Anthony Troy Lockett v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2010
Docket02-09-00403-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Anthony Troy Lockett v. State (Anthony Troy Lockett 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
Anthony Troy Lockett v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 2-09-403-CR

ANTHONY TROY LOCKETT APPELLANT

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS STATE

------------

FROM CRIMINAL DISTRICT COURT NO. 4 OF TARRANT COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION (footnote: 1)

I.  Introduction

In two issues, Appellant Anthony Troy Lockett appeals the denial of his postconviction request for forensic DNA testing.  We affirm.

II.  Factual and Procedural History

A.  Trial and Appeal

On July 29, 1996, a jury convicted Lockett of murder, and the trial court sentenced him to forty years’ confinement.  On October 16, 1997, after reviewing the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction, we affirmed it. See Lockett v. State , No. 02-96-00458-CR, slip op. at 10 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Oct. 16, 1997, pet. ref’d) (not designated for publication).  To provide context for our discussion below, we briefly summarize the facts as revealed by the record in this case and our prior opinion.  

On May 30, 1994, Lockett, who had spent the day drinking with his friend Lance Boyer, told Boyer that he could arrange for them to have group sex with Lockett’s girlfriend, Joann Wolfe. Lockett called Wolfe and, without informing her of their intent, asked her to pick them up at Boyer’s trailer, and she did so.   During the return to her apartment, Wolfe and Lockett argued, and when they arrived, she jumped from her car, ran into her apartment, and locked the front door. Undeterred, Lockett scaled the exterior wall to the second story balcony, entered Wolfe’s apartment, and let Boyer in the front door. When the argument resumed, Lockett grabbed Wolfe, shook her, and hit the back of her head against the wall.

Boyer did not see Lockett cause a wound that drew blood from Wolfe’s frontal scalp, but he left the apartment when Lockett slapped him for trying to intervene.   When he returned ten to fifteen minutes later, Lockett was sitting on the bed, and Wolfe had locked herself in the bathroom.   He saw blood in the living room that he had not noticed before.  At Wolfe’s request, Boyer put her gown and car keys where she could reach them under the bathroom door. Thirty seconds later, Wolfe, with blood on her face, ran out of the apartment, down the stairs, through the breezeway, and across the parking lot as Boyer watched. (footnote: 2)

Lockett wiped blood from the kitchen wall with his shirt, telling Boyer that he “didn’t want to make it look as bad as it seemed.”  Boyer helped him, wiping blood from the kitchen pantry door.  Lockett cleaned himself up and they left the apartment.  He told Boyer that “he felt bad and he lost control.” (footnote: 3)  Around 3 a.m., after he and Boyer split up, Lockett was arrested for public intoxication in the car lot of a nearby dealership. (footnote: 4)

About 6 a.m., Wolfe’s body was discovered face-down underneath a stairwell in the breezeway of the apartment building across the parking lot from her apartment.  She was wearing a gown and clutching her car keys.  The medical examiner, who had initially declared that Wolfe died from hypertension or cardiovascular disease, ruled that her death was a homicide after he spoke with investigating officers.  Specifically, he opined that she died from a closed head injury due to a blunt force trauma, which was a result of the frontal laceration on her scalp that caused her brain to swell.

Many items of physical evidence were collected from Wolfe’s apartment, (footnote: 5) and some had what appeared to be blood on them although no DNA testing was conducted, blood-type testing revealed that the blood that could be classified as human and typed was Wolfe’s Type O blood, and not Lockett’s Type A blood.  A pink towel found in Wolfe’s bathroom contained both Type O and Type B blood stains.

B.  DNA-Testing Hearing

After this court conditionally granted Lockett’s pro se petition for writ of mandamus seeking to have the trial court rule on his motion for DNA testing, (footnote: 6) the trial court held a hearing in September 2009.  At this hearing, Lockett’s counsel requested a DNA test on the pink towel.  The trial court denied this request as it had denied Lockett’s earlier request in November 2003, and it adopted the State’s proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law.

1.  Findings of Fact

The trial court made the following pertinent fact findings:

1.  The defendant was convicted by a jury of the offense of murder, and was sentenced to forty years’ confinement on August 27, 1996.

. . . .

3.  The Court denied the defendant’s [November 3, 2003] motion on the grounds that identity was not an issue since the defendant admitted causing Joann Wolfe’s head injury when he knocked her into the edge of the kitchen wall, and that the defendant would be unable to establish that he would not have been convicted if DNA testing was done given the substantial evidence of guilt.

6.  On September 9, 2009, the Court heard arguments on the merits of the defendant’s [2008] request for forensic DNA testing.

7.  During that [September 9, 2009] argument, the defendant limited his request to the pink towel found on the floor of the bathroom in Jo[ann] Wolf[e]’s apartment.

8.  The defendant’s identity was not or is not an issue in this case because he caused Ms. Wolfe’s head injuries in the presence of a witness, Lance Boyer.

9.  Joann Wolfe became angry at the defendant while driving him and Boyer to her apartment.

10.  When Ms. Wolfe arrived home, she ran upstairs and locked the defendant and Boyer outside.

11.  The defendant climbed up the balcony to Ms. Wolfe’s apartment and forced his way inside, and then let Boyer inside.

12.  The defendant and Ms. Wolfe resumed argument, which escalated into a fight.

13.  The defendant soon overpowered Ms. Wolfe and began to choke her.

14.  Boyer saw the defendant shake Ms. Wolfe and hit the back of her head against the wall.

15.  After a failed intervention, Boyer left the apartment and abandoned Ms. Wolfe to the defendant’s attack.

16.  When Boyer returned ten or fifteen minutes later, Ms. Wolfe was locked in the bathroom and the defendant was sitting on the bed.

17.  After obtaining her gown and car keys from Boyer, Ms. Wolfe ran out of the apartment.

18.  Even with his poor vision, Boyer saw blood on Ms. Wolfe’s face.

19.  Inside the apartment, the defendant began cleaning up the mess created by the beating, including wiping blood off the kitchen wall.

20.  The defendant told Boyer that he didn’t “want to make it look as bad as it seemed.”

21.  Ms. Wolfe was discovered sometime before 6:00 a.m. in a breeze-way approximately fifty yards from her apartment.

22.  Ms.

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Anthony Troy Lockett v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anthony-troy-lockett-v-state-texapp-2010.