Holcomb, Donna Gayle ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                      ORIGINAL
    No. PD-1233-14
    IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS
    DONNA GAYLE HOLCOMB
    d^.v                            RECEIVED m
    Petitioner,                   COURT OF CRMWAUPPEALS
    V.                            MAY 14 2015
    THE STATE OF TEXAS                   AbBl Acost^ ^
    Respondent
    PETITIONER'S MOTION FOR REHEARING
    On Appeal from the First Court of Appeals in
    Cause No. 01-08-00337-CR and from the 230th District Court
    of Harris County, Texas in Cause No. 1141352
    TO THE HONORABLE JUSTICES OF THE COURT OF CRIMINAL
    APPEALS:
    COMES NOW, DONNA HOLCOMB, Petitioner in the above-entitled
    appeal and files this, her Motion for Rehearing of .the Court's refusal of
    Petitioner's Petition for Discretionary Review ("PDR") and in support thereof
    would show the Court the following:
    FILED IN
    COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    MAY 14 2015
    i                       Abel Acosta, Clerk
    I.    GROUNDS FOR REHEARING
    A.    CLERICAL ERRORS CORRECTED
    1.    After Petitioner's PDR was refused shortly after it had been received,
    Petitioner contacted the Clerk of the Court to ask if Petitioner's PDR could have
    been refused based upon clerical errors. The Clerk said that it could have been
    refused for any reason and he did not know what those reasons were.
    2.    Petitioner is acting Pro Se and through an inadvertence did not sign
    her Petition, other than the certificate of compliance.        Further, Petitioner
    inadvertently did not include a service page or signature block after the prayer.
    Petitioner did not realize she had made these mistakes until Petitioner's PDR was
    summarily refused shortly after being received by the Court. Petitioner was
    informed by the Clerk ofthe Court that she had to send in several more copies of
    the PDR and Petitioner intended to send them when she learned that her PDR was
    refused. Petitioner respectfully requests that if the Court refused her PDR based
    solely upon the clerical errors and number of PDR's submitted, that the Court
    consider Petitioner's corrections (service page and signatures) to her PDR and
    grant review.
    B     THE COURT SHOULD NOT REFUSE PETITIONER'S PDR AS
    PETITIONER HAS MERITORIOUS CLAIMS THAT PETITIONER'S
    RIGHTS UNDER THE DOUBLE JEOPARDY CLAUSE WERE
    VIOLATED AND THAT IT WAS HARMFUL ERROR NOT TO SEND
    PETITIONER'S CASE TO THE TRIAL COURT FOR A NEW TRIAL ON
    GUILT OR INNOCENSE AND NOT JUST PUNISHMENT ON THE
    REMAINING THEFTS AND COMPLAINING WITNESSES
    3.     The Court of Appeals held any harm resulting from the inclusion of
    Bledsoe, on whom Petitioner received a directed verdict of acquittal, in the charge
    can be remedied by reforming the judgment to reflect conviction of the lesser-
    included offense of theft of property with an aggregated value of between $20,000
    and $100,000.
    4.    It was not harmless error which could be corrected by a reformation in
    the judgment because Petitioner was convicted ofa lesser included offense or of
    elements of thefts constituting aggregated theft on rebuttal post-acquittal fact
    finding testimony.
    5.     Petitioner certifies that this motion for rehearing is grounded on
    significant circumstances and the motion is made in good faith and not for delay
    and so that justice might be done. IfPetitioner is entitled to relief for violation of
    the Double Jeopardy Clause ofthe U.S. Constitution, then justice may only be had
    if Petitioner's PDR is considered.
    IV.   ARGUMENTS AND AUTHORITIES
    6.    This Court has the authority to reconsider its refusal of a Petition for
    Discretionary Review ifthe Petitioner files a motion for rehearing pursuant to Tex.
    R. App. P. Rule 79. The motion for rehearing is due within 15 days of the refusal
    of Petitioner's PDRon April 22, 2015 which is May 7, 2015.
    7.     As the Court does not allow petitioners to know the reasons for a
    refusal of a petition for discretionary review, Petitioner does not know if the
    clerical errors in her PDR were the cause of the Court's initial refusal of her PDR.
    However, Petitioner argues that pursuant to the Double Jeopardy Clause, Petitioner
    is entitled to a new trial on the guilt or innocence phase of Petitioner's trial and not
    just the punishment phase.
    8.     Petitioner was convicted of six constituent thefts of six complaining
    witnesses. It is undisputed that Petitioner received a directed verdict as to one of
    the complaining witnesses after the State rested its case. A rebuttal witness was
    called to testify as to the fact finding of the acquitted theft, which theft was then
    resurrected and acquittal set aside by the trial court.
    9.     The Court of Appeals has held that it was error to reverse the acquittal
    in violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause, but that any harm to Petitioner could
    be corrected with a reformation of the judgment to the lesser included offense. In
    this Court's opinion in Ex Parte Goodman, 
    152 S.W.3d 67
    , 71-72 (Tex.
    Crim.App.2004), it was faced with a similar situation with one very important
    difference; the State in Ex Parte Goodman was never allowed to prosecute in the
    second indictment using facts from the acquitted first indictment. Specifically, Ex
    Parte Goodman, this Court determined that the State may attempt to prove any
    number of the aggregated theft's constituent thefts.         Moreover, in Ex Parte
    Goodman, consistent with the Double Jeopardy Clause, this Court determined that
    the State may not attempt to relitigate the facts underlying the theft alleged in the
    first indictment in an effort to prove that offense or any of its lesser included
    offenses as one of the aggregated theft's constituent thefts. In other words, the
    State, in proving aggregated theft, may not rely upon proof of the theft alleged in
    the first indictment or any of its lesser included offenses.
    10.   The larger difference between Ex Parte Goodman and Petitioner's
    case is that the trial court and the State went one step further when it introduced
    rebuttal post-acquittal fact-finding testimony of a witness to bolster the testimony
    of the acquitted complaining witness. Having already been acquitted of the
    complaining witness and after the State concluded its case, Petitioner took the
    stand to testify. After Petitioner's testimony, a rebuttal witness was called to
    testify and the trial court reversed its decision after the rebuttal witness' testimony.
    11. The jury determined its findings of guilt or innocence on the acquitted
    complaining witness and the other complaining witnesses (lesser included offense)
    based in whole or in part upon the rebuttal post-acquittal fact-finding testimony.
    The U.S. Supreme Court has determined that post-acquittal fact-finding testimony
    to prove the truth of that offense or a lesser included offense violates the Double
    Jeopardy Clause of the U.S. Constitution. Smith v. Massachusetts, 
    543 U.S. 462
    ,
    467, 
    125 S. Ct. 1129
    , 1134 (2005) (quoting Smalis v. Pennsylvania, 4,16 U.S. 140,
    145, 
    106 S. Ct. 1745
    , 1749 (1986)).
    12.    In the Court of Appeals ruling that it could reform the judgment to
    include the lesser including offenses presupposes that Petitioner would not have
    been acquitted on all of the other thefts of the other complaining witnesses. The
    Court ofAppeals has made a factual determination substituting its own fact finding
    for the jury's fact finding. It is impossible to know ifthe jury would have acquitted
    Petitioner on guilt or innocence ofall the thefts if the damaging testimony ofthe
    post-acquittal fact-finding rebuttal witness' testimony had not been heard by the
    jury. The other complaining witnesses and thefts were merely contractual disputes,
    but the rebuttal witness' testimony was clearly testimony of Petitioner taking her
    money and literally running with the money and never to be seen or heard from
    again by rebuttal witness.
    13.   For this very reason, the Double Jeopardy Clause requires the trial
    court to take any post-acquittal fact-finding testimony out ofthe equation so that a
    defendant may be found guilty only of the offenses he or she has committed and
    not based upon post-acquittal testimony to prove the trust of the other lesser
    included offenses.
    V.      PRAYER
    Wherefore Premises Considered, Petitioner requests that the Court grant
    Petitioner's Motion for Rehearing and to grant Petitioner all other relief to which
    she may show herselfjustly entitled.
    tfully submi
    50NNA HOLCOMB            (PRO SE)
    4906 Scott Reef Dr.
    Bacliff, Texas 77518
    Ph. 281-942-8840
    Email: d holcomb@,aol.com
    Petitioner, Pro Se
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    I hereby certify that a true and correct copy ofthe foregoing was served on
    the following:
    DONNA HOLCOMB             (PRO SE)
    Harris County District Attorney        Via U.S. Mail
    1201 Franklin
    Houston, Texas 77002
    inmuimmammi
    UNITED STATES
    U.S. POSTAGE
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    |77573 0004                  05/11/2015
    S Date of sale
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Document Info

Docket Number: PD-1233-14

Filed Date: 5/14/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/29/2016