Daniel Paul Campbell v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 12, 2015
Docket10-13-00429-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Daniel Paul Campbell v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE TENTH COURT OF APPEALS

No. 10-13-00429-CR

DANIEL PAUL CAMPBELL, Appellant v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

From the 272nd District Court Brazos County, Texas Trial Court No. 12-03436-CRF-272

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted Appellant Daniel Paul Campbell of assaulting his girlfriend,

Cassandra “Cassie” Wells, and assessed his punishment at fifty years’ imprisonment.

This appeal ensued. In his sole issue, Campbell contends that the trial court abused its

discretion in allowing evidence of multiple inadmissible extraneous offenses during the

guilt/innocence phase of trial, which deprived him of a fair trial. We will affirm.

Raven Eldred, Wells’s sister, testified that Wells and Campbell dated for a couple

of months. They acted like a typical couple and only argued a lot when alcohol was involved. Alcohol was involved quite a bit at the end of their relationship, however,

and Campbell was becoming more controlling and obsessive and would not let Wells

out of his sight. One night in May 2012 between about 9 and 10 p.m., Wells’s neighbor

brought Wells over to Eldred’s house. Wells was in “bad shape.” She was bloody and

hysterical. She was limping and had scratches and bruises around her neck, scratches

around her mouth, a swollen jaw, and a chipped tooth. Wells told Eldred that she and

Campbell had gotten into a fight and that he had choked her. Wells thought that she

was going to die. Wells did not call the police because she did not want to get

Campbell in trouble, but Eldred called the police. Eldred also called Campbell and told

him to get out of her mother’s apartment, where the alleged assault occurred. About

thirty minutes later, Eldred met the police and let them into her mother’s apartment.

Wells had gone to the hospital by ambulance.

On cross-examination, Eldred agreed that because she was not there, she would

not know whether Campbell or Wells initiated the confrontation. Eldred also

acknowledged that it appeared that Wells had been drinking alcohol that night.

Wells testified that she met Campbell while she was incarcerated and that they

started dating when he was released. The relationship started off “good,” but, over

time, Campbell became more possessive and jealous. On the day of the incident, she

and Campbell had been drinking. They visited Campbell’s sister’s house where they

found some vodka. When they arrived back at Wells’s mother’s apartment where they

were staying at the time, they remained outside to visit with neighbors who were

having drinks and barbecuing. During this time, they drank the vodka that they had

Campbell v. State Page 2 brought back from Campbell’s sister’s house.

Wells testified that while talking with another woman, she divulged a personal

female problem. Campbell overheard this and became upset because he thought that

she was giving out too much personal information. Campbell subsequently went

inside. Wells then went inside, went upstairs to the bedroom where Campbell was, and

confronted him. She ultimately told Campbell that she was tired of his possessiveness

and that he should get his things and leave.

Wells testified that Campbell then told her to get his keys. As she was trying to

get the keys, Campbell pushed her down on the bed, put both of his hands around her

neck, and started to choke her by applying pressure with his hands. She struggled with

Campbell, making every effort to get away from him. Campbell let off the pressure, but

as Wells tried to get to the doorway of the bedroom, Campbell grabbed her and again

began choking her on the floor in front of the bed. Campbell told Wells, “I’ll kill you,

bitch.” Wells stated that it felt like her neck was “going to be crushed” and that she was

“seeing black, just like everything was fading away.” Campbell eventually let off the

pressure again, and Wells ran to the stairs. On about the third stair from the top,

Campbell got in front of her, blocking her from leaving. At that point, she kicked

Campbell, punched him in the face, and told him to let her go. Campbell then grabbed

her by the face and was digging his nails into her skin. His fingers were also in her

mouth, and she bit them. She ended up with cuts and scrapes in her mouth that were

bleeding. Wells tried to maneuver herself around Campbell, and he grabbed her shirt

and bra, but she was able to slip out of her clothes and make it to the bottom of the

Campbell v. State Page 3 stairs. She then ran to the sliding glass door, made it outside, and began screaming.

Wells sat down and tried to cover herself. She was spitting up blood. Neighbors

brought her a towel and gave her a shirt to cover up, and one neighbor gave her a ride

to her sister’s house. Wells said that she had been scared for her life that night.

On cross-examination, defense counsel elicited testimony about the differences

between Wells’s and Campbell’s appearances. Wells testified that she is five feet, seven

inches tall and weighed about 140 pounds at the time of the incident while Campbell is

about five feet, two inches tall and weighed probably between 125 and 130 pounds at

the time of the incident. Defense counsel also questioned Wells about whether she had

burned Campbell with a cigarette during the incident. Wells replied that she “could

have burned him” and that if he had burn marks, then it must have happened. But

when asked about whether she had hit Campbell with an ashtray or with a remote

during the incident, Wells denied hitting Campbell with anything other than her fist.

Wells agreed that after the incident with Campbell, she did not want anyone to be in

trouble, so she signed an affidavit of non-prosecution.

As the cross-examination continued, Wells acknowledged that she has had

physical altercations with other inmates during her time in the Brazos County Jail. She

said that she had been involved in about two or three altercations but that she was just

defending herself in those instances. Brazos County Sheriff’s Lieutenant Carey White,

the custodian of records for the Jail Division, confirmed that Wells’s records indicated

that she had been in three altercations but that she was the victim in each incident, not

the aggressor. Lieutenant White acknowledged on cross-examination, however, that he

Campbell v. State Page 4 had not personally observed any of the altercations.

Chainey Bennett testified that at the time of the incident, he was staying with his

sister, who lived in an apartment next door to Wells’s mother’s apartment. He had

gone upstairs to use the restroom when he heard “hollering” and “bawling.” He went

outside to find out what was going on. He found Wells sitting on the ground in only

her bra and underwear and crying, coughing, and yelling for help. Wells was scared

and upset. She was rocking back and forth and had little red marks on her neck.

Bennett asked Wells why she was sitting out there. Wells told him that Campbell had

tried to choke and kill her. Bennett got Wells a blanket to cover up, and Wells then

went to her sister’s house.

College Station Police Officer Andrea Mable testified that she and Sergeant

Jimmy Brown were dispatched to the apartment but were then redirected to Eldred’s

residence. Sergeant Brown arrived at the residence before she did and determined that

Wells needed medical attention. When Officer Mable saw her, Wells was hysterical and

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Daniel Paul Campbell v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-paul-campbell-v-state-texapp-2015.