do

with stolen vehicles.” She agreed that stolen cars may be exchanged for drugs or used to commit

other crimes. She would not agree with a generalization that stolen vehicles are used for a

purpose and then dumped; she testified “people steal for different reasons.” Fries stated “[s]ome

people use them for weeks” and said it is not common for a person to be caught driving the same

vehicle the person stole, but she has seen it happen. She agreed that ten days is a long time to be

“going around risking being caught in a stolen vehicle.” To do so, however, is still a violation of

the law.

Fries described the condition of the car as “very trashy” and it looked like “someone was

living out of it.” Venable also described the condition of the car as “absolutely disgusting” and

that it had been “obviously lived in.” Venable found a bag of clothes, food containers, trash,

-4- dirty clothes, a woman’s purse containing a prescription pill bottle with the name Janet or Janice

Weekley, a vodka bottle, beer cans, cigarettes, and a wooden box that she said had pot residue.

Rodriguez said appellant was arrested less than a mile from the police station; that

location also was a ten-minute drive from where the offense occurred. Rodriguez testified to

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