A Donley County jury convicted Darren Ray Gunnels for the third-degree felony offense of evading arrest in a motor vehicle in last Wednesday, February 22, in district court.
After hearing that the State filed a notice of enhancement in the punishment phase to increase the punishment to a second degree felony, the jury sentenced Gunnels to 20 years, the maximum available punishment, in the Texas Department of Justice, Institutional Division.
District Attorney Luke Inman, along with Assistant District Attorney Harley Caudle, prosecuted the case for the State of Texas, with the Honorable Judge Stuart Messer presiding.
Gunnels, 45 from Clarendon, was arrested by Donley County Sheriff’s Deputy Wesley Christopher on August 12, 2022. Gunnels was originally indicted on October 3, 2022, for three felony counts.
“Gunnels has been a degenerate burden on our community for 25 years,” said Caudle. “This is his ninth felony conviction and will be his fourth trip to prison. I can only hope that the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles will keep him locked up for the full 20 years this time, because we don’t want him back.”
The State called three witnesses in its case in chief, including Donley County Sheriff Butch Blackburn and Deputy Wesley Christopher.
Christopher testified to the Gunnels’ vehicle pursuit and Gunnels jumping from the vehicle illegally parked in the middle of the road through the passenger window.
Christopher said there were multiple turns and blown stop signs while Gunnels was accelerating away from his unit, according to testimony.
“Our unsuspecting children are not looking both ways across the street every time like we would hope for, looking for vehicles taking erratic turns and speeding down residential streets,” said Inman. “This defendant’s actions were just as dangerous as the perpetrators that drive over 100 miles per hour down 287. They all have to be stopped and arrested before they injure our loved ones.”
Blackburn informed the jury that, contrary to Gunnels’ assertion at the time of his arrest, the syringe found in Gunnels pocket was not for the treatment of a medical condition such as diabetes.
“I can’t even count the number of times a defendant has claimed he is a diabetic in hopes that would explain away his possession of a syringe,” said Caudle. “I guess methamphetamine degrades critical-thinking ability so much that the subject actually thinks law enforcement will believe it.”
After all the evidence, Gunnels was convicted of the evading offense and acquitted on two other charges before the evading took place.
Juries get to hear the testimony and see the evidence presented at trial and make an informed decision from there, according to Inman.
“We appreciate all of [the jury’s] hard work and attention during the trial,” said Inman. “When we get the same type of punishment we are asking for in these evading cases from a jury it makes us and law enforcement feel like we are looking out for everyone’s best interest.”
The enhanced second-degree felony, which Gunnels was convicted for, had a maximum of 20 years.
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