Ex Parte Brent Benefield

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 17, 2013
Docket02-12-00242-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Ex Parte Brent Benefield, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 02-12-00242-CR

Ex parte Brent Benefield § From the 30th District Court

§ of Wichita County (176,894-A)

§ January 17, 2013

§ Opinion by Justice Gardner

§ (nfp)

JUDGMENT

This court has considered the record on appeal in this case and holds that

there was no error in the trial court’s order. It is ordered that the order of the trial

court is affirmed.

SECOND DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

By_________________________________ Justice Anne Gardner COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

EX PARTE BRENT BENEFIELD

----------

FROM THE 30TH DISTRICT COURT OF WICHITA COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION1

I. Introduction

Appellant Brent Benefield appeals the trial court’s order setting the amount

of his bail at $200,000. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 11.24 (West 2005).

Benefield asserts in one issue that the trial court abused its discretion by setting

bail at an amount he cannot make and by failing to properly consider the nature

and circumstances of the offense. We affirm. 1 See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. II. Background

Benefield was arrested in April 2012 for the felony offense of injury to a

child causing serious bodily injury or death. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. §

22.04(e) (West Supp. 2012). Bail was initially set at $1 million. Benefield filed an

application for writ of habeas corpus, asserting that bail was excessive and

asking that the trial court reduce the bond to a reasonable amount or grant him

release on a personal recognizance bond. The trial court conducted a hearing

on Benefield’s application for writ of habeas corpus on May 18, 2012. After the

hearing, the trial court advised the parties that it had, based on the evidence

presented during the hearing, decided to reduce Benefield’s bail from $1 million

to $200,000. The trial court subsequently signed an order to that effect.

The State’s only evidence, which the trial court admitted without objection,

was the arrest affidavit. In the affidavit, Detective Todd Henderson averred that

he was the primary investigator in the case. On February 8, 2012, emergency

personnel responded to a 911 call from Benefield who stated that his four-month-

old son was not breathing and was coughing up blood. Detective Henderson

spoke with Benefield at the hospital, and Benefield said that he was the child’s

primary caregiver during the day and that his wife had left for work around 7:30

that morning.2 Benefield reported that the child had acted normally until about

noon but that his son became unresponsive and began coughing up blood when

2 Benefield’s wife told Detective Henderson that the child was ―smiling and fine‖ when she left for work that morning.

2 he moved the child from a swing in order to change the child’s diaper. Benefield

told officers that he was the only person in contact with the child between 7:30

a.m. and the time he called 911.

Detective Henderson also stated in the affidavit that medical personnel had

determined that the child had ―numerous injuries to his body including a brain

injury that resulted in a subdural hematoma inside his skull as a result of blunt

force trauma.‖ The child further had ―retinal hemorrhages in both eyes, along

with swelling of the brain.‖ The child died four days later. The cause of death

listed in the autopsy report was a ―[c]losed head injury due to blunt impact to the

head and brain,‖ and the manner of death was listed as homicide.

Benefield called three witnesses during the hearing: his mother, his former

mother-in-law, and himself. Benefield testified that he was thirty years old and

had lived in Wichita Falls for sixteen or seventeen years. He had been employed

off and on throughout the community, and his most recent employment was as a

warehouse associate for Harbor Freight Tools.

Benefield is married and has two other children, ages three and six. He

testified that he has no criminal history other than arrests for failure to pay traffic

tickets. He testified that he was aware of the investigation concerning this case

and that it lasted several months before his arrest. Benefield testified that he

received a phone call from the detective who said that officers were on their way

to arrest him. Benefield waited for the officers to arrive and allowed them to

3 peacefully arrest him. He testified that he had ―ample opportunity‖ to run but did

not do so.

Benefield also testified that he did not plan to run away if he were released

and that although he is no longer employed, he planned to find employment upon

release from custody. Concerning assurances that he could give the trial court,

Benefield testified, ―I don’t really know what I can give other than I’m not leaving

any -- any time because I have a six year old and a three year old that I can’t

leave.‖

Benefield testified that he does not have money in a bank account, that he

does not own a vehicle or home, that he could not personally post any amount of

bail, that he would rely on family and friends to help him make bail if the amount

was reduced by the trial court, and that his family and friends had indicated a

willingness to help him.

Angela Waldrop is Benefield’s former mother-in-law. She testified that she

had seen Benefield interact with his daughter many times over the years.

Waldrop described Benefield as ―[e]xtremely loving,‖ and that she had ―never

seen any temper,‖ and that ―he treat[ed his daughter] like the little princess she

is.‖ Waldrop testified that she did not believe Benefield to be a threat to the

community and that he has a good support structure in the community to help

him.

Terri Daugherty, Benefield’s mother, testified that Benefield had always

been ―excellent‖ with his children, had been a ―very good dad,‖ and had a ―really

4 low-key‖ personality. Daugherty testified that she and her husband lived in

Wichita Falls and that she had never seen anything out of the ordinary with

Benefield’s interaction with his children. Daugherty testified that she had

provided support to Benefield and his wife when needed and that Benefield did

not have the means to post $1 million in bail. She testified that Benefield would

have to rely on friends and family to post any kind of bail. Daugherty also

testified that Benefield had never before been in any kind of trouble and that she

would help assure that he would abide by the court’s orders concerning release

on bail, including any prohibition that he not be around his children.

At the conclusion of testimony, Benefield offered an exhibit containing a

recorded conversation between two of his attorneys and Dr. Lloyd White, the

pathologist who performed the autopsy in this case. The State did not object to

the exhibit, and the trial court admitted it for purposes of the hearing.

The recording reflects that Dr. White was reviewing a portion of the child’s

medical records while answering questions posed by Benefield’s attorneys. Dr.

White had noted during the autopsy that the child had suffered numerous injuries

throughout his life. Dr. White opined that the child had sustained a spiral fracture

in December 2011, and that fractures to the child’s ―long bones‖ were more

recent. The child also had rib fractures that could have occurred in December.

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