Daniel Mark Politte v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 31, 2019
Docket14-16-00993-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Daniel Mark Politte v. State (Daniel Mark Politte 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 Mark Politte v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed December 31, 2019.

In the

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-16-00993-CR

DANIEL MARK POLITTE, Appellant

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 400th District Court Fort Bend County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 14-DCR-066326

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found appellant Daniel Mark Politte guilty of the murder of his wife, Stephanie Politte, who was found in the couple’s home with a gunshot wound to the back of her head. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.02. The jury assessed punishment at imprisonment for a term of 85 years, without a fine. See id. § 12.32. Appellant argues that the trial court erred in excluding his forensic expert, admitting certain statements he made to the police, refusing to give a jury instruction as to the right to counsel, and, at the punishment stage, refusing to give a sudden-passion instruction. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

At 11:26 p.m. on March 11, 2014, appellant called 9-1-1 and reported that his wife, Stephanie, was vomiting and choking on blood at their home in Missouri City, Texas. The dispatcher instructed appellant to move Stephanie from her location on the couple’s bed to the floor to begin CPR.

Missouri City Police Department Officer Sonnier was dispatched to the scene along with emergency medical technicians and the fire department. When appellant met Sonnier at the door, appellant was covered in blood. Appellant motioned to the bedroom, where Stephanie lay on the floor, also covered in blood. Under the impression this was a medical call, Sonnier directed the emergency medical technicians, who had arrived at approximately the same time he had, to the bedroom. Upon reaching the bedroom, the medical technicians informed Sonnier that Stephanie was deceased, and that there was a firearm in the bedroom. Sonnier overheard one of the technicians say that Stephanie had a “GSW” (gunshot wound) to the back of her head.

According to Sonnier, he instructed appellant to go to the living room and sit down, but appellant was noncompliant to the point where Sonnier threatened him with his taser. Sonnier then placed appellant in handcuffs and took him to his police car, where he removed the handcuffs.

The police car was equipped with a dashcam and internal microphone that recorded conversations between appellant and the officers at the scene while appellant was sitting in the car. During a conversation beginning at 12:25 a.m. on March 12, Missouri City Police Department Detective Joseph asked appellant if he would consent to an interview at the police station. After initially agreeing, appellant

2 eventually responded, “if you’re insinuating some wrong doing I would really like to have a lawyer before I talk to anybody.” During another conversation beginning at 12:49 a.m., at which time appellant had again been handcuffed, Joseph asked appellant for consent to search the house. Appellant declined and, after the conversation ended and the car door had closed, appellant exclaimed, “I’m fucked!” Appellant requested that the dashcam recordings containing these statements be suppressed, a request the trial court denied following a suppression hearing.1

The State charged appellant with murder. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.02. At trial, the State argued that appellant intentionally shot and killed Stephanie while she was sleeping. The State’s evidence included a picture of a sleeping Stephanie taken approximately 20 minutes before the shooting. The State’s witnesses included experts Dr. Mambo, the medical examiner on the case, and crime-scene investigator Rossi. During his testimony, Mambo opined that, because there was no stippling around the entry wound on the back of Stephanie’s head, the shot that killed her must have been fired from at least “12 to 15 inches” away from her head. 2 Mambo also opined that bruising on Stephanie’s cheek was caused by the bullet hitting, but not penetrating, the skin of her cheek, a circumstance caused by the cheek having been pressed up against “some object” at the time of the gunshot. Rossi opined that, at the time of the shooting, Stephanie was lying on her left side, with her left cheek supported by a pillow on the bed. After Mambo and Rossi testified, appellant attempted to contest their testimony by offering testimony from a previously

1 The request was originally couched as motion in limine, which the trial court, with the agreement of the State, construed and treated as a motion to suppress. According to Mambo, “stippling” means small pock marks caused by unburned 2

gunpowder particles hitting the skin following a gunshot.

3 undisclosed expert, Dr. Sperry.3 The trial court excluded the testimony of Sperry.

The defense argued that the shooting had been an accident—that appellant had seen an awake Stephanie with a gun in her hand and, concerned that she might hurt herself, struggled with her to retrieve the weapon, during which struggle the gun accidentally went off. The jury heard evidence consistent with this theory, including: a recording of a conversation between appellant and his parents, during which appellant said that he had tried to take the gun away from Stephanie, but the gun had gone off during the struggle, though he did not know when the gun had gone off because he did not hear the gunshot; testimony of appellant’s sister Marie Connor and Stephanie’s friend Frances Sharp, each of whom testified that appellant had told her that he and Stephanie had struggled for the gun; and a recording of a conversation between appellant and Neil Kirkpatrick, Stephanie’s father, during which appellant said that he had gotten the gun away from Stephanie after a struggle, that he did not hear the gun go off, and that the gun may have gone off after appellant got off the bed and tripped near some shoes by the doorway to the bedroom. The jury also heard the cross-examinations of Mambo and Rossi, during which they conceded that, from their analysis, they could not determine whether the shooting had been intentional or accidental.

The jury found appellant guilty of murder. At the punishment phase of the trial, appellant requested a sudden-passion instruction, which the trial court denied. The jury assessed punishment at imprisonment for a term of 85 years.

3 On the State’s motion, the trial court had ordered that all defense experts be disclosed prior to trial. Sperry was not included on the defense’s expert list. Mambo and Rossi had been disclosed by the State before trial.

4 II. ANALYSIS

A. Exclusion of appellant’s expert

In his first issue, appellant contends that the trial court deprived him of his constitutional rights to due process and a fair trial by excluding Sperry, appellant’s expert on forensic pathology. See U.S. Const. amends. VI, XIV. Appellant sought to introduce Sperry to counter certain testimony by the State’s experts Mambo and Rossi. Specifically, Sperry would have testified that Mambo erred in concluding that, because there was no stippling around the entry wound on the back of Stephanie’s head, the shot that killed her must have been fired from at least “12 to 15 inches” away from her head. Sperry would have testified that any stippling could have been blocked by Stephanie’s hair, and accordingly the gun could have been closer to her head when it was fired. Sperry also would have contested the testimony of Mambo and Rossi that Stephanie’s head was supported by a pillow or some other object at the time she was shot.

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Daniel Mark Politte v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-mark-politte-v-state-texapp-2019.