Wilson, Jerome Devon v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 24, 2006
Docket14-04-00381-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Wilson, Jerome Devon v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed January 24, 2006

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed January 24, 2006.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-04-00381-CR

JEROME DEVON WILSON, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 176th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 925,625

M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N

Challenging his conviction for capital murder, appellant Jerome Devon Wilson asserts in six issues that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury on the law of accomplice witnesses and that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction because the accomplice testimony offered by the State was not credible or sufficiently corroborated.  We affirm.

I.  Factual and Procedural Background

On August 22, 2002, Leslie ABo@ Wilson[1] called his friend Terry Thomas to see if Thomas was available to accompany him to a car stereo store where Wilson=s Impala automobile was located.  A victim of prior robberies, Wilson kept a nine-millimeter Ruger handgun in the passenger=s back-seat pocket of his vehicle.  En route to the stereo store, Wilson, at Thomas=s request, agreed to take Thomas to a location where Thomas could sell some marijuana.  Wilson knew Thomas had a grocery bag full of marijuana, and he proceeded to drive Thomas to the Red Carpet Inn on Highway 59 in Harris County.  On the way to the hotel, Thomas made a call using Wilson=s cell phone.  Upon arriving at the hotel, Wilson drove around the parking lot looking for room number 109.  They saw a man standing in the doorway of that room, but Wilson continued to drive around the block.  Wilson then asked Thomas to get into the back seat to force the man, later identified as appellant, into the front seat.  The men then pulled the car in front of room number 109, and Wilson honked the horn.


Appellant walked out of the room and up to Thomas=s car door. Thomas told appellant to get in the front seat and shut the door.  Appellant complied. Appellant and Thomas conversed and Thomas handed appellant a bag of marijuana.  Appellant smelled the marijuana, asked for a price, and tried to negotiate a lower one.   Ultimately, Thomas and appellant agreed on a price; appellant then stated that the Amoney@ was back in his room.  Appellant got out of the car and went back into his hotel room.  When appellant came back out of the room and walked toward the car, appellant reached into his pocket with his right hand and opened the front passenger door.  Leaning inside, appellant then pulled a pistol out of his pocket, put it up to Wilson=s head, and said, ACheck yourself, fool.@  Wilson testified that he closed his eyes, balled up his legs and arms, and started to scream.  A few seconds later, he heard a single gunshot, opened his eyes, and noticed that his friend Thomas had been shot.  Wilson further testified that blood squirted out of Thomas=s neck and shoulder area onto the ceiling of the car and all over the interior of the vehicle.  Appellant grabbed the bag of marijuana and went back into the hotel room.  Wilson testified that Thomas said, AI=m going to remember that M.F.  I remember that M.F.  I know that face, when I see it again.  He shot me, he shot me.  Get me to a hospital, quick, quick, quick.@  Frightened and nervous, Wilson drove the car out of the hotel parking lot, called 911, and headed to Memorial Southwest Hospital, reaching that location in approximately ten minutes.  When Wilson arrived at the hospital, he was afraid that someone would find his handgun, so he quickly hid it in the trunk of his car, and ran inside the hospital, screaming for help.  Medical personnel arrived with a stretcher.  Thomas was moaning.  He had sustained one gunshot to his lower right neck.  The bullet had traveled through his right collarbone, torn through the subclavian artery and vein, and lodged inside one of his ribs.  Thomas later died.

At the hospital, Wilson talked to the police officers, but was not completely forthcoming for fear of being blamed for the shooting.  He initially told the officers that he and Thomas were at a gas station when a man came up and shot Thomas.   When the officers later drove Wilson to that gas station, they discovered that no crime had occurred there.  After Thomas=s death, Wilson decided to tell the police the truth about the shooting.  Wilson gave a written statement and assisted the police in creating a composite sketch of appellant.  The police recovered a fired shell casing from the front seat of Wilson=s car.  Wilson=s gun was also found, but testing eliminated it as the murder weapon.


The police went to the hotel to locate potential witnesses and to look at the registration log for room number 109.  This log showed that the room had been reserved by a man named Rozzell Barber.  Soon thereafter, in an unrelated incident, the police pulled Barber over for a traffic offense.

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