Houston Chronicle

Defense in choking trial says truth hidden

Lawyers accuse state of keeping story from jury in Denny’s case

- By Brian Rogers

Prosecutor­s on Monday are expected to conclude their murder case against the husband of a fired Harris County deputy, who is being retried for fatally choking a fellow patron during a late-night confrontat­ion outside a Denny’s restaurant last year.

Meanwhile, defense attorneys for Terry Bryan Thompson claimed prosecutor­s are attempting to conceal the “true story” of the fatal encounter from jurors by limiting testimony brought during an earlier trial.

“The state’s strategy in this case is to prevent the jury from truly knowing what was going on that night in the hopes that they convict somebody without knowing the full and true story,” attorney Scot Courtney said after court recessed for the day Friday. “It’s disappoint­ing that the state would rely on deception rather than all the evidence.”

Thompson, a 42-year-old railroad worker, faces life in prison if convicted of killing John Hernandez, a 24-year old Houston resident. Thompson’s first trial ended in June when a jury could not reach a unanimous verdict on whether he committed murder or acted in self-defense when he put Hernandez in a chokehold after wrestling him to the ground.

Courtney said this trial is a “perfect example of how the jury system is manipulate­d by the state.”

“It’s our job to endeavor to show the jury everything and overcome the state’s efforts to hide the informatio­n and the true story,” he said.

Prosecutor­s John Jordan and Sarah Mickelson Seeley declined to comment Friday.

Courtney gave several examples to back up his contention, including testimony Friday of a police officer who arrived at the scene in the parking lot of the Crosby-area eatery. His testimony was cut short by prosecutor­s before he could tell jurors what Thompson told him when he first arrived.

The prosecutio­n argued, and state District Judge Kelli Johnson agreed, that Thompson’s words to the officer, which are in his official report, are “hearsay” and therefore inadmissib­le.

Courtney also noted that pros-

ecutors have moved to keep the jury from hearing that Hernandez threatened another patron before he got into the altercatio­n with Thompson. He said the jury is also unlikely to hear that Hernandez sometimes got violent when he drank, as his wife testified in the first trial.

“The state does not want the jury to hear that,” Courtney said. “They don’t want them to hear the truth.”

The fatal 15-minute struggle took place the Sunday night before Memorial Day.

Thompson arrived at the restaurant shortly after 11 p.m. on May 28, 2017, with his teenage daughter and two of her friends. Thompson told police he saw Hernandez urinating outside of the restaurant and told him to stop.

Thompson ended up with a black eye after confrontin­g Hernandez. Testimony in the first trial showed that Hernandez was intoxicate­d after spending the day playing soccer and watching an internatio­nal soccer match on television while drinking with friends.

Courtney said Thompson was attacked and had a right to restrain Hernandez until the police got there. He has said his response was too forceful, but it is not murder.

Thompson’s wife, Chauna Thompson, who was a Harris County Sheriff’s deputy at the time, is also charged with murder and is accused of helping to hold Hernandez down. Her trial is pending.

The couple were recorded on a cellphone holding down Hernandez in a 53-second video. He lost consciousn­ess on the pavement outside the restaurant and died days later in a hospital.

The release of that video ignited a series of protests and internatio­nal news coverage about police violence and bias, because it was Hernandez who was originally charged with assaulting a peace officer.

After the video surfaced, Chauna Thompson was fired from the Harris County Sheriff ’s Office and both were indicted for murder.

The trial, in Johnson’s court, is expected to last another week.

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