Jacory Blue v. the State of Texas ( 2024 )


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  •                                      In The
    Court of Appeals
    Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont
    __________________
    NO. 09-23-00234-CR
    __________________
    JACORY BLUE, Appellant
    V.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
    __________________________________________________________________
    On Appeal from the Criminal District Court
    Jefferson County, Texas
    Trial Cause No. F21-36414
    __________________________________________________________________
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Ron Guillory died from a gunshot wound he received on November 16, 2020.
    A grand jury indicted Appellant Jacory Blue (Blue) for “intentionally and knowingly
    caus[ing] the death of an individual, namely: Ron Guillory, [] the Complainant, by
    shooting Complainant with a deadly weapon, to-wit: a firearm[.]”1 Blue pleaded “not
    1
    The State’s theory of prosecution, as evidenced by the jury charge, was that
    Blue and DeMarcus Powell were engaged in a criminal conspiracy to commit
    aggravated robbery against Guillory, and that in furtherance of that aggravated
    robbery, Powell committed the offense of murder by shooting Guillory with a
    1
    guilty,” and a jury found Blue guilty of murder and assessed punishment at twenty
    years of imprisonment. Blue timely filed a notice of appeal. In one issue, Blue
    challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the jury’s verdict. We affirm.
    Evidence at Trial
    Testimony of “Larry” 2
    “Larry” testified that on November 16, 2020, he received a text from a number
    that he did not recognize, and he conversed through text messages with someone he
    believed to be a female. According to Larry, she texted him a photograph of herself,
    and after they texted for a while, the texts turned sexual in nature. When he left work
    that night, she texted him, they agreed to meet at an apartment, and she agreed that
    she would have sex with him for $100. He drove to the apartment complex where
    she told him to meet at an apartment, and in the parking lot he became uneasy
    because of the surroundings. Despite feeling uneasy, he approached the second-floor
    apartment unit, and when he saw that the apartment had no lights, no blinds, and no
    sound coming from it, he became suspicious and started down the stairs to leave.
    firearm, and Blue should have reasonably anticipated the offense would result as a
    consequence of carrying out the conspiracy to commit the aggravated robbery. A
    trial court may charge the jury on the law of parties even though there is no such
    allegation in the indictment. See Marable v. State, 
    85 S.W.3d 287
    , 287 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2002) (“[I]t is well-settled that the law of parties need not be pled in the
    indictment.”).
    2
    “Larry” is a pseudonym. See Tex. Const. art. I, § 30(a)(1) (granting crime
    victims “the right to be treated with fairness and with respect for the victim’s dignity
    and privacy throughout the criminal justice process”).
    2
    Larry testified that when he was coming down the stairs, a man with a gorilla mask
    on his face put a gun to Larry’s head and made him get on the ground, and a man
    wearing a red bandana over his face ran up and started patting him down to see what
    he had in his pockets. The man in the gorilla mask threatened Larry if he moved and
    then took Larry’s phone. According to Larry, the man wearing the red bandana took
    Larry’s keys, and Larry lied and convinced them that they were his house keys and
    told them that he did not have a car there. The men also took $101 from Larry. When
    the men were distracted, Larry escaped and ran and hid in different spots around the
    apartments until he could make it to his car and call the police.
    Larry testified that he initially told the police that he was driving through the
    area and that two suspects jumped in front of his car and robbed him. According to
    Larry, he told police this initially because he was married, and he did not want
    anyone to know why he was going to the apartment. He later provided a second
    statement and told the police what had actually occurred. Larry testified that he was
    unable to identify the two men that robbed him because they had their faces covered,
    but the police recovered his money and phone and returned them to him. Larry
    identified a gorilla mask marked as State’s Exhibit 106 and a red bandana marked
    as State’s Exhibit 107 as items like the ones worn by the men who robbed him.
    3
    Testimony of “Brenda” 3
    “Brenda” testified that she lived in Apartment 336, a ground floor apartment
    at the Timberlake Courts apartment complex with her two young adult sons and
    fifteen-year-old daughter, and they were home at the time of the shooting on
    November 16, 2020. According to Brenda, she was lying on the sofa by the window
    in the living room by the front door, it was in “the middle of the night,” when she
    heard someone walking outside by the window stop and yell, “Get out of my face
    with that bull[#$&@].” Brenda testified she heard three or four gunshots outside the
    window and then “it got quiet after that.” According to Brenda she and her children
    were scared, and she called 911. Law enforcement arrived and talked to them at their
    apartment. A recording of the 911 call was played for the jury and admitted into
    evidence. According to Brenda, her children told her the voice they heard outside
    the window that night sounded like Blue’s voice. Brenda identified Blue at trial as
    someone who “was always at that apartment on top in the corner[]” of the same
    apartment complex. Brenda testified that the police went that night to the apartment
    where Blue had been staying.
    According to Brenda, two or three days before the shooting she was cleaning
    and noticed that the Smith & Wesson nine-millimeter gun that she kept in a box on
    her closet shelf was missing. Brenda testified that the gun was “brand new[,]” had
    3
    “Brenda” is a pseudonym. See Tex. Const. art. I, § 30(a)(1).
    4
    bullets loaded in the gun’s magazine, she had never used the gun, and she had
    purchased it from Academy. An Academy receipt from the purchase of the gun was
    admitted into evidence, and Brenda testified that the serial number on the receipt for
    the gun matched the serial number of the gun admitted into evidence as State’s
    Exhibit 2.
    According to Brenda, when she discovered the gun was missing, she asked
    her children about it and “they didn’t say anything.” Brenda testified that after the
    shooting, her oldest son, Charles, told her that prior to the shooting he had taken her
    gun outside for safety because “robbing was going on[,]” and DeMarcus Powell took
    the gun from him and told him that if he told anyone in the house about it that Powell
    would kill everyone in Charles’s home.
    Testimony of “Charles”4
    “Charles,” Brenda’s son, testified he was staying at his mother’s two-bedroom
    apartment on the night of the shooting, and he was staying in the first bedroom which
    was closest to the sidewalk, and his bedroom window faced the sidewalk. According
    to Charles, around midnight on the night of the shooting, he was in bed. He testified
    he heard Blue outside his window aggressively say, “Get that #&$@ out of my
    face[,]” and then Charles heard gunshots. At trial, Charles identified Blue as the
    defendant, and he explained that he had recognized Blue’s voice on the night of the
    4
    “Charles” is a pseudonym. See Tex. Const. art. I, § 30(a)(1).
    5
    shooting because over the month or two that Charles had been staying at his mother’s
    apartment, he passed Blue and Powell on a regular basis when they were “hanging
    out” in the stairwell near his mother’s apartment, where he occasionally spoke to
    them. Charles testified that after he heard the gunshots, he turned his lights off, got
    down on the ground, told his mother to call 911, and while she was talking to 911,
    he told her that it sounded like Blue’s and Powell’s voices were outside the window.
    According to Charles, when his mother was at work, he put his mother’s gun
    in his closet because he did not trust the area and he felt he needed to protect his
    little sister and little brother. When police initially questioned Charles about his
    mother’s missing gun, he did not tell the police who took the gun, and instead he
    told them someone knocked on his door and he went outside to see who it was, and
    someone took the gun when he left the gun on the back of his car.
    Charles testified that subsequently he told the police what really happened to
    the gun, and that that the gun had been stolen by Powell. When Charles corrected
    his statement to the police about the gun, according to Charles, he told the police
    that someone “knocked on [his] door banging and just took off[,]” and to protect
    himself because the neighborhood was dangerous, he put his mother’s unloaded gun
    in one of his pockets and the magazine for the gun in the other pocket, and he stepped
    outside. He saw Powell sitting outside and asked him if he had seen anyone knock
    on the door, and Powell said, “No.” He spoke with Powell for a few minutes and had
    6
    his hand in his pocket on the gun because he “already d[id]n’t trust the area[.]”
    Powell asked him what was in his pocket, told him to “[p]ull it out right now.”
    Powell then pulled out his own gun from his own pocket, and Powell told Charles to
    give him the gun. After Powell got the gun, he asked Charles for the magazine, which
    Charles gave him. Then (according to Charles) Powell said: “If you tell anybody I
    took this, I’m going to come kill y’all.”
    Testimony of “Michelle” 5
    “Michelle,” Charles’s sister and Brenda’s daughter, testified that on the night
    of the shooting she was sixteen years old and had just finished washing dishes in the
    kitchen. She heard who she thought was Powell outside say, “get the f[#$&] out of
    my face with that bull[#$&@][,]” and she heard about eight gunshots outside her
    brother’s window. She was scared, her brother came out of his room, and their
    mother told them to get down because she did not want them to get hurt. Michelle
    testified that she peeked out the window when the police arrived and saw crime scene
    tape and the police. According to Michelle, she remembered that the police knocked
    on the door and checked on her family, and the next morning law enforcement called,
    and she went to talk to them. Michelle testified that she told law enforcement initially
    that she thought the voice she had heard outside was Blue’s and not Powell’s.
    5
    “Michelle” is a pseudonym. See Tex. Const. art. I, § 30(a)(1).
    7
    Testimony of Officer Bryan Martin
    Officer Bryan Martin with the Beaumont Police Department testified that he
    was dispatched to the apartment complex in response to a report that shots had been
    fired. He arrived right after midnight and discovered that Ron Guillory was deceased
    in the parking lot, and that Guillory had been shot. Officer Martin found a small
    revolver, shell casings, and a cell phone next to Guillory’s body. According to
    Officer Martin, he spoke with the occupants of Apartment 336, who had called 911.
    The occupants told Martin that they believed based on the voices and subsequent
    gunshots they heard that the individuals involved were right outside their door, but
    Officer Martin testified that “[g]unshots can be loud, and in that courtyard it can
    echo fairly well.” According to Officer Martin, none of the occupants in Apartment
    336 initially reported that the person’s voice they heard was Blue. Officer Martin
    testified that while he was investigating at the scene, he learned through dispatch
    that a man had been robbed at the same complex a few minutes before by two people,
    one wearing a gorilla mask and the other a red bandana, but Martin did not know
    whether the robbery was related to the shooting. While Officer Martin was providing
    security at the scene, other officers followed a trail of blood police found on the
    scene while another officer went to speak with the victim of the robbery, whose
    phone was still “pinging” its location to the apartment complex. The video recording
    8
    from Officer Martin’s body camera from that night was admitted into evidence and
    published to the jury.
    Testimony of Officer Joshua Beard
    Officer Joshua Beard with the Beaumont Police Department testified that he
    was dispatched to the Timberlake Courts Apartments on the night of the shooting.
    He observed Guillory’s body with multiple gunshot wounds to the upper torso,
    including one gunshot wound to the center chest. A cell phone, nine-millimeter shell
    casings, and a small derringer gun were found near the victim’s body, and the body
    was outside near a breezeway and sidewalk. According to Officer Beard, a derringer
    is a revolver, and any rounds fired on it would remain inside the derringer cylinder.
    Officer Beard testified that he noticed a trail of fresh blood that he did not believe
    came from Guillory, which appeared to be directed away from the body rather than
    toward where the victim had fallen. Officer Beard testified that, based on his
    experience, he believed the pattern of the blood indicated that the person who was
    bleeding had moved away from the victim’s body. Officer Beard testified that he
    believed, based on the nine-millimeter shell casings found near the body and the
    blood trail leading away from the body, that the shooter might still be armed with a
    gun and could need emergency treatment. According to Officer Beard, he followed
    the blood trail into the courtyard of the complex, to the opposite breezeway, and up
    the stairs where the trail of blood ended at the door of apartment 440. Officer Beard
    9
    testified that during this time he received information that an individual had been
    robbed earlier near the complex and that one of the suspects had worn a gorilla mask
    and the other suspect had worn a red bandana. A video recording of Officer Beard’s
    body camera from that night was admitted into evidence and published to the jury.
    According to Officer Beard, Powell came out of apartment 440, and when
    Beard asked if anyone else was inside, Powell stated that only he and his girlfriend
    were inside. Powell’s girlfriend, Zoey, exited the apartment, and, from the outside
    of the apartment, Officer Beard looked for people inside the apartment and noticed
    a gorilla mask inside the apartment on the floor. Officer Beard testified that the
    gorilla mask he saw inside the apartment looked like State’s Exhibit 106. Officer
    Beard explained that when he saw the mask on the night the shooting occurred, he
    then had reason to believe that the previously reported robbery in the apartment
    complex was related to the shooting. Although Powell initially told Officer Beard
    that only he and his girlfriend were at the apartment, Mia Moore and Jacory Blue,
    who were inside apartment 440, also came out of the apartment, according to Officer
    Beard. Officer Beard testified that when he saw Blue that night, Blue had blood on
    his face. At trial, Beard identified Blue as the defendant.
    Testimony of Mia Moore
    Mia Moore testified that on the night of the shooting she was either sixteen or
    seventeen years old. According to Moore, at the time of the shooting she was dating
    10
    Blue and had met him through a dating app. Moore testified that on the night of the
    shooting, she went to Blue’s apartment in the Timberlake apartment complex around
    10:30 p.m. Moore testified that Blue typically stayed in the bedroom at the back of
    the one-bedroom apartment and that other people normally stayed towards the front
    of the apartment, but she did not know them, and she would usually stay in the back
    of the apartment with Blue.
    Moore testified that on the night of the shooting, Blue arrived at the apartment
    a couple of minutes after she did. Blue and Powell arrived and talked to her about
    “getting weed[]” and Blue left the bedroom where Moore was and then returned and
    handed her his phone and asked her to tell the person on the phone to be at a specific
    location at the apartment complex. Although Moore did not know the person on the
    phone and only gave the location and did not specifically talk about weed, she
    testified that Blue was supposed to meet the person to get the weed and then go to
    the store. Moore testified she was intoxicated and high that night, and that she was
    “not really paying attention to [Blue and Powell.]”
    According to Moore, Blue and Powell left the apartment, and within ten
    minutes of them leaving, she heard three gunshots outside, and seconds later Powell
    came running into the bedroom startled. Moore testified that Blue came running into
    the bedroom a few seconds later and said, “I’ve been shot.” Moore did not recall that
    either one of them were holding a weapon or holding or wearing a mask. But Moore
    11
    testified that she did remember seeing a gorilla mask on the floor of the apartment.
    She also testified she never saw Blue with a red bandana. According to Moore, Blue
    had been shot in the mouth, there “was blood everywhere[,]” and he went into the
    bathroom and fell on the floor. Moore testified that while she was leaning over Blue
    in the bathroom asking him if he was okay, Powell admitted to killing someone and
    said, “You better not tell nobody I took that body for you.” Moore explained that
    when she suggested calling the police “[e]verybody just looked appalled and . . .
    shocked.” And she said that when she was consoling Blue in the bathroom, Powell
    stepped out of the bathroom, and she did not know what he was doing. According to
    Moore, the police then knocked at the door, and everyone went to the bedroom and
    pretended to be sleeping. Moore testified that Powell answered the door after the
    police knocked over twenty times and announced that they were going to open the
    door. Moore testified that law enforcement escorted Powell and his girlfriend out,
    Blue exited, and then Moore.
    According to Moore, after that night she never contacted Blue to talk about
    the incident. Moore testified that she never saw Blue or Powell with a weapon.
    Moore said she later learned through police that a gun was found in the apartment.
    Testimony of Zoey Tate
    Zoey Tate testified that on November 16, 2020, she was probably seventeen
    years old and that she had been dating Powell for about three or four months.
    12
    According to Tate, she lived with her grandmother, and she would often go to
    Powell’s apartment where he lived with Blue and where the police came the night
    of the shooting occurred. Although she testified that she only knew Blue from the
    apartment and did not know him well, she identified him at trial. Tate testified that
    Powell was not friends with Blue and “didn’t like him” and only talked to him from
    time to time even though Powell and Blue stayed in the apartment together.
    Tate testified that she arrived at the apartment on the night of the shooting
    about 5 or 6 p.m., and she fell asleep there after taking a Xanax. She heard police at
    the door and went back to sleep. The police were banging on the apartment door,
    and she woke up again and she and Powell exited the apartment. Tate testified that
    Powell was arrested but she was not. She saw Powell a day or two later, when she
    bonded him out of jail, and he left the jail with her. According to Tate, she and
    Powell had items back at Powell’s apartment they needed to get, so they returned to
    Powell’s apartment to retrieve their belongings, but she did not see what Powell
    retrieved and did not see him with any type of weapon. Tate testified that prior to
    the shooting she had seen Powell a couple of times with a gun, but she did not know
    what kind of gun it was because she was not familiar with guns.
    Tate testified that she and Powell went to her grandmother’s house where they
    sat in the car most of the night, and Powell told Tate that he was upset that Blue had
    asked to borrow Powell’s gun and that instead of letting him borrow his gun, Powell
    13
    went with Blue to rob a man. Tate testified that Powell told her that when he and
    Blue met up with the man they had planned on robbing, the man started shooting at
    them and Powell admitted he shot and killed the man they were robbing after the
    man shot Blue. According to Tate, Powell did not tell her what he did with the gun,
    and she did not know where the gun was, but she later learned that Powell had left
    the gun at Tate’s grandmother’s house. Tate testified that on the day Powell went to
    talk to the detectives about getting his phone back, Tate’s grandmother found the
    gun when she went in Tate’s room after Powell had stayed there the night before,
    and Tate’s grandmother was concerned because Powell had just gotten out of jail.
    Tate testified that her grandmother took the gun she found to Tate’s great-
    grandmother’s residence. Tate believed the gun was Powell’s because she had seen
    Powell with a gun before, neither she nor her grandmother had a gun, and the only
    other person that had been in Tate’s room was Powell.
    Testimony of Michelle Ceja
    Michelle Ceja, a crime scene technician with the Beaumont Police
    Department, testified that she was dispatched to the scene on the night of the
    shooting. According to Ceja, when she arrived, she spoke with the officers and
    detectives about any potential evidence, and she was directed to the deceased. Ceja
    testified that she took photographs of the deceased and other evidence at the scene
    to document what was there. Ceja testified that a small .22 caliber derringer pistol
    14
    was found next to the victim. Ceja testified that she observed the deceased had five
    gunshot wounds. Ceja explained that she marked the locations of and photographed
    shell casings near the victim, and she identified two other casings that were found
    further away from the victim’s body as State’s Exhibits 235 and 236. Ceja testified
    she collected the shell casings from the scene, and she identified the shell casings at
    trial as State’s Exhibits 232 through 234. At trial, she identified the gun found near
    Guillory as State’s Exhibit 105-A, the chamber from the gun as State’s Exhibit 105-
    B, the live rounds removed from the gun as State’s Exhibit 105-C, and the items
    were admitted into evidence. Ceja testified that she documented and photographed
    items on the deceased’s person and that those items were condoms, lubricant, a $100
    bill and several $1 bills, a credit or debit card, and a cell phone. She also documented
    and photographed a trail of what appeared to be blood on the same breezeway of the
    deceased, she observed more blood along the opposite breezeway from the victim,
    and that the blood spots continued up the stairs and to the second-floor apartment,
    apartment 440. Photographs of the blood trail were admitted into evidence.
    Ceja testified that later that night she photographed Blue at the Beaumont
    police station, and those photographs were admitted into evidence and published to
    the jury. According to Ceja, the photographs depicted Blue with blood on his face,
    teeth missing, and an open wound on his face. She testified that she also documented
    what appeared to be blood on Blue’s hands.
    15
    Testimony of Chris Davis
    Chris Davis, a crime scene supervisor with the Beaumont Police Department,
    testified that he responded to the crime scene on November 16, 2020, at about 2 a.m.
    According to Davis, when he arrived at the scene, Ceja had already started
    photographing and marking evidence with cones, so Davis said he walked the scene
    and videotaped the area. He explained that he also assisted other detectives with
    executing a search warrant later that morning at apartment 440 and that he took
    photographs and documented the evidence that he collected when he executed the
    warrant.
    Davis identified State’s Exhibit 106 as a gorilla mask and State’s Exhibit 283
    as a red bandana, both items he observed and photographed inside apartment 440,
    and Davis stated the items were collected from the apartment. According to Davis,
    he also photographed a Kahr MK9 nine-millimeter pistol with a serial number
    GC2799 with two live rounds inside that was found underneath a chair cushion and
    two cell phones found in the apartment, which were all collected as evidence. At
    trial, he identified State’s Exhibit 315 as the Kahr nine-millimeter pistol he collected
    from the apartment that was taken to the crime lab. Davis testified that he
    photographed possible blood spots in the apartment, as well as money and a jar with
    a green leafy substance found inside the apartment.
    16
    According to Davis, a few days later, on November 18, 2020, he was called
    in this case to meet Detective Spikes to photograph and retrieve a gun at a different
    location, Apartment 112 at 2250 West Virginia. Davis testified he photographed a
    Smith & Wesson SD9VE firearm with serial number FCK3518 and that he identified
    State’s Exhibit 2 as that firearm. He also photographed the rounds that were inside
    the firearm’s magazine. Davis testified he transported the firearm to the Crime Lab
    that same day.
    Testimony of Detective Phillip Smith
    Detective Phillip Smith with the Beaumont Police Department testified that
    during his work on Blue’s case, he picked up a bullet from the morgue, which had
    been removed from Guillory’s body during the autopsy. Detective Smith testified
    that he transported the bullet to the Jefferson County Crime Lab. State’s Exhibit 342,
    the bullet that the detective identified as the bullet he picked up and took to the Crime
    Lab, was admitted into evidence. According to Detective Smith, he also assisted in
    preparing and executing a search warrant for apartment 440 at the Timberlake Courts
    apartment complex, and he was present when a weapon was found inside apartment
    440 underneath a couch cushion, and he was present when a phone was found during
    the search of the apartment in the same room.
    17
    Testimony of Hunter Jones
    Hunter Jones, a forensic scientist, firearms examiner, and ballistics expert
    with the Jefferson County Crime Lab, testified that on November 16, 2020, the
    Crime Lab received evidence in Blue’s case, and that he examined those items that
    day. Jones testified that as part of Blue’s case he analyzed Exhibits 232 through 236,
    which were fired cartridge casings from the crime scene. According to Jones, he was
    tasked with comparing the casings with each other and with two firearms, State’s
    Exhibits 2 and 315, that were also submitted to the lab. Jones testified that he
    determined that all the shell casings were excluded from being fired from Exhibit
    315, a Karh’s MK9 firearm. He testified that he determined that the shell casings
    identified as Exhibits 232, 233, and 234 were fired from Exhibit 2, a Smith &
    Wesson. He also determined that State’s Exhibit 342, the bullet from Guillory’s
    autopsy, had been fired from State’s Exhibit 2, the Smith & Wesson firearm. He
    concluded that the shell casings admitted as 235 and 236 were fired from the same
    firearm, but not from State’s Exhibits 2 or 315. According to Jones, he detected
    possible blood on the slide of the Karh firearm, State’s Exhibit 315, and swabbed it
    and sealed the swab as State’s Exhibit 343 for testing by the serology section of the
    crime lab. State’s Exhibit 343 was admitted into evidence.
    18
    Testimony of Steven Mayes
    Steven Mayes, a forensic scientist with the Jefferson County Regional Crime
    Lab, testified that he analyzed State’s Exhibit 343, the swab taken from the slide of
    the Karh firearm, for potential blood. He testified that the swab tested positive for
    blood on the presumptive and confirmatory tests he conducted. According to Mayes,
    his lab does not test blood for DNA, so once he confirmed the swab was blood, the
    Crime Lab sent the swab to the DPS lab in Houston for DNA testing on November
    29, 2020. Mayes testified that later, on January 22, 2021, Detective Timothy Spikes
    with the Beaumont Police Department delivered State’s Exhibit 345 to the crime lab,
    an exhibit that contained buccal swabs from the inside of Blue’s cheek. Mayes
    explained that he submitted that DNA sample to the DPS for testing.
    Testimony of Timothy Spikes
    Officer Timothy Spikes, a detective with the Beaumont Police Department at
    the time of the murder but a patrol officer for the same department at the time of
    trial, testified that he responded to the scene and was assigned as lead detective.
    Officer Spikes testified that DeMarcus Powell admitted that he shot the victim in
    this case. Officer Spikes testified that he also obtained a search warrant in January
    of 2021 for a buccal swab on Jacory Blue, whom he identified at trial as the
    defendant. Officer Spikes testified that the purpose of the warrant was to obtain
    Blue’s DNA to compare it to items at the crime scene. According to Officer Spikes,
    19
    he obtained two buccal swabs from the inside of Blue’s mouth, and Officer Spikes
    identified those swabs as State’s Exhibit 345. Officer Spikes testified that he secured
    the buccal swabs in a sealed envelope and submitted them for testing to the Jefferson
    County Crime Lab.
    Testimony of Mary Ralston
    Mary Ralston, a forensic scientist for the Texas Department of Public Safety
    Crime Laboratory in Houston, identified State’s Exhibit 343 as an envelope
    containing a general swab which is marked “swab from slide.” The swab inside has
    a light-red brown stain, and the material on the swab had already been confirmed as
    blood by another laboratory before it was sent to the DPS Crime Lab in Houston.
    According to Ralston, on December 8, 2020, she began her analysis on the blood
    swab, and she submitted a portion of the swab for DNA testing. She identified State’s
    Exhibit 345 as an envelope with Blue’s buccal swabs and testified the exhibit was
    received by her lab on January 29, 2021. According to Ralston she began her analysis
    on the material in Exhibit 345 on February 2, 2021, when she submitted a portion of
    a swab in the exhibit for DNA testing.
    Testimony of Kerri Todd
    Kerri Todd, a forensic scientist for the Texas Department of Public Safety,
    testified that she compared the DNA extract from the swab of the slide (State’s
    20
    Exhibit 343) with the DNA extract of the buccal swab from Jacory Blue. As to her
    findings, she testified as follows:
    For the DNA extract from the slide - - from the swab of the slide
    from the crime scene, the result was that the previously obtained DNA
    profile from this item is interpreted as a mixture of three individuals.
    The probability of obtaining this mixture profile if the DNA came from
    Jacory Blue and two unrelated unknown individuals is 29 septillion
    times greater than the probability of obtaining a profile if the DNA
    came from three unrelated, unknown individuals.
    This likelihood ratio indicates support for the proposition that
    Jacory Blue is a possible contributor to the profile.
    Todd testified that Blue could not be excluded as a contributor of the blood from the
    swab of the slide.
    Testimony of Dr. Amy Murphy
    Dr. Amy Murphy, who performed Ron Guillory’s autopsy on November 19,
    2020, testified through Zoom. Dr. Murphy testified that at the time of trial she was
    working out of town. According to Dr. Murphy, Guillory suffered from five gunshot
    wounds, his cause of death was “penetrating and perforating gunshot wounds of the
    torso[,]” and his manner of death was a homicide. Photographs and Dr. Murphy’s
    report from the autopsy were admitted into evidence.
    Testimony of Guillory’s Sister
    Guillory’s sister identified her brother, Ron Guillory, as the murder victim.
    21
    Challenge to the Sufficiency of the Evidence
    On appeal, Appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support his
    conviction. Appellant argues that the evidence clearly established that Powell, and
    not Appellant, shot Guillory and that Guillory’s cause of death was from gunshot
    wounds inflicted by Powell. According to Appellant, the record is insufficient to
    support that he was a party to the offense or that he participated in any act with an
    anticipation that Guillory’s death would occur. Appellant also argues that he had no
    specific intent to kill Guillory, and that the evidence established that he did not know
    Guillory had been shot “until the actual killer Powell told him that he ‘took a body
    for [him,]’” and that Blue’s conviction “rests entirely upon speculation[.]”
    We review the sufficiency of the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    verdict to determine whether a rational fact-finder could have found the essential
    elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979); Hooper v. State, 
    214 S.W.3d 9
    , 13 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007). We
    give deference to the fact-finder’s responsibility to fairly resolve conflicts in the
    testimony, to weigh the evidence, and to draw reasonable inferences from basic facts
    to ultimate facts. Hooper, 
    214 S.W.3d at 13
    . If the record contains conflicting
    inferences, we must presume that the fact-finder resolved such conflicts in favor of
    the verdict and defer to that resolution. Brooks v. State, 
    323 S.W.3d 893
    , 899 n.13
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2010); Clayton v. State, 
    235 S.W.3d 772
    , 778 (Tex. Crim. App.
    22
    2007). While a jury is permitted to draw reasonable inferences from the evidence, it
    is not permitted to draw conclusions based on speculation or factually unsupported
    inferences or presumptions. See Hooper, 
    214 S.W.3d at 15
    . The jury as fact-finder
    is the sole judge of the weight of the evidence and credibility of the witnesses, and
    it may believe all, some, or none of the testimony presented by the parties. See Febus
    v. State, 
    542 S.W.3d 568
    , 572 (Tex. Crim. App. 2018); Heiselbetz v. State, 
    906 S.W.2d 500
    , 504 (Tex. Crim. App. 1995).
    We also “‘determine whether the necessary inferences are reasonable based
    upon the combined and cumulative force of all the evidence when viewed in the light
    most favorable to the verdict.’” Clayton, 
    235 S.W.3d at 778
     (quoting Hooper, 
    214 S.W.3d at 16-17
    ). “Direct and circumstantial evidence are treated equally:
    ‘Circumstantial evidence is as probative as direct evidence in establishing the guilt
    of an actor, and circumstantial evidence alone can be sufficient to establish guilt.’”
    
    Id.
     (quoting Hooper, 
    214 S.W.3d at 13
    ). Each fact need not point directly and
    independently to the guilt of the defendant, as long as the cumulative force of all the
    incriminating circumstances is sufficient to support the conviction. Temple v. State,
    
    390 S.W.3d 341
    , 359-60 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013); Hooper, 
    214 S.W.3d at 13
    ;
    Johnson v. State, 
    871 S.W.2d 183
    , 186 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993).
    A person commits murder if he “intentionally or knowingly causes the death
    of an individual[.]” 
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.02
    (b)(1). “Murder is a ‘result of
    23
    conduct’ offense, which means that the culpable mental state relates to the result of
    the conduct, i.e., the causing of the death.” Schroeder v. State, 
    123 S.W.3d 398
    , 400
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2003). A person acts intentionally with respect to a result of his
    conduct when it is his conscious objective or desire to engage in the conduct or cause
    the result. 
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 6.03
    (a). A person acts knowingly with respect to
    a result of his conduct when he is aware that his conduct is reasonably certain to
    cause the result. 
    Id.
     § 6.03(b). Under the law of parties, “[a] person is criminally
    responsible as a party to an offense if the offense is committed by his own conduct,
    by the conduct of another for which he is criminally responsible, or by both.” Id.
    § 7.01(a); Adames v. State, 
    353 S.W.3d 854
    , 862 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011).
    Culpability under the law of parties does not distinguish between principals or
    accomplices. See 
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 7.01
    (c). A person is criminally responsible
    for an offense committed by the conduct of another if “acting with the intent to
    promote or assist the commission of the offense, he solicits, encourages, directs,
    aids, or attempts to aid the other person to commit the offense[.]” 
    Id.
     § 7.02(a)(2);
    Adames, 
    353 S.W.3d at 862
    .
    “‘Evidence is sufficient to convict under the law of parties where the
    defendant is physically present at the commission of the offense and encourages its
    commission by words or other agreement.’” Salinas v. State, 
    163 S.W.3d 734
    , 739
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2005) (quoting Ransom v. State, 
    920 S.W.2d 288
    , 302 (Tex. Crim.
    
    24 App. 1994
    )). Party participation may be shown by events occurring before, during,
    and after the commission of the offense, and may be demonstrated by actions
    showing an understanding and common design to do the prohibited act. 
    Id.
     at 739-
    40.
    The jury charge instructed the jury that, in order to find Blue guilty, the jury
    must agree on the following elements beyond a reasonable doubt:
    . . . that Defendant, Jacory Blue engaged in an attempt to carry out a
    conspiracy with Demarcus Powell to commit Aggravated Robbery; and
    in that conspiracy attempt Demarcus Powell committed Murder, by
    intentionally or knowingly causing the death of Ron Guillory, by
    shooting Ron Guillory with a deadly weapon, to-wit: a firearm; and the
    Murder was committed in furtherance of the said conspiracy to commit
    Aggravated Robbery; and the Defendant, though having no intent to
    commit Murder, should have anticipated that the Murder would result
    from carrying out the conspiracy to commit Aggravated Robbery[.]
    A criminal conspiracy arises when multiple people agree to commit an offense
    and “one or more of them performs an overt act in pursuance of the agreement.” 
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 15.02
    (a)(2). The Texas Penal Code also provides that
    If, in the attempt to carry out a conspiracy to commit one felony,
    another felony is committed by one of the conspirators, all conspirators
    are guilty of the offense actually committed, though having no intent to
    commit it, if the offense was committed in furtherance of the unlawful
    purpose and was one that should have been anticipated as a result of the
    carrying out of the conspiracy.
    
    Id.
     § 7.02(b).
    For a defendant to be found guilty as a party to the secondary offense (here,
    murder), the jury must determine that the secondary offense was committed in
    25
    furtherance of the unlawful purpose of the conspiracy (here, aggravated robbery)
    and was one that the co-conspirators should have anticipated as a potential result of
    carrying out that conspiracy. Anderson v. State, 
    416 S.W.3d 884
    , 889 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2013) (finding that the question before an appellate court is whether it was
    rational for the jury to infer that the accused should have anticipated that the
    secondary offense would occur as a result of the primary offense). The State is not
    required to prove that the defendant actually anticipated the commission of the
    secondary offense, “only that the crime is one that should have been anticipated.”
    
    Id.
     (emphasis in original). So, if in the attempt to carry out a conspiracy to commit
    one felony, another felony is committed by one of the conspirators, all conspirators
    are guilty of the felony actually committed, though having no intent to commit it, if
    the offense was committed in furtherance of the unlawful purpose and was one that
    should have been anticipated as a result of the carrying out of the conspiracy. 
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 7.02
    (b); Garcia v. State, No. 05-22-00526-CR, 
    2023 Tex. App. LEXIS 5429
    , at **4-16 (Tex. App.—Dallas, July 25, 2023, no pet.) (mem. op., not
    designated for publication).
    A person commits the offense of robbery if, in the course of committing theft,
    and with intent to obtain and maintain control the property of another, he either (1)
    intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly causes bodily injury to another, or (2)
    intentionally or knowingly threatens or places another in fear of imminent bodily
    26
    injury or death. 
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 29.02
    (a)(1), (a)(2). A person commits the
    offense of aggravated robbery if he commits the offense of robbery, and he uses or
    exhibits a deadly weapon in the course of committing that offense. 
    Id.
     § 29.03(a)(2).
    A deadly weapon is defined as “a firearm or anything manifestly designed, made, or
    adapted for the purpose of inflicting death or serious bodily injury[.]” Id.
    § 1.07(a)(17)(A).
    On this record, the jury could have reasonably inferred that Guillory was lured
    to the complex by Blue and Powell so they could commit an aggravated robbery of
    Guillory. The robbery scheme was similar to what Larry described when he was
    lured to the apartments and then robbed by a man in a gorilla mask and a man with
    a bandana, that same night. The jury heard Larry’s testimony describing the robbery.
    The jury also heard Moore’s testimony that on the night of Guillory’s murder she
    saw a gorilla mask on the floor of the apartment where Powell and Blue were staying
    at Timberlake Courts, and photographs were introduced into evidence showing a
    gorilla mask on the floor of the apartment where Powell and Blue lived. The jury
    could have reasonably inferred from the evidence that Powell and Blue were armed
    and planned to rob Guillory, just like they had robbed Larry, and when they
    attempted to do so, Guillory pulled his own gun (a derringer) to defend himself.
    Testimony from Brenda, Charles, and Michelle confirmed that they heard Blue tell
    someone at the time of the shooting to get the gun out of Blue’s face, and the
    27
    evidence showed that Guillory shot Blue in the face, and Powell shot Guillory. The
    jury heard Tate’s testimony that Powell hid a gun at her grandmother’s house and
    heard testimony that the gun had the same serial number as the gun Powell had stolen
    from Charles. The jury heard testimony that another weapon was found in a chair
    cushion after the shooting in the apartment where Powell and Blue were staying. The
    jury heard evidence that Powell and Blue ran back to the apartment and pretended
    to be asleep after the shooting until police knocked on the apartment door, and the
    jury heard Blue’s girlfriend testify that Powell and Blue did not want her to call the
    police after Blue was injured. The jury heard evidence that Powell admitted to
    shooting Guillory during the attempted robbery.
    Evidence that a defendant knew his co-conspirator might use a gun during a
    robbery can be sufficient to demonstrate that the defendant should have anticipated
    the possibility of a murder occurring during the course of the robbery. See Fisher v.
    State, No. 09-11-00379-CR, 
    2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 9218
    , at **39-40 (Tex. App.—
    Beaumont Nov. 7, 2012, no pet.) (mem. op., not designated for publication) (citing
    Love v. State, 
    199 S.W.3d 447
    , 453 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2006, pet.
    ref’d); Longoria v. State, 
    154 S.W.3d 747
    , 757 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
    2004, pet. ref’d) (holding appellant’s providing his associate with a gun for use in
    the robbery was sufficient to support the jury’s conclusion that victim’s death should
    have been anticipated as a result of the robbery)); see also Fuller v. State, 827
    
    28 S.W.2d 919
    , 932 (Tex. Crim. App. 1992) (holding that murder should have been
    anticipated as a possible result of a robbery when, although appellant denied
    participating in any brutality against decedent, he admitted to having a pocketknife
    with him at the time of entry and that one of his cohorts usually would have had a
    knife in that situation); Green v. State, 
    682 S.W.2d 271
    , 285-86 (Tex. Crim. App.
    1984) (murder should have been anticipated as a possible result of a robbery when
    appellant admitted entering the house armed with a gun); Smith v. State, 
    187 S.W.3d 186
    , 190-92 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2006, pet. ref’d) (there was sufficient evidence
    to support capital murder conviction under law of the parties when appellant
    participated in robbery but was not the shooter).
    Even if Blue did not intend for Powell to shoot Guillory during the robbery, a
    reasonable jury could have concluded that Blue should have anticipated that a
    murder was possible. The jury heard testimony that allowed them to reasonably
    conclude that because Powell and Blue were each armed with a firearm when they
    attempted to rob Guillory indicated that Blue was aware of the dangerousness of the
    robbery. Based on the evidence, the jury could have reasonably concluded that Blue
    anticipated, or should have anticipated, the possibility that Powell may shoot
    Guillory during the course of the robbery. See 
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 7.02
    (b);
    Anderson, 
    416 S.W.3d at 888-89
    ; Fisher, 
    2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 9218
    , at **35-40;
    Love, 
    199 S.W.3d at 453
    .
    29
    Blue aided or attempted to aid Powell in the commission of the offense of
    aggravated robbery, and he is also criminally responsible as a party to the offense of
    murder because, his co-conspirator, Powell, intentionally or knowingly caused
    Guillory’s death in furtherance of the aggravated robbery and the murder was a result
    that Blue should have anticipated as a consequence of carrying out the conspiracy to
    commit the offense of aggravated robbery. Viewing all the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the jury’s verdict, we conclude that the evidence is sufficient to support
    Blue’s conviction under section 7.02(b) of the Texas Penal Code. See 
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 7.02
    (b); see also Anderson, 
    416 S.W.3d at 888-89
    ; Fisher, 
    2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 9218
    , at **35-40; Love, 
    199 S.W.3d at 453
    .
    We overrule Blue’s issue on appeal and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
    AFFIRMED.
    LEANNE JOHNSON
    Justice
    Submitted on February 20, 2024
    Opinion Delivered March 20, 2024
    Do Not Publish
    Before Golemon, C.J., Horton and Johnson, JJ.
    30
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 09-23-00234-CR

Filed Date: 3/20/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/22/2024