Cinque Ross v. State ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                       ACCEPTED
    06-14-00157-CR
    SIXTH COURT OF APPEALS
    TEXARKANA, TEXAS
    3/11/2015 12:02:30 PM
    DEBBIE AUTREY
    CLERK
    NO. 06-14-00157-CR
    FILED IN
    6th COURT OF APPEALS
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS               TEXARKANA, TEXAS
    FOR THE                    3/11/2015 12:02:30 PM
    SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT OF         TEXAS DEBBIE AUTREY
    Clerk
    AT TEXARKANA
    CINQUE ROSS
    vs.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS
    Appealed from the 188th District Court of Gregg County, Texas
    Trial Cause No. 43,104-A
    BRIEF FOR APPELLANT CINQUE ROSS
    LAW OFFICES OF HOUGH-LEWIS (“LEW”) DUNN
    201 E. Methvin, Suite 102
    P. O. Box 2226
    Longview, TX 75606
    Texas
    State
    Bar
    No.
    06244600
    Email: dunn@texramp.net
    Tel: 903-757-6711
    Fax: 903-757-6711
    Counsel for Appellant
    Appellant Respectfully Requests Oral Argument.
    STATEMENT REGARDING PARTIES TO THIS APPEAL
    [RULE 38.1(a) TEX.R.APP. PROC.]
    CINQUE ROSS
    Appellant
    Rick Hagan
    Attorney at Law
    Trial Counsel for Appellant
    Texas State Bar No. 00786430
    P.O. Box 3347
    Longview, TX 75606
    Tanya Reed
    Texas State Bar No. 24039204
    Assistant Criminal District Attorney
    Counsel for the State at Pre-Trial
    Debbie Garrett
    Texas State Bar No. 00790747
    Assistant Criminal District Attorney
    Counsel for the State at Trial
    101 E. Methvin Street, Suite 333
    Longview, TX 75601
    Hough-Lewis (“Lew”) Dunn
    Attorney at Law
    Counsel for Appellant on Appeal
    Texas State Bar No. 06244600
    P.O. Box 2226
    Longview, TX 75606
    Zan Colson Brown
    Texas State Bar No. 03205900
    Assistant Criminal District Attorney
    Counsel for the State on Appeal
    101 E. Methvin Street, Suite 333
    Longview, TX 75601
    ii
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    PAGE
    STATEMENT REGARDING PARTIES TO THIS APPEAL …..   ii
    TABLE OF CONTENTS …………………………………………               iii
    TABLE OF AUTHORITIES ………………………………………             vi
    ISSUES PRESENTED …………………………………………….              ix
    STATEMENT OF FACTS ………………………………………..             2
    THE JURY WAIVER ON FEBRUARY 14, 2014 ……………….     2
    HEARING FEBRUARY 20, 2014 ………………………………           3
    HEARING MARCH 7, 2014 ……………………………………..           3
    BENCH TRIAL JULY 9, 2014 …………………………………..         4
    Raven Lister ………………………………………………..            5
    Joey Chitwood ……………………………………………..            5
    Appellant Cinque Abjual Ross ……………………………     10
    MOTION FOR NEW TRIAL OCTOBER 18, 2014 ……………..    13
    SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT ……………………………              15
    ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITIES ……………………………             15
    iii
    TABLE OF CONTENTS (CONT’D)
    PAGE
    FIRST ISSUE, RESTATED ……………………………………..             15
    THE TRIAL COURT REVERSIBLY ERRED IN FAILING
    TO PERMIT APPELLANT TO WITHDRAW HIS WAIVER
    OF JURY TRIAL
    FACTS …………………………………………………….                    15
    LAW AND ANALYSIS …………………………………..               17
    SECOND ISSUE, RESTATED ………………………………….              20
    THE VIDEO OF THE CUSTODIAL INTERROGATION AND ITS
    EVIDENCE SHOULD HAVE BEEN SUPPRESSED, SINCE IT
    WAS BASED UPON AN ILLEGAL INDUCEMENT BY AGENTS
    OF THE STATE, AND, CONSEQUENTLY, MAKING IT
    INVOLUNTARY
    FACTS …………………………………………………….                    20
    LAW AND ANALYSIS ………………………………….                21
    THIRD ISSUE, RESTATED …………………………………….              25
    THE TRIAL COURT REVERSIBLY ERRED IN FINDING THE
    SEARCH WARRANT VALID AND, THEREBY, ADMITTING
    THE EVIDENCE TAKEN DURING THE SEARCH
    FACTS …………………………………………………….                    25
    LAW AND ANALYSIS …………………………………..               27
    iv
    TABLE OF CONTENTS (CONT’D)
    PAGE
    FOURTH ISSUE, RESTATED ………………………………….              28
    SEC. 46.04(a)(1), TEX. PENAL CODE, AS APPLIED TO
    APPELLANT IS UNCONSTITUTIONAL, SINCE UNDER THE
    SECOND AMENDMENT, U.S. CONST., IT IS A
    CONSTITUTIONALLY PROTECTED RIGHT FOR AN
    INDIVIDUAL TO POSSESS A FIREARM IN HIS HOME FOR
    THE PURPOSES OF SELF-DEFENSE
    FACTS …………………………………………………….                    28
    LAW AND ANALYSIS ………………………………….                28
    PRAYER FOR RELIEF …………………………………………                 32
    CERTIFICATE OF DELIVERY …………………………………..            33
    CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE ……………………………..            33
    v
    TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
    CASES                                                           PAGE
    Blake v. State, 
    125 S.W.3d 717
    …………………………………….                  27
    (Tex. App. – Houston [1st Dist.] 2003 no pet.)
    Creager v. State, 
    952 S.W.2d 852
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1997) ………..   22
    District of Columbia v. Heller, 
    554 U.S. 570
    (2008)……………….      29
    Hobbs v. State, 
    298 S.W.3d 193
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) …………      17
    Holmes v. State, 
    323 S.W.3d 163
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2010)………..     24
    McDonald v. Chicago, 
    561 U.S. 742
    (2010) ………………… 28, 29, 30, 31
    McGrew v. State, 
    286 S.W.3d 387
    ………………………………..                  20
    (Tex. App. – Corpus Christi 2008, no pet.)
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    (1966) ……………………….. 21, 22, 23
    Rios v. State, 
    901 S.W.2d 704
    …………………………………….                   27
    (Tex. App. – San Antonio 1995, no pet.)
    Sax v. Votteler, 
    648 S.W.2d 661
    (Tex. 1983) …………………….           29
    Tenet Hosps. Ltd. v. Rivera, 
    445 S.W.3d 698
    (Tex. 2014) ……….    29
    Vasquez v. State, 
    830 S.W.2d 948
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1992) ……….    
    30 Will. v
    . Glash, 
    789 S.W.2d 261
    (Tex. 1990) ………………….          18
    Wolfe v. State, 
    917 S.W.2d 270
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1996) ………….     22
    vi
    TABLE OF AUTHORITIES (CONT’D)
    STATUTES AND RULES                                 PAGE
    U.S.CONST.
    Second Amendment ……………………………………            28, 29, 30, 31
    Fourth Amendment ……………………………………………….               27
    Fifth Amendment …………………………………………………                21
    Sixth Amendment ………………………………………………..               17
    Fourteenth Amendment …………………………………………..            28
    TEXAS CONST.
    Art. 1, Sec. 9 ………………………………………………………               27, 28
    Art. 1, Sec. 10 ……………………………………………………               17
    TEX. CODE CRIM. PRO.
    Art. 1.06 ………………………………………………………….                  27
    Art. 1.12 …………………………………………………………                   17
    Art. 1.13 …………………………………………………………                   17
    Art. 18.01 ………………………………………………………..                 27
    Art. 18.04(2) ……………………………………………………..               27
    Art. 38.22 ………………………………………………………..                 22
    vii
    TABLE OF AUTHORITIES (CONT’D)
    STATUTES AND RULES                                                     PAGE
    TEX. CODE CRIM. PRO.
    Art. 38.22, Sec. 3(a) ……………………………………………..                              22
    Art. 38.23 …………………………………………………………                                      28
    TEX. PENAL CODE
    Sec. 46.04(a)(1) ………………………………………………….                                  28, 29
    Sec. 46.04(a)(2) …………………………………………………..                                 30
    TEX. R. APP. PRO.
    Rule 38.1(a) ………………………………………………………..                                   ii
    Rule 44.2(a) ……………………………………………………….                                    24
    OTHER SOURCES
    Vernon’s Texas Codes Annotated, Penal Code, Vol. 6 ……………… 30
    Texas Legislative Reference Library, www.lrl.tx.us ………………              30
    NOTE: All references to statutes and rules are to the relevant dates
    found in Vernon’s Texas Codes Annotated
    viii
    ISSUES PRESENTED
    FIRST ISSUE:
    THE TRIAL COURT REVERSIBLY ERRED IN FAILING TO PERMIT
    APPELLANT TO WITHDRAW HIS WAIVER OF JURY TRIAL
    SECOND ISSUE:
    THE VIDEO OF THE CUSTODIAL INTERROGATION AND ITS EVIDENCE
    SHOULD HAVE BEEN SUPPRESSED, SINCE IT WAS BASED UPON AN
    ILLEGAL INDUCEMENT BY AGENTS OF THE STATE, AND,
    CONSEQUENTLY, MAKING IT INVOLUNTARY
    THIRD ISSUE:
    THE TRIAL COURT REVERSIBLY ERRED IN FINDING THE SEARCH
    WARRANT VALID AND, THEREBY, ADMITTING THE EVIDENCE TAKEN
    DURING THE SEARCH
    FOURTH ISSUE:
    SEC. 46.04(a)(1), TEX. PENAL CODE, AS APPLIED TO APPELLANT IS
    UNCONSTITUTIONAL, SINCE, UNDER THE SECOND AMENDMENT, U.S.
    CONST., IT IS A CONSTITUTIONALLY PROTECTED RIGHT FOR AN
    INDIVIDUAL TO POSSESS A FIREARM IN HIS HOME FOR THE PURPOSES
    OF SELF-DEFENSE
    ix
    NO. 06-14-00157-CR
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE
    SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    AT TEXARKANA
    CINQUE ROSS
    vs.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS
    Appealed from the 188th District Court of Gregg County, Texas
    Trial Cause No. 43,104-A
    BRIEF FOR APPELLANT CINQUE ROSS
    TO THE HONORABLE JUSTICES OF THE COURT OF APPEALS:
    COMES NOW CINQUE ROSS, Appellant herein, o n a p p e a l i n C a u s e
    No. 43,104-A, and the “Judgment of Conviction” of the District
    Court for 188th Judicial District Court of Gregg County, Texas,
    wherein he was found guilty of felon in possession of a firearm, and
    sentenced to a term of eight (8) years in the Texas Department of
    Criminal     Justice,   Institutional    Division,    the   Honorable      David
    Brabham presiding at the time of a bench trial without a jury, in
    which Appellant was Defendant, and in which the State of Texas was
    1
    p l a i n t i f f a n d n o w A p p e l l e e , and makes this, his appeal to this Honorable Court.
    STATEMENT OF FACTS
    THE JURY WAIVER ON FEBRUARY 14, 2014
    On February 14, 2014, Appellant and his counsel appeared before the Trial
    Court for the purposes of clarifying a plea agreement (2 RR 4). There were two cases
    before the court: this case and Cause No. 43,451-A, an information alleging
    possession of a controlled substance. The agreement was for Appellant to plead guilty
    to the felony information, get a six (6) year sentence, and the case of felon in
    possession of a firearm would be dismissed as well as a charge of possession of a
    prohibited substance in a correctional facility (2 RR 4-5). At first Appellant seemed to
    reject the offer, conferring with counsel during a recess (2 RR 5-8). Then he came
    back before the Court and stated that he would take the offer ( 2 RR 9-10).
    As a part of the plea agreement, Appellant signed a waiver of jury trial in both
    cases (2 RR 10-11; CR 21). The Court told Appellant that, if he approved the jury
    waivers in both cases, he could never again come back and ask for a jury trial (2 RR
    12). Counsel confirmed to the Court that Appellant understood “the implications of
    the jury waivers” (2 RR 12). A date was then set to return for the plea on February 20,
    2014 (2 RR 13). This was to enter a plea to the possession of a controlled substance (2
    RR 13).
    2
    HEARING FEBRUARY 20, 2014
    On February 20, 2014, Appellant appeared with counsel and told the Court that
    he and his family were trying to hire retained counsel. Therefore, the scheduled plea
    was cancelled; Appellant had changed his mind about that plea and wanted now to go
    to trial on the “indicted case,” i.e., the felon in possession of a firearm case. The plea
    was cancelled (3 RR 4).
    HEARING MARCH 7, 2014
    On March 7, 2014, Appellant appeared with counsel, presumably for a guilty
    plea to the felony information of possession of a controlled substance (4 RR 4).
    However, since the last court appearance, the lab report had come back; the amount of
    controlled substance was less than one gram, and was, therefore, not a felony amount;
    the State could not proceed on its pleadings (4 RR 4). The State was now offering a
    term of five (5) years TDCJ in return for a plea of guilty, which Appellant rejected (4
    RR 5). The issue of Appellant’s knowing and intelligent and voluntary waiver of a
    jury trial in the weapons case now was raised; “he believes he was confused when he
    waived the jury, that he did not understand what he was doing when he waived the
    jury” (4 RR 5). Counsel for Appellant stated: “We’re either ready to go forward on the
    weapons without a plea agreement to the Court or the Court rescinds the jury waiver ,
    then I guess it would be set and we’ll be ready for a jury trial” (4 RR 5). The State
    believed that the jury waiver should be upheld by the Court, resulting in a bench trial
    3
    (4 RR 6). As to the possession of drugs charge, the Trial Court stated: “although he
    did waive jury, that was on an information so he’s got a right to a jury on the
    possession, on the drug case” (4 RR 6). But the State maintained that both cases
    would be bench trials (4 RR 7).
    Coming back to Appellant, he stated that he did not understand, saying, “I was
    unaware of that, though.” And counsel told him: “…you waived the jury…without the
    benefit of a plea agreement” (4 RR 8). Appellant persisted and stated: “I was unaware
    of that, Your Honor. That’s what – I didn’t know what I was signing. I was in
    emotional distress at the time.” He wondered if the Court found him “incompetent at
    the time”; but the Court said, “No. That you knew what you were doing, that you
    waived the jury…” (4 RR 8). The Court found that the jury waiver remained in place
    for the weapons case (4 RR 9).
    BENCH TRIAL JULY 9, 2014
    The case was called for trial on July 9, 2014. Although the State announced
    “ready,” Appellant stated he was not ready, that his mother and family were hiring
    other counsel -- “ a new lawyer” – that he had been “misrepresented,” since his
    brother was “coming up here to sign a non-prosecution affidavit indicating the guns
    was theirs” (sic) (5 RR 4-5). The Court denied the request that the case be delayed and
    believed that current counsel “will do you an excellent job” (5 RR 9).
    4
    Appellant’s counsel was ready subject to a motion to suppress statements, the
    video, the search warrant, which would be taken up as the trial progressed (5 RR 10).
    Thereafter the indictment was read and a “not guilty” plea was entered (5 RR
    10-11). Witnesses were sworn, the Rule was invoked, and opening statements were
    made (5 RR 12-13).
    Raven Lister
    Ms. Lister stated that she was a parole officer, had worked at that position for
    six years, and knew Appellant (5 RR 14-15). She supervised Appellant’s parole for
    assault on a public servant in Cause No. 33,698-A from Gregg County; she did not
    know the date of the conviction (5 RR 15). She identified Appellant in open court (5
    RR 16). Appellant had been released from supervision on April 1, 2011 (5 RR 16).
    Joey Chitwood
    Officer Chitwood worked for the Kilgore Police Department, assigned to the
    narcotics unit, also called the “C.OD.E.” unit (5 RR 17). After testifying to his
    employment, credentials and training, Officer Chitwood stated that he prepared an
    affidavit for a search warrant on September 18, 2013, based upon information from a
    confidential informant; the affidavit was presented to Judge Brabham, who reviewed it
    and signed a search warrant (5 RR 19-20).
    State’s Exhibit No. 2 was then marked; Officer Chitwood was then questioned
    about it (5 RR 19-20). The State then offered the Search Warrant into evidence, but
    5
    counsel for Appellant objected, saying that “it does not particularly describe the
    property of the person to be searched. It is stale – it also does not set forth probable
    cause in the four corners of the document” (5 RR 21). The Trial Court carried along
    the objection, but received the exhibit so that he could review it as the trial went along
    (5 RR 21).
    Officer Chitwood then took the search warrant to a briefing with the SWAT
    team, had a briefing, then went out to 405 Harris Street in Kilgore, Gregg County (5
    RR 21-23). Appellant was named in the warrant; he was identified in open court (5
    RR 22). The SWAT team went into the residence while Chitwood waited across the
    street. Once the location was secured, he entered the residence (5 RR 23). Four
    persons were there: Jason Coggins was in the front living room; Steven Cantrell was
    in the living room; Mildred Ross was in the area between the kitchen and living room,
    and Appellant was in the first bedroom on the left, “a blue in color bedroom” (5 RR
    24).
    It was in that bedroom that agents found “all the narcotics and the handguns” (5
    RR 25). Over Appellant’s objection State’s Exhibits 3 and 4 were admitted into
    evidence: photographs from the scene of the search in the “blue” bedroom (5 RR 25).
    The witness stated that he anticipated finding handguns in that room, based upon the
    information from the informant (5 RR 26). Officer Chitwood said he found several
    small baggies of methamphetamine scattered throughout on the floor; then he found
    6
    four handguns inside the closet: a Glock 27 .40-caliber lying on top of some Jordan
    tennis shoes; a .380 in the left shoe; a .38 Special in the right shoe; a .22 in the pocket
    of a FUBU jacket in the closet; ammunition was found on top of the dresser. At that
    site he also found mail that belonged to Appellant, and “a little bit of marijuana” (5
    RR 26-27).
    Thereafter, the State showed Officer Chitwood a series of photographs from the
    scene of the various objects about which he had just testified: Exhibits 5-19 (5 RR 27-
    28). Counsel for Appellant objected to their admission, referring to his objections to
    the search warrant (5 RR 28-29). The Trial Court overruled those objections and
    received the exhibits into evidence (5 RR 29). Then Officer Chitwood identified
    another set of exhibits (State’s Exhibits 20-24) as pictures of pieces of mail addressed
    to Appellant (address: 405 Harris, Kilgore), which were found in the bedroom (5 RR
    29-30). Appellant’s counsel made his same objections to those exhibits, and the
    objections were overruled, bringing the exhibits into evidence (5 RR 30).
    Subsequent to that, the State next offered Exhibit 25, the .38 Special pistol;
    State’s 26, the firearm located on top of the shoes [Glock 27 .40-caliber]; State’s 27,
    .22 pistol; State’s 28, the .380 pistol. To all of these Appellant’s counsel raised the
    same objections and was overruled; the four weapons were received into evidence (5
    RR 30-34). In clarification, Appellant’s counsel stated: “And just to make sure I’m
    clear on the record, the objections that I’m saying same objection to are to the warrant,
    7
    the search, and any evidence that was recovered from it”; to this the Trial Court
    replied: “Well, I’m going to receive the evidence subject to my ruling on your overall
    objection as to the search warrant.” (5 RR 34)
    Then there was this exchange between Appellant’s counsel and the Trial Court:
    Counsel:        Right. Oh, okay. Thank you. I just didn’t know if you had ruled on that or
    not yet, and if you had I just need – there is another objection I need to make after that
    to the Court.
    Court:          Well, I’ve reviewed the search warrant, so I’m prepared to overruled your
    objection as to the search warrant at this time.
    Counsel:        Judge, I need to, for the record, object to the introduction of all the
    evidence that’s come in so far and further on to the prosecution of it under the Second
    Amendment to the Constitution, specifically that Penal Code Section 46.04(a) is an
    unreasonable restraint on the defendant’s right to keep and bear arms that has just
    come out within the past year or so by the Supreme Court that it’s a personal right.
    And we submit that weapons inside the defendant’s home is an unreasonable – or
    barring weapons inside the defendant’s home is an unreasonable restraint on the
    Second Amendment right. We’d object to it.
    Court:          Overruled.
    (5 RR 34-35).
    8
    The State continued its evidence, showing Officer Chitwood State’s Exhibit 29,
    identified as a box of .40 caliber ammunition, found in the bottom drawer of the night
    stand (5 RR 36-37). Then State’s Exhibits        30 and 31: loose ammunition from
    locations seen in the pictures. State’s Exhibits 29-31 were offered; Appellant’s
    counsel made the same objection, which was overruled, and those exhibits were
    received into evidence. (5 RR 36).
    A few days later, on September 20, 2013, after he was arrested and taken to jail,
    Appellant was subjected to custodial interrogation by Officer Chitwood; the Miranda
    warnings were read and signed by Appellant, as evidenced in State’s Exhibit 32 (5 RR
    37-38), received without objection. Then the State offered State’s Exhibit 33, a video
    interview of Appellant; to this Appellant objected (5 RR 39). During the time it took
    to get the video apparatus set up to play the video, Appellant informed the Trial Court
    that he would stipulate to State’s Exhibit 1, the prior felony conviction , and such was
    noted in the record (5 RR 39-40) with the exhibit received into evidence. Then State’s
    exhibit 33 was played, the interview between Appellant and Officer Chitwood (5 RR
    40). At the time of the offense, Appellant was off parole (5 RR 41); someone else put
    the firearms in Appellant’s closet, though he knows they are there; his fingerprints are
    on the weapons, and the location was his bedroom (5 RR 41-42). Appellant said that
    he placed the weapons in a plastic bag, in a backpack, and would walk with them to
    sell them (5 RR 42).
    9
    On cross-examination Officer Chitwood denied that Appellant had spoken to
    him at the time of arrest or mentioned that he wanted to talk with him or help him or
    work with him (5 RR 44). After Appellant had been in jail a while Officer Chitwood
    stated that he learned that Appellant wanted “to work”, i.e. be an informant (5 RR 45).
    However, Officer Chitwood and his unit and supervisor felt that the people Appellant
    mentioned already had informants working them; however, once Appellant got out on
    bond, Officer Chitwood said they tried to work with him, but it did not work out. He
    cited that fact that Appellant gave them “high hopes” but that Appellant would not
    report or contact them, or if he did, it was in a tardy manner (5 RR 45-46). Officer
    Chitwood framed this as being a part of what he called “work their charge off” (5 RR
    46). When asked if he was not going to try to help Appellant get his bond reduced in
    return for his cooperation, Officer Chitwood did not deny that statement, but said that
    after evaluating the information given to them by Appellant, he did not think it would
    be worth getting the $70,000 bond reduced (5 RR 47).
    After the State rested its case (5 RR 49), Appellant took the stand in his own
    defense.
    Appellant Cinque Abjual Ross
    Appellant told the Court that he had been advised of his right to testify or not,
    and decided that he would do so, because “I just want to be honest with him, you
    know, about my situation and the whole courts and everything” (5 RR 50).
    10
    Appellant stated that no one from law enforcement ever showed him or his
    mother the search warrant that day (5 RR 51). A few days after his arrest, Appellant
    decided that he would try to work with Officer Chitwood, that “…maybe I could –
    they could help me or we could help each other” (5 RR 52). According to Appellant,
    Officer Chitwood stated that, if he would “admit to the guns that he could help me.
    That’s the only reason why I admitted to the guns” (5 RR 52).
    Others shared the bedroom with Appellant: his nephew LaBryson Orange, and
    his son Jacobe Ross. He was unaware that the guns were there until officers “kicked
    the door in and put guns in my mom’s face and my little brother’s face and my
    nephew” (5 RR 52). Once Appellant bonded out of jail in September, he spoke to
    Officer Chitwood, who came to his house, and gave him some names – persons he had
    encountered while in jail: Christopher Stubbs and Rashunda Butler (5 RR 53). He also
    gave information to Detectives Lennox and Hope about someone named Bryan Butler,
    and he also told Officer Chitwood that he would wear a wire to help him (5 RR 54).
    However, Appellant stated that Officer Chitwood jeopardized him and his family
    when he came to his house after release from jail;   Appellant had concerns that the
    people whose names he had given (like Bryan Burns) and drug dealers at the end of
    his street (Mike Wilson and Michael Dennis) might retaliate (5 RR 54-55; 66).
    Appellant stated: since day one of arrest he had been trying to cooperate with police,
    because he was told that if he helped them, that they would help him (5 RR 55-56).
    11
    Once he was bonded out, he had to be concerned – while assisting the police – for his
    and his family’s safety (5 RR 56).
    As to punishment, Appellant stated that if found guilty, he hoped that the Court
    would be lenient, taking into consideration that he had been working with law
    enforcement, with rehab and probation (5 RR 57). He wanted to remain out of prison
    so he could be available for his son, to keep his son from going down the same road (5
    RR 57).
    In cross-examination Appellant stated that before the custodial interview began
    and before Miranda rights were given, there was a conversation between him and
    Officer Chitwood, where Chitwood said, “Well, we know your fingerprints are on
    there [the pistols] so you might as well admit to it.” (5 RR 59-60). That was the
    context for why, on the video, he states that his fingerprints will be on the guns (5 RR
    60).
    On re-direct, Appellant confirmed that this was the context for the remark about
    fingerprints on the pistols (5 RR 64-65). Before the video, Officer Chitwood told
    Appellant: “Now if you admit to this, that’s the only way I can help you” (5 RR 65).
    This occurred before the officers brought in the Miranda warnings and administered
    them (5 RFR 65).
    After Appellant rested his evidence, both sides rested and closed (5 RR 66).
    Argument ensued (5 RR 67-68). The State argued that the evidence proved the
    12
    allegations (5 RR 67). Counsel for Appellant argued that the statement given by
    Appellant was the product of promises from law enforcement – the “type of promise
    that would induce someone to give a false confession” and that the confession was,
    therefore, not voluntary. Counsel also re-urged his objections and argued for an
    acquittal (5 RR 67-68). The Court found Appellant guilty as charged (5 RR 68).
    The punishment phase commenced, with the State offering State’s Exhibits 34-
    43: prior convictions; with no objection from Appellant, the exhibits were received,
    and the State rested (5 RR 69). Appellant requested a pre-sentencing assessment on
    drug dependency, and the punishment phase was re-set for that to be done (5 RR 69-
    70). Post-conviction bail was then set at $50,000 (5 RR 70). Punishment hearing was
    continued to August 4, 2014 (5 RR 71).
    When the punishment phase reconvened on August 4, 2014, the Court stated
    that the pre-sentence report had been prepared, that he had seen it and read it (6 RR 4).
    With that, both sides rested and closed evidence (6 RR 5). After hearing arguments on
    punishment, the Court assessed punishments at eight (8) years confinement in TDCJ,
    with credit for time served (6 RR 9, CR 29).
    MOTION FOR NEW TRIAL OCTOBER 18, 2014
    On October 18, 2014, Appellant presented a Motion for New Trial (7 RR 4 ff).
    As a part of that hearing, counsel or the State informed the Court how, in another case
    involving Appellant, a lab report came back showing that the amount of controlled
    13
    substance was less than the minimum needed to support an indictment, thus “…there
    was no way for him to plead to the possession of controlled substance information of
    what we thought was one gram to four grams” (7 RR 6). State’s counsel then related
    the events (see, Brief, above, pp. 3-4) at the hearing on March 7. The dates of when
    that information became known to Appellant and his counsel were placed before the
    Court: the officer’s initial report on the drug offense recited an amount over 1 gram (7
    RR 7, line 22 through page 8, line 15), with State’s counsel saying about the
    assumption that there was an amount of over 1 gram: “That was the basis of our
    agreement was that it came in at one to four grams, a third-degree felony, so we did an
    information based on that information” (7 RR 8). State’s counsel also told the Court
    that even though the lab report was received in the prosecutor’s office on January 15,
    it was only on February 26 when she received the lab report (7 RR 6-7). Thus, the
    State was not actually aware of that lab report until everyone one had come to court on
    February 14, the date when the waiver of jury trial was signed and approved by the
    Court (7 RR 8). Those facts were agreed upon by the parties at the hearing on the
    Motion for New Trial (7 RR 9). After argument of counsel, the Court denied the
    Motion for New Trial (7 RR 25). Thereafter, this appeal comes forward for review by
    tis Honorable Court.
    14
    SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT
    THE TRIAL COURT REVERSIBLY ERRED IN FAILING TO SET ASIDE THE
    WAIVER OF JURY TRIAL, SINCE IT WAS MADE INVOLUNTARILY AND
    WITHOUT KNOWLEDGE OF FACTS UNDERLYING ITS EXECUTION. THE
    CUSTODIAL INTERROGATION OF APPELLANT SHOULD HAVE BEEN
    SUPPRESSED, SINCE IT WAS MADE UNDER INDUCEMENTS AND FALSE
    PROMISES FROM LAW ENFORCEMENT, MAKING IT UNRELIABLE. THE
    SEARCH WARRANT WAS DEFECTIVE, AND THE EVIDENCE DERIVED
    THEREFORE SHOULD HAVE BEEN SUPPRESSED, BECAUSE THE
    INFORMATION CONTAINED WITHIN ITS FOUR CORNERS WAS
    CONCLUSORY AND NOT SUFFICIENT TO PROVIDE PROBABLE CAUSE.
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO FIND THE STATUTE
    UNCONSTITUTIONAL, SINCE IT CONFLICTS WITH THE SECOND
    AMENDMENT RIGHT OF A PRIVATE CITIZEN TO KEEP ARMS IN HIS OWN
    HOME.
    ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITIES
    FIRST ISSUE, RESTATED
    THE TRIAL COURT REVERSIBLY ERRED IN
    FAILING TO PERMIT APPELLANT TO WITHDRAW
    HIS WAIVER OF JURY TRIAL
    FACTS
    The evidence shows that Appellant, at the time he executed his waiver of jury
    trial in this case, was charged under two different instruments: an indictment in the
    instant case and an information alleging possession of a controlled substance (PCS) in
    an amount of more than one gram but less than four grams, a third degree felony (2
    RR 4). In fact, the caption for the Reporter’s Record for February 14, 2014 (Vol. 2 of
    the RR), indicates both cause numbers: 43,104-A, and 43,451-A (2 RR 1). When the
    parties appeared on February 14, the case they intended to proceed with a guilty plea
    15
    on was the PSC case – with an offer of six years -- , and that the case for felon in
    possession of a firearm would be dismissed, along with a fail to ID misdemeanor and
    other drug offenses (2 RR 4-5). This was stated by both the prosecutor and
    Appellant’s counsel (2 RR 5). At first Appellant stated that he rejected the plea
    agreement (2 RR 6-7), but after conferring with counsel, he later told the Court that he
    did accept the offer and the agreement (2 RR 10-12).
    However, as shown in the record from the hearing on March 7, and according to
    the facts as related by State’s counsel at the hearing on the Motion for New Trial, the
    state of knowledge of both the parties at the hearing on February 14, 2014, was flawed
    and based upon a false assumption that can be traced back to an initial law
    enforcement report that believed there was an amount over one gram. The assumption
    was that the amount of controlled substance was sufficient to support the allegation
    and proof of a third degree felony. Although the lab report reflecting an amount less
    than one gram had been received into the prosecutor’s offices on January 15, 2014, the
    prosecutor (and by extension, Appellant and his counsel) only became aware of the
    report on February 26, eleven days after the hearing where the right to a jury trial was
    waived. Added to this, once Appellant sought to retract his waiver of jury trial, the
    record contained no evidence concerning how such a retraction and reinstatement of
    the right to jury trial would affect the administration of justice in the trial court,
    impact the State’s witnesses, or otherwise prejudice the State. No evidence exists that
    16
    might support a negative impact on the court and its duties or the prosecution in
    putting on its case. See, 4 RR, passim.
    LAW AND ANALYIS
    The right to a jury trial rests in the Sixth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
    and its state counterpart in Art. 1, Sec. 10, TEX. CONST.; see, Art. 1.12, TEX. CODE
    CRIM. PRO. However, the accused may waive his right to a jury trial. See, Art. 1.13,
    TEX. CODE CRIM. PRO., so long as the requirements of the statute are met.
    However, it has also been stated that once a defendant waives his right to a jury trial,
    he does not have the “unfettered right to reassert that right” Hobbs v. State, 
    298 S.W.3d 193
    , 197-198 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009). If a defendant wants to withdraw the
    written waiver, then he has the burden to show an absence of adverse consequences,
    namely, that the re-instatement of the jury trial will not interfere with the orderly
    administration of the business of the court, or result in unnecessary delay or
    inconvenience of the witnesses, or prejudice the State. Here, Appellant contends that
    no inconvenience for the court or State was ever placed in the record. Although those
    principles were discussed briefly by the Court and by the parties at the hearing on the
    Motion for New Trial, nothing was ever placed in the record that would serve as the
    basis for those kinds of problems.
    There are those considerations. Additionally, Appellant contends that there was
    a fundamental infirmity in executing the waiver of his right to a jury trial. As shown
    17
    above, an essential, crucial fact upon which he made such a waiver was not, in fact,
    true. Both parties, at the time the waiver was executed, believed that that case was
    heading toward a plea founded upon evidence that would support the allegations and
    proof of possession of a controlled substance in an amount over one gram but less
    than four grams (see, Brief, above, hearing on March 7, pp. 3-4; and evidence at
    hearing on Motion for New Trial, pp. 13-14).
    One would call this a mutual mistake in civil law, and the same should hold true
    in criminal proceedings. One may look to the decision of our Texas Supreme Court
    for guidance: Williams v. Glash, 
    789 S.W.2d 261
    , 264 (Tex. 1990), where, writing for
    a unanimous court on whether a party could cancel a personal injury release, Doggett,
    J., stated: “Pursuant to the doctrine of mutual mistake, when parties to an agreement
    have contracted under a misconception or ignorance of a material fact, the agreement
    will be avoided.” (citation omitted). Justice Dogget goes on to say, “The question of
    mutual mistake is determined not by self-serving subjective statements of the parties’
    intent…but rather solely by objective circumstances surrounding the execution of the
    release, such as the knowledge of the parties at the time of signing…the amount of
    consideration paid, the extent of negotiations…the haste or lack thereof in obtaining
    the release” 
    Id. Here, there
    is no doubt that both parties had no knowledge on February 14,
    2014, that the lab report would fail to support a plea to a felony drug charge. To the
    18
    contrary, both the State and Appellant entered into the agreement based upon a crucial
    factual assumption that was not, in fact, true. The “consideration” involved was a
    guilty plea, a waiver of jury trial, and acceptance of six years incarceration – pretty
    stout consideration in terms of life, liberty and waiver of constitutional rights.
    Moreover, it would appear from all evidence in the record that the agreement was
    reached after negotiations of the parties that failed to discover that fundamental
    mistake of fact.
    One can also observe that there was breakdown in information upon which a
    reasonable person would have based a decision. No reasonable person would have
    decided to plead guilty to an offense and take six years incarceration if, in fact, the
    evidence/proof was lacking upon which to sustain a conviction.
    It might be argued that Appellant waived his right to a jury trial as to the felon
    in possession of a firearm separately from the waiver of jury trial in the PCS case, that
    because they were different cases, it was too late to go back and reverse the waiver,
    that the trial court expressly told Appellant that he was waiving his jury trial right as
    to each offenses. One problem with that argument is that the ignorance of the facts
    permeated the entire proceedings, not just the PSC case. The agreement on February
    14 was that the felon in possession of a firearm case was going to be dismissed;
    Appellant had no reason to think he would ever go to trial on that allegation. An
    additional weakness of that argument is that the two cases were entwined: neither case
    19
    was being addressed without the other; they were interrelated by express design of
    both parties, State and Appellant.
    This is somewhat analogous to the problem of pleading guilty: it must be done
    knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily. See, McGrew v. State, 
    286 S.W.3d 387
    , 391
    (Tex. App. – Corpus Christi 2008, no pet.). Appellant, therefore, additionally contends
    that the waiver of jury trial was involuntary because, in signing the waiver as a part of
    the plea agreement, Appellant had every reason to believe that the felon in possession
    of a firearm case would go away, that is would be dismissed in consideration for his
    plea to the other felony of PCS.
    For all of those reasons, Appellant would urge this Honorable Court to reverse
    the trial court’s determination of the waiver of right to jury trial, reverse the conviction,
    and remand for a new trial.
    SECOND ISSUE, RESTATED
    THE VIDEO OF THE CUSTODIAL INTERROGATION
    AND ITS EVIDENCE SHOULD HAVE BEEN
    SUPPRESSED, SINCE IT WAS BASED UPON AN
    ILLEGAL INDUCEMENT BY AGENTS OF THE STATE,
    AND, CONSEQUENTLY, MAKING IT INVOLUNTARY
    FACTS
    The circumstances of the custodial interrogation are set forth above (Brief, p.
    12). Appellant stated that, prior to beginning the actual custodial interview as seen on
    the video, Officer Chitwood told him that, if he would admit to the offense of
    20
    possession of the firearms, he, Chitwood, would help him. Then, according to
    Appellant, the officers began to record the session, gave Miranda warnings, and took
    the statement, where Appellant makes incriminating statements, essentially admitting
    to the offense, keeping his part of the bargain reached off camera, i.e., helping the
    officers so that they would “help” him.
    Counsel for Appellant argued that the statement given by Appellant was the
    product of promises from law enforcement – the “type of promise that would induce
    someone to give a false confession” and that the confession was, therefore, not
    voluntary. (5 RR 67-68).
    LAW AND ANALYSIS
    The accused has the Fifth Amendment right not to make a statement that is self-
    incriminating. Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    (1966), establishes that there must be
    some warnings given to the accused before he makes such a self-incriminating
    statement during custodial interrogation. This constitutional principal finds its State
    statutory counterpart in Art. 38.22, Sec. 3(a) TEX. CODE CRIM. PRO., which sets
    out certain requirements that must be followed in order for a video custodial statement
    to be admissible in Texas courts, in essence that prior to the statement but during the
    recording that the Miranda warning be administered and that the accused knowingly,
    intelligently, and voluntarily waives the rights.
    21
    At trial Appellant’s counsel objected to the video statement as having been the
    product of wrongful inducement. No evidence is in the record that contradicts
    Appellant’s version of how there was a quid pro quo offered by Officer Chitwood
    before the video interview began. Wolfe v. State, 
    917 S.W.2d 270
    , 282 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 1996) outlined the following analysis for involuntariness: (1) a failure to comply
    with Art. 38.22, TEX. CODE CRIM. PRO.; (2) failure to comply with the dictates of
    Miranda; or (3) the statement was taken in violation of due process or due course of
    the law because the statement was not freely given due to coercion, force, or improper
    influence. Furthermore, it has been stated that to induce a confession, a promise must
    be (1) positive, (2) made or sanctioned by someone in authority and (3) of such an
    influential nature that a defendant would speak untruthfully. Creager v. State, 
    952 S.W.2d 852
    , 854 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997)
    Here the statement is suspect under three out of three of those standards seen in
    both Wolfe and Creager. First: Officer Chitwood failed to comply with Art. 38.22,
    TEX. CODE CRIM. PRO., because he began the interrogation prior to administering
    the warnings: he offered the quid pro quo to Appellant “off the record,” a clear
    violation of the statute. Additionally, time after time throughout the interview Officer
    Chitwood held out the prospect that Appellant could “work off” his charges as
    Appellant and Chitwood discuss details of drug dealers. 1Second, Officer Chitwood
    1
    References are to the times seen in State’s Exhibit No. 33 (by hour and minute): 10:45, 10:46
    22
    failed to comply with Miranda because his promises went beyond the allowable
    conduct under Miranda and the promises certainly came from someone clothed with
    authority. Third, there was an improper influence by holding out the quid pro quo of
    “you help us and we’ll help you,” such that the inducements of “working off your
    charges” and a probation would be likely to induce a false confession.
    When one looks at the totality of the circumstances (see, Creager v. 
    State, 952 S.W.2d at 856
    ), it is obvious that this inducement had substance, because several
    times during the interview Appellant supplied names to Officer Chitwood, hoping
    thereby that his “help” would gain a reciprocal “help” from Chitwood.                           The
    inducement had all of the hallmarks of impropriety: the balance of power was
    weighted very much in favor of Chitwood: he held all the cards, whereas Appellant
    was locked up, looking at what he believed were multiple felonies and a prison term;
    next, Chitwood held out hope to Appellant that he could assist him in lowering his
    bond and even a probation if he “helped” Chitwood (though that hope was mislaid,
    (bond); 10:50 (knowledge of persons selling drugs); 10:47 (location of person selling drugs); 10:48
    (Appellant naming names); 10:48 (Chitwood telling Appellant “you have to do the work”); 10:49-51
    (Appellant describes a drug dealer in detail, his physical attributes, where he lives, that he uses a
    motorcycle and sell crystal meth and how he sells it and for what price; 11:05-08 (describes another
    drug dealer and her whereabouts and other information); 11:08-09 )Chitwood says: “we can help you
    out…but it’s going to be your doing the work”); 11:09 (Chitwood tells Appellant he can be “doing
    so many people to work off your cases”); 11:10 (Chitwood tells Appellant: “ we can work off” the
    charges against him and “get probation”); 11:11-12 (Chitwood tells Appellant there are two ways to
    go about this, including Appellant making a video of a buy and then being available to testify in
    court); 11:18 (Appellant tells Chitwood, “I am ready to work” and can use his mother’s vehicle);
    11:19 (Chitwood asks Appellant if he can get more guns); 11:20 (Chitwood promises Appellant he
    will get his bond lowered the following Monday; he also tells Appellant that “you’ve been honest” –
    referring back to the initial premise upon which the conversation began, that if appellant was honest
    with him, that Chitwood would “help” him).
    23
    since Chitwood never intended to assist in lowering the bond, and said as much on the
    witness stand -- see 3 RR 45, lines 14-16); finally, even though Appellant did provide
    information to Chitwood, Chitwood characterized it as of little value, although he
    never said that to Appellant during the interview. So all the winning cards were in
    Chitwood’s hand in making improper inducements to Appellant, whose position could
    not have been much weaker.
    The trial court reversibly erred in admitting the video confession into evidence.
    Analyzed under Rule 44. 2(a), TEX. R. APP. PRO., it cannot be said beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the error did not contribute to Appellant’s conviction. Holmes v.
    State, 
    323 S.W.3d 163
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).      The video statement was used in the
    direct evidence from Officer Chitwood (5 RR 41-42); when the State cross-examined
    Appellant, the statements on the video were emphasized (5 RR 59-60); when the State
    made summation, it referred to the video (5 RR 67). It would be difficult to separate
    the proof of the State’s case from its use of the video at strategic parts of the trial.
    There was harmful, reversible, error. The cause should be reversed and remanded for a
    new trial.
    24
    THIRD ISSUE, RESTATED
    THE TRIAL COURT REVERSIBLY ERRED IN FINDING
    THE SEARCH WARRANT VALID AND, THEREBY,
    ADMITTING THE EVIDENCE TAKEN DURING THE
    SEARCH
    FACTS
    Officer Chitwood described how he used information from a confidential
    informant to draft his affidavit for a search warrant (5 RR 19-20). State’s Exhibit 2
    was the affidavit, admitted over the objections of Appellant’s counsel (5 RR 20-21).
    The affidavit recites several things that, upon trial, were not true. First, it states that
    Appellant has “a reputation for illegal narcotics trafficking” and that Appellant has
    two arrests, where he was “charged with drug law offenses.” The record shows
    otherwise: the only evidence of a prior conviction for contraband was the Class B
    Misdemeanor conviction for possession of marihuana found in State’s Exhibit 38.
    Hardly the stuff of narcotics trafficking or multiple arrests. Next, the Affidavit states
    that based upon the information from the confidential informant (“CI”) and his own
    experience, Chitwood “believes it is reasonable to expect to find other paraphernalia
    and evidence of Methamphetamine trafficking,” listing an array of the sorts of things
    he “reasonably expected to find”: scales, containers, records of sales, unpackaged
    contraband, money, and devices for using the drugs. None of that was found. Though
    he postulates the reliability of his CI, and that the information came within 72 hours,
    the search does not bear this out. Again, the affidavit sets out the CI’s observation of
    25
    Methamphetamine, in small clear baggies and also in a large bag, but he/she does not
    indicate (nor does Chitwood state in his affidavit) where that contraband would be
    found in the house. Then there is the phrasing of just how Officer Chitwood had relied
    in the past upon the CI: “CI has acted as an informant for Affiant in the past, giving
    Affiant information concerning illegal activity on numerous occasions. On each
    occasion, CI’s information has proved to be true and has led to seizures of illegal
    controlled substances…” (emphasis supplied). Note that Chitwood does not say what
    sort of illegal activity the CI observed and reported. Was it drugs? Was it theft? Was it
    forgery? Assault? Murder? Robbery? Burglary? It might have been any number of
    “illegal activities,” but the illegal activity of possessing narcotics is not stated. That
    the results in the past were the capture of narcotics proves nothing about the nature of
    the “illegal activity” reported by the CI. Was the seizure of contraband serendipitous?
    Accidental? Unforeseen? In spite of other information given? Happenstance? Luck?
    Good fortune? A roll of the dice? Taking the odd over the even? Betting on red
    instead of black? That does not establish reliability; it only establishes that Chitwood
    seized narcotics. How is there a cause and effect? Why would the CI be reliable in
    this instance? Does one simply get to make an intuitive leap within the four corners of
    the document? Hardly. One must, therefore, question the reliability of the CI as well
    as the accuracy of his/her information.
    26
    LAW AND ANALYSIS
    Underlying any analysis of the validity of a search warrant and its affidavit is
    the Fourth Amendment and its State counterpart, Art. 1, Section 9, TEX. CONST. See
    also, Art. 1.06, TEX. CODE CRIM. PRO., Art. 18.01, TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC.,
    Art. 18.04(2), TEX.CODE CRIM. PRO. See, Rios v. State, 
    901 S.W.2d 704
    , 706-07
    (Tex. App. – San Antonio 1995, no pet.). Blake v. State, 
    125 S.W.3d 717
    (Tex. App.
    – Houston [1st Dist.] 2003 no pet.) gives a concise recitation of case law and principles
    concerning the analysis of suppression questions on appeal: reviewed under an abuse
    of discretion, the four corners doctrine, probable cause, reliability of the informant.
    There it was stated that the reliability of the informant should be based upon the
    assertion that “that the informant had given information in the past regarding narcotics
    trafficking which had proved correct” 
    Id., at 726.
    Is that what occurred in the instant case? No. As set out above, in several
    important respects the informant was unreliable and without foundation, and the basis
    for reliance lacked sufficient detail for that reliance. The affidavit only says that the CI
    gave information concerning illegal activity on numerous occasions. That is all. It
    does not say that the CI “had given information in the past regarding narcotics
    trafficking which had proved correct.” That is a distinction with a difference. It does
    not meet the standard of reliability. The Trial Court abused its discretion and erred in
    failing to suppress the evidence taken from the illegal search in violation of the Fourth
    27
    Amendment and Art. 1, Sec. 9, TEX. CONST. See also, art. 38.23, TEX. CODE
    CRIM. PRO. The conviction should be reversed and the cause remanded to the trial
    court.
    FOURTH ISSUE, RESTATED
    SEC. 46.04(a)(1), TEX. PENAL CODE, AS APPLIED TO
    APPELLANT        IS   UNCONSTITUTIONAL,    SINCE,
    UNDER THE SECOND AMENDMENT, U.S. CONST., IT
    IS A CONSTITUTIONALLY PROTECTED RIGHT FOR
    AN INDIVIDUAL TO POSSESS A FIREARM IN HIS
    HOME FOR THE PURPOSES OF SELF-DEFENSE
    FACTS
    Upon the search of his bedroom in Appellant’s home, law enforcement seized
    four pistols of varying calibers, and it was based upon that seizure that Appellant was
    charged and convicted of being a felon is possession of a firearm under the indictment
    (CR, 2). At trial, counsel for Appellant argued to the Court that there was a
    constitutional impediment to conviction, based upon his client’s Second Amendment
    rights, interpreted in recent decisions by the United States Supreme Court (5 RR 35).
    LAW AND ANALYSIS
    Appellant was indicted and convicted under Sec. 46.04(a)(1), TEX. PENAL
    CODE. At the time of his arrest he was in his own home and in his own bedroom. The
    pistols were found in his closet (5 RR 27-28; 30-34). McDonald v. Chicago, 
    561 U.S. 742
    (2010) sets out the principle that, under the Second Amendment, and under
    Fourteenth Amendment Due Process considerations, a person in his own home has a
    28
    right to possess a firearm in that place for defensive purposes. McDonald v. City of
    
    Chicago, 561 U.S. at 791
    . That decision followed the Second Amendment decision in
    District of Columbia v. Heller, 
    554 U.S. 570
    (2008).
    There is a distinction between a facial challenge to a statute’s constitutionality
    and an “as-applied” challenge. It has been characterized as follows: “A facial
    challenge claims that a statute, by its terms, always operates unconstitutional. United
    States v. Salerno, 
    481 U.S. 739
    , 745 (1987). Tex. Workers’ Comp. Comm’n v.
    Garcia, 
    893 S.W.2d 504
    , 518 (Tex. 1995). By contrast, an as-applied challenge
    asserts that a statute, while generally constitutional, operates unconstitutionally as to
    the claimant because of her particular circumstances. City of Corpus Christi v. Pub.
    Util. Comm’n of Tex., 
    51 S.W.3d 231
    , 240 (Tex. 2001); 
    Garcia, 893 S.W.2d at 518
    n. 16.” Tenet Hosps. Ltd. v. Rivera, 
    445 S.W.3d 698
    , 702 (Tex. 2014). See also,
    Sax v. Votteler, 
    648 S.W.2d 661
    , 664 (Tex. 1983), holding that “…in passing on the
    constitutionality of a statute, we begin with the presumption of validity. It is to be
    presumed that the Legislature has not acted unreasonably or arbitrarily; and a mere
    difference of opinion, where reasonable minds could differ, is not a sufficient basis
    for striking down legislation as arbitrary or unreasonable” (citation omitted).
    Appellant’s challenge to Sec. 46.04(a)(1), TEX. PENAL CODE, is an “as-
    applied” challenge under the particular facts and circumstances of his case.
    29
    Appellant does not contend that the statute, no matter what the facts of any case,
    runs afoul of the Second Amendment. Rather, he tailors his argument to say that, in
    the confines of his own home, Appellant, as any other American citizen, has the
    constitutionally protected right to keep and bear arms for his own protection. This
    was expressed very pointedly during Appellant’s testimony, where several times he
    showed concern for his safety and the safety of his family, owing to the nefarious
    individuals who inhabited his neighborhood, who would tend to take a dim view of
    his actions as an informant for law enforcement. See, Appellant’s testimony at 5 RR
    54-55, 56, 60. The statute was codified in 1973/1974, well before these Supreme
    Court decisions; even its most recent amendments in 2009 (adding subsections f and
    g) precede the McDonald v. City of Chicago decision. See, legislative history in
    Vernon’s Texas Codes Annotated, Penal Code, Vol. 6, at p. 84. See also, in general,
    the Texas Legislative Reference Library online at www.lrl.tx.us.
    Moreover, one should note that the statute does not categorically deny a felon
    the right to possess a forearm. Section 46.04(a)(2), TEX. PENAL CODE, states that
    it is an offense for a felon to possess a firearm “…after the period described in
    Subdivision (1) at any location other than the premises at which the person lives”
    (emphasis supplied). It has also been held that the Legislature has not excluded the
    justification of necessity as a defense to this offense. See, Vasquez v. State, 
    830 S.W.2d 948
    , 950 (Tex. Crim. App. 1992). So, the legislature finds no crime in
    30
    possessing a firearm in one’s home after the period of five years set in Subsection
    (a)(1). Appellant contends that the time limitation should now yield to the decision
    in McDonald v. City of Chicago. The proof in this case shows that about two and
    one-half years (almost 30 months) had elapsed since Appellant was released from
    parole supervision,2 more than a reasonable span of time to see whether or not he
    would commit some sort of act of violence with a firearm. Moreover, if it is a
    defense for a felon to possess a firearm under the doctrine of necessity, surely in
    light of our Supreme Court’s recent holdings, it is now a defense to the offense to
    possess the firearm in one’s home for self-defense.
    In light of these qualifications to the offense, it would be reasonable to
    conclude that, given the recent extension of the Second Amendment right to citizens
    to possess a firearm in their own homes for self-defense, the statute as applied to
    Appellant is unconstitutional. For those reasons, the conviction should be reversed
    and the cause remanded with a judgment of acquittal.
    2
    He was released from parole supervision on April 1, 2011 (5 RR 16). The offense in the case at bar
    was alleged to have occurred on or about September 18, 2013 (CR 2).
    31
    PRAYER FOR RELIEF
    WHEREFORE, PREMISES CONSIDERED, CINQUE ROSS, APPELLANT,
    prays that, upon review and consideration of the facts, the reasoning, the arguments,
    and authorities herein, this Honorable Sixth Court of Appeals will reverse the
    conviction of Appellant and will remand the cause with a judgment of acquittal or,
    alternatively, remand the cause for a new trial, and for such other and further relief
    to which Appellant is justly entitled.
    Respectfully submitted,
    LAW OFFICES OF LEW DUNN
    201 E. Methvin, Suite 102
    P. O. Box 2226
    Longview, TX 75606
    Texas State Bar No. 06244600
    Email: dunn@texramp.net
    Tel: 903-757-6711
    Fax: 903-757-6712
    /S/ Hough-Lewis “Lew” Dunn
    Hough-Lewis “Lew” Dunn
    32
    CERTIFICATE OF DELIVERY
    I hereby certify that a true and correct copy of the above and foregoing Brief
    for Appellant was sent by first class mail and/or hand-delivered and/or sent
    electronically to the office of Hon. Zan Colson Brown, Assistant Gregg County
    Criminal District Attorney, Gregg County Courthouse, 101 E. Methvin, Suite 333,
    Longview, Texas on this 11th day of March, 2015.
    /S/ Hough-Lewis “Lew” Dunn
    Hough-Lewis “Lew” Dunn
    CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
    I certify that the foregoing document complies with Rule 9, TEX. R. APP.
    PROC., regarding length of documents, in that exclusive of caption, identity of parties
    and counsel, statement regarding oral argument, table of contents, index of authorities,
    statement of the case, issues presented, statement of jurisdiction, statement of
    procedural history, signature, proof of service, certification, certificate of compliance,
    and appendix, it consists of 8,130 words.
    /S/ Hough-Lewis “Lew” Dunn
    Hough-Lewis “Lew” Dunn
    33