Carlton Lamar Grant v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 30, 2024
Docket06-23-00231-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Carlton Lamar Grant v. the State of Texas (Carlton Lamar Grant v. the State of Texas) 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
Carlton Lamar Grant v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana

No. 06-23-00231-CR

CARLTON LAMAR GRANT, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 115th District Court Upshur County, Texas Trial Court No. 18094

Before Stevens, C.J., van Cleef and Rambin, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Rambin MEMORANDUM OPINION

An Upshur County jury convicted Carlton Lamar Grant of the capital murder of Rachel

Ann Rhoads, and the trial court sentenced him to imprisonment for life, without parole. On

appeal, Grant argues (1) that the evidence is legally insufficient to support the jury’s verdict of

guilt and (2) that the trial court erred by failing to submit an accomplice-witness instruction in

the jury charge.

Grant admits that he murdered Rhoads. But he contends that it was not a kidnapping-

based capital murder. Grant claims he killed Rhoads so quickly that she was dead before he did

anything that could be considered kidnapping. We reject that argument. We find that legally

sufficient evidence supports Grant’s conviction of capital murder.

Much of the testimony against Grant came from a participant in the events. On appeal,

Grant contends that the jury should have been given an accomplice-witness instruction about that

testimony, i.e., an instruction to the effect a defendant cannot be convicted solely on the

testimony of an accomplice. The trial court gave an instruction to that effect. Grant contends

that the jury also should have been given a definition of “accomplice.” Grant, though, did not

object to the jury charge at trial. So, he must show that the charge as given caused him egregious

harm. Assuming, but not deciding, that a proper jury charge would have had everything Grant

now asks for, we find that Grant was not egregiously harmed by the jury charge actually given.

Much of the testimony against Grant came from the accomplice. But not all. The accomplice

testimony was amply corroborated by other witnesses and by forensic evidence.

Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

2 I. Factual Background

At trial, Grant’s then-girlfriend, Lindsey McFadden, was the State’s key witness.

McFadden testified that she was dating Grant, who did not have a job and had moved into her

apartment. She described her relationship with Grant as “[v]ery abusive” and admitted that both

she and Grant used methamphetamine. The evidence showed that neither McFadden nor Grant

had any means of transportation and that McFadden was being evicted at the time of the offense.

McFadden, who was also under indictment for murder as Grant’s accomplice, testified in

detail about Rhoads’s murder. McFadden said she met Amber Mullins at a parenting class and

learned that she lived within walking distance of her apartment. Rhoads was Mullins’s

roommate. McFadden testified that, on March 29, 2018, she and Grant walked almost a mile to

Mullins’s and Rhoads’s home for a visit. According to McFadden, Rhoads owned a silver

Suzuki and Grant arranged for Rhoads to give them a ride back to McFadden’s apartment.

McFadden sat in the front passenger seat as Rhoads drove, with Grant sitting in the backseat

behind Rhoads. McFadden thought that she and Grant would be dropped off at her apartment,

but Grant had other plans.

McFadden testified that, as they “went to turn into [her] apartment,” Grant asked to be

taken to an unnamed friend’s house instead. According to McFadden, Rhoads “said no at first,

but then she gave in and said okay.” McFadden testified that, during the drive, Grant swung a

homemade garotte consisting of a ligature and hooks around Rhoads’s neck and began choking

her, causing her to fight and struggle. McFadden said the car swerved uncontrollably while

Grant used the garotte to pull Rhoads into the backseat. Mc Fadden testified that, as this was

3 going on, she reached for the steering wheel to steady the vehicle. McFadden testified that Grant

then tied a black zip tie around Rhoads’s neck. McFadden testified that Rhoads fought against

Grant, but soon Rhoads was not “able to move around with the same amount of force.”

McFadden said that she was able to put the car in park and get into the driver’s seat. She said

that she continued to hear Rhoads struggle with Grant, who “hit her a couple of times and put her

into the [back] floorboard of the car.”

McFadden testified that she was distressed and could barely drive and that Grant took

over the task while McFadden got in the backseat with Rhoads. According to McFadden, Grant

stopped at “a row of trailers” and “spoke to some people” that Grant knew before he went to the

Big Oak Trailer Park to purchase marihuana. McFadden said that, during the drive, Rhoads

remained in the backseat floorboard, was unable to move, and was covered with a zebra-print

blanket.

Joannie Saldana, who had met Grant at a game room in Longview, corroborated

McFadden’s account by saying that Grant came to her house on March 29 in a “silver, gray car”

she had not seen before. Saldana described Grant as “happy, in a good mood, [and] boisterous.”

She testified that Grant was fiddling with “like a bungee cord, like a broken bungee cord with

hooks on it,” and identified the makeshift garrote as the object he was holding. According to

Saldana, Grant said he needed it for his luggage because he and McFadden were going out of

town. Saldana’s girlfriend, Jennifer Arnold, saw McFadden in the silver vehicle and started

walking toward it, but according to Saldana, McFadden jumped out of the car and said they were

4 looking for something they had dropped. Saldana testified that Grant took a black zip tie from

her toolbox, said he was leaving town, and drove away.

McFadden said that, after obtaining marihuana from a man named Joe at the Big Oak

Trailer Park, she abided by Grant’s instructions to clean out Rhoads’s car. They then parked it

close to McFadden’s apartment, moved Rhoads from the backseat floorboard into the trunk,

walked to the apartment to destroy the clothes they were wearing, packed their bags, and went to

sleep.

The next morning, McFadden said that she and Grant “drove around for a long time” to

find a place to dispose of Rhoads’s body. McFadden testified that they stopped at a gas station

in Diana, Texas, to borrow a lighter. Nancy Wilson, who worked at Stop-A-Minit convenience

store in the Diana gas station said that a “[s]cared, nervous, skitsy” woman came in and

borrowed her white lighter but never came back to return it. After obtaining the lighter,

McFadden wiped Rhoads’s body with vinegar and Windex before Grant dumped Rhoads’s body

in a utility right-of-way near a farm-to-market road, poured gasoline on her, and lit her on fire.

According to McFadden, she and Grant ran back to Rhoads’s car and left for Fort Worth,

where Grant had family and friends. During the drive, McFadden suddenly remembered that she

forgot to take the black zip tie from Rhoads’s neck and confessed the error to Grant, who beat

her for it. McFadden said there were several arguments between her and Grant after the murder.

Tommie Chaffin, McFadden’s mother, testified that McFadden called her to say that she

was headed to the metroplex. Chaffin said that came as a surprise to her because McFadden had

prepared Easter baskets for her children and had picked out her own outfit for Easter. Chaffin,

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