Alan Patrick Fowler v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 4, 2018
Docket02-17-00154-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Alan Patrick Fowler v. State (Alan Patrick Fowler 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.

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Alan Patrick Fowler v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________

No. 02-17-00154-CR ___________________________

ALAN PATRICK FOWLER, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

On Appeal from Criminal District Court No. 1 Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 1495202R

Before Sudderth, C.J.; Meier and Kerr, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Sudderth MEMORANDUM OPINION

In a single point, Appellant Alan Patrick Fowler appeals his conviction for the

attempted murder of his former boss. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 15.01, 19.02

(West 2011). We affirm.

Background

I. The night of the incident

On the night of August 9, 2016, Lisa Lane was home alone with her two small

dogs, her husband Kevin having left that afternoon for a business trip. She went to

bed at about 11:00 p.m. but awoke around 1:00 a.m. and was profusely sweating. She

knew immediately that her air conditioner was not working, but she assumed that the

electricity had gone out due to a nearby car accident or similar incident and went back

to sleep.

But at around 4:00 a.m., Lisa was startled awake by the sound of her alarm’s

door chime and then the “blaring” sound of the full alarm. She immediately thought,

“Someone is in my house. The door has been opened. Someone is physically in my

house.” She realized that she had left her cell phone—the only functioning phone in

the house—in the living room, so she sprinted to the living room. When she

unsuccessfully tried to turn on the lights in the living room, she realized that the

power really was completely out. Shaken by the realization that she had no power and

that someone was in her house, Lisa grabbed her cell phone, raced back to her

bedroom, and screamed, “Get the he[ll] out of my house[!]” at the top of her lungs.

2 Lisa then called the alarm company and asked them to call the police, but she also

called the police herself once she hung up with the alarm company.

Police quickly arrived at the house and discovered Fowler crouching in the

backyard kitchen and a bullet hole through the nearby window to the Lanes’ game

room. Fowler admitted to one of the officers that he had driven from Shreveport to

Southlake that night in order to “try to scare” Kevin, his former boss at the major

accounting firm Deloitte & Touche.

II. Fowler’s history with Kevin

Fowler, a CPA, joined Deloitte as a consultant in 2006 and traveled all over the

world for his work in the ensuing years. By 2014, Fowler had tired of the

international travel and requested a position closer to his family home in Shreveport,

Louisiana. Deloitte agreed that he could live in Shreveport and work out of Deloitte’s

Dallas office with Kevin as his manager.

Initially, Fowler was a key employee in managing one of Deloitte’s major

emerging clients, 7-Eleven convenience stores, and he and Kevin developed a

working and social relationship. But his work performance began to suffer in January

2015 when he began missing work and failing to show up to work as scheduled. By

July 2015, Fowler elected to use his vacation time for an indefinite leave, but he did

not disclose to Deloitte that he was suffering from depression.

Not long after Fowler elected to take an indefinite leave, Deloitte discovered

that Fowler had made a number of high-dollar, unauthorized expense charges on the

3 7-Eleven account, including $8,000 to $10,000 for a personal trip to St. Martin, $3,000

to $4,000 for a sporting event in Las Vegas, and two $5,000 gift cards. Deloitte

terminated Fowler’s employment in August 2015.

In November 2015, Fowler filed a federal lawsuit against Deloitte, in which he

claimed that Deloitte retaliated against him for having a disability. Kevin was the

focus of Fowler’s complaints; according to Deloitte’s general counsel, Fowler blamed

Kevin for his firing. That lawsuit was dismissed in April 2017.

III. The police investigation

Once police arrested Fowler, they searched the outside of the Lanes’ house and

discovered that the electric meter had been removed and was lying on the ground.

Later, Lisa found a small bag tucked underneath the sink in the outdoor kitchen; the

bag contained channel lock pliers, razor blades, and a multi-purpose tool, and behind

the bag was a 9-millimeter handgun with a homemade oil-filter silencer attached to it

and a spare, loaded magazine. The gun was loaded with a round in the chamber. In

total, there were 19 bullets found with the gun. Southlake Police determined that a

twentieth bullet found inside the home had been fired by the 9-millimeter gun found

under the outdoor sink.

The police located Fowler’s car, a Chevrolet Tahoe, in the parking lot of a

nearby high school, with its hood slightly open and a pair of jumper cables hanging

4 from the passenger-side rearview mirror. Inside the vehicle,1 police found two pairs

of rubber gloves, a spent shell casing, two boxes of Fiocchi subsonic 9-millimeter

ammunition, an iPad, and a document detailing Fowler’s complaints against Deloitte

and his plans to arrange for billboards to be posted that disparaged Deloitte.

A search of Fowler’s Shreveport home uncovered two more boxes of Fiocchi

subsonic 9-millimeter ammunition, other loose and boxed 9-millimeter ammunition, a

factory box for the 9-millimeter pistol matching the serial number on the gun found

in the Lanes’ outdoor kitchen, and a receipt for the purchase of 1,000 rounds of

Fiocchi subsonic 9-millimeter ammunition. Police also recovered Fowler’s computer.

Among the evidence discovered on Fowler’s iPad, on his cell phone, and at his

house were web search histories inquiring how to construct a silencer out of an oil

filter and webpages with instructions for the same, as well as boxes from oil filters and

cans of black spray paint used to paint the oil filter. The instructions, boxes, and

spray paint matched the homemade oil-filter silencer that was attached to the 9-

millimeter gun found in the outdoor kitchen.

Additional evidence recovered from Fowler’s computer and iPad included the

following:

• a three-page document outlining Fowler’s work with Deloitte, referencing “[f]alse allegations” made by Kevin, and containing the phrase, “Judge, Jury[,] and Executioner”;

Searches of Fowler’s vehicle, home, iPad, and computer hard drive were 1

conducted pursuant to search warrants.

5 • the electronic version of the document found in Fowler’s vehicle which detailed his complaints against Deloitte and Kevin and mentioned his plans to arrange for billboards that would disparage Deloitte;

• a background report on Kevin;

• Google searches for firearm stores, “Kevin Lane,” “Lisa Lane,” “company credit card fraud,” home power meters and home electricity meters, the terms “judge, jury[,] and executioner” and “vigilante,” credit card fraud laws, hardware location of the On-Star feature of a Chevrolet Tahoe and how to disable it, and “deloitte kevin lane,”

• Several visits to Google Maps to view locations in Southlake, the Lanes’ home, street view angles of the Lanes’ home, and satellite images of the Lanes’ home;

• Visits to webpages regarding gun stores and how to buy a gun; and

• Amazon searches for “Razor knife” and visits to Amazon pages selling pocketknives, including the pocketknife in Fowler’s possession at the time of arrest.

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Alan Patrick Fowler v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alan-patrick-fowler-v-state-texapp-2018.