Inthalangsy, Santhy

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 10, 2021
DocketPD-1000-20
StatusPublished

This text of Inthalangsy, Santhy (Inthalangsy, Santhy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inthalangsy, Santhy, (Tex. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS

NO. PD-1000-20

SANTHY INTHALANGSY, Appellant

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

ON STATE’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW FROM THE FOURTEENTH COURT OF APPEALS HARRIS COUNTY

MCCLURE, J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which KELLER, P.J., RICHARDSON, YEARY, NEWELL, KEEL, WALKER, AND SLAUGHTER, JJ., joined. HERVEY, J. did not participate.

OPINION

Sara Cassandra Nelson (“Cassie”) witnessed her boyfriend, Kris Maneerut (“Jimmy”),

being shot. Immediately afterward, Appellant Santhy Inthalangsy and associates escorted her from

the crime scene. Later that day, she was killed. Appellant was charged with capital murder of

Jimmy while in the course of kidnapping Cassie. Was evidence of Cassie’s death admissible for a INTHALANGSY — 2

proper purpose and sufficiently relevant to the charge of capital murder? We hold that the evidence

was relevant, tended to prove an element of the charged offense, and provided necessary context

for the charged offense. Furthermore, we hold that the probative value of the evidence was not

substantially outweighed by its prejudicial effect. Therefore, the trial court did not abuse its

discretion in admitting the evidence.

BACKGROUND

Cassie Nelson panicked when drug profits worth $70,000 were stolen. Appellant’s

girlfriend Lindapone Phanprasa (“Linda”), the drug dealer, held Cassie responsible. On May 1–2,

2015, 1 Linda and Appellant held Cassie captive at Linda’s house. Cassie texted her landlord, “un

[sic] being held hostage . . .,” “huge deal gone bad,” and “I need to help find the 70,000 that was

stolen. I like my face.” Later, she texted to him the address where she was being held, which was

Linda’s house. Cassie offered to give Linda and Appellant her father’s speed boat as compensation,

and they released her the next day.

A few days later, on May 6, Cassie was evicted from her apartment for nonpayment of rent.

Around 10 a.m., she and her boyfriend Jimmy, an auto mechanic, drove to the home of their friend

Frank Garza. At first, they slept in their cars, but later Frank invited them inside.

Meanwhile, Linda was unable to transfer title to the boat to herself, so she and her

associates went looking for Cassie. On May 6, at about 4 p.m., three Asian men came to Cassie’s

former apartment asking for her. When her landlord said she wasn’t there, they left with her TV.

The landlord testified that he saw a man cock a gun in the car as they drove off. Late that night,

two men and a woman asked for Cassie at her mother’s house. They spoke Thai. A fourth person

1 All events pertaining to the offense occurred in 2015 unless otherwise noted. INTHALANGSY — 3

waited by the car outside the fence. Cassie’s mother later identified two of the people as Linda and

Appellant.

Syla Sengchareun (“Monk”) lived in the same neighborhood as Jimmy and Frank and had

gone to school with Jimmy. Linda asked Monk several times about Cassie’s whereabouts. She said

she wanted to speak to Cassie and Jimmy about money. On May 7, Monk phoned Frank and asked

if Cassie and Jimmy were at his house. Frank said yes. Monk told Frank that somebody was coming

to talk to Cassie and that he must not alert her. Monk immediately called Linda to report the news.

Appellant, Linda, and a man named Amalinh Phouthavong drove to Monk’s house, and Monk led

them to Frank’s house.

When both cars arrived, Frank walked out of his house and sat in Monk’s car to buy some

Xanax. Appellant and Amalinh got out of Linda’s car and opened the trunk. Watching from his

car, Monk saw one of the men put something behind his shirt, and Monk thought it was a gun.

Appellant and Amalinh walked into Frank’s house. About a minute later, Frank heard a sound

resembling a gunshot or a screen door slamming. Appellant and Amalinh walked out of the house

with Cassie between them. Monk observed that Cassie “looked like she was fixing to cry”—Frank

described her as appearing “confused.” Appellant and Amalinh were seated in the back seat of the

car on either side of Cassie as they drove off.

Frank walked into his house and saw Jimmy lying on the floor, gasping for breath, and

bleeding from a large hole in his face. Paramedics transported him by helicopter to a hospital,

where he was pronounced dead shortly after arrival.

Early the next morning, a fisherman found Cassie’s body in a damp, wooded area near the

San Jacinto River. She had eight or nine gunshot wounds to the head, neck, chest, back, and left INTHALANGSY — 4

wrist. An assistant medical examiner estimated that she had died twelve to twenty-four hours

before her body was discovered, the same day as Jimmy’s death.

A grand jury indicted Appellant for capital murder for shooting Jimmy while in the course

of kidnapping Cassie. 2 Appellant pleaded not guilty. Before the trial, defense counsel moved the

court to order the State to refrain from mentioning Cassie’s death or introducing any evidence of

her death. The State said it planned to use the evidence to prove the element of deadly force and

the defendant’s intent to kill Jimmy. The judge denied the motion, saying, “I think these are part

of the operative fact of the offense.” During the trial, the State presented evidence of Cassie’s

death, including a photograph of the lower portion of her body lying in the brush and testimony

about her bullet wounds. The defense made timely objections. The jury found Appellant guilty of

capital murder and assessed a sentence of life imprisonment without parole.

DIRECT APPEAL

In his appeal, Appellant cited five points of error:

1. Erroneous admission of hearsay statements by Cassie;

2. Erroneous admission of evidence of Cassie’s murder;

3. Finding that the probative value of Cassie’s murder was not substantially outweighed by

a danger of unfair prejudice;

4. Denial of his motion for continuance to investigate possible exculpatory and mitigating

evidence disclosed mid-trial; and

5. Insufficient evidence that a murder was committed in the course of a kidnapping.

2 The indictment alleged: “the Defendant . . . on or about MAY 7, 2015, did then and there unlawfully, while in the course of committing and attempting to commit the KIDNAPPING of SARA NELSON, intentionally cause the death of KRIS MANEERUT by SHOOTING KRIS MANEERUT WITH A DEADLY WEAPON, NAMELY A FIREARM.” INTHALANGSY — 5

The Fourteenth Court of Appeals did not reach the issues of Cassie’s alleged hearsay

statements or the motion for continuance. Inthalangsy v. State, 610 S.W.3d 138, 142 (Tex. App.—

Houston [14th Dist.] 2020). The court held that the evidence was legally sufficient for conviction

but that the trial court abused its discretion by admitting evidence of Cassie’s murder. Id. A

majority of the court concluded that Cassie’s murder “had no logical tendency to make a fact of

consequence concerning her kidnapping more or less probable” because there was insufficient

evidence connecting Appellant to her death. Id. at 146. The opinion of the court found that because

Cassie’s death was violent, reference to it caused prejudice that substantially outweighed its

probative value under Texas Rule of Evidence 403. Id. The court was unable to assess the impact

the evidence had on the jury and concluded that such uncertainty rendered the error harmful. Id. at

148.

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