Jan David Clark v. State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 8, 2012
Docket11-10-00335-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jan David Clark v. State of Texas (Jan David Clark 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
Jan David Clark v. State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Opinion filed November 8, 2012

In The

Eleventh Court of Appeals __________

No. 11-10-00335-CR __________

JAN DAVID CLARK, Appellant

V.

STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 244th District Court

Ector County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. C-35,136-T

MEMORANDUM OPINION The jury convicted Jan David Clark of the offense of murder and assessed his punishment at confinement for life and a fine of $10,000. We affirm. The decedent in this case was Susan Clark, appellant’s wife. Appellant testified that, on the evening of January 31, 2008, he had been to a business meeting with other people who were involved in the multi-level sale of nutritional supplement products known as Enzacta. Appellant’s wife was not in the business with him and did not attend the meeting; she stayed at home. Appellant got home “about 10:30 [p.m.].” He intended to perform an exorcism on Susan that night to rid her of a demon, but he felt like it had to be done at the right time. He had never performed an exorcism before. He stayed in his office at his house until 10:55 p.m. and then went to the bedroom. Susan was already in bed. When appellant began saying, “holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty,” Susan ran to the bathroom to “avoid me laying my hands on her head.” She dialed 911, but he took the phone away from her when he followed her into the bathroom. The dispatcher for the City of Odessa received that incomplete 911 call. When the call came in, the city’s caller identification system registered appellant’s name and address and recorded the time as 11:04 p.m. The dispatcher gave the information to Ector County Sheriff’s Office personnel. Deputy Victor Tercero responded and went to appellant’s house. A few minutes later, Sergeant Mike Griffis joined him there. The officers knocked on doors and looked through windows into lighted rooms of the house but saw nothing to indicate anything out of the ordinary, so they left. However, the bathroom into which appellant followed Susan could not be seen by looking through the windows of the house. After appellant followed Susan into the bathroom and terminated the 911 call, he “laid hands” on her head. According to appellant, at the point that he “laid hands” on Susan, he just lost control of himself. He testified that she fought against him. She eventually ended up facedown on the floor, and appellant was sitting on her backside and was straddling her. He remembered “hearing her say clearly, ‘I can’t breathe.’” Appellant testified that he continued to hold her down and that he smothered her. From the time that appellant “laid hands” on Susan and lost control of himself, he began to chant, and the chanting “went on until through the whole situation.” In a video statement to law enforcement officials, appellant said he felt that his own body had been overcome with the spirit of a Cherokee witch doctor. By his own testimony, appellant became sexually aroused, pulled up Susan’s shirt, and pulled down her panties. “There was a kind of vision like riding a horse and a bunch of wild Indian sounds and more chanting and whooping.” He rolled her over, and when he saw her face, “the whole chanting thing was gone.” Before the deputies arrived, appellant put a white sheet over Susan, poured grape juice over her, and placed three crosses on her body. He called for neither an ambulance nor any other help for Susan. Appellant did, however, call his friend, Stephen Culver, at approximately 3:15 a.m. on February 1. Culver did not answer the telephone in time, but he did listen to the message that

2 appellant left and returned the call to appellant. Culver did not testify as to the content of the conversation, but he did testify that, after he talked to appellant, he and his wife became concerned and decided to contact law enforcement personnel. One of the Culver’s employees was married to Phillip Partin, an FBI agent; they decided to call him. Agent Partin arrived at the Culver’s home around 4:20 a.m. Culver rode with Agent Partin so that Culver could show the agent where appellant lived. By arrangement, “Odessa law enforcement” followed them. They arrived there at about 5:00 a.m. and merely pointed out appellant’s house to the deputies and left. Agent Partin testified and confirmed Culver’s testimony. Five and one-half to six hours after he had been to appellant’s house the first time, Deputy Tercero was dispatched to the house again. Lieutenant Luffman, Sergeant Griffis, and Investigator Trujillo met him there. Deputy Tercero testified that, when he went back to the house the second time, a pickup had been moved from under the carport, and its engine was warm. A light in the carport that had not been burning at his first visit to appellant’s house was now on. Appellant testified that he moved the pickup out of the carport after he killed Susan so that a receiver inside the house could pick up and play Christian music from a satellite radio broadcaster in the vehicle. Although appellant usually had “about eight beers a night” and smoked “a couple of puffs a day” of marihuana from his pipe, he had not done so the night of the homicide. When the deputies made the second trip to appellant’s home, Investigator Trujillo knocked on the door to the house, and appellant answered. When the officers entered the residence, they found Susan lying dead on the master bathroom floor. Investigator Trujillo “read [appellant] his rights.” Sergeant Griffis placed appellant in the sergeant’s patrol unit. Appellant was taken to the detention center. At the time that appellant killed Susan, Steven John McNeill was an investigator for the Ector County Sheriff’s Office. Investigator McNeill was at his home on the morning of February 1, 2008, when he received a call to assist in an investigation. He and another investigator interviewed appellant at approximately 7:30 that morning. A video was made of the hour-long interview, and it was played for the jury. Although there were some inconsistencies, appellant told the investigators essentially the same thing that he related during the trial.

3 At the time of this homicide, Christin Timmons was a sexual assault nurse examiner at Medical Center Hospital’s emergency room. She examined Susan on February 1, 2008. She found multiple bruises on Susan’s body, ruptured blood vessels, and abrasions on her nose. Timmons also found four “pretty new” abrasions on Susan’s labia minora, indicating that “[s]omething of a harder substance rubbed against it causing some friction.” Appellant denied having any sexual activity with Susan since 2000. Dr. Lloyd White, a board certified forensic pathologist, testified that he was self- employed as a contract pathologist for the Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s District in Fort Worth. He had been appointed as a deputy medical examiner there. He performed autopsies for Ector County at the request of the Ector County Medical Examiner. On February 2, 2008, Dr. White performed an autopsy on Susan’s body. He found that Susan had an abrasion on her nose and that she had multiple bruises, including defensive bruises that would indicate that Susan struggled and put up a fight. Dr. White also noted the injury to the labia minora that Timmons had noted during her examination. That injury was consistent with assaultive behavior. As did Timmons, Dr. White also noticed “a lot of petechiae.” Petechiae are small hemorrhages in a person’s skin and “are typically associated with increased vascular pressure in the chest and with hypoxia or lack of air and oxygen to the organs and tissues of the body.” Petechiae typically accompany traumatic asphyxia. Dr. White noted “very prominent petechiae on the face, the membranes of the eyes and some areas of the upper torso and on the arms.” Dr. White was of the opinion that the cause of death was “asphyxia by smothering” and that the manner of death was homicide.

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