PD-0186-15
COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
AUSTIN, TEXAS
Transmitted 4/6/2015 9:26:43 PM
Accepted 4/13/2015 1:44:20 PM
APRIL 13, 2015 ABEL ACOSTA
CLERK
ORAL ARGUMENT REQUESTED
No. PD-0186-15
In the Court of Criminal Appeals
Austin, Texas
ROBERT LYNN PRIDGEN,
Petitioner / Appellant,
v.
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
Respondent / Appellee.
On appeal from the 369th District Court, no. 29956,
Anderson County, Texas, and the Tyler Court of
Appeals, No. 12-13-00136-CR
PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
James W. Volberding
SBN: 00786313
First Place (903) 597-6622
100 E. Ferguson Street (866) 398-6883 (fax)
Suite 500 e-mail: james@jamesvolberding.com
Tyler, Texas 75702
Attorney for the Petitioner, Robert Lynn Pridgen
No. PD-0186-15
In the Court of Criminal Appeals
Austin, Texas
ROBERT LYNN PRIDGEN,
Petitioner / Appellant,
v.
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
Respondent / Appellee.
On appeal from the 369th District Court, no. 29956,
Anderson County, Texas, and the Tyler Court of
Appeals, No. 12-13-00136-CR
PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
To the Honorable Court of Criminal Appeals:
Mr. Robert Lynn Pridgen, Petitioner, asks the Court to grant
discretionary review, then acquittal or retrial of his murder conviction.
ii
THE PARTIES AND THEIR COUNSEL
The following is a list of all parties to the trial court’s judgment
and the names and addresses of all trial and appellate counsel:
Petitioner Petitioner’s Counsel
Mr. Robert Lynn Pridgen Mr. James W. Volberding
First Place
100 E. Ferguson Street
Suite 500
Tyler, TX 75702
(903) 597-6622
Petitioner’s Trial Counsel
Mr. Jeff Haas
100 E. Ferguson, Suite 908
Tyler, TX 75702
State of Texas State’s Appellate Counsel
Ms. Allyson Mitchell
Anderson County District
Attorney
500 N. Church Street, Room 38
Palestine, TX 75801
State’s Trial Counsel
Mr. Douglas Lowe
Mr. Stanley Sokolowski
Mr. Scott Holden
Anderson Co. Asst. District
Attorneys
iii
(Parties, cont.)
Judges Hon. Deborah Oakes Evans,
369th District Court, Anderson
County
Hon. Bascom W. Bentley, III,
369th District Court, Anderson
County
Justices Hon. Chief Justice James T.
Worthen
Hon. Justice Sam Griffith
Hon. Justice Brian Hoyle
/s/ James W. Volberding
_______________________________
James W. Volberding
iv
CONTENTS
The Parties and Their Counsel ................................................................ iii
Authorities ................................................................................................ vii
Statement Regarding Oral Argument ................................................... viii
Statement of Jurisdiction ....................................................................... viii
Statement of the Case ............................................................................. viii
Statement of Procedural History ..............................................................ix
Grounds For Review ...................................................................................1
Statement of Facts ......................................................................................1
Argument .....................................................................................................8
Ground I. Albeit stating the proper standard, the appellate court
erred by actually applying a constitutionally deficient and
discredited standard of sufficiency review. .........................................8
A. The court of appeals’ favored items of proof did not come
close to eliminating reasonable doubt. ……………………… 10
B. The appellate court’s analysis ignored undisputed facts
inconsistent with murder.……………………………………... 15
Ground II. In assessing the case for self-defense, the appellate court
erred by applying an unconstitutional hindsight viewpoint as to
whether deadly force was necessary. ..................................................18
Ground III. The appellate court erred in holding that the decedent’s
photos of simulated sexual violence were inadmissible. ....................20
v
(Contents, cont.)
A. The photos are material to Pridgen’s statutorily authorized
defense……………………………………………………………. 21
B. The photos are probative of self-defense…………………….. 22
C. The photographs speak loudly for themselves and 12 citizen
jurors should be permitted to listen………………………….. 23
D. The appellate court undertook its own impermissible fact-
weighing and credibility assessment………………………….24
Conclusion .................................................................................................25
Relief Sought .............................................................................................26
Certificate of Compliance .........................................................................27
Certificate of Service .................................................................................27
Appendix ....................................................................................................28
Tyler Court of appeals opinion
Pridgen v. State, 2014 Tex. App.
LEXIS 12915 (Tex. App. --- Tyler
Dec. 3, 2014, pet. filed)……………………………………………...... A-1
Denied sexually explicit photographs by Rohne …………………… A-2
vi
AUTHORITIES
CASES
Brooks v. State, 323 S.W.3d 893 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010) ............17, 24, 25
California v. Trombetta, 467 U.S. 479 (1984) .........................................25
Cooper v. State, 95 S.W.3d 488 (Tex. App.---Houston [1st Dist.]
2002, no pet.) .........................................................................................22
Craig v. Boren, 429 U.S. 190 (1976) ........................................................23
Crane v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 683 (1986) ..................................................25
Holmes v. South Carolina, 547 U.S. 319 (2006) .....................................25
In re Winship, 397 U.S. 358 (1970) .........................................................17
Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307 (1979) ....................................14, 17, 18
Miller v. State, 36 S.W.3d 503 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001)………… 20, 22, 25
STATUTE
Tex. Penal Code § 9.32 (2011) ............................................................ 18-19
RULES
Tex. R. Crim. Evid. 401 .............................................................................20
Tex. R. Crim. Evid. 402 .............................................................................20
vii
STATEMENT REGARDING ORAL ARGUMENT
The Court will benefit from oral argument. This fact-intensive
murder/self-defense case pivots on two concepts. First, the case
delineates the difference between the constitutionally mandated
beyond-reasonable-doubt review standard of Jackson v. Virginia and
the lower, forbidden civil-sufficiency standard. The court of appeals
clearly applied the latter standard. But it never understood it was doing
so, a mistake subject to repetition. Second, the case explores the legal
framework for admitting pre-incident photos of simulated sexual
violence. The jury was explicitly charged to consider evidence of the
decedent’s sexual assault on defendant Pridgen. The photos would have
corroborated Pridgen’s protest that the decedent carried a knife and
intended sexual assault. When they were excluded, Pridgen was denied
the ability to prove self-defense.
The decision in this case will affect scores of similar murder/self-
defense appeals. This appears to be the first case addressing whether
admission of intended rape evidence requires proof that the rapist was
of the same gender.
STATEMENT OF JURISDICTION
This Court possesses jurisdiction under Texas Constitution Art. V,
§§ 1, 5 and Tex. Gov’t Code § 22.201, et seq.
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
Nature of the case Prosecution for murder, under Texas Penal
Code section 19.02, and the lesser-included
offense of manslaughter, under section
19.04.
District court Hon. Deborah Oakes Evans, 369th District
Court, Anderson County
viii
(Case, cont.)
Course and disposition Mr. Pridgen pled not guilty. RR11:8-9.
of proceedings After the court denied his motion for
directed verdict, a jury convicted Pridgen of
murder, RR15:65; CR166, and sentenced
him to 20 years incarceration, RR15:128;
CR163, 164. The court denied Pridgen’s
motion for new trial, by operation of law.
RR13:137; CR170, 174 (presented).
Properly certified, CR157, Pridgen timely
appealed. CR177.
The Court of Appeals affirmed in a written
unpublished opinion.
STATEMENT OF PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Date of court of appeals opinion December 3, 2014
Pridgen v. State, 2014 Tex. App.
LEXIS 12915 (Tex. App. --- Tyler
Dec. 3, 2014, pet. filed)
Date motion for rehearing filed January 20, 2015
(extension granted)
Date rehearing motion overruled January 30, 2015
!
ix
GROUNDS FOR REVIEW!
I. Albeit stating the proper standard, the appellate court erred by
actually applying a constitutionally deficient and discredited
standard of sufficiency review. (Presented: Pridgen’s Jan. 20,
2015, motion for rehearing at 1; Opening Brf. at 8-24; Directed
verdict, RR15:65, MNT, RR13:137; CR170-174).
II. In assessing the case for self-defense, the appellate court erred by
applying an unconstitutional hindsight viewpoint as to whether
deadly force was necessary. (Presented: Pridgen’s motion for
rehearing at 11; Opening Brf. at 8-24, 25-28; Directed verdict,
RR15:65, MNT, RR13:137; CR170-174).
III. The appellate court erred in holding that the decedent’s photos of
simulated sexual violence were inadmissible. (Presented:
Pridgen’s motion for rehearing at 13; Opening Brf. at 28-49;
Directed verdict, RR15:65, MNT, RR13:137; CR170-174).
STATEMENT OF FACTS
Robert “Lynn” Pridgen shot and killed his friend, Paul Rohne, in
Pridgen’s home late at night.
In response to Pridgen’s 911 call, police drove to Pridgen’s
Montalba home in which Rohne, recently divorced, rented a room.
RR14:9. They found Rohne slumped on the love seat, dead. RR12:59, 60-
62, 88-93, 121-22.
1
Both men were drunk. RR12:95-96, 106-07; 14:35. Alcohol bottles
lay throughout the kitchen. RR12:179-80. Rohne’s post-mortem blood-
alcohol content -- 0.33 -- was four times the legal limit. RR12:222. On a
911 call, sounding drunk, Pridgen acted nonchalantly with the operator,
explaining that there was a dead man on his couch. RR12:33-39, 47;
SX1 (recording).
Nothing was knocked over; there was no sign of any struggle.
RR12:139, 181-82; RR14:38, 116-17.When arrested, Pridgen cooperated
completely. RR12:100.
At trial Pridgen, 55, a retired TDC prison guard, explained what
happened. When his friend Paul Rohne, 40, divorced, Rohne and his ex-
wife persuaded Pridgen to rent Rohne a room in Pridgen’s Montalba
house because of Rohne’s heavy drinking. RR14:12-13, 53-55.
Otherwise, they feared, Rohne was “going to kill somebody [with his
drunk driving] ‘[i]f he keeps living up there in Tyler.’” RR14:12, 47-48.
Pridgen retained the master bedroom and the right to come and go.
RR14:13.
2
Seven months passed without incident. RR14:13-14, 55, 124-25.
Pridgen, intending to stay for a couple of days, RR14:14-15, arrived at
the Montalba house with some personal items, a case of beer, and an
unfinished vodka bottle. RR14:15-16, 59-60, 75, 77. He also brought a
12-gauge shotgun loaded with birdshot, which he used to frighten away
feral hogs, and the .45 pistol he regularly carried. RR14:15-16, 59.
Pridgen and Rohne, who often drank together, RR14:16-17, 47-49,
52-53, 57, did so this time. Rohne had his own beer and vodka.
RR14:17-18; 71-74; SX82, 23 (photos). They drank and smoked until
late, watching TV and discussing fishing, hunting, women, politics and
the war. RR14:19, 61-64.
Talk turned to sex. A week earlier, Rohne told Pridgen that he
hired a couple of Dallas prostitutes to chain him with leg-irons and
hand-cuffs to a bed. RR14:20-21, 66-67, 125. This time, Pridgen asked
Rohne to tell details. RR14:21-22, 66-67:
I asked Paul, . . . “Tell me what those whores did to you.”
And he said, “Oh, no, I'm not going to.” Probably 20 minutes
later, I said, “Come on, Paul, tell me what they did to you.”
And he said, “Oh, you would be surprised.” And a short time
3
after that, he said to me, “Lynn, you seem to be showing an
awful lot of interest in that. You ought to try it some time.”
And I said, “You've got to be fucked up.” And that was the
end of the conversation regarding any of that.
RR14:22, 26, 68-70 (Grammatical marks inserted for clarity.
First paragraph outside jury, but before jury on page 68).
Discussion turned to other subjects. RR14:39-40, 70-71.
Pridgen fell asleep around 11 p.m., upright on the love seat.
RR14:30-32, 35, 65, 83-84.
Near 1:25 a.m., he awoke to find the much larger Rohne (Rohne
was 6’, 4-1/4” and weighed 270 pounds; Pridgen is 5’, 8” and ninety
pounds lighter, RR14:38, 50) in unfastened shorts, pressed against
Pridgen, with his left hand rubbing Pridgen’s genitals. RR14:30-32, 34,
85-86, 120 (see photos SX9, 54). (Rohne had recently shaved his pubic
hair (RR12:234-35; SX63 (autopsy report, p. 3).) Rohne cooed, “Don’t get
up. Just relax and enjoy the pleasure.” RR14:30-32, 87, 114.
Frightened, Pridgen leapt up and ran the several steps to the
sliding glass door, locked. RR14:31-21, 62-63, 88, 90-92. When he
turned, he saw Rohne with a knife in his right hand rising from the love
seat, eyes toward him. RR14:33, 92-94, 116, 121, 123. Surmising he was
4
about to be killed (or as he surmised after shooting, handcuffed to a bed
and raped), and reacting to his prison-guard training, Pridgen
instinctively grabbed the shotgun that was propped by the door, turned,
and shot Rohne once center mass. Rohne slumped back onto the love
seat, where he died. RR14:35, 39, 40, 46, 94-96, 97-99, 102-03, 113-15,
118, 125, 130.
For some minutes Pridgen, very drunk and dazed, stared at
Rohne. RR14:36, 99-101. In retrospect, he was suffering shock.
RR14:36, 99, 103, 105. He touched nothing. RR14:37. He called 911.
RR14:36, 101.
He had never before seen Rohne’s knife. RR14:37. He certainly did
not plant it. RR14:37, 116.
Throughout trial, the State argued—incredulously—that Pridgen
had killed Rohne as a means to evict him, and then—in the midst of his
deep, drunken stupor somehow managed to fabricate self-defense by:
• planting a knife without leaving any trace of his DNA or
prints;
• reading a self-defense article from a gun magazine;
• delaying calling 911;
• calling his brother to concoct self-defense;
5
• falsely claiming attack in the 911 call; and
• falsely claiming that Rohne stood from the love seat when
his feet were crossed.
See supra and RR15:19-33, 54-64. The State argued that Pridgen made
up the account of Rohne’s sexual advances. According to the State,
Rohne was just a good ‘ol boy, like so many of the jurors, and Pridgen’s
contrary testimony was unbelievable.
To counter these arguments and prove self-defense, Pridgen
sought to corroborate his testimony about Rohne’s homosexual attack.
He offered photographs taken by Rohne himself and found in Rohne’s
room. The photos cataloged Rohne’s (1) practice of simulated sexual
violence, (2) use of sexual-fantasy toys, and (3) wearing of sexual role-
play clothing—including a “French maid” outfit, suggesting a
transsexual lifestyle. (See Appendix A-2.) The trial court barred the
proof’s admission, finding it irrelevant—even under the minimal
threshold of Evidence Rule 402—and further finding it outside the
allowance, in Rule 404, for proving a victim’s character or nature or
intent or motive.
6
Unaware of this critical contextual proof, the jury bought the
State’s argument and convicted Pridgen, who had no previously
criminal history, of murder, rejecting the lesser manslaughter, RR15:65,
and sudden passion, and assigned 20 years incarceration, RR15:128;
CR163, 164.
7
ARGUMENT
Respectfully, the court of appeals’ analysis falls short in three
critical respects:
• It applies a constitutionally deficient standard of review.
• It misapplies the substantive elements of self-defense.
• And it gets the admission-of-evidence analysis entirely wrong.
I. Albeit stating the proper standard, the appellate court
erred by actually applying a constitutionally deficient and
discredited standard of sufficiency review. (Presented:
Pridgen’s Jan. 20, 2015, motion for rehearing at 1; Opening Brf. at
8-24; Directed verdict, RR15:65, MNT, RR13:137; CR170-174).
While saying that murder must be proved and self-defense
rejected beyond all reasonable doubt – i.e., to a near-certainty – the
court of appeals actually applied a constitutionally prohibited “no
evidence” standard. The court searched only for a scintilla or mere
modicum of allegedly incriminating evidence and, on finding such proof,
called it a day.
This is no mere technicality. When examined under the correct
standard of review, the proof here misses the required mark (guilt
8
beyond reasonable doubt) widely—so widely, in fact, that we can negate
the State’s burden via a single undisputed fact: Rohne was found
clutching a knife, with no evidence it was planted.
The scientific proof about the knife – the only probative evidence
respecting how it came to be in Rohne’s hand – was that it was at least
equally probable that Rohne wielded the knife as that he didn’t. See
RR12:224 (Pathologist “I wouldn’t even speculate.”). The responding
officers’ comments (about a so-called death grip, etc.) were pure
surmise, categorized as non-probative nonsense by the pathologist.
RR12:224. This is critical because if Rohne held a knife, the case for
murder crumbles, regardless how the Court might analyze any other
fact.
The State has not even suggested that a murder conviction could
be sustained if Rohne wielded the knife. And it cannot. The remaining
items of the State’s “evidence” (such as the absence of a struggle) either
are so flimsy as to be utterly incapable of sustaining any inference at all
of murder, or they are so weakly suggestive of it that the unresolvable
uncertainty surrounding the knife simply swamps whatever slight
9
effect they otherwise could have. That is, the equal probability that
Rohne held the knife defeats the case for murder. Given the abject
uncertainty about Rohne’s use of the knife, the case for murder is no
more probable than the case for self-defense. No rational jury, apprised
by the pathologist of the probabilities respecting Rohne’s use of the
knife, could find murder beyond all reasonable doubt.
A. The court of appeals’ favored items of proof did not
come close to eliminating reasonable doubt.
The reasonable doubt that Rohne’s knife established was not
defeated by any other proof. For its contrary holding, the appellate
court listed nine items of evidence that it says “permit[ed] a rational
jury to conclude that deadly force was not immediately necessary,” slip
op. at 8:
1. Bruises on Rohne
2. Lack of signs of struggle
3. Rohne and Pridgen were intoxicated
4. 911 call
5. Absence of prior confrontations
6. Rohne’s mellow demeanor
7. Weapon discharged at elevated position
8. Rohne’s position on loveseat with ankles crossed
9. Pridgen’s testimony he thought only of Rohne and the knife
10
Most of these items just are not probative and thus are incapable
of sustaining any inference of murder. And not one of these nine items
rationally contradicts self-defense.
Evidence Supposition Rational Test
Bruises on That Pridgen ! The pathologist, who rejected the
Rohne assaulted him bruises as proof of an assault by
Pridgen, RR12:216, said the bruises
could have existed for hours before the
shooting. RR12:215-16.
! Rohne was tall, heavy, and .33
drunk. It is more logical that he
stumbled and hit the floor or a
cabinet.
! Pridgen had no bruises himself. It is
implausible that the smaller, weaker,
sicker man inflicted bruises on the
larger, stronger, younger man, but
sustained no bruising himself.
Lack of signs That Pridgen ! The far more logical conclusion is
of struggle assaulted him that Pridgen did not strike Rohne,
there was no struggle and Rohne
attempted to seduce Pridgen.
! The officer testified that a man
with a knife could stab a victim
quickly unless the victim acted fast.
RR13:50-51.
11
Evidence Supposition Rational Test
Rohne and In a stupor, ! Why would Pridgen, in his own
Pridgen were Pridgen home, shoot a long time friend paying
intoxicated decided to him rent, drunk or not?
murder his
friend ! The logical conclusion is that
something unexpected occurred, like
attempted seduction, increasing the
vital need for Rohne’s photos to prove
it was so.
911 Call Pridgen’s ! The 911 call is at worst a neutral
callousness event. Pridgen was drunk and in
shows lack of shock.
remorse
! That he called 911 and remained at
the scene supports self-defense.
Absence of That Rohne did ! Proof that something astonishing
prior not pull knife must have occurred to justify a
confrontations shooting.
12
Evidence Supposition Rational Test
Rohne’s That Rohne ! As the pathologist confirmed, if
position on was sitting Rohne was attempting to stand with a
loveseat with when shot knife, and was shot by a shorter man,
ankles gravity and the blast could have
crossed pushed Rohne back down into the
seat, RR12:239-40, precisely what
Pridgen said occurred, RR14:95-96,
119, 121-22.
! Police officer agreed. RR12:189.
! Pathologist explained alcohol’s
destruction of fine motor skills and the
ability to walk. RR12:223; also officer:
12:180-81. That Rohne stumbled,
tripped or crossed his feet is
predictable.
Pridgen’s That Pridgen ! The knife alone was sufficient cause
testimony he shot Rohne to shoot Rohne.
thought only only because he
of Rohne and had a large
the knife, not knife, not for
rape fear of rape
Weapon That Pridgen ! Pridgen admitted standing, and
discharged at was standing never contended that Rohne was fully
elevated while Rohne standing. Rohne was rising with the
position was sitting knife, consistent with self-defense.
! The knife is the reason for self-
defense.
Rohne’s That Rohne did ! Again, the appellate court ignored
mellow not pull the the knife. What is this mellow man
demeanor knife on doing with a 16-ounce knife? Mellow
Pridgen people kill every day.
13
Even if these items, taken in hindsight, could establish a modicum
of proof that deadly force was not necessary, there is nothing
approaching proof beyond a reasonable doubt that Pridgen did not in
fact reasonably believe such force was necessary when he pulled the
trigger.
While the appellate court was entitled to presume the jury
resolvedy conflicting inferences in favor of the prosecution, Jackson v.
Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 326 (1979), this did not authorize the jury to
speculate its way into a criminal conviction, any more than it
authorized the appellate court to speculate its way to affirmance. And
yet that is exactly what has happened. The appellate court has parlayed
what is at best a “mere modicum” of proof into the basis for a murder
conviction. Constitutional due process forbids this. “[I]t could not be
argued that such a “modicum” of evidence could by itself
rationally support a conviction beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Jackson, 443 U.S. at 320 (emphasis added).
Any attempt to rationalize a murder verdict in this case hinges on
speculation that the knife was planted – by the same drunk who made
14
the bizarre 911 call the appellate court quotes. Pridgen’s reasonable
belief that force was necessary can’t be disproved beyond all reasonable
doubt if there was a knife. The only credible evidence respecting the
knife (and thus the only proof the jury could credit in its deliberation)
shows the presence of a knife was equally probable with its absence. So
no rational fact-finder could conclude that murder was proved beyond
all reasonable doubt.
B. The appellate court’s analysis ignored undisputed
facts inconsistent with murder.
The appellate court ignored seven items of incontestable fact:
Evidence Proof of Self-Defense
The knife ! Officers testified the one-pound knife is a deadly
weapon. RR13:42.
! Only two equally probable possibilities exist: (1)
Pridgen planted the knife, for which no proof exists,
or (2) Rohne had the knife, and Pridgen had the
right to shoot him.
Pridgen’s home ! The shooting was not in a honky-tonk. It was
inside Pridgen’s home, where he had every
entitlement to self-protection.
! It is implausible Pridgen would plot murder in his
home, without any motive, but highly likely he
would defend himself given a knife threat.
15
Evidence Proof of Self-Defense
The difference in ! Rohne was 15 years younger, 8 inches taller, and
size, age and 90 lbs heavier than Pridgen, who suffered from
condition of the chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, RR14:38;
two men SX53, 63; RR14:38, 50.
! It is impossible that the much smaller Pridgen
inflicted bruises on Rohne while receiving none,
without disturbing the room. But it does explain
why Rohne selected Pridgen as a victim.
Pridgen’s prison ! Police verified that officers are trained to fire
guard training center of the chest of a knife attacker within 21 feet
(now 27-feet) because an attacker at close range can
stab faster than officer can fire. RR13:43-44, 46-47,
50-51;12:191-92. Pridgen, a former prison guard, is
similarly trained. His instinctive reaction to fire
tends to support that he faced a real threat.
Officer’s ! The police officer, testifying as the State’s expert,
testimony that confirmed that shooting under these circumstances is
shooting in self-defense. RR13:46-47; 50-51. No reasonable juror
response to knife can set aside that testimony without a valid basis,
wielder within 21 and none exists.
feet is
appropriate self-
defense
Rohne changed to ! This is unrebutted proof of Rohne’s intent.
shorts which he
unfastened
The government’s ! No rational person could reasonably believe a
weak attempt at homeowner killed a renter to expel him when the
motive – to expel renter was a month-to-month tenant.
a renter
16
A reviewing court must consider these facts if it is going to
conduct a sufficiency review consistent with the Jackson beyond-a-
reasonable-doubt standard. The appellate court’s refusal to do so proves
it applied a “scintilla” or “mere modicum” test: having found 9 items it
believes supply a modicum of guilt evidence, the court saw no point in
examining any other record facts, no matter how strongly they might
point away from murder. Such analysis is constitutionally wrong. “[I]t
could not be argued that such a “modicum” of evidence could by
itself rationally support a conviction beyond a reasonable
doubt.” Jackson, 443 U.S. at 320 (citation omitted) (emphasis added);
accord Brooks v. State, 323 S.W.3d 893, 916 & n.20 (Tex. 2010)
(Cochran, J., concurring).
The appellate court’s review of cherry-picked evidence—the kind
of ‘no-evidence’ review afforded in civil cases—is precisely barred in this
criminal case. In re Winship, 397 U.S. 358, 363 (1970) (“[A] person
accused of a crime . . . would be at a severe disadvantage, a
disadvantage amounting to a lack of fundamental fairness, if he could
17
be adjudged guilty and imprisoned for years on the strength of the same
evidence as would suffice in a civil case.”) (citation omitted).
II. In assessing the case for self-defense, the appellate court
erred by applying an unconstitutional hindsight viewpoint
as to whether deadly force was necessary. (Presented:
Pridgen’s motion for rehearing at 11; Opening Brf. at 8-24, 25-28;
Directed verdict, RR15:65, MNT, RR13:137; CR170-174).
When it comes to self-defense, the appellate court did not even get
the substantive elements right. The nub of the court’s analysis, on page
eight of its slip opinion, is that certain cherry-picked proof “permit[ted]
a rational jury to conclude that deadly force was not immediately
necessary ....” Slip op. at 8. But the question is not whether a jury could
in hindsight conclude that deadly force was unnecessary. It is whether a
jury rationally could conclude to a near certainty that Pridgen – clearly
drunk and reacting in real time – could not have formed a reasonable
belief that deadly force was necessary, see TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 9.32,
and, further, could conclude that this conclusion was established so
soundly as to exist beyond any reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia,
443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979) (“[B]y impressing upon the factfinder the need
18
to reach a subjective state of near certitude of the guilt of the accused,
the standard symbolizes the significance that our society attaches to the
criminal sanction”).
The question, as respects self defense under Penal Code Section
9.32, is what Pridgen himself, in the critical instant and faced with the
particular circumstances, might reasonably have believed when he
pulled the trigger. TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. §9.32(a) (imposing a
subjective standard under which deadly force is justified “when and to
the degree the actor reasonably believes the deadly force is immediately
necessary ... to prevent the other’s use or attempted use of unlawful
deadly force” or “to prevent the other’s imminent commission of ...
murder, sexual assault, [or] aggravated sexual assault ...”). Under this
statute, the appellate court’s analysis—which asks whether a detached
observer, in the calm and clarity of hindsight, could “conclude that
deadly force [in fact] was not immediately necessary,” slip op. at 8—is
beside the point.
19
III. The appellate court erred in holding that the decedent’s
photos of simulated sexual violence were inadmissible.
(Presented: Pridgen’s motion for rehearing at 13; Opening Brf. at
28-49; Directed verdict, RR15:65, MNT, RR13:137; CR170-174).
“A defendant has a fundamental right to present evidence of a
defense as long as the evidence is relevant and is not excluded by
an established evidentiary rule.”
Miller v. State, 36 S.W.3d 503, 507 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001)
Evidence in a criminal trial is “relevant” if it has “any tendency to
make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the
determination of the action more probable or less probable than it
would be without the evidence.” TEX. R. CR. EVID. 401; Miller, 36 S.W.3d
at 507. The photos of Rohne (attached to this petition) clearly meet this
test and thus are admissible under Evidence Rule 402. TEX. R. CR. EVID.
402 (“All relevant evidence is admissible, except as otherwise provided
by ... these rules .... Evidence which is not relevant is inadmissible.”).
20
A. The photos are clearly relevant to Pridgen’s statutorily
authorized defense.
“The photographs, I’ll concede, there are some images of sexual
violence. We are dealing with bondage and S&M nature, where
people are in a superior position and an inferior position, where
someone was being sometimes violently abused, and someone was
receiving that violent abuse.”
Prosecutor, RR2:11-12.
The photos—which depict Rohne role-playing bizarre, violent
sexual fantasies—directly addressed the statutory defense jurors were
charged to decide: “[a] person is justified in using deadly force ... to
prevent the other’s imminent ... sexual assault or aggravated sexual
assault.” Jury Charge, CR152-53. The government conceded this
indirectly at trial, stating that the photos included “images of sexual
violence” and “bondage.” RR2:11-12. The photos counter the
government’s contention that Pridgen fired to evict a tenant. They go a
long way to answering the prosecutor’s rhetorical question: “And who
knows what went on that night?” RR15:62-63. And, of course, the
photos are vitally necessary to rebut the government’s cries that
21
Pridgen planted the knife. If the photos were not admissible already,
the government arguments would make them admissible. See Cooper v.
State, 95 S.W.3d 488, 491 (Tex. App.---Houston [1st Dist.] 2002, no pet.)
(The State’s counter arguments alone can make evidence Rule 401
relevant).
B. The photos are highly probative of self-defense.
To be probative, “the proffered evidence must tend to make the
existence of the fact ‘more or less probable than it would be without the
evidence.’” Miller, 36 S.W.3d at 507. So what facts are made more or
less probable by the photos?
• That Rohne was capable of sexual assault.
• That Rohne had a knife.
• That Rohne grabbed Pridgen’s genitals.
• That Rohne whispered ““Don’t get up. Just relax and
enjoy the pleasure.”
• That Rohne’s bruises may have been self-inflicted when
using his sex toys (see his chains and clamps, App. A-2).
• That Rohne and Pridgen’s lack of prior confrontation is
consistent and explained with the secret and threatening
activities Rohne knew of but Pridgen did not.
22
Jurors&
Rule&404(a)& Rule&404(b)& Self&Defense&&
(Character& (MoCve,& TPC&Art&9.31&
Trait)& Plan,&Intent)&
Rule&402&Relevance&Threshold&
Rohne’s&Photos,&
Toys&and&
Equipment&
C. The photographs speak loudly for themselves and 12
citizen jurors should be permitted to listen.
Remarkably, the appellate court erected an artificial barrier to
sexual assault evidence: the evidence must be of a homosexual nature
when the victim and perpetrator are of the same gender. See slip op. at
10 (“There are no images contained in Defense exhibits 1 through 27
that show Rohne acting as an aggressor or engaging in homosexual
conduct.”) This is not only wrong—at least one photo (see App. A-2)
showed the giant Rohne cross-dressing in a maid costume—but is a
violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
See Craig v. Boren, 429 U.S. 190 (1976).
Whether Rohne is homosexual is beside the point. Who is to say
that Rohne did not see this encounter with Pridgen as a fresh
opportunity to branch out from female prostitutes to male participants?
What rational distinction can (or should) be made between simulated
violence against women and men, censuring the one, and sanctioning
the other?
Further, as the government conceded, RR12:11-12, the photos do
show Rohne as an aggressor:
23
• 7 of the photos (see App. A-2) show Rohne inflicted pain on
himself with a genital clamp (proof his bruises may be self-
inflicted);
• 3 photos show that Rohne used restraint devices to simulate
bondage and pain.
• And other photos (DX7 and DX12) (see App. A-2) display
rope, penis clamps, handcuffs and chains --- designed to
inflict pain and recognized as deadly weapons. See Hill v.
State, 913 S.W.2d 581, 583 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996) (chain is
deadly weapon); Castro v. State, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 704,
7 (Tex. App. --- Houston [1st Dist.] Jan. 26, 2006, no pet.)
(rope is deadly weapon); Smith v. State, 186 N.C. App. 57
(N.C. App. 2007) (handcuffs as deadly weapon).
D. The appellate court undertook its own impermissible
fact-weighing and credibility assessment.
The appellate court wrote, “Appellant testified that he shot Rohne
because he ‘was in fear of his life and thought Rohne was going to kill
him.’ But as the sole judge of witness credibility and the weight to be
given their testimony, the jury was free to disbelieve Appellant’s
contention that he feared for his life.” Slip op. at 8. But the court
withheld an entire class of evidence relevant to whether Pridgen in fact
feared for his life. The photos were unique and would have been critical
to the “witness credibility” and “weight” determinations on which the
24
appellate court hangs its decision. See Brooks, 323 S.W.3d at 911
(appellate court cannot sit as 13th juror).
The exclusion of the photos was more than error; it denied critical
constitutional rights. “[T]he Constitution guarantees criminal
defendants ‘a meaningful opportunity to present a complete defense.’”
Crane v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 683, 690 (1986). As this Court explained in
Miller, exclusions of evidence under Rules 401 and 402 implicate the
Due Process and Confrontation Clauses of the Sixth and Fourteenth
Amendments. See Miller, 36 S.W.3d at 506. By dismissing the
photographs of Rohne on mere relevance grounds and refusing retrial,
the court of appeals violated Pridgen’s right to present a complete
defense, in contravention of Holmes v. South Carolina, 547 U.S. 319
(2006), and the Due Process and Confrontation Clauses of the Sixth and
Fourteenth Amendments. See California v. Trombetta, 467 U.S. 479,
485 (1984).
CONCLUSION
A former prison official with no criminal record, standing in his
own home, shot a transsexual who pulled a knife and grabbed his
25
genitals with plans for simulated or actual rape. Every rational Texan
would say this is fair reason for self-defense. When jurors see the photos
that corroborate Pridgen’s explanation and Rohne’s misconduct, they
will acquit Pridgen. The court of appeals should not stand in the way of
the most important right we have, to have accusations decided by a jury
of peers with full presentation of evidence. The Court should grant
review.
RELIEF SOUGHT
Pridgen seeks discretionary review followed by acquittal or new
trial. Respectfully submitted this 6 day of April 2015,
By: /s/ James W. Volberding
___________________________________
JAMES W. VOLBERDING
SBN: 00786313
First Place
100 E. Ferguson Street
Suite 500
Tyler, Texas 75702
(903) 597-6622
(866) 398-6883 (fax)
e-mail: james@jamesvolberding.com
Attorney for Appellant,
Mr. Robert Lynn Pridgen
26
CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
I certify that this document is written in 14-point font and
contains 4,238 words, as measured from the Statement of Facts through
the Relief Sought, plus about 200 words in pages containing exhibits.
/s/ James W. Volberding
____________________________
James W. Volberding
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that a true and correct copy of this pleading has
been delivered this 6 day of April 2015 to:
Anderson County District Attorney
500 N. Church Street, Room 38
Palestine, TX 75801
State Prosecuting Attorney
P. O. Box 13046
Austin, Texas 78711-3046
by the following means:
_____ By U.S. Postal Service Certified Mail, R.R.R.
_X___ By First Class U.S. Mail
_____ By Special Courier _______________________
_____ By Hand Delivery
_____ By Fax before 5 p.m.
_____ By Fax after 5 p.m.
_____ By email.
/s/ James W. Volberding
____________________________
James W. Volberding
27
APPENDIX
Tyler Court of appeals opinion
Pridgen v. State, 2014 Tex. App.
LEXIS 12915 (Tex. App. --- Tyler
Dec. 3, 2014, pet. filed) …………………………………………………. A-1
Denied photographs of Rohne …………………………………………… A-2
28
NO. 12-13-00136-CR
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
TWELFTH COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT
TYLER, TEXAS
ROBERT LYNN PRIDGEN, § APPEAL FROM THE 3RD
APPELLANT
V. § JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
APPELLEE § ANDERSON COUNTY, TEXAS
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Robert Lynn Pridgen appeals his conviction for murder. He raises three issues on appeal.
We affirm.
BACKGROUND
An Anderson County grand jury indicted Appellant for the murder of Paul Rohne alleged
to have occurred on or about January 27, 2009. It is undisputed that Appellant fired the shot that
led to Rohne’s death, but he contends that he was acting in self-defense.
Appellant pleaded “not guilty,” and his first trial resulted in a hung jury. In his second
trial, the jury rejected Appellant’s claim of self-defense, found him guilty, and assessed
punishment at twenty years of imprisonment. This appeal followed.
SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE
In his first two issues, Appellant contends that the evidence is legally and factually
sufficient to support his “affirmative defense of self-defense.” Appellant contends that he is
entitled to an acquittal because the evidence established his “affirmative claim of self-defense . . .
as a matter of law.”
Standard of Review
Appellant contends that the standard of review in this case is governed by the holding in
Matlock v. State, 392 S.W.3d 662 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013), but his reliance on Matlock is
misplaced. In Matlock, the court of criminal appeals reaffirmed that the civil standards of
review apply when an appellant raises a legal or factual sufficiency challenge to a jury’s adverse
finding on his affirmative defense. See Matlock v. State, 392 S.W.3d 662, 668–70 (Tex. Crim.
App. 2013). This is because, in a criminal case, a defendant must prove an affirmative defense
by a preponderance of the evidence—the civil burden. See id.
Under Matlock, the standard for reviewing the legal sufficiency of the evidence
supporting an adverse finding on an affirmative defense is as follows:
When an appellant asserts that there is no evidence to support an adverse finding on which [he]
had the burden of proof, we construe the issue as an assertion that the contrary was established as
a matter of law. We first search the record for evidence favorable to the finding, disregarding all
contrary evidence unless a reasonable fact[]finder could not. If we find no evidence supporting
the finding, we then determine whether the contrary was established as a matter of law.
See id. at 669 (citations omitted). When examining whether an appellant established his factual
sufficiency claim, the appellate court views the entirety of the evidence in a neutral light, and
may sustain a factual sufficiency challenge on appeal
only if, after setting out the relevant evidence and explaining precisely how the contrary evidence
greatly outweighs the evidence supporting the verdict, the court clearly states why the verdict is so
much against the great weight of the evidence as to be manifestly unjust, conscience-shocking, or
clearly biased.
See id. at 671 (citing Meraz v. State, 785 S.W.2d 146, 155 (Tex. Crim. App. 1990) (en banc)).
However, the standards set forth in Matlock do not apply to the current case because self-defense
is a defense rather than an affirmative defense. Zuliani v. State, 97 S.W.3d 589, 594 (Tex. Crim.
App. 2003).
The issue of self-defense is a fact issue to be determined by the jury, and a jury’s verdict
of guilt is an implicit finding that it rejected a defendant’s self-defense theory. Saxton v. State,
804 S.W.2d 910, 913-14 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991) (en banc). In reviewing the sufficiency of the
evidence to support the jury’s rejection of self-defense, we examine all of the evidence in the
light most favorable to the verdict to determine whether any rational trier of fact could have
2
found the essential elements of the offense and also could have found against the defendant on
the self-defense issue beyond a reasonable doubt. See id. at 914 (stating “we look not to whether
the [s]tate presented evidence which refuted appellant’s self-defense”); Sutton v. State, No.
12-04-00150-CR, 2005 WL 3725087, at *3 (Tex. App.—Tyler 2006, pet. ref’d) (mem. op., not
designated for publication). Under this standard, we do not conduct a separate factual
sufficiency review. See Brooks v. State, 323 S.W.3d 893, 895 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).
Accordingly, we address Appellant’s second issue (legal sufficiency) but not his first (factual
sufficiency). See TEX. R. APP. P. 47.1.
Applicable Law
The use of deadly force is justified as self-defense under certain circumstances. Morales
v. State, 357 S.W.3d 1, 7 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011). An actor is justified in using deadly force
against another if (1) the actor would be justified in using force under Section 9.31 of the penal
code, and (2) when and to the degree the actor reasonably believes that deadly force is
immediately necessary to protect the actor against the other’s use or attempted use of unlawful
deadly force, or to prevent the other’s imminent commission of murder, sexual assault, or
aggravated sexual assault. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 9.32(a) (West 2011).
Self-defense is an issue to be determined by the jury. Saxton, 804 S.W.2d at 913.
“Defensive evidence which is merely consistent with the physical evidence at the scene of the
alleged offense will not render the State’s evidence insufficient since the credibility
determination of such evidence is solely within the jury’s province and the jury is free to accept
or reject the defensive evidence.” Id. at 914.
When a defendant raises self-defense, he bears the burden of producing some evidence to
support his defense. See Zuliani, 97 S.W.3d at 594 (citing Saxton, 804 S.W.2d at 913); see also
McCurdy v. State, No. 06-12-00206-CR, 2013 WL 5433478, at *3 (Tex. App.—Texarkana Sept.
26, 2013, pet. ref’d) (mem. op., not designated for publication). Once the defendant produces
some evidence supporting his defense, the state then bears the burden of persuasion to “disprove
the raised defense.” Zuliani, 97 S.W.3d at 594; see also Tidmore v. State, 976 S.W.2d 724, 729
(Tex. App.—Tyler 1998, pet. ref’d) (state does not have burden of producing evidence to
affirmatively refute self-defense). The burden of persuasion does not require the production of
evidence; it requires only that the state prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt. Zuliani, 97
S.W.3d at 594.
3
The Evidence
It is undisputed that Appellant shot and killed Paul Rohne. Appellant called 911 at
approximately 1:25 a.m. on January 27, 2009. The following discourse took place between
Appellant and the 911 dispatcher:
Dispatch: Anderson County 911.
Appellant: Yeah, how you doin’ tonight?
Dispatcher: Sir, do you have an emergency?
Appellant: Yeah I do, I got a dead man on my couch. Um.
Dispatcher: You have a dead man on your couch?
Appellant: Yeah, I just shot him.
Dispatcher: You shot him?
Appellant: Yes I did.
Dispatcher: What’s your name sir?
Appellant: Lynn Pridgen.
Dispatcher: And who is the man you shot?
Appellant: Uh, Paul Rohne.
Dispatcher: And why did you shoot him?
Appellant: Uh, because he was attacking me. But, you know, all this stuff needs to be hashed out
in court. But I’m telling you I got a dead man on my couch and I’d like a[n] ambulance or
something to come get him.
Dispatcher: Okay, hold on for me just a second sir, okay?
Appellant: Yeah.
At approximately 1:30 a.m., law enforcement arrived at the residence. By that time, Appellant’s
911 call had ended. The 911 dispatcher called Appellant back and informed him that law
enforcement was requesting that he exit his residence. In concluding this phone call with the
dispatcher, Appellant said, “Cool deal[.] You’re doin’ good girl. Bye.”
Sergeant Ronnie Foster was among the first officers to enter the residence. He testified
that there did not appear to be any signs of struggle, that the temperature inside the residence was
4
68 degrees, and that Rohne was deceased. Rohne was sitting on a loveseat, slumped over, with
his ankles crossed. He had a “tight” grip on the side of his glasses with his left hand and “no grip
at all” on a knife that was in his right hand.
Deputy Michael Mitchell arrived at Appellant’s residence at the same time as Sergeant
Foster. When they arrived, they handcuffed Appellant, and placed him in Mitchell’s patrol car.
Mitchell testified that Appellant had difficulty standing, his speech was slurred, and he smelled
heavily of alcohol. He testified that Appellant was intoxicated, which Appellant confirmed when
he testified that he was “drunk” the night of the shooting.
Paramedic Matthew Corbin arrived at Appellant’s residence at approximately 1:50 a.m.
Corbin confirmed that Rohne was dead and testified that he was cool to the touch, and his skin
was pale and mottled.1 Corbin testified that a large amount of blood was “all over the place,” and
that blood was “already coagulating” when he arrived.
The officers collected various items from the scene, including the knife in Rohne’s right
hand and a shotgun that they believed was used in the shooting. They swabbed the knife and
shotgun for forensic testing. The trigger of the shotgun contained Appellant’s DNA, but no
DNA profiles could be extracted from the knife. No usable fingerprints were obtained from the
gun or the knife.
Cause and Time of Rohne’s Death
Dr. Delbert Van Deusen, a forensic pathologist, performed an autopsy and determined
that Rohne’s cause of death was a shotgun wound to the chest. He testified that Rohne had a
blood alcohol concentration of .33, “a rather obvious bruise on the . . . right side of his face[,]
multiple bruises on his arms, a pretibial area on his legs[, and] of course, the shotgun wound to
the chest.” The bruising occurred prior to Rohne’s death, Dr. Van Deusen explained, because
bruising requires blood pressure. When Rohne was shot, he instantly lost blood pressure because
the gunshot went through his heart. Dr. Van Deusen described the bruising on Rohne’s arms as
“defense wounds” because their pattern indicated that they were incurred from a person
attempting to protect his face or body. He agreed that an equally consistent explanation for the
cause of Rohne’s bruising was falling.
Dr. Van Deusen testified that Rohne’s gunshot wound was front to back, downward, and
slightly left to right. He described the wound as “more of a distant gunshot wound.” He
1
Corbin explained that “mottled” meant Rohne’s skin appeared, pale, white, and blotchy.
5
explained that the firearm was discharged approximately eight to ten feet away and was
positioned higher than Rohne when it was discharged. Dr. Van Deusen did not know how long
Rohne had been dead when the photographs of Rohne (specifically State’s exhibits 10, 48, and
51) were taken. Hypothetically, he estimated that if there was some mottling of the skin, the
body was cool to the touch, and there was coagulation of blood, a person could have been dead
for “two or three hours.”2
Dr. Van Deusen explained the differences between liver mortis and rigor mortis because
the testimony had shown that some of the officers believed Rohne’s loose grip on the knife was
due to the fact that the knife was staged. Sergeant Foster testified that he expected Rohne to
have a “death grip” on the knife. Investigator Larry Warrick testified that he thought the
positioning of the knife was odd because Rohne’s hand was “cupping” the knife instead of
holding it, and the knife fell out of Rohne’s hand after Warrick barely touched it.
Dr. Van Deusen testified that there was not anything significant about Rohne’s left hand
having a stronger grip on his glasses and his right hand being more loose and open around the
knife. He was asked, “You can’t say whether [Appellant’s fingers were] like that and opened up,
or whether it was closed, or whether it was never closed, or—I mean, either hand?” Dr. Van
Deusen replied, “I wouldn’t even speculate.”
Appellant’s Testimony
Appellant is a retired, fifty-nine-year-old man. He is five feet, eight inches tall, weighs
180 pounds, and has chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). He has worked as a
security officer, and as a sergeant and maintenance employee for the Texas prison system.
Appellant met Rohne sometime before 2001, and Appellant began renting part of his house to
Rohne approximately seven months before the shooting.3
Appellant testified that he originally did not want to rent his house, but after several
months of being “begged” by Rohne and Rohne’s ex-wife, he finally agreed. Appellant testified,
“[B]oth he [(Rohne)] and Carla [(Rohne’s ex-wife)] stated [‘]If I keep living up here,[’] – or,
Carla would say [‘]If he keeps living up there in Tyler, he’s going to kill somebody.[’]” Because
Appellant occasionally needed the use of his Bois D’ Arc house, his agreement with Rohne was
2
State’s exhibits 10, 48, and 51 are photographs of Rhone from different angles as he was found at
Appellant’s residence. The record is silent as to the time the photographs were taken.
3
Appellant’s primary residence is in Neches, Texas. The house where the shooting occurred is located in
Bois D’Arc, a community near Montalba.
6
that he would continue to have use of the master bedroom and bathroom, he could stay at the
house whenever he desired, and Rohne was to have use of the rest of the house.
Appellant described Rohne as a much younger, very large man—over six feet tall and
weighing about 270 pounds. Rohne was one of Appellant’s “drinking buddies.” Appellant
testified that Rohne generally had a mellow demeanor when he was drinking but sometimes
became depressed and talked about killing himself. Rohne and Appellant never had any
disagreements, fights, or arguments prior to January 26, 2009.
Appellant and Rohne talked on the phone almost every night. Appellant testified that he
was sure he and Rohne had talked about their “escapades of the past a couple of weeks” before
the shooting. But it was not until the week before the shooting that Rohne told Appellant that he
hired prostitutes in Dallas to handcuff and leg iron him to a bed.
On January 26, 2009, at approximately 4:00 p.m., Appellant arrived at his Bois D’ Arc
house. Once he arrived, he and Rohne began drinking alcohol. During the night, Appellant
inquired about Rohne’s experience with the Dallas prostitutes. Because Rohne had not
responded to his previous questions, Appellant continued to prod Rohne for details and stated,
“Come on, Paul, tell me what those whores did to you.” Rohne responded, “Oh, you’d be
surprised.” Later that night, Rohne commented on Appellant’s interest about the Dallas
prostitutes and said, “Lynn, you seem to show a lot of interest in that. You ought to try it
sometime.”
Sometime after 10:00 p.m., Appellant fell asleep on the loveseat and was awakened by
Rohne “rubbing my genitals” with his left hand. Rohne told Appellant, “Don’t get up. Just relax
and enjoy the pleasure.” Approximately one second after Rohne’s statement, Appellant “jumped
up,” and ran to the sliding glass door, but the door was locked. When Appellant turned and
looked back at Rohne, he saw that Rohne had a knife in his hand and “was getting up, and
coming towards me.” When he saw Rohne standing with the knife, Appellant “thought
something bad was fixing to happen” to him. Appellant explained that he felt that he had been
sexually assaulted, and the thought running through his mind was that Rohne “was going to rape
me, handcuff me up to a bed. He was just running fast.” Appellant shot Rohne as he was “in the
process of standing up,” and testified that he shot Rohne because “I was in fear of my life. I
thought he was going to kill me.” Appellant testified that one of the photographs of Rohne
7
showed that his shorts were unbuttoned, but he did not state whether he was aware of this when
he shot Rohne.
On cross examination, Appellant demonstrated how Rohne was positioned on the love
seat when he woke up. Appellant confirmed that when he was awakened by Rohne’s touching,
he did not see a knife and had no fear of a knife. But he confirmed that when he shot Rohne, he
was thinking only about Rohne and the knife. Appellant testified that “[t]he knife was the
immediate danger.” Appellant did not know how Rohne received the bruises on his face and
arms, and maintained that he had not fought with Rohne that evening.
Discussion
To accept Appellant’s claim of self-defense, the jury had to find that Appellant was
justified under Section 9.31 of the penal code in using deadly force against Rhone, and that
Appellant reasonably believed the deadly force was immediately necessary to protect him against
Rhone’s use or attempted use of deadly force, or to prevent Rhone’s imminent commission of
sexual assault. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 9.32(a).
Appellant testified that he shot Rohne because he “was in fear of his life and thought
Rhone was going to kill him.” But as the sole judge of witness credibility and the weight to be
given their testimony, the jury was free to disbelieve Appellant’s contention that he feared for his
life. See Saxton, 804 S.W.2d at 914. Although Rohne had bruising on his face and arms, the
living room showed no signs of struggle, and Rohne’s gunshot wound showed that the weapon
was discharged from an elevated position. This evidence, when viewed in light of Appellant’s
and Rhone’s intoxication, Appellant’s 911 phone calls, Rohne’s mellow demeanor, the absence
of prior confrontations between Rohne and Appellant, and Rohne’s position on the loveseat with
his ankles crossed, permits a rational jury to conclude that deadly force was not immediately
necessary to protect Appellant from Rohne’s alleged use or attempted use of unlawful deadly
force. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 9.32(a)(2)(A); Saxton, 804 S.W.2d at 914.
Appellant testified further that Rhone had rubbed his genitals and he thought Rhone “was
going to rape” him. But Appellant contradicted his prior testimony on cross examination when
he testified that he was thinking only about Rohne and the knife when he shot Rohne. This
evidence permits a rational jury to conclude that it was not reasonable for Appellant to believe
that deadly force was immediately necessary to prevent the imminent commission of a sexual
assault. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 9.32(a)(2)(B),(b)(10(c); Saxton, 804 S.W.2d at 914.
8
After viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, we conclude that a
rational jury could have found the essential elements of the offense and also found against
Appellant on the self-defense issue beyond a reasonable doubt. Saxton, 804 S.W.2d at 914.
Therefore, the evidence is sufficient to support the jury’s implicit rejection of Appellant’s
self-defense claim. See id. Accordingly, we overrule Appellant’s second issue.
EXCLUSION OF EVIDENCE
In his third issue, Appellant contends that the trial court abused its discretion by
excluding evidence that would have corroborated his testimony. He contends that the excluded
evidence proves “Rohne was an aggressive bisexual hungry to role play bizarre sexual
encounters including rape, bondage, and torture.”
Standard of Review
A trial court has considerable discretion in determining whether to exclude or admit
evidence. See Montgomery v. State, 810 S.W.2d 372, 391 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991) (en banc)
(op. on reh’g);; State v. Dudley, 223 S.W.3d 717, 724 (Tex. App.—Tyler 2007, no pet.). Absent
an abuse of discretion, we will not disturb a trial court’s decision to admit or exclude evidence on
appeal. Dudley, 223 S.W.3d at 724 (citing Martin v. State, 173 S.W.3d 463, 467 (Tex. Crim.
App. 2005)). Under this standard, we will uphold a trial court’s evidentiary ruling as long as the
ruling is within the “zone of reasonable disagreement.” Id.
Applicable Law
Evidence is relevant if it has “any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of
consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be
without the evidence.” TEX. R. EVID. 401. Evidence that is not relevant is inadmissible. TEX. R.
EVID. 402.
In determining whether evidence is relevant, it is important that courts examine the
purpose for which the evidence is being introduced. Layton v. State, 280 S.W.3d 235, 240 (Tex.
Crim. App. 2009) (citations omitted). It is critical that there is a direct or logical connection
between the actual evidence and the proposition sought to be proved. Id.
An alleged victim’s prior specific acts of violence are admissible “only to the extent that
they are relevant for a purpose other than character conformity.” Torres v. State, 71 S.W.3d 758,
760 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002). In the context of proving the deceased was the first aggressor,
9
violent acts are relevant apart from showing character conformity by demonstrating the
deceased’s intent, motive, or state of mind. Id. Before a specific, violent act is introduced, there
must be some evidence of a violent or aggressive act by the deceased that tends to raise the issue
of self-defense that the specific act may explain. Id. at 761. Prior specific acts of violence
relevant to the ultimate confrontation may be offered to show a deceased’s state of mind, intent,
or motive, and the specific violent acts need not be directed at the defendant to be admissible.
Id. “As long as the proffered violent acts explain the outward aggressive conduct of the
deceased at the time of the killing, and in a manner other than demonstrating character
conformity only, prior specific acts of violence may be admitted. . . .” Id. at 762.
Discussion
The only contested issue at trial was whether Appellant shot Rohne in self-defense.
Appellant testified that Rohne was the first aggressor because Rohne rubbed Appellant’s
genitals, told him to relax and enjoy the pleasure, and then began to stand up from the loveseat
holding a knife in his hand. The trial court excluded twenty-seven exhibits that Appellant argues
would have increased the probability that Rohne (1) was an aggressive transvestite, (2) who
fondled Appellant’s genitals, (3) told Appellant to relax and enjoy the pleasure, and (4) whose
next steps “apparently were to force or role play [Appellant’s] rape with a knife (or perhaps
[Appellant’s] involuntary, forced rape of Rohne).”
Defense exhibits 2 through 27 are photographs of items found inside Rohne’s room. The
items include women’s shoes, women’s undergarments and other clothing, and various “sex
toys.” Defense exhibit 1 is a disc containing the results of a forensic search of Rohne’s laptop.
The disc contains several different files that include links to websites which purport to contain
sexually explicit material, pornographic images of male genitalia, pornographic images of
women, and pornographic images of Rohne. The pornographic images of Rohne showed him
wearing women’s clothing, being subjected to sexual acts with women in which he was in a
submissive position, or wearing other items with his genitals exposed. There are no images
contained in Defense exhibits 1 through 27 that show Rohne acting as an aggressor or engaging
in homosexual conduct.
In order for Defense exhibits 1 through 27 to be admissible, they must explain the
outward aggressive conduct of Rohne at the time he was shot. Id. at 762. The evidence at trial
does not show that Rohne was wearing any of the items depicted in the proffered photographs, or
10
that Rohne was attempting to use any of the items on Appellant. No knives are shown to have
been found in Rohne’s room, and none of the images of Rohne show him engaging in
homosexual activity or other activity in which a knife is being used. Accordingly, there is no
direct or logical connection between these exhibits and Appellant’s contention that he shot
Rohne in self-defense. See Layton, 280 S.W.3d at 240.
Although the items found in Rohne’s bedroom and laptop show that Rohne engaged in
unorthodox sexual practices, they do not make more or less probable the fact that Appellant was
in fear for his life when he shot Rohne or that he believed Rohne was going to rape him. See id.
Moreover, Defense exhibits 1 through 27 do not demonstrate Rohne’s state of mind, intent, or
motive on the night of the shooting. See Torres, 71 S.W.3d at 760–62. Thus, the exhibits are
not relevant apart from showing character conformity. See TEX. R. EVID. 401; Torres, 71 S.W.3d
at 760. The trial court did not abuse its discretion by excluding Defense exhibits 1 through 27.
See TEX. R. EVID. 402; Montgomery, 810 S.W.2d at 391. Accordingly, we overrule Appellant’s
third issue.
DISPOSITION
Having overruled Appellant’s second and third issues, we affirm the judgment of the trial
court.
JAMES T. WORTHEN
Chief Justice
Opinion delivered December 3, 2014.
Panel consisted of Worthen, C.J., Griffith, J., and Hoyle, J.
(DO NOT PUBLISH)
11
COURT OF APPEALS
TWELFTH COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT OF TEXAS
JUDGMENT
DECEMBER 3, 2014
NO. 12-13-00136-CR
ROBERT LYNN PRIDGEN,
Appellant
V.
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
Appellee
Appeal from the 3rd District Court
of Anderson County, Texas (Tr.Ct.No. 29956)
THIS CAUSE came to be heard on the appellate record and briefs filed
herein, and the same being considered, it is the opinion of this court that there was no error in the
judgment.
It is therefore ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED that the judgment of
the court below be in all things affirmed, and that the decision be certified to the court below
for observance.
James T. Worthen, Chief Justice.
Panel consisted of Worthen, C.J., Griffith, J., and Hoyle, J.