Clifton Earl Polk, II v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 2011
Docket14-10-00096-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Clifton Earl Polk, II v. State (Clifton Earl Polk, II 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
Clifton Earl Polk, II v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Affirmed in Part; Reversed and Rendered in Part; and Memorandum Opinion filed March 31, 2011.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NOS. 14-10-00096-CR

          14-10-00097-CR

Clifton Earl Polk, II, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 23rd District Court

Brazoria County, Texas

Trial Court Cause Nos. 58,086; 57,057

MEMORANDUM  OPINION

A jury convicted appellant Clifton Earl Polk, II of arson in cause number 57057 and assessed appellant’s punishment at 25 years’ confinement and a $2,500 fine.  The jury also convicted appellant of criminally negligent homicide in cause number 58086 and assessed appellant’s punishment at two years’ confinement and a $10,000 fine.  The trial court ordered the sentences to be served concurrently.  Appellant contends on appeal that (1) the evidence is legally insufficient to support his conviction for criminally negligent homicide; (2) the trial court erred “in the application paragraph of its charge to the jury on the lesser included offense of criminally negligent homicide . . . because it did not limit the jury’s consideration to the manner & means originally set out in the charged offense of murder;” (3) the evidence is insufficient to corroborate accomplice testimony that appellant “started the fire in the van and was thereby guilty of the offense of arson;” and (4) the trial court failed to charge the jury with regard to the offense of arson “on the law of accomplice witnesses as it applied to Harold Jones, the State’s main witness, and appellant suffered egregious harm.”

Background

            A group of boys found a burned-out minivan containing a body in a field near County Road 612 in Brazoria County at approximately 4 p.m. on March 20, 2006.  An investigation determined that the body found was that of Mary Ann Harder; that Harder had died from multiple drug toxicity; and that Harder had accused appellant of sexually assaulting her a few weeks before her burned body was found in the minivan.  After a lengthy investigation, the State indicted appellant for arson, murder, and tampering with evidence.  A jury trial was held from January 4 to January 11, 2010.

            At trial, Jamie Devercelly testified that a group of boys informed her that there was a burned-out minivan containing a body near her property in the sparsely populated community of Holiday Lakes.  Devercelly described the location as a field where “people throw their garbage and stuff.”  Devercelly called the Sheriff’s Department.

            Peace Officer Darrell Collins, who worked for the crime scene division of the Brazoria County Sherriff’s Department, arrived at the scene to investigate the burned-out minivan.  Officer Collins did not see any containers containing a flammable substance or a Rubbermaid container when he took pictures and collected evidence at the crime scene.  Officer Collins and two other officers removed Harder’s remains from the minivan and arranged for a funeral home to transport the remains to the Galveston County Medical Examiner’s Office.

            Dr. John DeHaan, a criminalist who specializes in fire investigations, reconstructed how the minivan burned.  Dr. DeHaan testified that the fire was started inside the passenger compartment with gasoline, and that the body was in such a position that it must have been placed in the minivan; the fire could not have been an accident, and Harder was not accidentally trapped in the minivan.  The “vehicle was burned with the body in place.”  Dr. DeHaan opined that the fuel could not have come from the fuel tank during the fire because the tank was protected.

Dr. DeHaan testified that the temperature in the van exceeded 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit; there was no explosion; and the fire was not extinguished but burned itself out.  Dr. DeHaan concluded that “the fire was started deliberately within the passenger compartment with the decedent . . . placed in there prior to the start of the fire, and that there was gasoline present on the victim at the time the fire was started.”  Dr. DeHaan based these conclusions on the minivan’s condition — uniform burn patterns; the body’s position; the presence of the minivan keys in the tailgate lock mechanism; and the presence of gasoline on Harder’s hair decoration.

Chief Medical Examiner for Galveston County and forensic pathologist Dr. Stephen Pustilnik determined the cause and manner of Harder’s death.  Dr. Pustilnik testified that Harder had no soot in her airways, which showed that “she did not inhale any sort of hydrocarbon burning, the products of combustion.”  The toxicology laboratory report established that Harder had methamphetamine, ecstasy, cocaine, parent cocaine, and cocaine metabolites in her liver.  According to Dr. Pustilnik, Harder had “a lethal amount of cocaine in her system, a very large amount of cocaine, not a — what we see as a recreational amount of cocaine.”

Dr. Pustilnik explained that drugs taken together act in a synergistic manner so that their effect may be multiplied by a factor of four or eight.  Although he concluded that Harder died from multiple drug toxicity, Dr. Pustilnik testified that the cocaine itself could have killed Harder.  He testified that “there is no safe dosage of cocaine” and “any amount of cocaine is potentially lethal;” he stated that “cocaine can be lethal at any time to anyone at any level.”  Dr. Pustilnik could not say whether Harder voluntarily ingested the drugs that were in her system, and he could not determine the order in which she ingested the different drugs.  Dr. Pustilnik determined that cocaine was ingested at or near the time of Harder’s death.

            Harold Jones, a friend of appellant’s who was present on the evening that Harder died, also testified during the State’s case-in-chief.  Jones and appellant had become friends through work in 2002.  He acknowledged using marijuana and cocaine together with appellant and stated that appellant would usually provide the cocaine.  Jones testified that he knew Harder because she would “come over” to get drugs; he stated that he did not know Harder very well and never saw “her outside of the presence of” appellant.  Jones admitted that he had been charged with arson but that the State had dropped the charge; he admitted that he was currently on probation for tampering with evidence and “as part of that probation” he promised to truthfully testify at appellant’s trial “about what happened” to Harder.

Jones testified that appellant came to his apartment on March 19, 2006 because Jones wanted to buy some cocaine from appellant.

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Clifton Earl Polk, II v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clifton-earl-polk-ii-v-state-texapp-2011.