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Colbin John Wright v. the State of Texas ( 2024 )


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  • Opinion issued June 25, 2024
    In The
    Court of Appeals
    For The
    First District of Texas
    ————————————
    NO. 01-23-00249-CR
    ———————————
    COLBIN JOHN WRIGHT, Appellant
    V.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
    On Appeal from the 77th District Court
    Limestone County, Texas
    Trial Court Case No. 15490-A
    CONCURRING OPINION
    Introduction
    After the jury found Colbin John Wright guilty of the third-degree felony
    offense of evading arrest in a motor vehicle and the state jail felony offense of theft,
    it assessed his punishment at 99 years of imprisonment. In the usual case, the more
    serious of the two crimes, the third-degree felony, is punishable by 10 years in prison
    at most. However, this is not the usual case.
    Here, the prosecution alleged that Wright had previously been convicted of
    two other felonies: aggravated assault and possession of a controlled substance.
    Wright pleaded true to these allegations, which made him a habitual offender. As a
    habitual offender, the range of punishment for the third-degree felony was increased.
    The minimum punishment was now 25 years and the maximum 99 years or life.
    After hearing the evidence on punishment, the jury assessed 99 years. The
    trial court rendered judgment consistent with the jury’s verdict, and we affirm.
    Under existing law, our court reaches the only result it can in this case. Any
    ostensible error that arguably could have supported reversal was neither preserved
    below nor raised on appeal. Nonetheless, I cannot in good conscience silently affirm
    the severe and disproportionate punishment imposed by the jury in this case, which
    could only have resulted from evidence the jury should not have heard, because this
    kind of punishment undermines the legitimacy of our criminal-justice system.
    Discussion
    Simone Weil, a French philosopher, once observed that “everything
    connected with the penal law should wear a solemn and consecrated aspect,” such
    that “the majesty of the law should make its presence felt by the court, the police,
    the accused, the guilty man—even when the case dealt with is of minor importance,
    2
    provided it entails a possible loss of liberty.” SIMONE WEIL, THE NEED FOR ROOTS:
    PRELUDE TO A DECLARATION OF DUTIES TOWARDS MANKIND 21 (Arthur Wills trans.,
    Routledge Classics 2002) (1949). Weil elaborated that punishments disproportionate
    to the crime are incompatible with genuine justice, and therefore beneath the majesty
    of the law, noting by way of illustration that a “scale of penalties which provides a
    much harsher punishment for ten acts of petty larceny than for one rape or certain
    types of murder” deprives a criminal-justice system of “anything that deserves the
    name of punishment.” Id. When a punishment is unjust for this or other reasons, it
    is not truly punishment worthy of a criminal-justice system. See id. at 22 (arguing
    that genuine punishment only occurs when the hardship it visits on a wrongdoer is
    accompanied “by a feeling of justice”); see also Gordon Goodman, The Ethics of
    Punishment, IN CHAMBERS: THE OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE TEXAS CENTER FOR
    THE JUDICIARY, Summer 2019, at 13–14 (discussing Weil’s philosophical views on
    punishment).
    Though Weil’s articulation of these ideas may be unfamiliar to American
    lawyers and judges, the ideas themselves are not. It is a maxim of our criminal law
    that the punishment should fit the crime. See Grunsfeld v. State, 
    843 S.W.3d 521
    ,
    544 (Tex. Crim. App. 1992) (Clinton, J., concurring) (characterizing principle that
    “the punishment should fit the crime” as a “self-evident maxim”). By prescribing a
    range of punishment for crimes, rather than a fixed punishment applicable in all
    3
    cases, the Legislature has “made it the jury’s job to assess the specific facts and
    circumstances of each case and determine where on the punishment scale the specific
    criminal act fits.” Sadler v. State, 
    977 S.W.2d 140
    , 142 (Tex. Crim. App. 1998).
    Under our law, it is equally axiomatic that the punishment should fit the
    criminal. See Grunsfeld, 843 S.W.3d at 544 (Clinton, J., concurring) (observing
    “courts have traditionally believed that the punishment should fit the criminal as
    well”). One expression of this axiom is the habitual-offender statute, which provides
    that the range of punishment for a felony, other than a state jail felony, shall be life
    or a term of not more than 99 years or less than 25 years when a defendant has
    already been finally convicted of two other felonies. TEX. PENAL CODE § 12.42(d).
    I have no quarrel with these general principles. But as this case illustrates,
    their application by juries in some cases can result in excessive punishment.
    Like virtually any defendant who qualifies as a habitual offender, Wright is
    not a sympathetic defendant. The jury found Wright guilty of evading arrest in a
    motor vehicle and theft. He first led police on a high-speed chase. After abandoning
    the motor vehicle in which he had initially fled, Wright then stole a riding
    lawnmower in a continued but fruitless effort to escape from law-enforcement
    officers. During the punishment phase of trial, he pleaded true to the enhancement
    allegations that he had previously been convicted of two other felonies: an
    aggravated assault and possession of a controlled substance, methamphetamine.
    4
    Consequently, the minimum punishment Wright was eligible to receive with respect
    to the evasion offense was 25 years of imprisonment. Id.
    The jury assessed Wright’s punishment at 99 years. Given the evidence at
    trial, it is not necessarily surprising that the jury did not opt for the minimum. As his
    own trial counsel acknowledged at the outset of the punishment phase, the jury was
    “not going to hear anything good about” Wright during this phase of the trial.
    Nevertheless, the jury’s imposition of a sentence of 99 years stands out like a
    sore thumb. Neither of the two crimes the jury found Wright guilty of committing
    are crimes of violence. Of the two prior felonies that served as the basis for the
    enhancement allegations, only one was a violent crime, the aggravated assault. That
    conviction resulted from a prior episode in which Wright fled from the police in a
    motor vehicle and attempted to force a police vehicle off the road by ramming it.
    Dangerous as that conduct may be, it is less egregious than many violent crimes.
    Other habitual offenders receive sentences far less severe under circumstances
    more egregious than the ones the jury confronted in this case. For example, in Henry
    v. State, a jury found the defendant guilty of the offense of evading arrest in a motor
    vehicle and using the vehicle as a deadly weapon. 
    509 S.W.3d 915
    , 916 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2016). The jury also found the enhancement allegations regarding two prior
    violent felony convictions, one for aggravated assault and another for aggravated
    5
    robbery, to be true. 
    Id.
     at 916–17. Even though the defendant was a habitual offender
    with convictions for violent crimes, the jury sentenced him to just 60 years. 
    Id.
    Similarly, in Lomax v. State, a jury found the defendant guilty of the offense
    of felony murder based on the death of a five-year-old girl, who died in an
    automobile accident the defendant caused by his drunken and reckless driving. 
    233 S.W.3d 302
    , 303 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007). Based on two unspecified prior felony
    convictions, the jury sentenced the defendant as a habitual offender. 
    Id.
     Even though
    the defendant killed a small child, the jury sentenced him to just 55 years. 
    Id.
    In the same vein, in Miller v. State, a jury found the defendant guilty of three
    offenses: evading arrest in a motor vehicle, unlawful possession of a firearm, and
    unlawful possession of body armor. 
    605 S.W.3d 877
    , 880 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st
    Dist.] 2020, pet. ref’d). The defendant led police on a high-speed chase in a vehicle
    he apparently stole at gunpoint. 
    Id.
     at 880–81. It was unlawful for him to possess a
    firearm or body armor because he was a felon. Id. at 879. He pleaded true to the
    allegation that he was a habitual offender, and one of his prior felony convictions
    was for the assault of a family or household member. Id. at 880, 882. These facts
    notwithstanding, the jury sentenced him to just 30 years. Id. at 882.
    I concede that no two criminal cases are exactly alike. Like unhappy families,
    each criminal case is unhappy in its own way. Punishment is necessarily a fact-bound
    determination, and the broad ranges of punishment in the Penal Code are intended
    6
    to allow juries to tailor the punishment to the circumstances of each case. Sadler,
    977 S.W.2d at 142–43. But a criminal-justice system in which Wright receives
    approximately four decades more punishment than either of the defendants in Henry
    and Lomax, and almost seven decades more punishment than the defendant in Miller,
    is so arbitrary and capricious that it calls the system’s credibility into doubt.
    In general, our system presumes punishments for habitual offenders at or near
    the statutory maximum are reserved for situations in which the evidence shows the
    defendant is especially incorrigible, unusually dangerous, or both. See, e.g., Drichas
    v. State, 
    175 S.W.3d 795
    , 796–97 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005) (jury found defendant
    guilty of evading arrest in a motor vehicle, which he used as a deadly weapon, and
    sentenced him to 99 years as a habitual offender with fourteen prior felony
    convictions); Jones v. State, 
    338 S.W.3d 725
    , 729–30 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st
    Dist.] 2011) (jury found defendant guilty of possession of a firearm by a felon and
    two drug-dealing offenses involving intent to deliver cocaine and ecstasy, and
    sentenced him to 99 years as a habitual offender with prior convictions for
    aggravated assault and arson), aff’d, 
    364 S.W.3d 854
     (Tex. Crim. App. 2011).
    While Wright is a habitual offender, and thus qualifies for a sentence
    somewhere between 25 years and 99 years or life, he hardly ranks among the worst.
    So, one must ask, why did the jury in this case throw the proverbial book at him?
    7
    The answer: during the punishment phase of trial, the jury heard two types of
    especially damning evidence it certainly should not have heard. Specifically, the jury
    heard conclusory testimony that Wright is a member of a violent white-supremacist
    criminal gang and testimony implicating him in the murder of his own sister.
    Some standards that might otherwise restrict the admissibility of evidence are
    relaxed to a significant degree during the punishment phase of a criminal trial. In
    particular, character evidence and evidence of extraneous crimes and bad acts,
    regardless of whether they resulted in a charge or conviction, are admissible. TEX.
    CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 37.07, § 3(a)(1). The lone restriction safeguarding a trial from
    unreliable evidence of this sort is that the extraneous crimes or bad acts must be
    proved beyond a reasonable doubt. Id. In this case, the restriction was thwarted.
    Let’s begin with the murder. A. Lowrie, who was a lieutenant with the Polk
    County Sheriff’s Department, testified about this extraneous crime. In 2013, a
    warrant was issued for Wright’s arrest in connection with the alleged aggravated
    assault of Wright’s girlfriend. Based on this warrant, Lowrie and other law-
    enforcement officers attempted to take Wright into custody. While testifying about
    their efforts to take him into custody and the vehicular pursuit that ensued when he
    tried to flee, Lowrie additionally testified, without objection, that Wright was also a
    “suspect in a homicide investigation” concerning the murder of his sister, who was
    shot twice in the head. This testimony was not inadvertent. Lowrie did not disclose
    8
    this information unsolicited. The prosecution intentionally introduced this evidence
    before the jury, asking Lowrie whether Wright was “also a suspect in a homicide
    investigation” after Lowrie had already testified about the unrelated warrant.
    However, the prosecution did not offer any evidence connecting Wright to
    this murder beyond the bare indication of suspicion. Indeed, the prosecution made
    no attempt to prove a connection. On the contrary, during its closing argument, the
    prosecution conceded it had not connected Wright to the murder beyond a reasonable
    doubt. As such, this extraneous crime was categorically inadmissible. See Haley v.
    State, 
    173 S.W.3d 510
    , 515 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005) (holding article 37.07, § 3(a)
    requires jury to be “satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the acts are attributable
    to the defendant” before the acts can be considered for purposes of punishment).
    Perhaps, in another situation, a belated acknowledgement by the prosecution
    that it had failed to prove an extraneous offense beyond a reasonable doubt might
    mitigate the harm. But the intentional injection of an unproved murder during the
    punishment phase in a trial for non-violent felonies places a skunk in the jury box
    that the jury cannot unsmell. See Walker v. State, 
    610 S.W.2d 481
    , 483–84 & n.6
    (Tex. Crim. App. [Panel Op.] 1980) (reversing 99-year sentence in murder
    prosecution due to injection of inadmissible, inflammatory evidence of extraneous
    crime and noting that jury cannot be successfully instructed not to smell a skunk).
    9
    Then there is the gang evidence. Two witnesses testified about Wright’s gang
    membership. Once again, the defense did not object to the testimony of either
    witness.
    First, Deputy R. Martel of the Liberty County Sheriff’s Office testified Wright
    is identified as a registered member of the Aryan Brotherhood in a state database
    called TX Gang. Martel described the Brotherhood as “a white pride, white national
    group that is really big in a lot of the prison systems” and that is involved in “a lot
    of violent crime and drug trafficking” outside of the prison systems. Common tattoos
    associated with Aryan Brotherhood membership include Nazi swastikas, SS
    emblems, and Hitler portraits. According to Martel, SS emblems in particular
    indicate “somebody that’s really, really embedded into that kind of gang activity.”
    Video evidence admitted during the guilt–innocence phase of trial showed
    that Wright, who is heavily tattooed, has a large swastika tattoo on or around the left
    side of his torso. After eliciting the testimony about Aryan Brotherhood tattoos, the
    prosecution asked, “So if he has a large swastika on his rib cage that would be
    consistent with somebody in the Aryan Brotherhood?” Martel replied, “Yes, or any
    other of the—the white gangs.” But the prosecution did not solicit any testimony
    from Martel explaining how he knew about the Aryan Brotherhood or its reputation
    for violent crime and drug trafficking. Nor did the prosecution elicit testimony about
    the reliability of the TX Gang database or Martel’s level of familiarity with it.
    10
    Second, Deputy M. Dubose of the Liberty County Sheriff’s Office testified
    that Wright is an active member of the Aryan Brotherhood. But once again, the
    prosecution did not solicit any testimony explaining how Dubose knew about gangs
    in general, the Aryan Brotherhood in particular, or Wright’s membership.
    It is well-understood that a defendant’s active membership in a group known
    for criminal activity is virtually always a relevant consideration in deciding an
    appropriate punishment. See Beham v. State, 
    559 S.W.3d 474
    , 479 (Tex. Crim. App.
    2018) (stating evidence a defendant is an active member of a gang that regularly
    engages in criminal activity “is almost always relevant for sentencing purposes”).
    Like any other testimony, however, facts about gangs, gang-related criminal
    activities, and one’s active participation in these activities cannot be conclusory or
    speculative. See 
    id. at 484
     (stating prosecution “must make some showing of the
    group’s violent or illegal activities” for membership to be relevant to sentencing).
    Nor is every law-enforcement officer competent to testify on these matters. See 
    id. at 477
     (noting that prosecution called “an experienced detective specializing in gang
    activity” to testify about gang crime and offer opinion based on photographs of
    defendant that he held himself out to the public as a member of some gang).
    Here, the evidence about both the Aryan Brotherhood’s activities and
    Wright’s membership depended on the unsupported assertions of two witnesses who
    11
    were not shown to have any experience or personal knowledge on these subjects.
    Without this foundation, this evidence was not admissible. See 
    id. at 477, 484
    .
    Like the testimony that Wright was a suspect in his own sister’s murder, the
    testimony that he was an active member of the Aryan Brotherhood was introduced
    for the purpose of establishing that he is the sort of especially incorrigible and
    unusually dangerous habitual offender whom the jury should punish severely.
    Presented with this evidence, the jury did just that, and it is hard to fault it for doing
    so. A member of a violent gang who poses a mortal threat to even his nearest kin is
    the sort of criminal who deserves a sentence at or near the statutory maximum.
    The problem is that the jury should not have heard the evidence about the
    murder and gang. Under well-settled law, our criminal-justice system requires us to
    ignore this circumstance because these issues were neither preserved below nor
    raised on appeal. But doing so results in the affirmance of a severe and
    disproportionate punishment based not on actual proof of the defendant’s penchant
    for extreme violence and unreformability but the mere suggestion of these
    characteristics. The affirmance of this kind of tainted verdict undermines the
    credibility of our criminal-justice system, credibility that it needs to serve the
    purposes for which it exists, and it diminishes the majesty of the law.
    12
    Conclusion
    With these additional thoughts, I reluctantly join the court’s opinion.
    Gordon Goodman
    Justice
    Panel consists of Justices Goodman, Landau, and Hightower.
    Justice Goodman, concurring.
    Publish. TEX. R. APP. P. 47.2(b).
    13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 01-23-00249-CR

Filed Date: 6/25/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/1/2024