Helena Thompson v. State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 2003
Docket12-01-00019-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Helena Thompson v. State of Texas (Helena Thompson v. State of Texas) 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
Helena Thompson v. State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Rhonda

NO. 12-01-00019-CR



IN THE COURT OF APPEALS



TWELFTH COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT

TYLER, TEXAS



HELENA THOMPSON,

§
APPEAL FROM THE 241ST

APPELLANT



V.

§
JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT OF



THE STATE OF TEXAS,

APPELLEE

§
SMITH COUNTY, TEXAS




Appellant Helena Thompson appeals her conviction for the offense of murder for which she was sentenced to forty years in prison. Appellant presents six issues for our consideration. We affirm.



Background

Appellant married Lin Thompson ("Lin") about two weeks after meeting him in the fall of 1999. In the days and weeks prior to his death on December 9, 1999, Lin told several friends and acquaintances that he was considering divorcing Appellant. He intended to tell Appellant on the night of December 8.

That night, Appellant and Lin went to a club where they argued throughout the night. Both were drinking alcoholic beverages and became intoxicated. Several witnesses testified that Appellant was known to have a violent temper when she had been drinking alcohol. Appellant and Lin left the club before midnight. Shortly after midnight, Appellant called 911 from their home and reported that her husband had been shot by an intruder. The police arrived approximately eight minutes later.

Officers Chris Hudson ("Hudson") and Fred Johnson ("Johnson") of the Whitehouse Police Department were dispatched to the Thompson residence at 12:05 a.m. to investigate a burglary in progress. Both testified that they did not see any cars or any person on foot leaving the area of the Thompson residence. When the officers arrived at the residence, they found the front door open. They entered the house with their weapons drawn, searching for an intruder. Hudson could hear a woman crying in the back of the house, so he announced himself.

Hudson and Johnson told the jury that as they started down the hall toward the woman's voice, they could see Lin's feet through the open door. When Hudson entered the bedroom, he saw Appellant kneeling beside Lin, who was lying on his back on the floor. A broken mirror was on the floor, and blood was splattered on the broken glass and around Lin. Hudson had Johnson remove Appellant from the room immediately.

Hudson testified that Lin's face was swollen and discolored, and Lin did not have a pulse. When he tried to tilt Lin's head back in an attempt to open an airway, Hudson noticed that the carpet under Lin's head was blood-soaked and that the blood was clotted. Hudson removed a cloth that Appellant had been holding over Lin's neck and noticed a hole in the middle of his neck. Hudson testified that when he started giving Lin chest compressions, a large amount of blood came out of the wound and out of Lin's mouth.

Johnson testified that he left Appellant in the care of two dispatchers who were riding along with him and Hudson. Once outside, Appellant alternately screamed hysterically, beat her fists on the ground, dug or clawed at the ground, and tried to force her way back into the residence. Appellant was never able to give any information to any of the police officers which they were able to use to search for a suspect. Johnson returned to the bedroom where he noticed a gun sticking out from under some clothing lying on the floor near Lin's feet. Johnson also observed that a sliding glass door in the bedroom was standing open.

After Johnson removed Appellant from the bedroom, Appellant slept for a couple of hours in a patrol car before she was transported to the Sheriff's Office by Sergeant Charlie Baker ("Baker"). Appellant ultimately refused to give a written statement, but she had already told Baker that she had held the gun after the shooting. Also, Appellant told Baker that she had accidentally broken the windshield of the truck when she had to brace her feet against it because the truck's faulty brakes had nearly caused an accident.

On the morning of the murder, and over the next couple of days, Appellant told several people her version of what had happened when Lin was killed. She consistently claimed to have heard a pop and seen the shadow of an intruder. However, her story varied as to whether she was inside the house or outside when she heard the pop, whether Lin called her name before the pop, and whether she saw the shadow of the alleged intruder before or after she heard the pop.

Brad Vanderbilt ("Vanderbilt"), a paramedic, arrived at the residence at 12:23 a.m. As he walked down the hall toward the bedroom, he could see Lin's legs through the open door. Vanderbilt testified that he saw an entrance gunshot wound just below Lin's Adam's apple, and when he rolled Lin over to look for an exit wound, he noticed that lividity had set in on the back side of Lin's body, indicating that he had been dead for at least fifteen minutes. Vanderbilt also told the jury that the amount of clotting on the back of Lin's head indicated to him that the wound was at least twenty-five minutes old. Vanderbilt ceased resuscitation efforts at that point.

Several Smith County Sheriff's Department officers went to the Thompson residence that night to aid in the crime scene investigation. Lieutenant Jason Waller ("Waller") of the Smith County Sheriff's Department testified that he performed an atomic absorption analysis test on Appellant's hands to determine whether she had gun powder residue on her hands. As he looked at Appellant's hands while conducting the test, Waller noticed an area of redness at the base of her right thumb that he believed was consistent with an injury caused by firing a .357 caliber handgun. Waller told the jury that he observed blood on Appellant's jeans and a small amount of blood on her hands.

Waller testified that the gate to the privacy fence outside the master bedroom was closed and that there were no visible footprints in the dewy grass outside the open sliding glass door. He also told the jury that when he walked on the grass, he left visible footprints. Waller walked through the house and noticed that although the house was cluttered and unkempt, no items of value appeared to be missing. He saw a TV, a VCR, more than one computer, more than one cell phone, some change, and some Christmas presents in the house.

From the hallway, Waller could see Lin's body on the bedroom floor. Once in the bedroom, Waller noted that Lin had removed his boots and emptied his pockets onto a night stand. The witness told the jury that Lin would have had to pass by the open sliding glass door to reach the night stand. Waller saw a mop or broom handle on the floor beside the track of the sliding glass door. Waller observed that plaster and the doorstop had been knocked from the wall behind the bedroom door. The bedroom doorknob had been pushed into the plaster behind the door, cracking it. Waller told the jury that it appeared the dresser mirror had fallen and shattered when the door hit the wall.

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Helena Thompson v. State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helena-thompson-v-state-of-texas-texapp-2003.