Cassandra Joyce Williams v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 21, 2008
Docket03-05-00460-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Cassandra Joyce Williams v. State (Cassandra Joyce Williams 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
Cassandra Joyce Williams v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-05-00460-CR

Cassandra Joyce Williams, Appellant



v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BURNET COUNTY, 33RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 9794, HONORABLE GUILFORD L. JONES, III, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N


A jury convicted Cassandra Joyce Williams of murder. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.02(b) (West 2003). The district court assessed punishment at fifty years' imprisonment. In five issues, Williams asserts that the jury charge was improper because it permitted a non-unanimous verdict and challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence showing that she acted with the requisite culpable mental state. We affirm the judgment of conviction.



BACKGROUND

The jury heard evidence that Williams and the victim, Frank Bohannon, Jr., had been living together in an apartment in Marble Falls, Texas. On June 17, 2003, at around 9:30 p.m., police were called to the apartment, where a man later identified as Williams's father showed them to Bohannon's body, which was lying on the bathroom floor. The evidence established that Bohannon died as the result of a single stab wound to the chest, penetrating his heart.

A downstairs neighbor, Christine Rodriguez, testified that she heard Williams and Bohannon arguing in their apartment on the afternoon of June 17 and that after the argument, Williams walked downstairs and stated "to anyone who was listening" that she wanted a baseball bat in order to kill Bohannon. Rodriguez further testified that Williams then went back upstairs to her own apartment and began pounding on the door and that after Williams had re-entered the apartment, Rodriguez heard a "commotion" that sounded like Williams was trying to force open a door while Bohannon "was trying to get away" from Williams. "Shortly after that," according to Rodriguez, Williams walked out of her apartment and drove away in her car.

On cross-examination, however, Rodriguez testified that Bohannon was in fact "yelling" at Williams to come back upstairs after they first argued and that Bohannon "was getting mad" at Williams for being in Rodriguez's apartment. Defense counsel questioned Rodriguez further concerning a prior recorded statement that she had given to police close to the time of the investigation of Bohannon's death, which the State then admitted into evidence. After the recording was played for the jury, Rodriguez testified that she did recall telling police that Bohannon had thrown Williams out of the house and would not let her back in and that, after Williams had eventually returned to her apartment, Rodriguez "thought it sounded like [Bohannon] was trying to hurt [Williams]."

Rodriguez also testified on cross-examination that, while she had initially told the police that she had heard Williams pounding on the bedroom door, she had also told them that "we didn't really hear anything." She further admitted that her initial statement to investigators had been that Williams had said she wanted a baseball bat "to whip his ass," rather than to "kill" Bohannon. When asked to address the apparent inconsistencies between her testimony on direct examination and the statements she had previously given to investigators, Rodriguez conceded that she had given "more than one completely different answer" on the tape as compared to her testimony on direct examination.

Williams's sister, Beverly Walker, testified that on the evening of June 17, Williams showed up at her house in nearby Granite Shoals and said "that she thinks that she stabbed [Bohannon], that she thinks he's dead." Williams also told Walker that she "couldn't have a man beating on her," but Walker acknowledged that Williams had no visible injuries that evening and that she had never seen Bohannon be violent before. She did state, however, that she had "often" seen Bohannon drink to the point of intoxication and that Bohannon was a "pretty regular" drinker.

Walker testified that she called their father to check on Bohannon, who went to Williams's apartment in Marble Falls and confirmed that Bohannon was dead. Walker then contacted the police, who arrived at her house and arrested Williams. After Williams was taken into custody, investigators obtained a warrant to search her vehicle and found a bloody knife "out in the open" in the passenger compartment. DNA analysis confirmed that the blood recovered from the knife matched that of Frank Bohannon. Several investigators testified that the knife, which had an eight-inch blade, is a weapon capable of causing death or serious bodily injury.

Williams's theory at trial was that Bohannon, an alcoholic who had physically abused Williams in the past, had attacked her while she was cornered in the bathroom and she stabbed him in self-defense. (1) Dr. Roberto Bayardo, the Chief Medical Examiner for Travis County who performed Bohannon's autopsy, confirmed that Bohannon's blood-alcohol concentration was 0.31 percent at the time of death, nearly four times the legal limit for operating a motor vehicle in Texas; however, Dr. Bayardo also testified that he was "100 percent certain" that Bohannon had been lying down on his back when he was stabbed. Dr. Bayardo based his conclusion on the downward angle of the entry wound and the blood pattern on the victim's body and clothing, which he testified "shows that the blood was running towards his back" so that it dripped off of Bohannon's shoulder. Both Dr. Bayardo's testimony and the autopsy report established that Bohannon had no injuries to his hands or arms that would be consistent with defensive wounds. (2)

Dr. Bayardo also testified that Bohannon's degree of intoxication would likely have caused him to "pass out." This basis for concluding that Bohannon was therefore lying down when he was stabbed was contradicted by defense counsel, who elicited testimony from Dr. Bayardo on cross-examination that a large man such as Bohannon with a history of alcoholism might have developed a tolerance to drinking significant quantities of alcohol and might not necessarily have passed out, even with a blood-alcohol level of 0.31.

Sergeant Garth Davis, a Texas Ranger who had analyzed the crime scene, also testified regarding the likelihood that Bohannon had been lying on the ground when he was stabbed. He testified that, as illustrated by the autopsy photographs, the pattern of blood flowing from the victim's left shoulder to his back and the absence of blood dripping down the chest of the victim indicated that Bohannon had been lying down when he was stabbed. He further testified, as an expert in blood-stain analysis, that the crime scene showed no evidence that the victim had been moving, that he had fallen against any surfaces when he was stabbed, or that he had been actively resisting or fighting off an attacker. (3) Sergeant Davis characterized the amount of blood at the crime scene as "very limited." He noted that the majority of the blood evidence found at the scene was discovered on the victim's body and pooled on the floor beneath the victim. (4)

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Cassandra Joyce Williams v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cassandra-joyce-williams-v-state-texapp-2008.