George Washington Hicks v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 21, 2015
Docket05-14-00417-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
George Washington Hicks v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Affirmed as Modified; Opinion Filed July 21, 2015.

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-14-00417-CR

GEORGE WASHINGTON HICKS, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 363rd Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F11-00837-W

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Myers, Evans, and Brown Opinion by Justice Evans George Washington Hicks appeals his conviction for murder and asserts thirteen issues.

Appellant asserts the trial court erred by overruling his: (1) three Batson challenges (issues 1-3);

(2) motions to dismiss due to a violation of his right to speedy trial and due process (issues 4-5);

(3) motion to dismiss the indictment in the case on grounds it is barred by the doctrine of laches

(issue 6); (4) plea of res judicata and collateral estoppel (issue 7); (5) objections to identification

testimony (issue 8); (6) objection to the testimony of the medical examiner (issue 9); and (7)

objection to the jury argument (issue 11). Appellant also argues that the trial court erred in

denying his motion for mistrial (issue 10). Finally, appellant asserts that the evidence is legally

insufficient (issue 12) and the judgment does not properly reflect defendant’s back-time credit (issue 13). We modify the judgment with respect to back-time credit and affirm the judgment as

modified.

I. BACKGROUND

Before noon on December 23, 1981, a mother, Roxanne Jeeves, and her five-year old

son, Kristopher Korper, were murdered in a field in Mesquite. Both mother and son were shot in

the head. Deputy Sheriff James Cron, a lieutenant in the physical evidence section,

photographed the crime scene and recovered a white knit hat and a knife from the crime scene.

Deputy Sheriff Cron found the keys to Jeeves’s car and located latent prints on the front

passenger window. A blue bag on the front seat of the car contained a black knit hat with a pin

in it saying “Super Shit,” duct tape, live ammunition, a small vanilla extract bottle and an antique

revolver holster. He also collected hairs from inside the black knit hat and some cigarette butts

from the car. A small notebook with the name E. Oden in it was also found in the car. Jeeves’s

purse and a toy were located in the backseat. No firearm was recovered.

In March 2001, hairs recovered from the blue bag were submitted for DNA testing and

comparison to CODIS (Combined DNA Index System). There was a hit in the CODIS database.

The DNA profile from the hairs matched appellant’s DNA. In addition, the DNA on one of the

cigarette butts found in Jeeves’s car matched the DNA on the hairs from the knit cap. At the

time of this discovery, appellant was serving time with the Texas Department of Criminal

Justice.

In 2001, the police also interviewed appellant’s wife and her brother (Joseph McGary)

and son (Derrick McGary). The brother and son both lived with appellant at the time of the

double murders in December 2001. The brother and son identified the blue bag found in

Jeeves’s car as belonging to appellant.

–2– On April 29, 2003, appellant was indicted for the murders of Jeeves (Cause No. F03-

21910) and Korper (Cause No. F03-21911). In 2006, the rape kit collected from Jeeves was

compared to appellant’s DNA profile and there was a match. On January 22, 2007, the State

elected to proceed only with Jeeves’s case and appellant was tried for her murder. The jury

found appellant guilty of murder and the trial court sentenced him to life in prison. The trial

court further ruled that the life sentence would run consecutively to the 80-year sentence

appellant had received for aggravated sexual assault in 1994. In February 2007, the State

dismissed Korper’s murder case (Cause No. F03-21911) for the following reasons:

As a result of the Defendant now serving two long consecutive sentences, any sentence imposed in this case would not in all probability increase the time he is presently serving. As a result, prosecution of this case at this time cannot be justified. In addition, in order to eliminate the overcrowded condition of this Honorable Court's docket and to best serve the interests of the citizens of Dallas County through the most efficient use of judicial and prosecutorial manpower, the District Attorney's Office believes this case should be dismissed without prejudice.

In December 2011, appellant was re-indicted for Korper’s murder. The indictment

charged that appellant had intentionally or knowingly caused Korper’s death or had intended to

cause serious bodily injury by “shooting the said Kristopher Korper with a deadly weapon, to-

wit: a firearm.”

On March 24, 2014, appellant entered a plea of not guilty as to the charge of murder.

The State presented over twenty witnesses during appellant’s murder trial. Roy Baird and James

Cron, retired officers from the Dallas Sheriff’s Office, testified about the crime scene and what

items were recovered. Dr. Jeffrey Barnard, the chief medical examiner for Dallas County,

examined the autopsy photographs and concluded that the victim’s cause of death was a gunshot

wound to the right forehead area. Dr. Barnard noted that there was gunpowder marking the

victim’s skin surface which means the barrel tip was close enough to the victim when it was

discharged that the gunpowder struck the skin surface. –3– Larry Forsyth, a former detective for the Dallas Sheriff’s Office, worked on this case and

testified that he had recovered a Texaco receipt from the car. Detective Forsyth spoke with a gas

station attendant who stated that Jeeves was driving the car with an African-American man in the

front seat and a child in the backseat around 9:30 am or 10:00 am on the day of the murders. In

2001, Detective Forsyth submitted the hairs from the knit cap into CODIS and the DNA in the

hairs matched appellant’s DNA. Deputy Sheriff Lieutenant Howard Sparks of the Dallas County

Sheriff’s Office also worked on this case and testified at trial. He noted that the “E. Oden”

notebook found at the murder scene belonged to Eugene Oden who worked at an office building

where appellant performed cleaning services.

Numerous employees of SWIFS (Southwestern Institute of Forensic Sciences) testified at

trial including Joe Paredez, Tim Fallon, Benita Boyd, and Charles Clow. Paredez, as a former

autopsy assistant, testified that samples and slides for a rape kit were prepared during Jeeves’s

autopsy. Fallon, a trace evidence analyst, testified that it was his job to examine hairs, fibers,

chemical residues, gunshot residues and other items for criminal and civil investigations. He

testified that the small bottle of liquid recovered at the crime scene was ethyl ether and water

which could be used as an anesthetic. Boyd, a forensic serologist, testified that as a former

employee of SWIFS that it was her job to identify and classify blood and body fluids as well as

evidence from a rape kit collected during an autopsy. Boyd testified she examined swabs and

smears from the Jeeves autopsy and located the presence of seminal fluid and acid phosphatase.

Clow, a former SWIFS employee, testified about his 2006 testing of the three lead fragments in

the victim’s case and the bullets from Jeeves’s case. Clow concluded that the bullets were

consistent with bullets coming from a .38 or .357-caliber firearm.

In addition, Lorna Beasley, a former employee of the Texas Department of Public Safety,

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