in Re Chance Deallen Keller

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 11, 2019
Docket03-18-00420-CR
StatusPublished

This text of in Re Chance Deallen Keller (in Re Chance Deallen Keller) 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
in Re Chance Deallen Keller, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-18-00420-CR

In re Chance Deallen Keller

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BELL COUNTY, 27TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 69920, HONORABLE FANCY H. JEZEK, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In 2013, Chance Deallen Keller was convicted of capital murder for fatally shooting

Steven Wright while committing or attempting to commit robbery. See Tex. Penal Code § 19.03(a)(2).

Keller was sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. See id. § 12.31(a)(2);

see also Keller v. State, No. 03-13-00501-CR, 2014 WL 6617143 (Tex. App.—Austin Nov. 20, 2014,

no pet.) (mem. op., not designated for publication) (affirming conviction). Five years later, Keller

filed a motion for post-conviction DNA testing. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. arts. 64.01-.05. The

State opposed the motion. After reviewing the record and the parties’ arguments, the district court

denied the motion. In two issues on appeal, Keller asserts that the district court erred (1) by denying

his request for DNA testing and (2) by denying his request for appointment of counsel. We will

overrule both issues and affirm the district court’s order denying Keller’s request for DNA testing. BACKGROUND

As set out above, Keller was charged with and ultimately convicted of capital

murder. Following his conviction, Keller filed a motion for new trial asserting that someone else

was responsible for Wright’s death, and the district court denied the motion. Following that

determination, Keller filed a motion for DNA testing requesting that items collected during the

investigation be tested or retested.

During the trial of the underlying criminal proceeding, evidence was presented

demonstrating that Wright lived with his mother and stepfather in Belton and used and sold illegal

drugs at their home. Because Wright sold drugs from his house, several individuals routinely went

to Wright’s home, including his friends Sarah Steglich and Brandon Hargett. On the night in

question, Courtney White went to Wright’s home to purchase drugs from Wright a few hours before

Wright was killed. Keller also used and sold illegal drugs, and Keller and Wright knew each other.

Keller admitted to law-enforcement personnel that he would “jack[] or rob[]” people he believed

were drug dealers. Early in the morning on the day in question, Wright was shot in the abdomen in

his home and died from injuries caused by a gunshot wound from a small-caliber bullet. Wright’s

stepfather found him deceased outside on the front steps to the porch of their house. The gun used

in the offense was never recovered.

In the trial, evidence regarding Keller’s commission of two prior offenses was also

presented to the jury. The first prior offense was the robbery of Jesus Perez and Perez’s girlfriend

Aubry Waltrip one week before the murder of Wright. After agreeing to sell them drugs, Keller told

them that he would supply them with extra drugs if Perez could “get [Keller] a throw-away gun.”

2 Perez gave Keller a chrome-colored .22 handgun, and Keller asked Waltrip to accompany him to

get the drugs while Perez stayed behind. Shortly after Keller and Waltrip walked off, Keller pointed

the gun at her head and robbed her of the money that she was going to use to buy drugs.

The second prior offense was the attempted robbery of Margaret Biddy in Waco a

few hours before the murder. Biddy met Keller through a mutual acquaintance, Megan Richardson.

Keller went to Biddy’s home shortly before Wright was killed and offered to sell her some cell

phones and cameras. When Biddy indicated that she was not interested, Keller pulled out a handgun

with a chrome-colored barrel, held the gun to Biddy’s head, and demanded all the money in her

purse. Biddy refused and ran after Keller with a bat when he started to leave. While chasing Keller,

Biddy “heard a shot go off outside” before Keller left in a car. After the police responded to the

scene, one of the investigating officers found a .22 shell casing in the location where Biddy said that

someone fired a gun.

A few hours after Keller left Biddy’s home, Keller asked his friend Richardson to

drive him to Wright’s house. On the way, Keller used Richardson’s phone to make phone calls and

send text messages to Wright. After they arrived, Keller went inside the residence and later returned

to the car. Cell-phone records for Richardson’s and Wright’s phones showed that Richardson’s

phone made multiple calls to Wright’s phone before Wright died, and Richardson’s phone was

the last one to contact Wright’s phone before he died. The records also showed that Richardson’s

phone traveled from Waco to Belton and connected with a cell tower approximately one block from

Wright’s home.

While the police were investigating the murder at Wright’s home, Wright’s girlfriend

and his friends Hargett and Steglich arrived. The police found a .22 shell casing at Wright’s house.

3 Testing performed on the casing demonstrated that it was fired from the same gun as the casing

collected from outside Biddy’s home a few hours earlier.

Later on the same day that Wright was killed, Keller went to a hotel with Chrisann

Cameron. While at the hotel, he called his sister, Lacy Fitch, for a ride because, as she testified,

he and Cameron had gotten into a disagreement after Cameron stole his gun and some of his pills.

Fitch and her friend Brittney Buckner picked up Keller and noticed that Keller was acting

nervously. Keller asked them if they had heard anything about a murder. Fitch testified that Keller

asked them to look up news stories about the murder of a man with Wright’s first name, and

Buckner testified that Keller asked them to look for any news about Wright.

Fitch later drove Keller to a store where Biddy’s son recognized Keller and called

the police. Keller left the store with Fitch and Buckner and drove away. After a pursuit, the police

directed the driver, Fitch, to pull over. When the police initiated the stop, Keller made a statement

to Fitch and Buckner before being ordered out of the car. Fitch testified that Keller asked her to tell

their mom “he loved her” and stated that he was “going to jail” because he “shot him.” Buckner

testified that Keller asked them to “to tell his mom he loved her” and stated “that he would be going

away for a long time” because “he killed . . . Wright” after unsuccessfully attempting to rob Wright.

After his arrest, Keller instructed Fitch and Buckner to take the memory card out of

his phone and destroy it. They complied and flushed the card down the toilet. Keller told Fitch to

tell Cameron to get rid of the gun that Cameron had taken.

When Keller was in jail, he told three jail guards that he had enemies in one part of

the jail and that he could not return there “because of the person that I murdered” in Belton. While

4 in jail, Keller talked with several family members and friends. Those conversations were recorded

and admitted during the trial. In one recording involving Cameron, Keller admitted to firing the

gun while at Biddy’s home, and Cameron stated that she took his gun. In another recording

involving Fitch, Keller directed Fitch to tell Richardson to stop talking to the police and asked Fitch

if she got rid of his phone. One additional recording was made of a conversation that Keller had

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