Zajahn Antonio Johnson v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 3, 2014
Docket14-12-00319-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Zajahn Antonio Johnson v. State (Zajahn Antonio Johnson 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
Zajahn Antonio Johnson v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed April 3, 2014.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-12-00319-CR

ZAJAHN ANTONIO JOHNSON, Appellant V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 248th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 1217869

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Zajahn Antonio Johnson was convicted by a jury of capital murder and was sentenced to mandatory life in prison without the possibility of parole. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 12.31(a)(2); 19.03(a)(7) (West 2011). On appeal, appellant presents five issues. In his first two issues, appellant contends the trial court abused its discretion when it admitted into evidence allegedly false and irrelevant testimony regarding appellant’s membership in a gang. In his third issue, appellant asserts he received ineffective assistance of counsel because his trial counsel did not obtain a copy of the transcript from his first trial on the capital murder charges. In his fourth issue, appellant contends his trial counsel was ineffective because he did not object to the admission of an unadjudicated extraneous offense. Finally, in his fifth issue, appellant argues his trial counsel was ineffective in three ways: (1) failing to object to hearsay testimony, (2) not exercising any peremptory strikes on potential jurors, and (3) not calling any witnesses for the defense. Concluding none of appellant’s issues on appeal require reversal, we affirm the trial court’s judgment of conviction.

BACKGROUND This appeal arises out of the murders of two men: Gilbert Cruz and Henry Sepulveda. Appellant was tried for those murders in 2011, but the jury could not reach a verdict. In his second trial, appellant did not contest his identity as the person who fired the shots that resulted in the deaths of both Cruz and Sepulveda. Appellant instead argued he was acting in self-defense when he shot both men. Appellant was represented by the same attorney in both trials. Appellant has not challenged the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction.

On the night of August 21, 2008, detectives from the Houston Police Department were called to investigate a shooting at a west-side park. When the detectives arrived, they found a trail of blood starting inside the parking lot and running north out of the lot. Police investigators recovered eleven spent shell casings from the parking lot sidewalk. Finally, the investigators found a discarded milkshake cup, which was still cold, in the grass beside the sidewalk.

From the park, the detectives proceeded to a nearby hospital where victims of a shooting were being treated. At the hospital, the detectives found a Chevrolet Tahoe parked directly outside the emergency room doors. Officer Jose Pena, a

2 crime scene investigator, observed at least eight bullet holes in the Tahoe. Pena testified that the bullet holes had different shapes, which suggested that some of the shots had been fired directly at the vehicle, while others had been fired at an angle. The detectives also observed a substantial amount of blood in the Tahoe’s back seat and dripping from the passenger-side rear door down onto the running board.

Inside the hospital, police found one of the shooting victims, Gilbert Cruz, already deceased from a single bullet wound to his forehead. The police also determined that Henry Sepulveda, one of four passengers in the Tahoe, had been shot in the abdomen. Officer Eric Garza attempted to collect as much information from Sepulveda as possible before he was rushed to surgery. Sepulveda told Officer Garza that he and his friends were “chilling” at the park when a black man ran up, yelled “BGB,” and started shooting at them. Police learned that Sepulveda had been seated in the front passenger seat of the Tahoe and Gilbert had been in the rear passenger seat. Officer Garza testified that “BGB” is a gang. Sepulveda eventually died as a result of the gunshot wound he suffered at the park.

Officer Garza also tried to interview David Cruz, Gilbert’s brother, who was one of the passengers in the Tahoe when the shooting occurred. Officer Garza testified that David appeared to be highly intoxicated and was initially uncooperative. David eventually told Officer Garza that he was in a gang called the “Crips,” and that a rival gang member named “Dime” had run up and started shooting at them.

A few days later, the Tahoe was processed by Officer D.C. Lambright at the HPD vehicle examination building. Officer Lambright found a total of nine visible bullet strikes to the passenger side of the vehicle. Based on the trajectories of those bullets, Officer Lambright opined that either the car, the shooter, or both

3 were moving when the bullets struck the Tahoe. Officer Lambright did not find any weapons or spent cartridges inside the vehicle.

At trial, Officer Lambright testified that the lack of broken glass in the front passenger seat and floor area led him to believe the front passenger window had been rolled all the way down when the shooting occurred. Officer Lambright also testified that he believed the rear passenger window was partially down because there was no glass remaining in the top frame of the window.

Detective Richard Martinez conducted the follow-up investigation of the shooting. Martinez testified that he believed the shooting may have been gang- related. A confidential informant had provided the police with the name of a possible suspect: “Grim.”

Officer Cynthia Purl, who worked with the Westside Divisional Gang Unit, ran the alias “Grim” through the gang database and came up with a person named Zajahn Johnson who lived in the same area where the homicides had occurred. Officer Purl testified that appellant was not listed in the gang database when she initially ran a search in 2008 but had been added well before the start of his trial. Officer Purl testified that appellant is documented as a “Black Disciple” or “BD” gang member. Officer Purl further testified that the Black Disciples fall under the umbrella of the Folk Nation.

Detective Martinez also interviewed David Cruz. David initially told Martinez that the person who shot his brother and Sepulveda was in a car with two other Hispanic males. Martinez testified that David later admitted he had initially not been truthful because he was worried his brother would be looked upon “badly” because he “had been talking some noise out there.” David provided Martinez with a second statement describing a black man and a woman. David also told Martinez that he and Gilbert were “associates” of the “Crips” gang. 4 David indicated that Gilbert and the black man had been cussing at each other and that he tried to keep Gilbert from getting out of the Tahoe.

During the investigation, the police learned that Jameka Stevenson, appellant’s girlfriend at the time, was with the suspect during the shooting. Martinez interviewed Stevenson, who told him that appellant had started shooting when the boy in the backseat of the vehicle rolled down his window and pulled out a gun.

At trial, the witnesses to the offense gave varied accounts of the shooting. David Cruz testified that on the night of the shooting, he was drinking at his sister’s house with his brother Gilbert, Sepulveda, and Jose Rico, the driver of the Tahoe. David decided that they should make a trip to the store to buy more beer. David testified that he was so intoxicated he could barely walk. According to David, he passed out and could not remember going to the park where the shooting occurred. He testified that he woke up at the sound of a gunshot and saw blood on his shirt. The next thing he remembered was waking up at the hospital.

Rico testified that he drove with Sepulveda and Gilbert to Houston so that Gilbert could pick up some DVDs from his mother’s house.

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