Gregory Shane Bailey v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 13, 2015
Docket05-13-01536-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Gregory Shane Bailey v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

AFFIRM; and Opinion Filed April 13, 2015.

Court of Appeals S In The

Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-13-01536-CR

GREGORY SHANE BAILEY, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 15th Judicial District Court Grayson County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 062872

OPINION Before Justices Fillmore, Schenck, 1 and Thomas 2 Opinion by Justice Fillmore

A jury found appellant Gregory Shane Bailey guilty of murder and assessed punishment

of life imprisonment and a $10,000 fine. In three points of error, Bailey contends he was denied

a fair trial as a result of mid-trial publicity, the trial court abused its discretion by admitting

autopsy photographs of the decedent into evidence, and the trial court abused its discretion by

admitting evidence of his prior bad acts in relation to the decedent and a former girlfriend. We

affirm the trial court’s judgment.

1 The Honorable Justice Michael J. O’Neill, who was on the panel and participated in the submission of this case, retired December 31, 2014. Justice David J. Schenck succeeded Justice O’Neill. Justice Scheneck has read the briefs and reviewed the record and now serves as a member of the panel. 2 The Honorable Linda Thomas, Chief Justice of the Court of Appeals for the Fifth District of Texas—Dallas, Retired, sitting by assignment. Background 3

The evening of February 7, 2013, Bailey called the police to report that his fiancé, Sarah

Swaim, was missing. In his interviews with the police that were played for the jury, Bailey

indicated that the evening before, he, Swaim, and their two-year-old daughter, L.B., 4 were at

home in their trailer in Sherman, Texas, where they had lived since December 2011 or January

2012. After putting L.B. to bed, Bailey and Swaim had been drinking shots of vodka and began

to argue. Bailey told the police that Swaim was “running her mouth” and “griping” at him, but

she was not being physical and that the last time they “got physical with each other” was over

two years before when they were on drugs. He did not want to argue with Swaim, and he went

to bed. A short time later, he heard the door to their trailer shut, and he had not seen Swaim

since. Bailey told the police that when Swaim left the trailer, she was wearing a t-shirt and pink

sweat pants with the word “sweet” on the back. Bailey told the police that Swaim could have

walked to his stepfather’s nearby trailer and that Swaim had done that before on a couple of

occasions. The police contacted Bailey’s stepfather, Mark Watkins, who had not seen Swaim

during this time period. During a consensual search of Bailey and Swaim’s trailer, police

officers discovered blood on the outside of the clothes dryer, a banner from a baby shower with

blood and hair on it, a pair of pink sweatpants with “sweet” on the back, a bloodstained gray t-

shirt, and a towel with several red stains. After obtaining a search warrant, law enforcement

officers found additional blood stains at a number of locations, and on a number of items, in the

trailer.

Bailey testified during the guilt/innocence phase of trial. His testimony regarding the

events of February 6, 2013 differed markedly from what he told the police when he reported

3 Bailey does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction. We will dispense with a recitation of facts unnecessary to the resolution of the points of error under consideration in this appeal. 4 Minors are identified by their initials in this opinion.

–2– Swaim missing and in his interviews with the police on February 7, 2013; in fact, he testified that

most of what he told the police in the prior interviews was false. Bailey testified that he and

Swaim were in the trailer drinking vodka shots on the night of February 6, 2013. Bailey testified

that at one point in the evening, he was in the kitchen and heard Swaim “banging around” in the

bedroom and yelling. When he went into the bedroom, Swaim was laying on the floor between

the bed and the wall, bleeding from her mouth. She was yelling and flinging her arms and had a

banner that had been hanging on the wall in her mouth. Bailey told Swaim to be quiet lest she

wake L.B., who was sleeping in a crib next to the bed. Bailey tossed the banner onto the floor

and threw his gray t-shirt down the hallway into the laundry room. He heard Swaim snoring as

he laid down to go to sleep, and he did not think anything was wrong with Swaim other than her

being intoxicated. The next morning, he discovered that Swaim had died. Bailey testified he

and Swaim had not argued or fought on the evening of February 6, 2013, and he did not choke or

strangle Swaim.

Bailey telephoned his employer, Bobby Tate, and Tate gave him permission to take

carpet he had replaced in his trailer to a pile of trash to be burned on Tate’s property. Tate and

Garland Foscue, another of Tate’s employees, saw Bailey unloading a roll of carpet from his van.

When they heard Swaim was missing, Tate and Foscue decided to check the roll of carpet on the

burn pile, and they found Swaim’s body wrapped in black garbage sacks and rolled in the carpet.

The police then arrested Bailey for Swaim’s murder.

Texas Ranger Brad Oliver testified regarding photographs taken at the burn pile showing

blood on, and bruising and injuries to, Swaim’s body. Lynn Salzberger, M.D., testified

regarding an autopsy she performed on Swaim while she was employed at the Dallas County

Medical Examiner’s Office. Salzberger testified that Swaim’s body had bruises in various stages

of healing on the top half of her body, including her head, neck, tongue, and face, as well as on

–3– her legs, her pubic area, and at the opening of her vagina. Her bruised tongue suggested that

injury was sustained during strangulation. Swaim’s neck and throat injuries, including a broken

bone in her thyroid cartilage or voice box, also were suggestive of blunt force and strangulation.

Salzberger indicated the bruises on Swaim’s pubic area and vagina could have resulted from

blunt force injury, but could not have been caused by a fall. Swaim also had bruising in the

spacing between her ribs on both sides of her chest, fresh rib fractures in the area of the bruising,

and an old rib facture. She had bruising on her hands, suggestive of defensive injuries. Swaim’s

liver was lacerated, resulting in blood in her abdomen. According to Salzberger, Swaim’s

lacerated liver could only have been caused by the infliction of significant force. Swaim’s blood

alcohol level was .328, but Swaim did not die from alcohol poisoning. Salzberger testified that,

while some of Swaim’s injuries could have been the result of a fall, considering the number and

locations of Swaim’s injuries, it was not her opinion Swaim’s death resulted from a fall. A

number of Swaim’s injuries could have been caused by the impact of a fist or foot. Salzberger

testified the cause of Swaim’s death was homicidal violence, including strangulation and blunt

force injury, and the manner of death was homicide. Bailey testified he saw none of the injuries

to Swaim’s body shown in autopsy photographs when he found her deceased the morning of

February 7, 2013.

Witnesses at trial testified to the tumultuous and physical nature of Bailey and Swaim’s

relationship. Watkins testified concerning three incidents in which Swaim came to his trailer

after she and Bailey had argued. Ceclia Howe testified that in the year she lived across the street

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