Edward George McGregor v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 10, 2008
Docket01-07-00994-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Edward George McGregor v. State (Edward George McGregor 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
Edward George McGregor v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion issued April 10, 2008







In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NOS. 01-07-00994-CR





EDWARD GEORGE MCGREGOR, Appellant


V.


THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee





On Appeal from the 178th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause Nos. 1137739





MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Appellant, Edward George McGregor, appeals from a judgment that sets bail at $750,000 for the indictment for the offense of capital murder for which the State is seeking the death penalty. In his sole issue, appellant contends that the bail is excessive. We conclude that the record fails to show that the trial court abused its discretion in setting the amount of bail. We therefore affirm.

Background

          Appellant is a 35-year-old man who has lived in the Houston area since he was nine years of age. His parents, brother, grandmother, niece, aunts, uncles, and cousins live in the Houston area. Until recently, appellant worked as a UPS truck driver for 11 years. He has no prior felony convictions, but is a suspect in the deaths of four women, including the complainant in this indictment, with whom he had contact shortly before their deaths, which occurred over a 16-year span of time between 1990 and 2006.  

          Police officers’ interest in appellant began after Daniel Subjects died in August 2005. Subjects was a single, black woman found nude in her apartment. Her body was draped over the edge of a partially water-filled bath tub with her head submerged in the water, her knees on the bathroom floor, and articles of clothing wrapped around her head. Her purse was found dumped, as if someone had rummaged through the contents. An investigation of her cell phone records revealed that appellant was the last person who called her before she was killed. Police officers who interviewed appellant after Subjects’s death, informed him that they were interested in him because his name came up in Subjects’s cell phone records. Although he was one of the last people to speak to Subjects before her death, appellant was not charged with her death.

          Six months later, in February 2006, Mandy Rubin was killed under similar circumstances to those surrounding the death of Subjects. Like Subjects, Rubin was a single, black woman found nude in her apartment with her body in the same position as Subjects’s body and also with articles of clothing wrapped around her head. Like Subjects’s purse, Rubin’s purse was found dumped, as if someone had rummaged through the contents. The investigating police officers could not find Rubin’s cell phone in her apartment or car, and it appeared to be the only thing missing from her apartment. The officers obtained Rubin’s cell phone records, which showed that someone had gone into her cell phone server and deleted the messages after she was dead. Despite the efforts to conceal the messages, the officers’ search of the cell phone records showed that a call from appellant was one of the last phone calls she received before she was killed. Because appellant was one of the last people to speak to Rubin before her death, Houston police officers interviewed appellant. Additionally, officers obtained a DNA sample from appellant and submitted it to Identigene to get his DNA profile. Appellant was not charged with Rubin’s death.

          After the deaths of Subjects and Rubin, appellant was charged in Fort Bend County in May 2006 with the 1990 death of Kim Wildman, who was found nude in her kitchen, dead from a stab wound. Within a statistical probability, appellant’s DNA matched DNA found at the home of Wildman. Appellant acknowledged that he was with Wildman shortly before her death, claiming that he had consensual sex with her up until about 8:30 p.m. the night she was attacked. At the time of Wildman’s death, appellant was 17 years of age and lived with his parents, who lived a couple of houses from Wildman, an Anglo woman. The report of the 911 call from Wildman documented that “the caller mentioned ‘stab’, ‘male’, ‘black’, and whom she did not know, and ‘hurry’ and ‘dying’.”

           Some time after his arrest in May 2006, appellant posted a $250,000 bond for his capital murder arrest for the death of Wildman. The bond amount was reached after a bond reduction hearing at which appellant testified. Appellant said that he had no equity in the house he had just purchased in Fort Bend County in April 2006. Appellant said that he had no vehicles. Appellant testified that he had a UPS Stock Purchase Program for which UPS took about $250 out of his paycheck, but he had no idea how much money was in that retirement account. He said that he could not borrow against it or cash it out until he retired. He stated that he had no liquid funds or assets he could use to make a bond. At the same hearing, appellant’s mother, Sonia McGregor, testified that if they combined the resources of everyone in their family, they “could try to come up with $5,000" to make a bond. However, after the court set bond at $250,000, the bond was made by a premium paid by appellant’s sisters and by their pledges of their house titles and 401K accounts. After he made the bond, appellant complied with the conditions of the bond by appearing in court and wearing a satellite leg monitor. That bond is still in effect.

          Within no more than eight months after making the bond for the Fort Bend County charge, appellant was rearrested in December 2006 for a capital murder in Harris County for the 1994 death of Edwina Barnum, the complainant in this case. Within a statistical probability, appellant’s DNA was determined to match the DNA found in a used condom recovered in Edwina Barnum’s apartment, where she was found dead.

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