Anthony Deshon Jennings v. the State of Texas ( 2023 )


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  •              In the
    Court of Appeals
    Second Appellate District of Texas
    at Fort Worth
    ___________________________
    No. 02-21-00161-CR
    No. 02-21-00162-CR
    ___________________________
    ANTHONY DESHON JENNINGS, Appellant
    V.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS
    On Appeal from the 235th District Court
    Cooke County, Texas
    Trial Court Nos. CR19-00923, CR19-00924
    Before Sudderth, C.J.; Womack and Walker, JJ.
    Memorandum Opinion by Justice Womack
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    I. INTRODUCTION
    A jury found Appellant Anthony Deshon Jennings guilty in two cases of
    aggravated assault with a deadly weapon (a firearm) arising from an incident involving
    complainants Martin “Chino” Ibarra and Sarah Brule. See 
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.02
    (a)(2). Jennings pleaded true to two prior and sequential felony enhancement
    allegations, increasing each offense’s punishment range to twenty-five to ninety-nine
    years’ confinement or life. See 
    id.
     §§ 12.33, .42(d). The jury assessed thirty years’
    confinement in each case, and the trial court set Jennings’s sentences to run
    concurrently.
    In three points, Jennings appeals, arguing that the trial court erred by
    overruling his motion for a directed verdict, by failing to instruct the jury to disregard
    the prosecutor’s improper comments on his failure to testify, and by admitting into
    evidence a booking photo provided to the defense on the morning of trial. We affirm
    the trial court’s judgments because the trial court did not err by denying Jennings’s
    directed-verdict motion and because Jennings did not preserve his jury-instruction
    complaint and was not harmed by the photo’s admission.
    2
    II. DIRECTED VERDICT1
    In his third point,2 Jennings complains that the trial court erred by overruling
    his motion for a directed verdict because there was no evidence of a deadly weapon
    and no evidence of an imminent threat, i.e., that Ibarra and Brule actually feared him.3
    A motion for directed verdict is essentially an evidentiary-sufficiency challenge. See
    Madden v. State, 
    799 S.W.2d 683
    , 686 (Tex. Crim. App. 1990).
    Jennings was charged with, on or about September 27, 2019, having
    intentionally and knowingly threatened Ibarra and Brule with imminent bodily injury
    while using or exhibiting a firearm. See 
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.01
    (a)(2) (defining
    assault to include intentionally or knowingly threatening another with imminent bodily
    injury), § 22.02(a)(2) (defining aggravated assault to include committing assault while
    using or exhibiting a deadly weapon). In our evidentiary-sufficiency review, we view
    all the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict to determine whether any
    rational factfinder could have found the crime’s essential elements beyond a
    reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319, 
    99 S. Ct. 2781
    , 2789 (1979);
    Queeman v. State, 
    520 S.W.3d 616
    , 622 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017).
    1
    We combine our evidentiary review with our analysis to avoid repetition.
    2
    We reorder Jennings’s points to address those providing the greatest potential
    relief first. See Benavidez v. State, 
    323 S.W.3d 179
    , 182 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).
    3
    Jennings divides his complaint between legal and factual sufficiency, but that is
    no longer the standard. See Brooks v. State, 
    323 S.W.3d 893
    , 912 (Tex. Crim. App.
    2010) (overruling Clewis v. State, 
    922 S.W.2d 126
     (Tex. Crim. App. 1996)).
    3
    The factfinder alone judges the evidence’s weight and credibility. See Tex. Code
    Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 38.04; Martin v. State, 
    635 S.W.3d 672
    , 679 (Tex. Crim. App.
    2021). We may not re-evaluate the evidence’s weight and credibility and substitute
    our judgment for the factfinder’s. Queeman, 
    520 S.W.3d at 622
    . Instead, we determine
    whether the necessary inferences are reasonable based on the evidence’s cumulative
    force when viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict. Braughton v. State,
    
    569 S.W.3d 592
    , 608 (Tex. Crim. App. 2018); see Villa v. State, 
    514 S.W.3d 227
    , 232
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2017) (“The court conducting a sufficiency review must not engage
    in a ‘divide and conquer’ strategy but must consider the cumulative force of all the
    evidence.”). We must presume that the factfinder resolved any conflicting inferences
    in the verdict’s favor and defer to that resolution. Braughton, 
    569 S.W.3d at 608
    .
    A. The State’s case
    Three police officers and the two complainants testified during the State’s case.
    1. Police officer testimony
    Investigator Ronald Alford4 had worked on the case with the assigned
    investigator, Michael Young, who was home sick during trial.                During the
    investigation, he and Investigator Young reviewed Brule’s 911 call from
    September 27, 2019; he described Brule’s voice in the 911 call as “excited and upset.”
    4
    Investigator Alford had worked for the Gainesville Police Department for
    almost eighteen years and had spent three and a half of those years as a gang-unit
    officer before working in criminal investigations.
    4
    The trial court admitted into evidence the ninety-second 911 call, which was
    published to the jury. The call began with Brule’s telling the 911 operator that she
    needed “a police officer over here immediately” to her home because she “just had
    Anthony Lovato pull a gun on [her].” When the operator asked if he was still there,
    Brule replied, “No, but he was -- come now, please. Y’all can find him. He’s driving
    a gold Yukon [with the back window busted out] . . . and he’s got a gun wrapped up
    in a white rag that he just . . . I was raking my front yard.” When the operator asked,
    “Now, is that Anthony Jennings?” Brule replied, “Yes, whatever his name is, yes.”5
    When the operator then asked, “And he has the gun wrapped up in a white . . . ,”
    Brule replied, “Yeah, and he pointed it at me.” As the operator attempted to ask in
    which direction Jennings had gone, Brule demanded, “How does he not get locked
    up?”6 When the operator re-asked her question about the direction Jennings had
    gone, Brule replied, “He left towards Harris Street.” Brule then stated, “I’m not
    having this. I’m not having this. I was raking my front yard. I’m not having this.”
    Investigator Alford testified that Jennings used multiple names, including
    5
    Anthony Lovato, Anthony Royal, Anthony Guwap, and Slimey Lovato.
    6
    Investigator Alford opined that Brule’s exclamation was indicative of
    frustration but possibly not fear over “someone who’s . . . able to just do whatever
    they want and get away with it.” He agreed that it could also have been an expression
    of frustration with law enforcement.
    5
    Officer Johnny Freeman7 was the first officer to respond to Brule’s 911 call.
    When he arrived, Brule, upset and tearful, was in her front yard. She did not appear
    to be intoxicated,8 and she coherently explained the situation to him. He took her
    statement but did not complete the call because he was “just responding to assist” as
    the closest officer in the area when the call came in. He was one of three officers who
    responded to the scene.9
    Investigator Alford stated that he spoke with Jennings at the Cooke County jail
    almost a month later, after he and Investigator Young read the Miranda10 warnings to
    him and Jennings agreed to speak with them. Jennings had recounted his version of
    events to the investigators as follows,
    He advised that he was driving through the area and he stated that Brule
    yelled at him, and that he came back around over there and rolled down
    the window, and I believe the words were he asked her what’s up or
    something to that effect.
    And she started yelling at him, about being a woman hitter or
    something to that effect, and that he started asking where Chino [Ibarra]
    7
    Officer Freeman, a licensed peace officer since 2009, had worked for the
    Gainesville Police Department as a patrol officer for a little over two years by the time
    of the October 2021 trial.
    8
    Brule testified that she took Prozac and Clonopin by prescription for her
    bipolar disorder but denied having been on anything that day, although she
    acknowledged having used street drugs “a long time” ago.
    9
    Officer Freeman stated that his body camera had recorded his interaction with
    Brule, but no one offered the body camera footage into evidence.
    10
    See Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 
    86 S. Ct. 1602 (1966)
    .
    6
    was. Chino is Brule’s boyfriend at the time. I’m not certain if they’re
    dating still. But asked where he was.
    She goes and gets -- gets [Chino]. He comes out, some additional
    words were exchanged. When [Jennings] was asked if he pointed at her
    or did anything to that effect, he stated he did not.
    Jennings told the investigators that he was “really good with his hands[,] so there[ was]
    no reason for him to have a gun,” and that Brule told him that he needed a bullet in
    his head.
    Investigator Alford testified that he had been dealing with Jennings since
    Jennings was a juvenile.11 Although he had arrested Jennings a number of times, he
    did not recall Jennings’s ever having a gun during those arrests. Officer Freeman said
    that he had had very few dealings with Jennings but did not see a firearm on those
    occasions.
    Investigator Jack Jones12 had investigated reports of Jennings that alleged
    firearm use, but Jennings had never been in possession of a gun when arrested by
    Investigator Jones or anyone else in his agency. During his time in the gang unit,
    Investigator Jones had investigated Jennings, who had been entered into the
    11
    Jennings was twenty-four years old at the time of the trial.
    12
    Investigator Jones had worked for the Gainesville Police Department for
    twenty-four years, during which time he had worked in patrol, special investigations,
    narcotics, gang enforcement, and criminal investigations.
    7
    Department of Public Safety’s gang investigative database on February 21, 2014.13
    Investigator Jones said that Jennings’s inclusion on the database would not expire
    until May 26, 2024; he had no personal knowledge about whether Jennings had
    removed himself from the gang. Investigator Jones was not present when Jennings
    was interviewed by Investigators Alford and Young, and he did no follow-ups to try
    to find a gun.
    Investigator Alford testified that the tattoos on the left side of Jennings’s
    forehead depicted a firearm, a light socket plug, and a dollar sign. He stated that
    based on his training and experience, a social-media post with these particular
    “emojis”14 meant dealing with firearms and drugs (a “plug” means drug supplier). He
    agreed that “a whole lot of rap songs” talk about guns, plugs, and money but opined
    that Jennings’s facial tattoos probably indicated more than a favorite rap song.
    13
    According to Investigator Jones, the legislature set gang-database inclusion
    criteria such as clothing, tattoos, and other items. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann.
    arts. 67.251–.256 (describing electronic gang resource system “to provide criminal
    justice agencies . . . with information about criminal street gangs in this state”). But see
    
    id.
     art. 67.253 (“Information relating to the identity of a specific offender or alleged
    offender may not be maintained in the gang resource system.”).
    14
    “Emoji are images, symbols, or icons used in online communication (that is,
    communication via cell phone text messaging, electronic mail, personal or instant
    messaging, chat rooms, bulletin boards, or similar) to convey information, emotion,
    and attitudes.” Marilyn M. McMahon & Elizabeth A. Kirley, When Cute Becomes
    Criminal: Emoji, Threats and Online Grooming, 21 Minn. J.L. Sci. & Tech. 37, 38 (2019).
    “Just as non-verbal behavior such as pitch, volume, speed of speech, gestures, and
    facial expressions fundamentally informs our verbal communications, emoji can also
    improve one-dimensional texting and posting by adding emotion, sociability, and
    humor.” 
    Id. at 41
     (footnotes omitted).
    8
    During cross-examination, Investigator Alford acknowledged that he had
    known Ibarra for a number of years and had been told while on the gang task force
    that Ibarra was in a gang, but he said that Ibarra did not consistently come up as
    someone involved in Cooke County gang activities.          Around the time of the
    September 27, 2019 incident, there had been up to twenty active gangs in the area,
    including the Norteños (Jennings’s gang) and Satan’s Disciples (the gang with which
    Ibarra had been associated).      Investigator Alford stated that the Norteños were
    involved in criminal activities from assault to murder, and he agreed that there was a
    great risk of retaliation in standing up to a Norteños.
    Regarding Brule, Investigator Alford stated, “I wouldn’t say that I know her
    well. I know of her. I’ve talked to her a few times off and on throughout the years
    through law enforcement contacts,” various criminal investigations and follow-ups,
    and “probably a traffic stop or two.” He did not know her well enough to know if
    she had been faking her distress in her 911 call.
    2. Brule’s testimony
    At the time of the trial, Brule lived in the same house in Gainesville where the
    September 27, 2019 incident occurred, but she and Ibarra were no longer together.
    She lived in the house with her sister and six children, three of whom were Brule’s.
    She worked from home so she could care for one of her daughters, who was disabled.
    Brule testified that on September 27, 2019, she had been raking her yard after
    Ibarra finished mowing. She wore earbuds to listen to and sing along with music
    9
    while she raked. A gold SUV drove by a few times, but she did not think anything of
    it until, on the third pass, Jennings stopped in the middle of the street, rolled down
    the window, and asked her several times if she had a problem in a “[d]emanding,
    upset, kind of riled up” tone. Brule stated that she did not know Jennings—they did
    not run in the same circles—but that she knew who he was because of an incident
    that had involved her sister.
    When Jennings asked her if she had a problem with him, Brule told him to
    leave in a belligerent, profane manner. She also told him, “[Y]eah, I do have a
    problem with you, you just broke my sister’s collarbone.”15 Brule said that her sister’s
    injuries had occurred two weeks before the encounter, “so it was a fresh wound on
    [her] and [her] family.” Brule testified that Jennings replied, “B-tch, I’ll beat your -ss,
    too,” and he told her to go into the house and get Ibarra.
    Brule went inside the house, where Ibarra was getting dressed after taking a
    shower, and he went outside with her to talk to Jennings. Brule recounted the
    conversation as follows,
    Q. All right. So tell me what happened then?
    A. Chino proceeded just to tell him: You know, come on, bro,
    just go, just get out of here, just -- just leave, just go, just leave, we don’t
    need this over here. And just kept telling him to leave, and [Jennings]
    just kept asking -- [Jennings] kept asking him what the problem was, and
    The trial court overruled Jennings’s hearsay and relevance objections to this
    15
    evidence, and Jennings does not complain about this evidence on appeal.
    10
    Chino told him over and over, There’s no problem, there’s no issue, but
    you need to leave, you need to leave.
    Q. Okay. Were they talking in any -- anything about gangs or
    anything at that point that you remember?
    A. Chino wasn’t. He just kept telling him to leave. [Jennings]
    was saying some kind of gang jargon, I don’t know what it was exactly,
    but it was something, and Chino told him, I don’t even bang no more, I
    don’t do any of that no more, you just need to get out of here, my kids
    are in the house.
    Q. Okay. So he was kind of, I think, trying to rile him up, talk
    about his gang, bad mouthing --
    A. Correct. Correct.
    Q. -- his gang, something like that?
    A. Yes.
    Q. Okay. And did -- after that, what happened? After the gang
    or -- I think this all kind of happened at once, but just keep telling us
    what happened.
    A. So from there, after he kept telling him to go, I’d already kind
    of just start to turn, to walk in, and he had popped off and yelled
    something, so it got my attention. I turned back around, and Chino just
    told me, run, and about that time, that’s when everything happened.
    Q. Okay. Well, tell us what -- so you -- y’all decided it’s about
    time to go inside or whatever, but did you -- when you turned and you
    say everything happened, what did you see?
    A. He had a pistol pointed at us with a white cloth over it, and so
    we just took off and ran as quick as we could into the house.
    Q. Okay.
    A. And Chino said, he’s got a gun, run.
    11
    Q. What was Chino’s expression like when he said that?
    A. You could -- it’s scared, fear. You could see it in his face,
    frustration.
    Q. Do you -- have you -- had you seen Chino like that many
    times?
    A. No. Chino is not really scared of a whole lot. But he was that
    day, I -- I feel, in his face. We were together for seven years. I know
    him pretty well. But the fear in his face was not something that I had
    ever seen, because Chino isn’t scared of anything.
    The encounter lasted around eight minutes.        When Jennings drove away, Brule
    gathered her kids in the back of the house and then called 911.
    Brule stated that she did not want to testify or to be in court. When asked if
    the situation had caused her fear and stress, she replied, “Very much so, yes,
    horribly,” including stress caused by contacts from Jennings’s family—mostly by his
    wife but also his mother. The record reflects that Brule was crying during this portion
    of her testimony.
    On cross-examination, Brule testified that she and Ibarra were not married but
    had a child together. She had always known Jennings by the name Lovato and had
    been afraid of him when she recognized him that day; she did not immediately go into
    her house when he pulled up because she initially did not recognize him. She denied
    that Jennings stopped his car when she yelled out, “[M]otherf-cker, you need a bullet
    in your head.” She agreed that approximately an hour after the encounter, she
    “Facebooked” Jennings and told him that she did not know he was in that car.
    12
    Regarding her Facebook messages with Jennings, Brule said that she “made several
    false statements” to him, including that she did not see a gun and that she was not
    afraid of him. Brule denied that she had told Jennings that she thought he was going
    to kill her but testified that she was afraid that he was going to kill her at some point.
    Brule stated that she did not recall Jennings’s asking her why she had said that
    he needed a bullet in his head and that if he had asked her that, she would not have
    responded, “[Y]eah, because I’m crazy as hell.” Defense counsel then offered into
    evidence, and the trial court admitted, the Facebook messages exchanged between
    Brule and Jennings.
    The September 27, 2019 Facebook conversation showed that around 6:31 p.m.,
    Brule and Jennings exchanged messages in which Brule denied that she had known
    Jennings was in the vehicle and stated that she did not care what he had done to her
    sister and that she was not afraid to die. She used an eye-rolling emoji when she told
    him, “I won’t f-cking rake my yard and listen to music since you gonna kill me and
    Chino for all that.” Jennings replied, “Kill y[’]all?” and Brule responded, “Yeah[,] isn’t
    that what you said[?] [laughter emoji] I’m really not on pills[,] dude[.] This is dumb.”
    Jennings then stated, “No[,] you the one that said I need a bullet in my head.”
    Brule responded, “Cause I’m crazy as hell[.] My sister always said you will kill me[.]
    So I thought it was the truth.” Jennings stated, “No reason to[.] I fight before I
    shoot[.]” Brule replied, “You said you would whoop me because I said you broke my
    sister[’]s collarbone[.] You been through sh-t but I’m old and I been through sh-t
    13
    to[o] f-ck it half the time I wish someone would pull the f-cking trigger. So yeah the
    whole fighting killing sh-t[,] I’m not sure why.” Jennings told her that it had been a
    misunderstanding and to “[h]ave a good day[.]”        Brule responded, “You too,”
    followed by a peace sign emoji.16
    Later, Jennings asked Brule, “Y[’]all called the cops and said I had a gun??
    Craaaaazy[.]” In her response to him, Brule blamed her neighbor17 and told Jennings
    that Ibarra had said that Jennings had a gun but that he did not talk to the police.18
    She also told Jennings, “If I called the cops[,] I wouldn’t have messaged you[.]”
    Jennings replied, “You good. Is what it is.” Brule then elaborated, stating, “Chino
    16
    Brule also told Jennings in her Facebook messages that Ibarra did not know
    she was corresponding with him and that he “hates if [she] get[s] in the business” but
    that she “just wanted [Jennings] to know [she] didn’t say nothing.” Brule told
    Jennings that she was going to tell Ibarra about their messages, “Just not tonight
    because he will whoop me,” followed by five laughter emojis and “just kidding[.]”
    During cross-examination, Brule said that by “the business,” she meant “guy
    business” or “men business” and not drug-dealing. She acknowledged that she and
    the father of two of her children had served time in federal prison in 2007; Brule’s
    incarceration had been drug-related. Brule testified that she had not been back to
    prison since then and that she had a stable home and job, was raising her children,
    and had nothing to do with gangs or drugs.
    17
    On redirect, Brule claimed that what she had said in her message was untrue
    and that she had told Jennings that the neighbor had called the police because she had
    been scared and just wanted Jennings “to be calm and hopefully smooth it over to
    where nothing happened to us.” She added that she and Ibarra had both spoken to
    the police but that she had lied to Jennings because she “didn’t want him coming back
    and shooting [her] house up.”
    18
    Investigator Jones testified that he went with Investigator Young to Brule’s
    house to interview Ibarra.
    14
    wasn’t even outside when the cops came 4 deep to my house[.] But I’m not gonna act
    scared or explain myself[;] I really have no issue with you[.]” Jennings replied, “Lol I
    just saw the report [laughter emoji] Lol y[’]all cool have a good night.”
    Brule then told Jennings, “The f-cking neighbor called and then the [police]
    asked me who it was[;] I told them[,] but you had to have pulled out a gun and I was
    turned around because this white lady does not play . . . I don’t know what I’ve done
    to you[;] we don’t even know each other.” Jennings replied, “I didn[’]t have no gun.”
    Brule then responded that both the neighbor and Ibarra had said that they had seen a
    gun but that she had not seen one. Jennings told her, “I didn[’]t have no gun
    [laughter emoji.] The cops just told me y[’]all made a report lmao it’s all good though.
    You was there the whole time[;] I never had a gun.”
    Five days later, on October 2, 2019, at 3:01 p.m., Brule missed a video-chat call
    from Jennings. She sent him a message at 4:26 p.m., stating, “What’s up[?] I just got
    outta jail[.] If it’s about [Investigators] Jones or Young[,] I told them to go f-ck
    themselves[.]”19 Jennings asked, “Jail for what?” At 7:33 p.m., Brule replied, “Assault
    causing bodily injury[.]”
    During recross-examination, when Brule denied having told anyone that she
    did not want the case prosecuted, defense counsel offered an email she had sent to
    During cross-examination, Brule denied having continued to communicate
    19
    with Jennings after September 27, 2019.
    15
    Investigator Jones, and the trial court admitted it into evidence. In her October 7,
    2019 email to Investigator Jones, Brule stated,
    I hope all is well with you. Chino told me you and Young came by
    about the gun situation with Anthony Lovato/Jennings. At this time I
    do not want to p[u]rsue charges against him. I feel that it will just make
    my family a target, . . . I appreciate you always, and I’m sorry but I have
    to keep my family safe and watch what I do with the police from here on
    out. I am becoming a joke around there it seems. I just want peace and
    to move. However, if you would like to talk to me my new number is
    [XXX-XXX-XXXX].
    Brule denied that she had told anyone that the prosecutor wanted her to testify or that
    the prosecutor had offered her a deal.
    3. Ibarra’s Testimony
    At trial, Ibarra testified that he had lived in Irving for the previous four or five
    months with his girlfriend. He had known Jennings—with the last name Lovato—
    “[s]ince [Jennings] was in diapers.” He had not wanted to testify but had been
    subpoenaed and understood that he had to tell the truth. He did not want to testify
    because “[y]ou don’t tell on people no matter if they’ve done good or bad for you,
    you just -- you just don’t.”
    On September 27, 2019, he had been living with Brule, their son, and Brule’s
    two daughters. He was in the back bedroom getting dressed after his post-yardwork
    shower when Brule ran into the house and said, “Hey, Anthony Lovato is out here
    talking sh-t to me.” Ibarra put on his prosthetic leg and finished dressing before
    going outside to talk to Jennings.
    16
    When Ibarra went outside, Jennings’s SUV was by the neighbor’s fence, but
    when Jennings saw him, Jennings reversed the vehicle and parked in front of the
    house. He asked Jennings, “What’s up, bro?” Jennings replied, “Your b-tch is talking
    sh-t.” Ibarra said that he asked Jennings to “take that down the road,” and Jennings
    replied, “Well, you need to check her. I don’t know if she’s on pills or what’s going
    on with her or whatever.” Ibarra denied that Brule had been on anything but
    prescribed medicine that day.
    Ibarra testified that while he spoke with Jennings, Brule was “yelling, like, back
    and forth” with Jennings and that “it was getting like real noisy, real like drama-type
    situation.” Ibarra tried to push her behind him and move her into the house because
    he had been in that type of situation before. He explained, “[I]f [Jennings] wasn’t
    getting out of the vehicle, he wasn’t looking for no physical confrontation,” but he
    thought Jennings had been on drugs “because you don’t just pull up to somebody’s
    house and just threaten[ ] somebody that you’ve never had an issue with.”
    Ibarra had tried to defuse the situation because he did not know Jennings’s
    state of mind and because, as a former felon,20 he had no gun to protect himself.
    Then he saw Jennings’s gun. Ibarra stated,
    So when I was telling [Brule] to get in the house or whatever, I saw
    [Jennings] put this hand on the window rest, and he had a white towel
    and he had the pistol under the white towel. And he looked at me and
    Ibarra had been convicted of deadly conduct and possession of ammunition
    20
    and had been released from the penitentiary in 2002.
    17
    he said, [“]I’m going to pop that b-tch.[”] So when he said that, I said to
    Brule, [“]Man, get your -ss in the house.[”]
    Ibarra said that Jennings was not aiming the gun at him when he said he was going to
    “pop” Brule. Jennings also said something about “disciple killer, S.D. killer,”21 but
    Ibarra did not pay any attention to it, assuming Jennings was trying to rile him up.
    Ibarra stated that Jennings’s gun had been a snub-nosed Glock that was
    completely covered by Jennings’s “little face towel.” He also testified that it was “like
    a Glock 40.”22 Ibarra said that he had been around plenty of guns and there was no
    question in his mind that what Jennings had was a gun, which Jennings had
    brandished in his right hand with the towel on top. Ibarra stated, “He just laid it on
    the edge of the window sill, pointed in our direction. But I couldn’t tell you if it was
    pointed at me, at [Brule], at the house, at the front door, window.” The gun was
    pointed in their direction but the sights were not lined up on them, meaning that if
    Jennings had pulled the trigger, he could have hit Ibarra, Brule, the house, or
    something else in their direction.
    21
    As noted by Investigator Alford, Ibarra had been associated with Satan’s
    Disciples. Ibarra testified that he was no longer actively involved in any gangs.
    22
    When shown a manufacturer’s photograph of a Glock 40, which was
    admitted into evidence and published to the jury, Ibarra agreed that the gun in the
    photo was not a snub-nosed pistol. He agreed that a Glock 40 was a 10-millimeter
    pistol but corrected his earlier testimony, stating, “What I said was a Glock, not a
    Glock 40. ‘Could have been Glock 40[,]’ were my exact words.” He had a brief
    glance at the gun when Jennings put the towel over it and insisted that it had been a
    Glock. On redirect, Ibarra agreed that the photographic exhibit was of a full-sized
    Glock and said that there were Glocks that were smaller or larger than that.
    18
    On cross-examination, Ibarra agreed that he remained friends with Jennings’s
    father and had no fear of Jennings’s family, but he added, “[A]fter today, it might
    change.” He gave the following testimony,
    Q. You’ve never actually feared Mr. Jennings at all, have you?
    A. No.
    Q. No. I mean, even -- even at the time of this incident, you did
    not fear that he was actually going to shoot you immediately, did you?
    A. I didn’t fear that he would shoot me, like off the bat, I guess
    you could say like –
    Q. Right.
    A. -- initially.
    ....
    Q. Okay. So you -- you did not feel imminent danger, is that -- is
    what I’m saying. You did not feel it was going to happen immediately or
    -- or within a -- you know, within a couple of seconds, you did not fear
    that?
    A. Well, I’m pretty sure everybody if somebody pulled a gun on
    them, they’re feeling immediate danger.
    Ibarra stated that Jennings never left his vehicle during the encounter and agreed that
    if there had been a personal problem between them, they would have worked it out in
    a physical manner that did not involve a gun.
    Ibarra denied ever having heard Brule tell Jennings that Jennings needed a hole
    or bullet in his head.          He did not have any personal knowledge of Brule’s
    communicating with Jennings after their encounter because he and Brule “broke up a
    19
    little bit after that.” He had been unaware that Brule had exchanged messages with
    Jennings within a few hours of the encounter but said that it would not surprise him
    because he had also exchanged communications with Jennings since then. Ibarra kept
    their communications cordial because his family still lived in Gainesville, where
    Jennings lived.
    On recross-examination, when asked whether he and Brule had conspired to
    add the gun to their allegation “to save [his] gang pride,” Ibarra replied, “If I had gang
    pride, I wouldn’t be sitting here in this chair.”
    B. Jennings’s Directed-Verdict Motion
    When the State rested, Jennings’s attorney moved for a directed verdict,
    arguing that there was no evidence that he had possessed a deadly weapon based on
    contradictory testimony about the gun and no evidence of an imminent threat. The
    trial court denied the motion.23
    C. Analysis
    Jennings complains that the trial court erred by overruling his directed-verdict
    motion because there was no evidence of a deadly weapon or an imminent threat.
    After the trial court denied the motion, Jennings’s mother testified that she
    23
    had never allowed guns in her home, that Jennings had never brought a gun into her
    home, that she had never seen him possess a gun, and that she had found no guns
    when she was forced to pack their belongings after her eviction upon Jennings’s
    arrest.
    20
    1. Deadly weapon
    Ibarra and Brule—testifying as reluctant witnesses—both stated that Jennings,
    a gang member with a firearm tattoo on his forehead, had pointed a gun in their
    direction; Brule stated that he had pointed the gun from underneath a white cloth,
    while Ibarra said the white covering was a towel. Ibarra, who was formerly associated
    with a gang, described the weapon based on his prior experience with firearms.
    Brule’s Facebook exchange with Jennings reflected that she told him that she
    did not call the police or tell them that he had a gun and that she denied to him that
    she had seen him with a gun—instead, she blamed these statements on a neighbor—
    and she testified that these statements to Jennings were lies that she told because she
    was afraid Jennings would come back and shoot up her house. Brule also told
    Jennings in a Facebook message that she had told Investigators Jones and Young “to
    go f-ck themselves,” but in an email to Investigator Jones, she said she did not want
    to pursue charges against Jennings because it would make her family a target. Ibarra
    denied that he and Brule, who was no longer his girlfriend, had conspired to add a
    gun to their allegations.
    Jennings denied to Brule in their Facebook exchange that he had had a gun,
    and he made the same denial to the investigating officers when they interviewed him.
    Officer Freeman had not seen Jennings with a firearm during their interactions, and
    Investigators Jones and Alford had not found Jennings in possession of a firearm on
    the occasions they had arrested or investigated him.
    21
    The jury had to assess the weight and credibility of the above evidence to
    determine whether Brule and Ibarra were telling the truth at trial about Jennings’s
    having had a gun that day, and we may not re-evaluate that weight and credibility and
    substitute our judgment for the jury’s. See Martin, 635 S.W.3d at 679; Queeman,
    
    520 S.W.3d at 622
    ; see also Chambers v. State, 
    805 S.W.2d 459
    , 461 (Tex. Crim. App.
    1991) (“As factfinder, the jury is entitled to judge the credibility of witnesses, and can
    choose to believe all, some, or none of the testimony presented by the parties.”). The
    State need not introduce the weapon into evidence; instead, lay testimony may suffice
    to support a deadly-weapon finding. See Banargent v. State, 
    228 S.W.3d 393
    , 398–99
    (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2007, pet. ref’d).
    Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, because the jury
    could have chosen to believe Ibarra’s testimony and to find Brule’s in-court testimony
    more credible than her statements to Jennings on Facebook (and more credible than
    Jennings’s statements to her on Facebook and to the police in his interview), the
    evidence was sufficient to establish that Jennings had a firearm, which is a deadly
    weapon. See 
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 1.07
    (a)(17)(A) (defining “deadly weapon” to
    include a firearm); Wright v. State, 
    591 S.W.2d 458
    , 459 (Tex. Crim. App. [Panel Op.]
    1979) (“Testimony using any of the terms ‘gun’, ‘pistol’ or ‘revolver’ is sufficient to
    authorize the jury to find that a deadly weapon was used.”); see also Stringer v. State, No.
    02-19-00042-CR, 
    2020 WL 938150
    , at *3 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Feb. 27, 2020, pet.
    ref’d) (mem. op., not designated for publication) (noting that a jury is free to believe
    22
    witnesses’ testimony about seeing a gun and fearing for their lives). We overrule this
    portion of Jennings’s third point.
    2. Imminent threat
    Ibarra testified that if Jennings had pulled the trigger, he could have hit Ibarra,
    Brule, their house, or something else in their direction. While Ibarra denied that he
    had feared Jennings “initially,” he also indicated that he had felt immediate danger
    when Jennings drew the weapon, and Brule testified that Ibarra’s face had shown his
    fear when Jennings pointed the gun at them. Ibarra stated that he saw Jennings
    brandish the gun while he was telling Brule to get in the house and that Jennings
    looked at him and said that he was going to “pop” Brule.
    The Court of Criminal Appeals has defined “imminent” to mean “ready to take
    place, near at hand, impending, hanging threateningly over one’s head, menacingly
    near.” Garcia v. State, 
    367 S.W.3d 683
    , 689 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012); see Olivas v. State,
    
    203 S.W.3d 341
    , 350 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006) (“The fact that Ms. Tunnell perceived
    some threat of imminent bodily injury, coupled with the fact that appellant did use a
    firearm in threatening her, is sufficient to sustain his conviction for aggravated assault
    as charged in the indictment.”). As with the deadly-weapon element discussed above,
    the jury had to assess the evidence’s weight and credibility to determine if Jennings
    had intentionally or knowingly threatened Ibarra and Brule with imminent bodily
    injury. See Chambers, 
    805 S.W.2d at 461
    . Viewed in the light most favorable to the
    verdict, the jury could have chosen to believe Ibarra’s and Brule’s testimonies about
    23
    Jennings’s holding the gun, pointing it in their general direction, and making a
    statement about “popping” one of them, to find that element. Accordingly, we
    overrule the remainder of Jennings’s third point.
    III. PRESERVATION OF ERROR
    In his first point, Jennings complains that the trial court erred by failing to
    instruct the jury when the State commented on his failure to testify.
    To preserve a complaint for our review, a party must have presented to the trial
    court a timely request, objection, or motion sufficiently stating the specific grounds, if
    not apparent from the context, for the desired ruling. Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a)(1);
    Montelongo v. State, 
    623 S.W.3d 819
    , 822 (Tex. Crim. App. 2021). Because it is a
    systemic requirement, we independently review error preservation and have a duty to
    ensure that a claim is properly preserved before addressing its merits. See Dixon v.
    State, 
    595 S.W.3d 216
    , 223 (Tex. Crim. App. 2020).
    While questioning Investigator Jones during the trial’s punishment phase,
    defense counsel asked, “In taking these photographs, was Mr. Jennings helpful in
    identifying relevant street gang tattoos?” The prosecutor objected, stating, “If Mr.
    Jennings wants to testify to that, he can. But other than that, it’s hearsay.” Defense
    counsel then asked, “At the time you were taking these photographs, did Mr. Jennings
    tell you that he had renounced his affiliation with Norteños?”           The prosecutor
    interrupted, stating, “Your Honor, once again, same objection.”
    24
    The trial court asked the attorneys to approach the bench and gave the
    following warnings. To the prosecutor, the trial court stated, “Okay, I didn’t like your
    comment about ‘if he wants to testify,’ okay? You’re commenting on his failure to
    testify, so don’t say that again.” The trial court then cautioned defense counsel,
    “You’re leaving the door open with that when you keep saying ‘didn’t he tell you,
    didn’t he tell you,’ so watch your question too, don’t say that. . . . I’m just saying,
    you’re pointing it out. I’m not going to allow you to say that question again.”
    Jennings testified after the State rested.
    While the failure of a defendant to testify shall not be alluded to or commented
    on by counsel, see Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 38.08, defense counsel did not
    object to the prosecutor’s comments, ask the trial court to instruct the jury to
    disregard them, or move for a mistrial. See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1; Hernandez v. State,
    
    538 S.W.3d 619
    , 623 (Tex. Crim. App. 2018) (referencing the traditional three steps of
    error preservation: objection, instruction to disregard, and motion for mistrial).
    Further, the record reflects that Jennings actually testified during that phase of the
    trial after the prosecutor’s improper comments. Accordingly, because Jennings has
    failed to preserve this complaint for our review, and because even if he had preserved
    it, he would be unable to demonstrate harm, see Tex. R. App. P. 44.2, we overrule his
    first point.
    25
    IV. DISCOVERY
    In his second point, Jennings complains that the trial court abused its discretion
    by admitting State’s Exhibit 2, a booking photo of his face, during the trial’s guilt–
    innocence phase because the photo was not provided to the defense until the
    morning of trial.
    Jennings was present at trial.       During the first witness’s testimony, the
    prosecutor offered the photo. Defense counsel objected, stating, “Your Honor, we
    were presented with this photo this morning, not given adequate time to prepare a
    rebuttal for the particular piece of evidence, which amounts to trial by ambush.”24
    In the ensuing bench conference, the prosecutor replied, “I can’t surprise them
    by his face. If they didn’t know that this was his face, then I don’t know -- I mean,
    they -- I mean, [defense counsel] told me that she had seen these tattoos that I’m
    speaking about. There’s no way this is a surprise at all. It’s his face.” The trial court
    appeared to agree, stating, “[H]ow can his face be a surprise? They can look at it there
    24
    Defense counsel also argued that the photo’s admission violated the
    Confrontation Clause. On appeal, Jennings argues that failure to provide the
    photograph before trial violated both his confrontation and due-process rights.
    Because Jennings did not raise due process in the trial court, that argument is not
    preserved. See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1. Further, Jennings provides no briefing on the
    Confrontation Clause other than quoting the Sixth Amendment, rendering this
    portion of his argument inadequately briefed. See Tex. R. App. P. 38.1(i). He also
    does not explain how the failure to produce a photo of his face before trial harmed
    him beyond a conclusory statement that “it cannot be said that [the error] did not
    prejudice the jury” or “contribute to the verdict of the jury.” See 
    id.
    26
    and see, how can his face be a surprise?” The trial court overruled the objection and
    admitted the booking photo into evidence.
    Jennings argues that under Watkins v. State, 
    619 S.W.3d 265
     (Tex. Crim. App.
    2021), the photo was “clearly material evidence”25 that should have been disclosed
    before the morning of trial and that the trial court erred by admitting it, prejudicing
    the jury. But Jennings’s face was disclosed to the jury in person at trial before the
    photo was offered or admitted, making the photo a harmless redundancy. See Sopko v.
    State, 
    637 S.W.3d 252
    , 256–57 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2021, no pet.) (applying Rule
    44.2(b) to Article 39.14 violation); see also Macedo v. State, 
    629 S.W.3d 237
    , 240 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 2021) (stating that an error does not affect a substantial right under Rule
    44.2(b) if the court has a fair assurance from the record as a whole that it did not
    influence the jury or had but a slight effect). Accordingly, we overrule Jennings’s
    second point.
    25
    Article 39.14(a) provides that as soon as practicable after receiving a timely
    discovery request from the defendant, the State “shall produce . . . any designated . . .
    photographs . . . that constitute or contain evidence material to any matter involved in
    the action and that are in the possession, custody, or control of the state or any
    person under contract with the state.” Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 39.14(a). In
    Watkins, the Court of Criminal Appeals construed “material” to mean “having a
    logical connection to a consequential fact” and synonymous with “relevant.”
    619 S.W.3d at 290.
    27
    V. CONCLUSION
    Having overruled all of Jennings’s points, we affirm the trial court’s judgments.
    /s/ Dana Womack
    Dana Womack
    Justice
    Do Not Publish
    Tex. R. App. P. 47.2(b)
    Delivered: February 23, 2023
    28