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CROSSOVER: Aggravated-assault appeal highlights admissibility of victim-on-scene statements and prior testimony in dating-violence shooting

New Texas Court of Appeals Opinion - Analyzed for Family Law Attorneys

Recarido Antonio Terrell v. The State of Texas, 09-24-00126-CR, May 27, 2026.

On appeal from Criminal District Court, Jefferson County, Texas

Synopsis

The Beaumont court held the evidence legally sufficient to support an aggravated-assault-with-a-deadly-weapon conviction where the record combined the complainant’s on-scene identifications, a 911 call, body-camera evidence, prior testimony from unavailable officers, medical testimony confirming a gunshot wound, and circumstantial corroboration tying the defendant to the vehicle and timeline. Under Jackson v. Virginia, the appellate court deferred to the jury’s resolution of credibility disputes and evidentiary inconsistencies rather than reweighing the proof on appeal.

Relevance to Family Law

For Texas family-law litigators, this is a useful crossover authority on how courts evaluate violence evidence when the record includes fragmented, emotionally charged, and partially hearsay-inflected proof gathered in crisis conditions. In divorce, SAPCR, protective-order, and conservatorship litigation, the opinion reinforces a practical truth: a factfinder may credit on-scene victim statements, corroborating third-party accounts, body-camera footage, medical observations, and circumstantial location evidence even when the victim’s later testimony is incomplete, inconsistent, or contested. That matters directly to best-interest findings, family-violence findings under the Family Code, supervised-access disputes, exclusive-use claims, and disproportionate property-division arguments tied to fault or wasting conduct arising from abuse.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The State prosecuted Terrell for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon arising from a dating-violence shooting. The complainant, identified by pseudonym as Casey, was alleged to have been shot in the leg by Terrell, a former boyfriend with whom she had a dating relationship. A third-party witness working at an industrial site heard a woman screaming, called 911, and reported that the woman said she had been shot by her boyfriend and had jumped from his red vehicle. EMS personnel observed abrasions consistent with road rash and a gunshot entry-and-exit wound to Casey’s leg/buttock area. Casey reportedly told EMS that she had been in the car with her boyfriend when she was shot and then fled for help.

At trial, the State also relied on prior testimony from an unavailable responding officer, along with the officer’s body-camera footage. That evidence reflected that Casey identified Terrell by name as her ex-boyfriend, described his red vehicle, and recounted that an argument escalated while they were traveling on Interstate 10. According to those statements, she saw a gun, Terrell struck her with it, fired once into the floorboard, threatened her, and ultimately shot her in the leg after she fled the vehicle and struggled with him near the median.

Additional circumstantial evidence strengthened the State’s theory. A patrol officer later encountered a house fire at an address associated with Casey and found a red vehicle registered to Terrell parked nearby. The officer observed what appeared to be a bullet hole in the front passenger door that looked like an exit defect from a shot fired inside the vehicle. Cell-phone mapping evidence placed two relevant phones together in the area of Casey’s residence, later in Port Arthur, then on Interstate 10 in Beaumont, and ultimately placed Terrell’s phone back near Casey’s residence in the early morning hours after the shooting.

Casey also testified and identified Terrell as a former boyfriend of about three years. Her testimony described meeting him that evening, getting into his red vehicle, traveling through Port Arthur and back into Beaumont, and then, on Interstate 10, Terrell pulling a pistol, threatening to kill her, and firing it while she begged him not to hurt her. She testified that she jumped from the car and was injured in the process. The appellate issue centered on whether this body of evidence, taken together, permitted a rational jury to find beyond a reasonable doubt that Terrell caused bodily injury with a firearm.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court applied the familiar legal-sufficiency standard from Jackson v. Virginia: reviewing courts consider all admitted evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict and ask whether any rational factfinder could have found the essential elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. That standard does not permit the appellate court to sit as a thirteenth juror, reevaluate witness credibility, or substitute its judgment for the jury’s resolution of conflicts in the evidence.

The substantive offense was aggravated assault with a deadly weapon under Texas Penal Code section 22.02, which incorporates assault principles requiring proof that the defendant caused bodily injury and used or exhibited a deadly weapon during the commission of the assault. A firearm is a deadly weapon per se, so the central factual dispute was identity and causation, not whether the instrument alleged could qualify.

The opinion also reflects ordinary evidentiary principles concerning the use of prior testimony from unavailable witnesses and the admission of punishment-phase extraneous-offense evidence, with review framed through the abuse-of-discretion standard. Although the requested focus here is the sufficiency analysis, the procedural posture matters because the sufficiency review included all evidence admitted before the jury.

Application

The court’s reasoning was straightforward and prosecutor-friendly in the way many legal-sufficiency opinions are. It did not isolate any single evidentiary item as independently dispositive. Instead, it treated the proof as a layered record in which each component corroborated the others. The complainant’s immediate statements to the 911 caller, to EMS, and to responding officers were all materially consistent on the essential points: she had been in a car with her boyfriend or ex-boyfriend, she was shot, she fled from the vehicle, and the assailant was Terrell. The body-camera footage reinforced those identifications in real time, before the distortions that can accompany later litigation positioning.

Medical testimony supplied objective support. EMS observed a gunshot wound and abrasions consistent with jumping from a moving vehicle. That physical evidence matched the complainant’s account and undercut any suggestion that the injury was fabricated or disconnected from the described assault. The later discovery of Terrell’s red vehicle near Casey’s residence, coupled with the apparent bullet defect in the passenger-side door and the phone-location analysis tracking the parties’ movements, provided additional circumstantial support linking Terrell, Casey, and the vehicle to the relevant places and times.

Terrell’s appellate sufficiency challenge necessarily invited the court to focus on potential inconsistencies, gaps, and the absence of direct observation by third parties of the actual shooting. The court declined that invitation because Jackson does not authorize appellate reweighing. The jury had heard the competing implications in the record, including limitations in witness knowledge, questions about vehicle speed, and the fact that some evidence came through prior testimony or on-scene reporting rather than pristine eyewitness observation of the trigger pull. But because the combined evidence supported a rational inference that Terrell shot Casey with a firearm, the verdict stood.

Holding

The court held the evidence legally sufficient to support Terrell’s conviction for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. In the court’s view, Casey’s repeated identifications of Terrell as the shooter, the 911 recording, body-camera evidence, medical testimony describing a gunshot wound and road-rash-type abrasions, and corroborating circumstantial evidence regarding the red vehicle and phone locations collectively permitted a rational jury to find beyond a reasonable doubt that Terrell caused bodily injury with a firearm.

The court also held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting extraneous-offense evidence during punishment. Although that issue is secondary to the crossover significance for family-law practitioners, the affirmance underscores the broader appellate theme of deference to trial-level evidentiary calls and jury factfinding when the record contains facially probative support for the State’s theory.

Practical Application

Family lawyers should read this opinion as a roadmap for building or attacking violence narratives in civil cases where no single witness saw every critical event and where the alleged victim’s testimony may evolve over time. In protective-order proceedings, modification suits, conservatorship fights, and fault-based divorce cases, the most persuasive evidentiary presentation is often cumulative rather than singular. This case illustrates how a trial court can rely on a mosaic: on-scene statements, law-enforcement recordings, EMS observations, photographs, phone-location evidence, vehicle evidence, and admissions or denials by the accused.

For the lawyer proving family violence, the lesson is to move beyond affidavit-level allegations and assemble corroboration that makes the story internally coherent across media and witnesses. For the lawyer defending against those allegations, the lesson is equally sharp: generalized attacks on credibility will often fail if the opposing party has contemporaneous statements and objective corroboration. The better defense strategy is to test foundation, timing, chain of inference, attribution, and the precision of technological evidence, while also developing an affirmative alternate explanation early enough to matter.

In custody litigation, this case supports the proposition that factfinders may credit emergency statements made under stress, especially when they are corroborated by physical injuries and digital evidence. In property litigation, allegations that one spouse used a vehicle, residence, weapon, or community resources in connection with violent conduct can affect claims for reimbursement, waste, exclusive use, temporary injunctions, and disproportionate division. In short, the opinion is not family-law precedent in the doctrinal sense, but it is highly instructive on evidentiary persuasion in family-violence-driven litigation.

Checklists

Building a Family-Violence Evidentiary Record

Proving Best Interest and Conservatorship Restrictions

Defending Against a Corroborated Violence Narrative

Using This Case Offensively in Divorce and Property Litigation

Avoiding the Non-Prevailing Party’s Appellate Problem

Citation

Terrell v. State, No. 09-24-00126-CR, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Beaumont May 27, 2026, no pet. h.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

This opinion can be weaponized in a Texas divorce or custody case in two principal ways. First, it is a strong rhetorical and evidentiary analogy for the proposition that family violence is often proven through contemporaneous statements plus corroborating circumstances, not through perfect direct evidence. If you represent the alleging spouse or parent, this case supports framing the record as a coherent evidentiary web: what the victim said immediately, what responders saw, what digital evidence shows, and what physical evidence confirms. That is especially effective in temporary-orders hearings, protective-order cases, and modification proceedings where the other side’s principal defense is that the account is inconsistent or unsupported by a neutral eyewitness.

Second, the case is a warning for respondents in custody and divorce litigation that denial alone is rarely enough once corroboration accumulates. A party accused of firearm-related threats, vehicular assault, stalking, or post-incident property conduct can face severe consequences in family court even if no criminal conviction has yet occurred, because the burden and procedural setting differ. Skilled family-law counsel can use the logic of this opinion to argue that the trial court should credit emergency disclosures, objective injury evidence, digital-location proof, and physical scene evidence when crafting conservatorship restrictions, possession limitations, injunctions, and a disproportionate property award.

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