GLOEDE v. State

328 S.W.3d 668, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 9909, 2010 WL 5117299
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 15, 2010
Docket09-09-00457-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 328 S.W.3d 668 (GLOEDE 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
GLOEDE v. State, 328 S.W.3d 668, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 9909, 2010 WL 5117299 (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

HOLLIS HORTON, Justice.

Lori Randall died from the head injury she suffered after spending the weekend with her boyfriend, Michael Brandon Gloe-de. The State indicted Gloede for murder and alleged that he struck Lori on her head. After a jury trial, the jury found Gloede guilty of manslaughter, a lesser-included offense. Gloede elected to have the trial court assess his punishment, and the trial court sentenced him to ten years in prison.

Gloede presents two issues for our review. In issue one, Gloede asserts the trial court erred by allowing the prosecutor to use a plastic liquor bottle as a demonstrative exhibit during final argument. In issue two, Gloede asserts that the evidence is insufficient to support the jury’s verdict. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Factual Background

According to Jennifer Sunday, Lori’s sister, Lori and Gloede had an “on and off’ relationship over the course of two to three years. On Saturday, April 29, 2006, Lori brought Gloede to a house where she was living with her grandmother. Lori got her “stuff’ and left with Gloede.

Around 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 29, 2006, J.M., 1 a minor, was driving around when she saw Lori sitting in her parked car in Gloede’s driveway. J.M. and Lori were friends. J.M. testified that she noticed that Gloede was sitting in the passenger seat of Lori’s car. As J.M. pulled into the driveway, she noticed that Lori got out of her car. At that point, Gloede got out of the car, told J.M. that he and Lori were talking, and he asked J.M. to leave. As J.M. pulled away from Gloede’s house, she saw Gloede choking Lori. According to J.M., “he was just shaking her and her head was going back and forth and that’s all I saw.” J.M. called Lori’s sister and *671 told her that she saw Lori and Gloede arguing and that Gloede “put his hands on [Lori].”

Cynthia Gerard, who was Lori’s friend and who lived across the street from Gloe-de’s residence, testified that Lori came to her house on the Saturday afternoon of April 29, 2006. According to Cynthia, Lori appeared to be upset and in fear of Gloede. She also thought that Lori had been drinking. According to Cynthia, later that same day, she heard Lori and Gloede arguing; Cynthia then heard someone pull into Gloede’s driveway and later drive away. Cynthia indicated that it was not uncommon for her to hear Gloede and Lori arguing.

Cynthia also explained that on Sunday evening, April 30, 2006, Gloede asked her for some medication to treat Lori because she had complained of a headache. At that time, according to Cynthia, Gloede “seemed like he was messed up on something. He seemed agitated, antsy.” Cynthia saw Gloede again when he came to her house and told her that Lori had died. Cynthia described Gloede as seeming to be agitated and upset. When he told Cynthia that Lori died, Cynthia explained that he was crying. She further explained that during this visit, “[h]e didn’t look anybody in the eye. And he left very shortly thereafter. He did not stick around.”

Buffy Jacobs, one of Lori’s friends, lives four houses from Gloede’s residence. According to Buffy, for approximately eight years, she had regularly obtained prescription drugs from Gloede’s father. Buffy stated that “[a] couple of times” before Lori’s death, Lori told her that she was scared of Gloede. On May 1, 2006, the day that Lori was taken to the hospital, Buffy went to Gloede’s residence around 8:00 a.m. to see Lori. Gloede’s father told her that Lori was not there. Buffy returned to her home, but when she was unable to locate anyone who knew Lori’s whereabouts, she returned to Gloede’s house. When Buffy again asked for Lori, Gloede’s father indicated that he had not seen her.

On the morning of May 1, 2006, paramedics employed by the Lake Conroe Fire Department responded to a call for assistance at Gloede’s residence. They arrived around 10:00 a.m. Nicholas Daniel, a paramedic that responded to the call, testified that upon entering the bedroom he saw Lori lying on her back on the floor. Daniel explained that he noticed bruising on Lori’s face and arms, and a hematoma, or swelling, on Lori’s head. When Daniel first assessed Lori, she was unconscious and she was not breathing normally. After removing Lori from the residence, he turned her care over to Brian Piatkowski, a paramedic employed by the Montgomery County Hospital District. Shortly thereafter, an air ambulance took Lori to Methodist Hospital in Houston.

Buffy Jacobs testified that she heard the sirens and saw the paramedics arrive at Gloede’s residence. Buffy related that she ran in the door behind the paramedics, and, upon entering the back bedroom, she saw Lori lying unconscious on the floor. As the paramedics brought Lori out of the house, Buffy explained that she saw the sheet the paramedics were using to carry Lori slip, which allowed the back of Lori’s head to hit the top of the step.

Buffy also testified that on Monday evening, May 1, 2006, Gloede told her that he and Lori had been “in an altercation over her being — leaving—leaving drunk. He took the bottle from her. And they had gotten in another scuffle and she had gotten hit over her head.” In subsequent testimony, Buffy clarified that Gloede told her that “he grabbed the keys and the bottle from [Lori] and that they were in a scuffle and that he did hit her over the head with the bottle.”

*672 On May 4, 2006, three days after arriving at the hospital, Lori died. Dr. Dwayne Wolfs autopsy report attributed Lori’s death to the following:

... blunt head trauma, resulting in a subdural hematoma. The manner of death however, is less clear. History suggests an altercation preceded the head injury; however, police were unable to confirm the details of an altercation. The injuries (especially following surgical manipulation) cannot be distinguished from accidental injuries (a fall for example). Therefore, the manner of death will be undetermined.

During the trial, Dr. Wolf explained that blunt force trauma can occur either by striking the body with a blunt object or the body’s falling onto a blunt object. Dr. Wolf testified that he could not tell from his post-mortem examination whether a blow or a fall was responsible for the blunt force trauma which had caused Lori’s death. According to Dr. Wolf, Lori’s sub-dural hematoma had been caused by blunt force trauma that probably occurred between April 28, 2006, and May 1, 2006.

During the guilt-innocence phase of the trial, four witnesses were called to testify by Gloede. One of the witnesses was paramedic Brian Piatkowski, who indicated that when he arrived, Lori was in the front yard and was unconscious and unresponsive. He noticed no abnormalities to Lori’s head, and he felt that Lori was suffering from “bleeding, intracranial hemorrhage.” Piatkowski described Lori as critically ill or injured, and he acknowledged that he possibly missed some of Lori’s injuries if they were covered by her hair or by equipment.

Kimberly Daoudi, who was acquainted with the Gloedes, indicated that she went to Gloede’s home on Saturday afternoon, April 29, 2006, between 4:30 and 5:00 p.m. When she pulled into Gloede’s driveway, she noticed Lori and Gloede in a car parked in the street. She saw Lori get out of the car and then stumble.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
328 S.W.3d 668, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 9909, 2010 WL 5117299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gloede-v-state-texapp-2010.