History
  • No items yet
midpage
Eric Samuel Tucker v. State
01-15-00274-CR
| Tex. App. | Oct 13, 2015
|
Check Treatment
Case Information

*0 FILED IN 1st COURT OF APPEALS HOUSTON, TEXAS 10/13/2015 11:11:38 AM CHRISTOPHER A. PRINE Clerk *1 ACCEPTED 01-15-00274-CR FIRST COURT OF APPEALS HOUSTON, TEXAS 10/13/2015 11:11:38 AM CHRISTOPHER PRINE CLERK N O . 01-15-00274-CR I N T HE C OURT O F A PPEALS F OR T HE F IRST D ISTRICT O F T EXAS E RIC S AMUEL T UCKER Appellant

v . THE S TATE OF T EXAS Appellee

On Appeal from Cause Number 1428647 In the 184 th District Court of Harris County, Texas Honorable Jan Krocker, Presiding B RIEF FOR A PPELLANT Oral Argument Requested A LEXANDER B UNIN

Chief Public Defender Harris County, Texas C HERI D UNCAN Assistant Public Defender Texas Bar No. 06210500 1201 Franklin, 13 th Floor Houston, Texas 77002 Phone: (713) 368-0016 Fax: (713) 368-9278 cheri.duncan@pdo.hctx.net Counsel for Appellant *2 IDENTITY OF PARTIES AND COUNSEL APPELLANT: Eric Samuel Tucker

TDCJ# 01983465 Stiles Unit, TDCJ 3060 FM 3514 Beaumont, TX 77705 TRIAL PROSECUTOR: Farnaz Faiaz

Assistant District Attorney Harris County Texas 1201 Franklin St, 6 th Floor Houston, TX 77002 DEFENSE COUNSEL AT TRIAL: Emily Munoz Detoto

Attorney at Law 917 Franklin, 4 th Floor Houston, TX 77002 COUNSEL ON APPEAL FOR APPELLANT: Cheri Duncan

Assistant Public Defender Harris County TX 1201 Franklin St, 13 th Floor Houston, TX 77002 cheri.duncan@pdo.hctx.net PRESIDING JUDGE Hon. Jan Krocker

184th District Court Harris County, TX 1201 Franklin St, 17 th Floor Houston, TX 77002 ii

T ABLE OF C ONTENTS I DENTITY OF P ARTIES AND C OUNSEL ................................................................................... ii

T ABLE OF C ONTENTS .............................................................................................................iii

I NDEX OF A UTHORITIES ........................................................................................................ v

S TATEMENT OF THE C ASE ..................................................................................................... 1

I SSUE P RESENTED ................................................................................................................... 1

M R . T UCKER WAS UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF SYNTHETIC

MARIJUANA . H E TESTIFIED THAT HE WAS BLACKED OUT AND DID NOT

ASSAULT HIS GIRLFRIEND WITH SCISSORS . D ID THE STATE PROVE

BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT THAT M R . T UCKER ’ S CONDUCT WAS

VOLUNTARY AND THAT HE ACTED INTENTIONALLY OR KNOWINGLY ?

S TATEMENT OF F ACTS ............................................................................................................ 1

S UMMARY OF THE A RGUMENT .............................................................................................. 4

A RGUMENT ............................................................................................................................. 5

I SSUE O NE ............................................................................................................................... 5

A. S TANDARD OF REVIEW ............................................................................................... 6

B. T HE EXTRANEOUS OFFENSES THAT ALLEGEDLY OCCURRED THAT SAME

EVENING WERE NOT EVIDENCE OF MENS REA OR VOLUNTARY CONDUCT IN THE

ALLEGED ASSAULT WITH THE SUTURE SCISSORS ...................................................... 6

C. M R . T UCKER WAS IN A BLACKOUT STATE INDUCED BY A BAD BATCH OF

SYNTHETIC MARIJUANA . H IS ACTIONS WERE INVOLUNTARY , AND HE LACKED

THE MENS REA FOR AGGRAVATED ASSAULT AS ALLEGED IN THE INDICTMENT 11

D. T HERE WAS NO EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT THE TRIAL COURT ’ S IMPLIED FINDING

THAT M R . T UCKER ’ S ACTIONS IN THE ASSAULT WERE VOLUNTARY .................... 13

iii

E. T HERE WAS NO EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT THE TRIAL COURT ’ S IMPLIED FINDING

THAT M R . T UCKER ACTED INTENTIONALLY OR KNOWINGLY ............................. 16

C ONCLUSION ........................................................................................................................ 18

P RAYER .................................................................................................................................. 18

C ERTIFICATE OF S ERVICE .................................................................................................... 19

C ERTIFICATE OF C OMPLIANCE ........................................................................................... 19

iv *5 I NDEX OF A UTHORITIES Cases

Farmer v. State , 411 S.W.3d 901 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013) ...................................... 13, 14, 16

Landrian v. State , 268 S.W.3d 232 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) .......................................... 7, 11

Mendenhall v. State , 77 S.W.3d 815 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002) .............................................. 11

Ramirez-Memije v. State , 44 S.W.3d 624 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014) ...................................... 11

Robinson v. State , __ S.W.3d __, 2015 Westlaw 4068109 at *4 (Tex. Crim. App. July 1,

2015) .................................................................................................................................... 6

Rogers v. State , 105 S.W.3d 630 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003) ................................................... 13

Statutes

T EX . P ENAL C ODE § 6.01(a) ................................................................................................ 11

T EX . P ENAL C ODE § 22.02(a) .............................................................................................. 16

v *6 S TATEMENT OF THE C ASE Eric Samuel Tucker was charged with aggravated assault of his girlfriend, causing

serious bodily injury, with a deadly weapon. Scissors were the alleged deadly weapon.

After being found sane and competent by a court-appointed psychiatrist, and being

admonished about his rights, Mr. Tucker waived a trial by jury (2 RR at 8). He testified

that he was blacked out and does not recall any of the events of that evening. The Hon.

Jan Krocker found him guilty of the indicted offense and assessed punishment at 30

years in prison. She entered judgment on February 18, 2015. Notice of appeal was filed

on February 20, 2015.

I SSUE P RESENTED Mr. Tucker was under the influence of synthetic marijuana. He

testified that he was blacked out and did not assault his girlfriend

with scissors. Did the state prove beyond a reasonable doubt that

Mr. Tucker’s conduct was voluntary and that he acted intentionally

or knowingly?

S TATEMENT OF F ACTS Eric Tucker and Kimberly Lockett began dating about three years before the

incident from which this case arose. They lived together in her apartment (3 RR at 13).

Their relationship was notable for a pattern of playing rough with each other and

engaging in “makeup sex” that he would initiate with her after disagreements. The

“horseplay” was such a part of their relationship that Ms. Lockett did not find anything

especially alarming about Mr. Tucker’s allegedly violent conduct earlier that same night

(3 RR at 143).

That evening, before the indicted offense, the couple fought, then had makeup

sex. Ms. Lockett testified that afterwards, while they were sitting on the couch, Mr.

Tucker scratched her with a pill packet and punched her in the face, then chased her

into the bedroom and forced her onto the bed (3 RR at 26). She testified that Mr. Tucker

tried to force her to have sex again:

Q. Is he successful?

A. No, he’s not.

Q. Uh, tell us what happens from that point on.

A. I told him that his --

Q. You can tell us.

A. His dick wasn’t gonna get him out of this one. He backs up and

pulls me up by my hair and pulls me back in like the hallway space of the -- uh -- between the -- bathroom and the bedroom.

Q. What did you mean when you told him, “Your dick’s not gonna get

you out of this one”?

A. Because he likes to use it as a -- as a gift -- uh -- how can you say -

- uh -- as -- he likes to use it to like, you know, maybe like persuade me to -- uh -- take him back, or something like that.

Q. Okay. Sort of like sex as a pacifier?

A. Yes.

(3 RR at 42). Apparently, this chain of events was not out of the ordinary, and did not

alarm Ms. Lockett:

Q. During the course of this assault, from when it first happens with

the first cut across you with that pill container until the very end, *8 what’s going through your mind? Is it one thing? Is it multiple things? [1]

A. At first, I just thought it was -- it was just like, you know, maybe

like a little too much of roughness on his behalf, but then when he pulled my hair and pulled me off the ground , then I -- that’s when I considered it’s going a little too far, and I was having to really defend myself beyond what I norm -- what -- somebody should ever do.

(3 RR at 69)(emphasis added).

Ultimately, Ms. Lockett testified, Mr. Tucker trapped her in the bathroom and

began to assault her with a pair of suture scissors while smoking synthetic marijuana, or

“cush.” As she struggled to take the scissors away, they broke in half (3 RR at 62). One

half was admitted into evidence at trial; the state never explained what happened to the

other half. Ms. Tucker ended up with extensive injuries that required multiple surgeries

to repair (3 RR at 181).

Despite their history of roughhousing, Mr. Tucker’s behavior in the bathroom

was completely unexpected, Ms. Lockett testified:

Q. …(W)hat are your thoughts during this process?

A. That I just got off work and now I’m having to fight for my life on

my day off.

Q. And what do you mean by that?

A. That was -- it was -- meaning that this was something I did not

expect. At all. And I just didn’t know where -- where this all came from.

*9 (3 RR at 70).

Mr. Tucker took the stand in his own defense, but he could not recall anything

about the evening from the time he sat on the couch, feeling dizzy, until he woke up in

a police car. He denied committing the alleged offense (3 RR at 210).

Officer Jerome T. Owens testified that he found Mr. Tucker unresponsive on

the apartment floor with 1/2 pair of scissors next to him on the floor, shiny and red (3

RR at 153). The officer called paramedics, and Mr. Tucker became responsive when

they sat him up (3 RR at 157). He was treated at scene, and was not taken to a hospital

(3 RR at 159).

S UMMARY OF THE A RGUMENT Aggravated assault by conduct, such as the offense alleged in this case, is a result-

of-conduct crime. The state must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant

had the requisite mens rea (in this case, intentionally or knowingly) to cause a specific

serious bodily injury or to use or display a deadly weapon. The nature of the defendant’s

conduct is not relevant.

The evidence in this case showed that on the night of the alleged offense, Mr.

Tucker was in a blackout state induced by a smoking synthetic marijuana. He had used

synthetic marijuana for more than three years and always found it to make him feel

mellow, similar to marijuana. There was no evidence that he knew or had any reason to

suspect that cush could cause him to black out or become violent.

The state offered some evidence that Mr. Tucker might have been acting

voluntarily during earlier incidents that evening, but it had no evidence that his alleged

assault with suture scissors was the product of voluntary conduct, or was intentional or

knowing. Instead, the state tried to paint the entire evening as one single, ongoing

assault.

However, because each assaultive contact is a separate offense, the state was

required to establish that the particular offense alleged – an attack with scissors that

caused serious injuries to Ms. Lockett – was both a voluntary act and was done with the

requisite mens rea. Because the state failed to prove either of these elements beyond a

reasonable doubt, the evidence was legally insufficient to support the judgment. Mr.

Tucker’s conviction should be reversed.

A RGUMENT

The indictment alleged that Mr. Tucker intentionally and knowingly caused

serious bodily injury to Kimberly Lockett, with whom he had a dating relationship, by

cutting her with a deadly weapon, namely, scissors (CR at 25). Mr. Tucker has

consistently denied that he committed any offense. He testified that as he was getting

ready to leave for work that evening, he felt dizzy and sat down. “I was in a blackout,”

he said (3 RR at 210). Further, Mr. Tucker has consistently maintained that Ms. Lockett

is a voodoo practitioner, and that she used voodoo to “contaminate” him that night.

See Defendant’s Exhibits 4 and 5 (6 RR at 78).

A. Standard of Review

In bench trials, as in jury trials, an appellate court reviews the sufficiency of the

evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict to decide whether a hypothetical

rational fact finder could have found the essential elements of the offense beyond a

reasonable doubt. A conviction that is not rationally based on the evidence violates the

Due Process Clause, whether a judge or jury sits as the fact finder in the case. See

Robinson v. State , __ S.W.3d __, 2015 Westlaw 4068109 at *4 (Tex. Crim. App. July 1,

2015).

B. The extraneous offenses that allegedly occurred that same evening were

not evidence of mens rea or voluntary conduct in the alleged assault with

the suture scissors.

The indicted offense was the last of three that the state presented evidence about.

The first two alleged extraneous offenses that evening were: 1) a punch to Mr. Lockett’s

face while they sat on the couch; and 2) a possibly non-consensual attempted sexual

encounter in the bedroom. The state tried to paint a picture of a single assaultive offense

that began on the couch, continued into the bedroom, and ended in the bathroom. This

was a necessary attempt to overcome the lack of evidence of mens rea and voluntary

act for the particular aggravated assault in this case. By presenting the case in this

manner, the state made a critical mistake –it offered no evidence of intent or voluntary

act during the particular assault for which Mr. Tucker was on trial.

As a matter of law, whether Mr. Tucker caused Ms. Lockett serious bodily injury

or used a deadly weapon or both, as alleged in the indictment, this particular offense

was a single assault. The gravamen of the offense is the specific type of assault. See

Landrian v. State , 268 S.W.3d 532, 536 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008). The alleged incidents

earlier in the evening – scratching and punching Ms. Lockett on the couch, then

attempting sex with her in the bedroom – were not part of the indicted offense. The

evidence that Mr. Tucker may have been conscious during those acts (scant though it

was) is not evidence of mens rea or voluntary act for the alleged attack with suture

scissors.

In fact, the evidence showed that by the time Mr. Tucker began assaulting Ms.

Lockett with the scissors and causing serious bodily injury, he no longer was acting

voluntarily, even if the earlier alleged conduct was voluntary, as the state tried to show.

The state’s position was that the earlier acts were voluntary because Mr. Tucker was

able to talk to Ms. Lockett and appeared to understand what she was saying to him.

This no longer was the case during the alleged aggravated assault with the suture

scissors, however:

Q. Are you saying anything to him at that point?

A. “Why are you doing this?” Uh, “Please stop. I’ll do whatever,” and

he steady (sic) pushing me down.

Q. Were you screaming for help at any point?

A. Yes, I was.

Q. And did help ever arrive?

A. No.

Q. Is the Defendant saying anything?

A. Not at that moment.

(3 RR at 44). Ms. Lockett’s testimony continued:

Q. Okay. Let me stop you right there. Where does he get these

scissors?

A. I have no idea.

Q. What do the scissors look like?

A. They’re suture scissors.

Q. When he’s cutting your hair, what’s he doing with the hair?

A. He’s feeding it to me while my head is in the toilet. … He would

raise me up and feed the hair in my mouth.

Q. Was he saying anything?

A. He didn’t say anything.

(3 RR at 45). Ms. Lockett then testified that after he cut her hair, he pulled out her

earrings and began to cut on her left ear:

A. And I’m fighting, trying to stop him, but then he pulls some more

and then he cut again, he cut again, and I just see blood dripping. …

Q. Were you screaming?

A. Yes, I was.

Q. Was he saying anything when he’s cutting your ear?

A. Nothing at all.

(3 RR at 46). His eerie silence continued as they stood and wrestled for control of the

scissors:

Q. Okay. When he – when the Defendant is in this position where he’s

standing behind you and his arms are coming over his head reaching forward towards you (indicating), is he saying anything to you?

A. No.

(3 RR at 50). She testified that they fell back to the floor:

Q. What is he doing – what is the Defendant doing with his right hand?

A. He’s stuffing his hand repeatedly down my throat to keep me from

screaming.

Q. Is he saying anything?

A. No, he’s not.

(3 RR at 54). She testified that he began to stab her wrist with the then-broken half of

the scissors as he lay on top of her, growling and finally passing out:

Q. Are you able to get his body off of yours?

A. No, I was not.

Q. What does he do from this position?

A. He’s still (indicating) – uh – moving it back and forth in my wrist.

Q. And when you say “it,” are you talking about the scissors?

A. Yes.

Q. Okay. And does anything else happen from this point?

A. Then, from that point on, he starts to make like a – a growling

sound and like shaking his head like he’s in a biting situation.

Q. What does it sound – what does it sound like?

A. It’s just (making growling sound).

Q. Can you see from the position he was in what he’s doing to you?

A. No, I do not (sic).

Q. Okay. At this point, do you still have sensation left in your hand?

A. No, I do not.

Q. Okay. What happens from this position?

A. Then he rolls over and he passes out.

(3 RR at 56).

Mr. Tucker’s actions were involuntary – the result of an outside force over which

he had no control. In both the guilt and punishment stages of the trial, he attributed

this to some kind of voodoo cast upon him by Ms. Lockett, because he was blacked

out and does not recall the assault. In fact, the evidence shows a different cause – the

synthetic marijuana rolled in cough syrup that he smoked during the assault in the

bathroom:

Q, Okay. Was the Defendant under the influence of any substance that

you know of that night?

A. Yes, I do.

Q. Okay. And what substance do you know of that he was under?

A. Synthetic marijuana.

Q. Okay. And how do you know that?

A. Because he had it already mixed up and he was smoking it – it

during the time he was cutting my hair and my ear.

Q. Okay. Tell us what you mean by that.

A. At some point – I’m – I’m really not even sure – at the point where

he had put my head in the toilet and was gonna – I’m thinking maybe he’s at – he’s still at the door, or he ran off and grabbed his smoke and lit it and then brought it in the bathroom. And as he’s lighting his smoke, whatever, he begins to – that’s when he begins to really cut my hair and cut my ear, so he was smoking it while he was doing this.

(3 RR at 72).

Having chosen to try Mr. Tucker for aggravated assault with scissors, the state

was required to prove each element of that specific offense. This required proof beyond

a reasonable doubt that the defendant was acting voluntarily, and that he intended or

knew it was likely that he would cause serious bodily injury to Ms. Lockett, or that he

knew or intended that he was using the scissors as a deadly weapon. Landrian , 268

S.W.3d at 537. The state failed to satisfy its burden of proof.

C. Mr. Tucker was in a blackout state induced by a bad batch of synthetic

marijuana. His actions were involuntary, and he lacked the mens rea for

aggravated assault as alleged in the indictment.

Two defenses are “readily available” to a defendant who was unconscious or

semi-conscious at the time of an alleged offense: the defendant may argue that he lacked

the mens rea necessary for criminal liability, or that he did not engage in a voluntary act.

See Mendenhall v. State , 77 S.W.3d 815, 818 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002). In Texas, actus reus

requires that a person voluntarily engage in an act (or omission or possession). Criminal

responsibility is established if the person voluntarily engaged in the act, omission, or

possession with the mental state required for the specific offense. See T EX . P ENAL C ODE

§ 6.01(a). See, also , Ramirez-Memije v. State , 44 S.W.3d 624, 627-8 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014).

Mr. Tucker was clear and steadfast – he was blacked out and does not recall any

of the alleged assault:

A. But I didn’t do that. That’s why I claimed that I was possessed. I

thought I was possessed, but it’s not realistic.

Q. Right.

A. So, therefore, she had to like contaminate me, but it’s due to the

fact of what she does indulge in.

(3 RR at 210).

Q. … The first day you were brought to Court … (d)o you remember

saying you needed an exorcism?

A. Yes, ma’am.

Q. Okay. And why is it that you thought you needed an exorcism?

A. From 5-11 to 5-16, I started seeing things and I had a conclusion

that she had – she’d been putting stuff in my food and my drink. …

(3 RR at 211).

Q. Let’s talk about the date of the offense, right? You’ve repeatedly

told me that you believe that you were contaminated, or someone had possessed you, right?

A. Pretty much contamination, realistically.

Q. Okay. And you’re believing that the Complainant did this to you;

right?

A. Yes, ma’am.

Q. Okay. Uh, now you know that’s very hard to believe, don’t you,

Eric?

A. I understand. I understand.

Q. Uh, and you told this to the psychiatrist that evaluated you, right?

A. Yes, I told it to the psychiatrist.

(3 RR at 213).

Although the court-ordered psychiatrist concluded that Mr. Tucker was both

sane at the time of the offense and competent to stand trial, and Mr. Tucker believed

his blackout was caused by voodoo, the evidence at trial actually showed that Mr.

Tucker was acting involuntarily due to the unanticipated side effects of synthetic

marijuana. The evidence further showed that he did not act intentionally or knowingly

when he allegedly assaulted Ms. Lockett with the suture scissors. The state tried to rebut

this by showing that he was able to communicate with her earlier in the evening, but as

discussed in Section E below, the state’s attempt to paint a picture of one drawn-out

assault could not make up for its lack of evidence about voluntariness and mens rea and

voluntary act during the indicted offense, aggravated assault with scissors, causing

serious bodily injury.

D. There was no evidence to support the trial court’s implied finding that Mr.

Tucker’s actions in the assault were voluntary.

Movement is considered involuntary if the movement was “the product of

unconsciousness , hypnosis or other non-violent impetus,” Farmer v. State , 411 S.W.3d 901,

906 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013), citing Rogers v. State , 105 S.W.3d 630, 638 (Tex. Crim. App.

2003). In this case, the evidence was legally insufficient evidence to prove beyond a

reasonable doubt that the aggravated assault in the bathroom included any voluntary

act. In fact, the evidence showed that Mr. Tucker’s movement was the “product of

unconsciousness,” as contemplated by Farmer .

In Farmer , the Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the DWI conviction of a

defendant who claimed that his action of driving while he did not have the normal use

of his faculties was involuntary because he took a sleeping pill his wife accidentally left

out for him instead of his usual morning muscle-relaxant pill. The Court drew a

distinction between mistaken intoxication and involuntary intoxication: “Even if

Appellant took the medication in error, that error was made because Appellant did not

take the time to verify the medication he was taking, although he knew that he was prescribed

medications that could have an intoxicating effect .” Farmer , 411 S.W.3d at 908 (emphasis added).

In contrast to Farmer , the state offered no evidence that Mr. Tucker had any idea

that the cush he used might make him violent and dangerous. In fact, the evidence

affirmatively disproved any knowledge that the cush could have such an effect. Ms.

Lockett testified that Mr. Tucker used synthetic marijuana often, and that he had never

responded to it as he did that night:

Q. Okay. Was it the first time -- I guess -- was this time the first time

that he had been under this concoction?

A. No.

Q. Okay. Uh, was this typical behavior for him that he exhibited that

night -- uh -- of how he acts when he’s under the influence of the Delsym and the -- and the -- the synthetic marijuana?

A. No.

Q. Okay. Uh, was it enhanced on this particular evening?

A. Yes.

(3 RR at 76). Mr. Tucker’s own testimony made this point even clearer – he had no

reason to suspect that the cush he smoked that night could cause him to black out and

commit a violent crime:

Q. Okay. Uh, when did you start – uh – smoking cush?

A. It was – uh – throughout the day.

Q. No, I’m talking about in your life.

A. Oh, okay.

Q. When did you first –

A. Uh, like – I did it like three and a half years ago.

Q. Okay.

A. Or four.

…

Q. Okay. And – uh – just briefly, how does that – uh – cush laced with

cough syrup affect you?

A. It doesn’t.

Q. It doesn’t?

A. I just gives me the – uh – uh – same – it mimics the marijuana, so

it gives me that feeling, but I don’t feel crazy or nothing, or delirious, or psychotic. I don’t feel that way.

Q. Okay.

A. I feel relaxed.

(3 RR at 206).

Because the evidence was undisputed that Mr. Tucker did not intend or know

that smoking Delsym-laced cush could make him feel anything other than mellow and

relaxed, and the state had no evidence to rebut his testimony that he was in a blackout

during the incident, the state did not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the alleged

aggravated assault was not the result of involuntary conduct that occurred while Mr.

Tucker was actually unconscious. The bad cush he smoked was an intervening cause of

his conduct.

E. There was no evidence to support the trial court’s implied finding that Mr.

Tucker acted intentionally or knowingly.

There is one other key difference between Farmer and this case: the offense

involved in Farmer , driving while intoxicated, is a strict liability crime. For this reason,

the Court of Criminal appeals concluded, it did not matter that the defendant had taken

the wrong prescription pill by mistake, rather than intentionally, knowingly, or

recklessly. Farmer , 411 S.W.3d at 907.

Assault with a deadly weapon, in contrast, is not a strict liability crime. Based on

the indictment in this case, the state was required to prove:

1) Mr. Tucker intentionally or knowingly caused bodily injury; and

2) Mr. Tucker caused serious bodily injury or used or exhibited a

deadly weapon, specifically, scissors.

See T EX . P ENAL C ODE § 22.02(a)(emphasis added). The state was never able to show

Mr. Tucker was acting voluntarily, or that the stabbing was committed intentionally or

knowingly.

Ms. Lockett testified repeatedly that Mr. Tucker did not appear to be in his right

mind. The prosecutor rephrased the question several times to give her the chance to

correct her testimony, but succeeded only in getting her to admit that some of his

conduct that night appeared to be intentional:

Q. Okay. Uh, was it so enhanced or was his condition in such a state

that you felt he was not in his right mind?

A. Correct. Yes.

Q. Well, let me ask you this: Did you think he was in his right mind?

A. No, I did not.

Q. Okay. Did you think that what he was doing that night he meant to

do to you?

A. Part of it had significant -- uh -- significant value so, yes, I did.

(3 RR at 76)(emphasis added). The problem with this attempt at rehabilitating the

witness is that the “part of it” that was “significant” involved an earlier alleged incident

on the couch, not the indicted offense. See 3 RR at 27. During cross-examination, Ms.

Lockett confirmed that it seemed like Mr. Tucker was out of his mind (3 RR at 106).

Mr. Tucker did not remember any of the alleged incidents that night (3 RR at 208). The

evidence was legally insufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Mr. Tucker

acted intentionally or knowingly when he caused serious bodily injury to Ms. Lockett

using a deadly weapon, as alleged in the indictment.

C ONCLUSION

If there were any evidence in the record that Mr. Tucker knew or was reckless

about the effects of cush, the state’s evidence might be considered legally sufficient.

Instead, the undisputed evidence showed that Mr. Tucker was a long-time user of cush

and knew only that it made him feel relaxed, like marijuana. Further, the state offered

no evidence that Mr. Tucker was not blacked out, as he testified. The evidence was

legally insufficient to prove each element of aggravated assault as alleged in the

indictment, beyond a reasonable doubt.

P RAYER

Because the evidence was insufficient to support the judgment against him, Mr.

Tucker respectfully requests this Court to reverse his conviction and enter a judgment

of acquittal.

Respectfully submitted, Alexander Bunin Chief Public Defender Harris County Texas /s/ Cheri Duncan ______________________________ Cheri Duncan Assistant Public Defender Texas Bar No. 06210500 *24 1201 Franklin, 13 th floor Houston Texas 77002 (713) 368-0016 telephone (713) 437-4318 e-fax cheri.duncan@pdo.hctx.net C ERTIFICATE OF S ERVICE I certify that a copy of this brief was served electronically on the Harris County

District Attorney’s Office on October 13, 2015.

/s/ Cheri Duncan ______________________________ Cheri Duncan C ERTIFICATE OF C OMPLIANCE I certify that this brief complies with Rule 9.2, T EX . R. A PP . P ROC . It was prepared on

a computer using 14-point Garamond type. It contains 4,228 words.

/s/ Cheri Duncan ______________________________ Cheri Duncan

[1] Although the prosecutor repeatedly referred to the events of the evening as a single assault, this is neither legally nor factually correct, as discussed in Section E below.

Case Details

Case Name: Eric Samuel Tucker v. State
Court Name: Court of Appeals of Texas
Date Published: Oct 13, 2015
Docket Number: 01-15-00274-CR
Court Abbreviation: Tex. App.
Read the detailed case summary
AI-generated responses must be verified and are not legal advice.
Your Notebook is empty. To add cases, bookmark them from your search, or select Add Cases to extract citations from a PDF or a block of text.