Daniel Carl Greeley v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 2, 2000
Docket03-98-00007-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Daniel Carl Greeley v. State (Daniel Carl Greeley 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
Daniel Carl Greeley v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-98-00007-CR
Daniel Carl Greeley, Appellant


v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 331ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 973133, HONORABLE BOB PERKINS, JUDGE PRESIDING

Appellant Daniel Carl Greeley was convicted of capital murder for intentionally causing the death of Bruce Becker in the course of committing robbery. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 19.02(b)(1), .03(a)(2) (West 1994). Greeley defended the charge on the grounds that he acted in self-defense or sudden passion and did not intend to kill Becker. In twenty-one points of error Greeley appeals his conviction. We will affirm.

BACKGROUND

Appellant Daniel Carl Greeley first met the victim, Bruce Becker, in May 1995. Becker approached Greeley on Sixth Street in Austin, Texas, and engaged Greeley in conversation. The two spoke for twenty to thirty minutes as they walked along the street. A week later Becker approached Greeley on Guadalupe Street (the "Drag"), and the two conversed briefly. Becker invited Greeley, who was living out of his car, to come to Becker's home. Greeley accepted and ended up spending the night. Greeley testified that the evening was uneventful. The next morning Becker returned Greeley to his car. That night Becker saw Greeley at an Austin night club and invited him to spend the night. Greeley accepted. Greeley testified that between three and four o'clock the next morning he awoke to the sounds of Becker slamming kitchen cupboards. Greeley stated that Becker was drunk and crying about an ex-boyfriend and came into the room where Greeley was sleeping on the couch. Becker then removed all of his clothing and lay down nude in the middle of the floor. Greeley said that the situation made him uncomfortable and that he left the house and walked back to downtown Austin.

Greeley testified that he had no further contact with Becker until May or June 1996, when the two saw each other in the cafeteria of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). Becker had been employed at the IRS for a number of years, and Greeley was working there temporarily. Becker engaged Greeley in conversation, gave Greeley his telephone number and address, and invited Greeley to his home to stay or do laundry. Greeley, who was living on the streets, went to Becker's house and did laundry once in June. Greeley testified that he called Becker again on July 13, 1996, and asked if he could come over to do laundry and get out of the heat. A third man was also present at Becker's house, and the three stayed up all night. Greeley testified that he was aware that Becker was homosexual and that at one point in the evening Becker put his arm on Greeley. Greeley said that the action caused him to be in "a little bit of shock" but that Greeley did not interpret Becker's action to be a sexual overture.

The next day Becker dropped the third man off in downtown Austin and invited Greeley to return to Becker's house. Greeley testified that he accepted the offer because he wanted to see a movie Becker was going to rent but that they had an understanding Greeley would not be spending the night. The two men went to the Central Market grocery store to get food for dinner and ran into Becker's co-worker. The co-worker identified Greeley in a photographic lineup and at trial, testifying that she had been struck by the "expressionless" look on Greeley's face. After leaving Central Market, the two men rented the movie and returned to Becker's home. Greeley testified that Becker was drinking bourbon and that the two sat together on the sofa, ate dinner, and watched television. Greeley stated that Becker began massaging Greeley's neck and suggested that the two go up to bed.

The evidence regarding what happened next is sharply conflicting. Three witnesses testified as to what Greeley related to them and presented the jury with four different versions of events. In addition, Greeley testified and presented the jury with a fifth version. (1) Although the stories vary in detail, by all accounts Greeley bludgeoned Becker repeatedly in the head with a metal bar and stabbed him in the neck with a knife, killing him.

Greeley then took Becker's keys out of his pocket, put Becker's body into a footlocker, and attempted to clean up the room. Greeley drove to the Drag in Becker's car and found Johnny Ooten, a man he had met while living on the streets. Greeley told Ooten that he had killed Becker, and the two returned to Becker's house and made further attempts to remove evidence. Greeley asked Ooten to help clean up the house and gave Ooten cleaning solution and towels that Ooten used to clean the banister, the upstairs, and the bathroom. The two men put the footlocker containing Becker's body in the trunk of Becker's car and loaded several boxes of Becker's belongings and a small safe (2) into the vehicle. Greeley gave Ooten one of Becker's credit cards and a personal identification number, and they drove to an Albertson's grocery store where Ooten attempted to get money using the card. (3) After that attempt failed, the two drove to the Drag, where Ooten made three additional attempts to use the card. At some point, Greeley gave Ooten a shoe box containing baseball cards they had taken from Becker's house and drove to a shop on the Drag where Ooten sold the cards and gave the money to Greeley.

Greeley and Ooten then drove to the Texas panhandle and buried Becker's body and some of his personal items near a picnic area or rest stop. After burying the body, the two men went to a local Wal-Mart where Ooten made yet another attempt to use one of Becker's credit cards. Ooten testified that at some point after removing the body, Greeley emptied the car's trunk, removed the trunk's liner, stabbed holes in the bottom of the trunk with a screwdriver, and sprayed the trunk out with water. Ooten testified that the two men had originally planned to leave the state but instead decided to return to Austin.

A few days after Greeley's and Ooten's return, an Austin police officer approached Ooten on the Drag and asked him to come to the station and answer some questions. Ooten agreed and was interviewed for several hours. The interview, which was videotaped, produced two somewhat contradictory written statements, neither or which is in evidence. (4) The police flew with Ooten to Amarillo and from there drove to the rest stop where the men had buried Becker's body.

After leaving Ooten in Austin, Greeley made his way to Utah where he had lived in early 1996. Keith Lee was living with Greeley's former roommate, Karra Urry, in Utah. Lee testified that Greeley arrived at the Utah apartment on or about July 20. Lee, Urry, and Greeley all indicated in their testimony that while staying at the apartment, Greeley used Becker's credit cards to buy things that he would then sell. Lee testified that Greeley and Urry went to Texas in late July or early August to get money. According to bank records, Greeley went to a Dallas bank and cashed an eight-hundred-dollar check dated July 27, 1996, drawn on Becker's account and payable to Greeley.

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