William Goode v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 9, 2011
Docket03-10-00254-CR
StatusPublished

This text of William Goode v. State (William Goode 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
William Goode v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-10-00254-CR

William Goode, Appellant



v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 403RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. D-1-DC-09-301157, HONORABLE FRED A. MOORE, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



William Goode was convicted of family-violence aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, see Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.02 (West 2003), and retaliation, see id. § 36.06 (West Supp. 2010), and was sentenced to two concurrent forty-five year sentences. Goode appeals his convictions, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence supporting each. Because the evidence is sufficient to support the jury's findings of guilt, we affirm the trial court's judgments of conviction.



BACKGROUND

On May 23, 2009, Gina Wilson, who had been dating Goode for about two weeks, left her dog at Goode's rural Travis County home while she spent time with friends. (1) When she returned to pick up her dog, Wilson told Goode that she was tired and did not want to go into Austin for the night as they had previously planned. In response, Goode became upset and tried to take Wilson's keys away from her. The next day, Goode called and text-messaged Wilson repeatedly, apologizing for his behavior the previous night. That evening, while at a friend's house, Wilson's phone was "ringing off the hook" with calls from Goode's number. When Wilson finally answered, Dante Beard, Goode's roommate and Wilson's close friend, told her that Goode was attempting to kill himself and that Wilson needed to come to the house and talk to him. Wilson testified that she was reluctant to return to Goode's residence after the incident the night before, but felt obligated to try to help.

Wilson arrived at Goode's home at approximately midnight on the night of May 24 and found Goode locked in his bedroom. When Wilson threatened to leave if he did not open the door, Goode let her into the room. He then showed her a note typed on his computer that said that he loved her. Wilson replied, saying, "No matter what you have to say to me right now, I really don't care," and that she was only there because Beard told her that Goode was trying to kill himself. Goode became angry and punched a large hole in his bedroom door. He then picked up a utility knife, held it up to his throat, and said, "You're going to sit here and watch me kill myself." Wilson began screaming, told him to stop, and attempted to leave. Goode pushed Wilson onto the bed with the knife still in his hand, at which point Wilson testified that she thought she was going to die. Goode then picked up a cable that was tied as a noose and said, "This is for you, bitch; you're going to die tonight." Wilson testified that Goode was acting "crazy" and "erratic" and that his face looked blank and evil. Goode then climbed on top of Wilson, who was yelling and screaming, and knelt over her.

While struggling with Goode on the bed, Wilson attempted to unlock her phone to call 911. Goode responded by saying, "I have my guns in the house. Go ahead and call 911, bitch. Everybody will die if you do." (2) Still kneeling over her, Goode punched Wilson in the left side of her head with his fist. Wilson then kicked Goode off of her and rolled onto her stomach in an attempt to crawl away.

Goode grabbed Wilson by her throat, first with one hand, then with both, and Wilson rolled onto her back, trying to escape. Wilson testified that she was gasping for air and was terrified that she "wasn't going to get out if it." In an effort to persuade Goode to stop strangling her, Wilson ceased fighting and told Goode that she "wanted to be there" and would stay with him. Goode then got off of Wilson and laid on the bed. After a failed attempt to convince Goode that she needed to leave the house, Wilson went into the living room and put a bag of frozen french fries on her head where Goode had punched her. Soon after Wilson entered the living room, Beard and his girlfriend, Taryn Vannoy, came into the house from the front porch. When Beard went into the back of the house to find Goode, Wilson told Vannoy that Goode "beat the shit out of [her]." Goode and Beard returned to the living room and Wilson, accompanied by Goode, went outside to retrieve pajamas from her car. While outside, Wilson placed her phone in between her car's seats to hide it from Goode. Wilson testified that Goode "stayed close" and that she would not have been able to leave.

When Wilson refused to sleep in Goode's room, Goode brought a mattress into the living room, where he spent the night with her. Wilson testified that she hid her keys under the mattress and was planning to leave after Goode fell asleep. At around 4 a.m., Goode found Wilson's keys, accused her of plotting to leave, and threw her keys into his bedroom.

The next morning, Goode told Wilson that if she went to the police he would "kill [her] and [her] whole family." Goode also advised Wilson that in order to explain her injuries, she should tell everyone that she and Goode's "baby mama" got into a fight.

Eventually, Goode, Wilson, Beard, and Vannoy left the house and drove to a gas station. Because Goode was concerned that Wilson would go to the police, he insisted that Beard and Vannoy drive his car, so that he could ride with Wilson. Wilson left from the gas station alone to go to work. After Wilson left, she called her mother and told her that they needed to go home and pack suitcases because Goode knew where they lived and they were not safe at home. Wilson's mother told Wilson to instead meet her at the hospital. Once Wilson arrived, Wilson's mother called the police.

While at the hospital, Wilson received approximately twenty calls and text messages from Goode. That night, Wilson received a text message from Goode with a photograph of the apartment complex where Wilson was staying with a friend and her friend's 17-month-old child. The text read "1st." Wilson testified that she believed the message was in reference to Goode's threat to "kill every member of my family and people I cared about, starting from the youngest one." Wilson later received another text message with a photograph of her mother's house and the word "2nd."

At some point after Goode was arrested, Wilson began speaking to him again. Wilson regularly visited Goode in jail and wrote him letters. She testified that at the time, she believed she loved him. At Goode's instruction, Wilson went to Goode's trial attorney's office to sign a non-prosecution affidavit. Once there, Goode's attorney informed her that she needed to go to the district attorney. Wilson ultimately decided against a non-prosecution affidavit after the district attorney played her a jailhouse call between Goode and Latrice, the mother of his child, in which Goode asked Latrice to find someone to kill Wilson, stating, "I want the bitch dead, Latrice. Do you understand? . . . Get a hold of them boys, the ones I've been tellin' you to. The ones I've been telling you to from day one." After hearing the recording, Wilson cut off communication with Goode.

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William Goode v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-goode-v-state-texapp-2011.