Court of Criminal AppealsJordan v. State
No. PD-0899-18 2/5/20
Issue:
Is a defendant entitled to a jury instruction on multiple assailants when the evidence demonstrated that others, who were not the aggressors in their own right, were acting together with the victim?
Holding (Keel, J.):
Yes. The Court held that the defendant was entitled to a jury instruction on multiple assailants, and the failure to include it was harmful. A self-defense instruction on multiple assailants does not require evidence that each person defended against was an aggressor in his own right; it requires evidence that the defendant had a reasonable fear of serious bodily injury from a group of people acting together. Because the evidence demonstrated that the defendant had a reasonable apprehension of apparent danger from multiple assailants, he was entitled to the instruction. Read Opinion.
Dissenting (Keasler, J.):
“Because [the defendant] did not admit to harboring the requisite culpable mental state for the particular deadly-conduct offense with which he was charged, I do not think he was entitled to a multiple-assaila
Dissenting (Yeary, J. joined by Keller, P.J.):
“I would remand this cause, not to the trial court for further proceedings, as the Court does today, but to the court of appeals. I would leave it to the court of appeals in the first instance to decide on remand whether the lack of a multiple-assaila