William Williams AKA Clinton William Lee v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 22, 1999
Docket03-98-00143-CR
StatusPublished

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William Williams AKA Clinton William Lee v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-98-00143-CR
William Williams a/k/a Clinton William Lee, Appellant


v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF RUNNELS COUNTY, 119TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 4376, HONORABLE JOHN E. SUTTON, JUDGE PRESIDING

A jury found appellant William Williams a/k/a Clinton William Lee guilty of aggravated assault against a public servant. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 22.01(a)(2), 22.02(a)(2) (West 1994). The jury assessed punishment at twenty-five years in prison. Appellant raises two issues complaining that the evidence is factually insufficient to support his conviction and the trial court erred by refusing to charge the jury on a lesser-included offense. Finding the evidence sufficient and no error in the jury charge, we will affirm the conviction.

Background

The basic facts in this case are undisputed. Ballinger Police Officer J.W. Sailer testified that on February 22, 1996, about 1:15 a.m., he was wearing his police officer uniform and driving a marked patrol car when he saw appellant lean out of the driver's side window of his car holding a hand gun and fire four rounds of ammunition toward a bank. Sailer knew appellant as the owner of a game room in town. Sailer quickly pulled in behind appellant and turned on his spotlight and overhead lights. Appellant continued at the same rate of speed for about two blocks and then rapidly accelerated and "took off." Sailer continued his pursuit and radioed for assistance. During the chase, Sailer noticed something fly back and hit his patrol car. A few minutes later Sailer realized that appellant's back window had shattered with pieces hitting Sailer's patrol car. Appellant was driving with his left hand while turning around in his seat and shooting his gun through the inside of his car at Sailer. Sailer continued to chase appellant while appellant fired at least five rounds at him. Appellant stopped shooting at Sailer, turned off his headlights, and increased his speed to about one hundred miles per hour. On two occasions during the chase, appellant applied his brakes very hard in an effort Sailer believed to get him to rear-end appellant's car. Sailer chased appellant out of town and eventually back into town covering approximately seventeen miles. Officers eventually located appellant's car in Ballinger but could not find appellant.

Also undisputed in this case was that appellant had a diabetic condition. Dr. Kim Peck, a physician practicing at the family health center in Ballinger, testified that she had seen appellant four or five times to treat him for diabetes and related complications. Peck explained that appellant is a brittle diabetic meaning that even with appropriate doses of insulin and consistent physical activity, his blood sugar tends to fluctuate widely. During her course of treatment, Peck found it necessary to change the type and dosage of insulin for appellant on several occasions.

Appellant testified at trial that he had no memory of the shooting and chase. He recalled that he took his insulin around 10:00 p.m. but was feeling a little shaky. Because he thought his blood sugar was low, appellant drove to a convenience store to get something to eat. The last thing appellant recalled was that he purchased two burritos, returned to his car, and placed the burritos on the passenger seat beside him. The next thing he recalled was waking up in a field outside of town with cactus in his left hand and his .45 caliber hand gun in his right hand. Appellant was scared, and because he did not know what he had done, he began walking along the road toward San Angelo. Someone eventually picked him up and drove him into town. When he arrived in San Angelo, appellant called his pager service and learned from his mother that the police in Ballinger were looking for him. Rather than returning to Ballinger, appellant caught a ride to Houston. Once in Houston, appellant went to his former employer, Bob Gale, a private investigator who operated a missing person bureau. Appellant stayed in Houston for two weeks until he was arrested and transported to Ballinger.

Appellant had always lived in Houston until he moved to Ballinger in 1994. His last job was working for Gale. While working for Gale, appellant received several death threats from an unknown person. Due to these threats, he decided to move to Ballinger where his mother, brother, and grandmother lived. At the time he left Houston, he had served six years of a ten-year probated sentence following his conviction for felony burglary of an automobile. Although appellant told his Houston probation officer about the threats, he did not tell the probation officer he was leaving town. Upon moving to Ballinger, appellant began using the name Clinton William Lee rather than William Williams and did not attempt to transfer his probation to Runnels County.

The State charged appellant with aggravated assault and contended at trial that he intentionally engaged in the chase and shot at the bank and officer Sailer. Appellant contended that he suffered a diabetic seizure caused by his insulin, acted involuntarily, and did not recall any of the shooting or chase.

The State called Dr. Milton Williams, an emergency room doctor in San Angelo. Williams had been practicing emergency room medicine for twenty-one years and routinely saw approximately sixty patients per month with diabetic problems. Williams testified generally about diabetes. He explained that brittle diabetics, despite training, have difficulty maintaining control over their blood sugar. Williams testified that when diabetics have low blood sugar they become confused or lethargic. This is corrected when they eat. When diabetics have low blood sugar their failure to eat something may result in hypoglycemic coma. Some diabetics lash out when their blood sugar is low. Typically motor skills become impaired. In Williams's opinion, during a time when a diabetic is suffering a low blood sugar episode, such a person cannot make conscious decisions, and while some of the time these people are able to carry on purposeful movements, most are of the repetitive type. Such a person is generally unable to make choices as simple as deciding to walk to the left or right. It was his opinion that during one of these episodes a diabetic would not be able to perform a complicated task such as driving a car.

Sheriff Baird testified that on two occasions during appellant's stay at the Runnels County jail before trial appellant experienced seizure episodes. Both times the jailer thought appellant's blood sugar was low and had appellant transferred to the emergency room. Appellant was very uncooperative; it took two or three deputies to remove him from his cell, handcuff him and transport him to the emergency room. Both times when he arrived at the emergency room his blood sugar was low.

Dr. Jarvis Wright, a forensic psychologist, examined appellant and reviewed the related police reports. Wright concluded that appellant was aware of what he was doing at the time of the incident and knew he was acting wrongfully.

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