Daniel Acker v. Lorie Davis, Director

693 F. App'x 384
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 14, 2017
Docket16-70017
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 693 F. App'x 384 (Daniel Acker v. Lorie Davis, Director) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniel Acker v. Lorie Davis, Director, 693 F. App'x 384 (5th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Daniel Acker was convicted and sentenced to death in Texas in 2001 for the capital murder of his girlfriend, Marquetta (“Markie”) George. He has applied for a certificate of appealability (“COA”) to appeal the district court’s denial of federal habeas relief. Because he does not make a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right, or a showing that his claims are adequate to proceed further, we DENY his request for a COA ■

I, Facts and Procedural History

Acker and George moved into a rented trailer home together in February 2000, shortly after they met. On the evening of Saturday, March 11, they went to a rodeo and then to a nightclub, “Bustin’ Loose.” While at the nightclub, they argued. Witnesses who were at the nightclub testified at trial that Acker threatened to kill George that night. Acker was kicked out of the nightclub, but he returned several times, looking for George.

When the nightclub closed at 1:00 a.m., Acker’s sister saw him in the parking lot and gave him a ride to his truck, which he had parked up the road from the nightclub. Earlier that evening, Acker had given George’s pocket knife to his sister and he asked her to return it. When she refused, Acker told her that if he was going to hurt someone he would not need a knife. He held up an axe and said that if he found George with another man, “they will pay.”

*386 Acker continued to look for George the rest of that night. He believed she was spending the night with another man. On the morning of March 12, still looking for George, Acker went to his sister’s house. He told his sister that when he found them he was going to beat them and that nobody was going to make a fool out of him.

Around 9:15 a.m. on March 12, Acker went to the home of George’s mother, Lila Seawright, still searching for George. Sea-wright testified at trial that Acker told her that if he found out George had spent the night with another man, he was going to kill them. Seawright replied that no one was worth going to the penitentiary for murder. Seawright testified that Acker shrugged and replied, “Pen life ain’t nothing. Ain’t nothing to it.”

Later that morning, after Acker had returned to the ■ trailer he shared with George, . Robert “Calico” McKee, who worked as a bouncer at Bustin’ Loose, brought George to the trailer. George went inside. McKee told Acker that he had taken George to her father’s home to spend the night. Acker testified that he did not believe McKee was telling the truth, because he had driven by .George’s father’s house the previous night when he was looking for George. Acker testified that he went into the trailer and confronted George, who admitted that she had spent the night with Calico. When he inquired whether she had slept with Calico, she asked what difference it would make. Acker said that he pushed her down on the couch and shook her, with his hands on her shoulders and his thumbs more or less touching. Acker testified that he asked George where Calico lived and she said she would show him, but instead, she darted out of the trailer.

The neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. Smiddy, testified that George ran out of the trailer, screaming for them to call the sheriff. Acker followed George out of the trailer, grabbed her and threw her over his shoulder, forced her into his pickup truck, and sped away. George was crying and frightened. Mr. Smiddy testified that when George was being pushed into the truck, it was like watching someone try to push a cat into a bathtub. Both Mr. and Mrs. Smiddy testified that after Acker forced George into the truck, they heard a noise that sounded like a loud hit or slap, and did not see George any more after hearing that sound. They testified that as Acker drove away, the truck was swerving all over the road. Mr. Smiddy went inside and called the sheriff.

Brodie Young testified that on the morning of March 12, he was driving past a dairy farm on a county road when he saw a truck on the side of the road. As he passed the truck, he saw a man sitting in the driver’s seat of the truck. The man looked “peculiar” and seemed to be talking to himself. After Young passed the truck, he looked at his side mirror and saw a man get out of the truck on the driver’s side, rush around the front of the truck, open the passenger’s door, and pull a woman out of the truck. The man had his arms under the woman’s arms and took three or four steps backward after he pulled her out of the truck, then laid her on the side of the road, got back in the truck, and drove away. Young drove to the sheriffs office to report what he had seen. On cross-examination, Young admitted that he had exaggerated when he initially told law enforcement officers that he had seen a man and woman fighting in the truck.

Sedill Ferrell, who owned the dairy farm, found George’s body and contacted the sheriffs office. Acker turned himself in to a law enforcement officer and was arrested soon thereafter. George’s body was found less than two and one-half miles *387 from the trailer where she had lived with Acker.

The medical examiner, Dr. Gonsoulin, testified at trial that George had extensive injuries, including blunt force injuries to all parts of her body, particularly her head and neck. Her heart and lungs were lacerated, and her liver was pulpified. There was a large, deep laceration on her leg. The bones in her face were broken, her skull was shattered in all areas, and her head was crushed, consistent with being struck with some type of blunt instrument. The injuries on the neck indicated that a significant amount of pressure was applied around the neck and that it occurred while George was alive. The parchment-like abrasions seen on external examination were consistent with the kind of blunt force injuries sustained in motor vehicle accidents or accidents where people fall out of cars. The injuries to the neck were not consistent with falling or being hit, but were from constriction rather than blunt force received from falling from a vehicle. The neck injuries were consistent with strangulation. The blunt force injuries in and of themselves were sufficient to cause death, and so was the strangulation. It was her opinion that the cause of death was strangulation, either manual or ligature, or possibly both, as well as blunt force injury resulting from George being caused to impact a blunt object. Dr. Gonsoulin could not determine whether strangulation or blunt force caused George’s death.

On cross-examination, Dr. Gonsoulin testified that it was possible George’s neck injuries could have occurred forty-five minutes to an hour prior to her death. She also testified that George had road rash, consistent with jumping out of the vehicle and striking the ground. She testified that a downward force on the head can cause fracturing in the skull and with sufficient force, fracture the atlas. George had a pons medullary rent, meaning that her brain stem and medulla were torn where the base of her skull was crushed. Dr. Gonsoulin explained that death occurs instantaneously when the pons medulla is torn. She testified that George had a lot of injuries that would have killed her regardless of any strangulation, independent of it.

Acker’s counsel asked Dr.

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693 F. App'x 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-acker-v-lorie-davis-director-ca5-2017.