DocketNumber: NO. PD-0638-17
Citation Numbers: 559 S.W.3d 474
Filed Date: 9/12/2018
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Keasler, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Keller, P.J., and Hervey, Richardson, Yeary, Keel, and Walker, JJ., joined.
Roderick Beham posted several pictures on Facebook in which he appears to "hold[ ] himself out as" a gang member.
I. FACTS
A. Trial and Retrial
A Bowie County jury found appellant Roderick Beham guilty of aggravated robbery for robbing a hotel clerk on the night of December 22, 2013. He was initially sentenced to twenty-five years in prison, but that sentence was reversed.
To explain the significance of these photographs, the State called Shane Kirkland, an experienced detective specializing in gang activity. Beham had filed a motion in limine requesting a hearing before the State presented any gang-related evidence. So, when Kirkland was called, a hearing was held in which Kirkland summarized what he intended to testify to: that, based on his law-enforcement experience, Beham was "holding himself out to be" a member of a criminal street gang. Beham objected to this testimony, but he was overruled. The trial judge specified that Kirkland's testimony would be admissible only insofar as it went to Beham's "character."
Kirkland began by testifying to some of the "indicators" that he looks for in determining a person's gang status. He testified that gangs are often involved in a litany of crimes such as aggravated robbery, drug sales, thefts, and assaults "on rival gangs ... or just people in general." Kirkland was then shown the photographs taken from Beham's Facebook profile and, picture-by-picture, developed his opinion that the person shown in the photographs was "holding himself out as" a gang member. He based this opinion off of Beham's hand signs, the presence of a weapon and narcotics, the phrase "Money, Power, Respect," and the prevalence of the color red, "which is a big indicator of a gang unit affiliation." Kirkland frankly admitted that he had never met Beham, that he had no knowledge of Beham's involvement in any particular gang, and that he did not have a "file" on him. At the conclusion of the case, the jury sentenced Beham to forty years in prison.
B. Appeal and Discretionary Review
The Sixth Court of Appeals reversed Beham's sentence, holding that Kirkland's testimony was not relevant to the jury's determination of proper punishment.
We granted the State's petition to decide whether the trial court erred in admitting opinion testimony that Beham was holding himself out as a gang member, and if so, whether the admission was harmful. We hold that the admission was not an abuse of discretion, and so we do not address the issue of harm.
II. LAW
Trial court decisions to admit or exclude evidence will not be reversed absent an abuse of discretion.
We deal today with an issue of relevance. Under Rule of Evidence 401, evidence is relevant if it has any tendency to make a "fact ... of consequence" more or less probable than it would be without the evidence.
Determining the relevance of any given item of evidence to any given lawsuit is not exclusively a function of rule and logic. The trial court must rely in large part upon its own observations and experiences of the world, as exemplary of common observation and experience, and reason from there in deciding whether proffered evidence has "any tendency to make the existence of any fact of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence." The determination of relevance, vel non , thus depends upon one judge's perception of common experience. The process cannot be wholly objectified.13
These observations ring particularly true in the punishment context, where "there are no distinct 'facts ... of consequence' that proffered evidence can be said to make more or less likely to exist."
Nevertheless, the Rule-401 concept of relevance has been incorporated into Article 37.07, Section 3(a) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which "governs the admissibility of evidence during the punishment stage of a non-capital criminal trial."
Of course, neither the statute's demonstrative list nor any general formula could fully describe the universe of evidence that might plausibly be considered "relevant to sentencing."
Beasley does not hold otherwise. Even if it did, as a plurality opinion construing an iteration of Article 37.07 that was more narrowly drafted than the present law,
We must begin by recalling that, even in the punishment phase, relevancy "often occur[s] in chains-one fact proves another fact, which proves a third fact, etc."
With this very idea in mind, in Mendiola v. State , then-Judge Keller argued that we ought to think of punishment-phase facts as existing in two separate categories: normative facts and subsidiary facts.
The advantage of this scheme is that it provides clarity to the reviewing court about what kinds of considerations should inform its relevancy-to-sentencing analyses. Whether a normative fact is admissible "turns upon policy;"
We do not hold that reviewing courts should always designate discrete facts as being either "normative" or "subsidiary" in deciding relevancy issues at sentencing.
III. ANALYSIS
In this case, Kirkland testified in two broad categories: First, he testified generally as to the kinds of indicators of gang membership that he typically looks for, and also as to some of the illegal activities that criminal street gangs commonly engage in. Second, he testified specifically as to his opinion that, based solely on his impression of the Facebook photographs, Beham was "holding himself out" as a gang member. We assume, without deciding, that Beham preserved a relevance objection as to each of these categories of testimony, and we address each category in turn.
A. General Matters: "Indicators" and Criminal Activities
Kirkland testified that various factors inform his determination of whether he considers a person to be gang-affiliated. These indicators include "what that person does," how he dresses, his preferred color schemes, any criminal activity, who his "known associates" are, the person's social media presence, whether the person carries a weapon, how they "get their money," and whether that person displays gang signs. Kirkland also testified that, as for the kinds of gangs that are associated with these indicators, they are "usually" involved in "a very long list" of criminal activities. By Kirkland's account, these activities include "aggravated ... robberies, drug sales, drug trafficking, thefts, assaults on rival gangs or aggravated assault on rival gang members or just people in general."
Insofar as, in this portion of his testimony, Kirkland is describing generic factors that might apply to any potential subject of investigation, this evidence cannot be said to directly affect the jury's normative response to Beham. This testimony does not yet concern or address Beham, so it is best understood as "subsidiary" evidence. It is relevant to the extent that it makes a legitimate normative fact more or less likely.
If we assume that whether Beham was holding himself out as a gang member is a legitimate area of normative inquiry (an issue we will address below), we must conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting this portion of Kirkland's testimony. Knowing that these factors are commonly associated with gang membership, the factfinder could rationally conclude that one who wilfully displays these indicators on his social media profile is more likely-if only by a "brick"-to be holding himself out as a gang member.
*482It might be objected that this evidence was not helpful to the jury in determining an appropriate sentence because it did not conclusively establish that one who exhibits these characteristics is a member of a criminal gang or is even necessarily "holding himself out" as one. For example, as Beham argued at trial, many non-gang-affiliated people dress in red clothing. Many non-gang-affiliated people carry weapons. Many non-gang-affiliated people display gang-related hand signs in an unfortunate attempt to appear "cool," to be trendy, to fit in-and perhaps without any knowledge of what these symbols actually mean. In short, a person might engage in any or all of these activities without a conscious desire to hold himself out as a gang member.
But this objection goes to the weight of the proffered evidence, and not its admissibility. To meet the threshold requirement of relevance, evidence need only have a tendency to make the ultimate fact more or less likely than it would be without; it need not prove the point by itself.
B. Specific Matters: Holding Oneself Out to be a Gang Member
Of course, this conclusion depends on the premise that evidence of a person's "holding himself out" to be a gang member is relevant to his character. This was the thrust of the second broad category of Kirkland's testimony: that, through his Facebook pictures, Beham intended to identify himself as a member of a criminal gang. Because this evidence might arguably have a direct effect on the jury's normative response to Beham, it is best understood as normative evidence.
We do not think he did. The trial judge's "own observations and experiences of the world" might reasonably lead him to the conclusion that, if a person glorifies a certain lifestyle, he is likelier to want to participate in that lifestyle.
The trial judge might also conclude, within the zone of reasonable disagreement, that how a person portrays himself within his own social circles gives at least some useful indication of what his values are. This will, of course, not always be true. Those who portray themselves as loving and devoted husbands, wives, fathers, mothers, etc. , are often anything but. But here again, the evidence is not without normative relevance simply because it fails to conclusively prove that Beham has a particular character flaw. There is not, as opposed to unadjudicated extraneous offenses, a quantum of proof that must be met with respect to a person's character before it may be considered by the jury in reaching a just punishment.
There is certainly a concern that, by offering evidence that Beham was holding himself out as a gang member, the State was inviting the jury to punish him more harshly because he holds a particular belief-that the gang lifestyle is one deserving of approval or praise. Displeasing as this belief might be, an invitation to punish someone for their abstract beliefs may be constitutionally objectionable, even when the belief at issue is "morally reprehensible."
But we perceive a distinction between (1) actively promoting the gang lifestyle and depicting oneself as a participant in it, and (2) merely "holding," in a more abstract sense, the belief that gang membership is laudable.
CONCLUSION
It is still the law that when the State intends to put on evidence of a defendant's membership in an organization or group, it must make some showing of the group's violent or illegal activities for the evidence to remain relevant to sentencing.
Alcala and Newell, JJ., concurred.
See State's Petition for Discretionary Review at 2.
See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 37.07, § 3(a)(1).
Beham v. State ,
See, e.g. , Tienda v. State ,
See Tex. R. Evid. 105(a) ("If the court admits evidence that is admissible against a party or for a purpose-but not against another party or for another purpose-the court, on request, must restrict the evidence to its proper scope and instruct the jury accordingly.").
Beham v. State , No. 06-16-00094-CR,
E.g. , Martinez v. State ,
See McGee v. State ,
Tex. R. Evid. 401.
Montgomery ,
See Ellison v. State ,
Murphy v. State ,
McGee ,
Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 37.07, § 3(a)(1).
McGee ,
Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 37.07, § 3(a)(1).
McGee ,
See Dawson v. Delaware ,
Cf. Beasley ,
See Ellison ,
See Mendiola v. State ,
Rogers ,
Cf. 1 Kenneth S. Brown et al. , McCormick on Evidence § 195, at 999-1000 (7th ed. 2013) ("An item of evidence, being but a single link in the chain of proof, need not prove conclusively the proposition for which it is offered.... A brick is not a wall.").
Mendiola ,
See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 37.07, § 3(a)(1).
Mendiola ,
See, e.g. , Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 37.07, § 3(a)(2) ("[E]vidence may not be offered by the state to establish that the race or ethnicity of the defendant makes it likely that [he] will engage in future criminal conduct."); Dawson ,
But see Ellison ,
Cf. Montgomery ,
Mendiola,
See Mendiola ,
See supra note 27.
See id.
See Ellison ,
See Mendiola ,
Cf. Montgomery ,
Contra Beham ,
Cf. Huizar v. State ,
Dawson ,
Compare
Cf. Davis v. State ,
E.g. , Davis ,
Michael Bryan Templeton v. State ( 2021 )
Dana Francis Walcott, Jr. v. the State of Texas ( 2021 )
Ervin Edward Kingsbury, III AKA Irving Edward Kingsbury, ... ( 2021 )
Christopher Revill v. the State of Texas ( 2021 )
Cody Harris Herd v. the State of Texas ( 2021 )
Shawn Ray Wishert v. the State of Texas ( 2022 )
Desmond Armond Jones v. the State of Texas ( 2022 )
Anthony White Jr. v. the State of Texas ( 2022 )
Dominique A. Smith v. the State of Texas ( 2022 )
Amado Flores v. the State of Texas ( 2022 )
Erick Estrada-Morreal v. the State of Texas ( 2022 )
Erick Estrada-Morreal v. the State of Texas ( 2022 )
Lloyd Morgans v. the State of Texas ( 2022 )
Jose Mauricio v. the State of Texas ( 2023 )
Earnest Dewayne Clayton v. the State of Texas ( 2023 )
Lattrell Pejuan Teal v. the State of Texas ( 2022 )
Johnny Len Kellogg v. the State of Texas ( 2022 )
James Michael Helms v. the State of Texas ( 2022 )