Ahrens v. State

43 S.W.3d 630, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 1875, 2001 WL 278688
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 22, 2001
Docket01-99-00686-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 43 S.W.3d 630 (Ahrens v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ahrens v. State, 43 S.W.3d 630, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 1875, 2001 WL 278688 (Tex. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

NUCHIA, Justice.

Appellant, Bernice Ahrens, was charged with capital murder. 1 A jury convicted her of murder and assessed punishment at 80 years confinement. In this appeal, she raises three points of error: (l)-(2) whether the evidence was legally and factually sufficient to warrant her conviction; and (3) whether the trial judged erred when he denied her motion to include a jury instruction on the lesser included offense of manslaughter. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

On August 26, 1998, Mieal Renz was jogging on Main Street in Galena Park at about 6:15 a.m. when he saw what he believed to be a person lying on the embankment. At the time, Renz did not stop to inquire further into what he had seen. After finishing his morning run and preparing for work, Renz went back to the scene a few minutes before 8:00 a.m. He discovered that what he had seen earlier was the body of a dead man. Renz then called the police. A few minutes later, Officer Kevin Cates of the Galena Park Police Department arrived on the scene and confirmed that the victim was dead. Cates observed that the body was dressed in clean clothes, despite the fact that the body was bloody and badly bruised. From *632 that, the officer concluded that the victim had been moved to that location rather than killed there. Shortly after Cates’s arrival, Assistant Chief Robert Pruett also arrived. Pruett had a police dispatcher check neighboring cities for reports of missing persons. Jacinto City, a city which borders Galena Park, indicated that a Suzanne Basso had recently filed a missing person report. Based on that report, Pruett headed out to Basso’s address, hoping to gain more information regarding the then unidentified victim.

When Pruett arrived at Basso’s apartment, Basso had gone to the Jacinto City Police Department to give them an identification card belonging to Louis “Buddy” Musso, the person she had reported as missing. She returned to her apartment a few minutes after Pruett had arrived. From speaking with her, Pruett learned that Musso lived with Basso and her son, James O’Malley. Basso invited Pruett into her home. While inside, Pruett met O’Malley and saw some bloody clothing and a bloody sheet near a cot on the living room floor. Basso told Pruett that Musso slept in the living room on the cot and that the clothing was Musso’s. Pruett then asked Basso and O’Malley to accompany him to where the victim’s body lay to determine whether they could identify him. When they arrived, O’Malley got out of the car and, without displaying any signs of surprise or emotion, positively identified the victim as Musso. Pruett then asked them both to go to the police station with him and give a written statement, to which both agreed. At the police station, O’Mal-ley confessed, in an oral and written statement, to the events surrounding, and the persons involved in, the murder of Musso. He directed the officers to a dumpster where officers retrieved a garbage bag that contained bloodstained clothes worn by Musso at the time of his death, plastic gloves, bloodstained towels, and used razors, all used to coverup evidence of Mus-so’s death.

After speaking with O’Malley, Pruett went to appellant’s apartment, located in Houston. Appellant was one of the persons mentioned by O’Malley as being involved in the murder of Musso. In addition to appellant, her son, Craig Ahrens, her daughter, Hope Ahrens, and her daughter’s boyfriend, Terence Singleton, were at the apartment. According to officers, after they identified themselves, they asked appellant whether she knew why they were there, to which she replied, “This is about Buddy, isn’t it?” Appellant consented to a search of the apartment and her car. During the search, officers collected in the apartment, among other things, a wooden baseball bat, an aluminum baseball bat, handcuffs, and pieces of bloodstained carpet. They also collected carpet from the trunk of appellant’s car. Based on O’Malley’s statement and their discovery at the Ahrens apartment, the officers arrested all four. While in custody, appellant and Craig each voluntarily waived their rights and gave statements regarding Musso’s murder.

According to appellant’s and Craig’s statements, as well as trial testimony, Musso was a 59-year-old mentally retarded man living in New Jersey in 1998 when he met Suzanne Basso. In June 1998, Musso came to Houston, Texas to live with Basso and her son, O’Malley. Basso and O’Malley were friends with appellant and her children. On June 22, 1998, Musso signed a Last Will and Testament leaving his property and insurance benefits to Basso. Appellant, O’Malley, and Terence Singleton signed the will as witnesses.

Beginning on Friday, August 21, 1998 and continuing until his death, on about Tuesday, August 25, 1998, Musso was denied food, made to sit all night with his *633 knees on a mat and his hands on the back of his neck, and subjected to a series of violent beatings administered by Craig and Hope Ahrens, Basso, O’Malley, and Singleton. Many of the beatings took place in appellant’s apartment. The beatings inflicted on Musso included being hit with a belt, baseball bats, hands, fists, feet, and other hard objects, and being kicked with boots. Appellant admitted that she struck Musso one time, claiming it was because he had hit a little girl appellant was babysitting. As a result of the beatings, Musso died in appellant’s apartment late Tuesday night. To cover up his death, Basso suggested they use appellant’s car and drive to a location where Musso’s body could be disposed of. Appellant suggested they place Musso’s body in the trunk. After Musso’s body was cleaned, appellant assisted in placing his body in the trunk and, later, in leaving him on the embankment where he was later discovered.

Lab tests of the evidence recovered from appellant’s apartment revealed that there was blood on the carpet taken from the hallway, blood and hair on the wooden bat and blood on the aluminum bat recovered from appellant’s apartment, blood on the bumper of her car, and blood on most of the items found in the garbage bag recovered from the dumpster. At trial, there was testimony that Musso had lost 25-30 pounds by the time of his death. Among the numerous injuries the medical examiner detailed were fractured ribs, a broken nose, a skull fracture, cigarette burn marks, and bruises resulting from blunt force trauma extending from the bottom of Musso’s feet to his upper torso, including his genitals, eyes, and ears. Blood was discovered in Musso’s oral cavity and windpipe. The examiner further testified that the cause of most of the injuries was consistent with Musso’s being beaten with hard objects. The cause of death was determined to be multi-blunt-force trauma.

DISCUSSION

Legal and Factual Sufficiency

Appellant’s first and second points of error challenge the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence relied on to secure her conviction. Specifically, appellant puts forth two arguments in support of her contention that the evidence is both legally and factually insufficient. First, she argues that the record fails to show that her single act of striking Musso, which she admits to, was a cause or concurrent cause of Musso’s death. Second, she asserts that the evidence fails to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that she had the specific intent to promote or assist in the murder of Musso.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 S.W.3d 630, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 1875, 2001 WL 278688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ahrens-v-state-texapp-2001.