Kevin Allan Lindsey v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 19, 2007
Docket14-06-00327-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Kevin Allan Lindsey v. State (Kevin Allan Lindsey v. State) 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
Kevin Allan Lindsey v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed June 19, 2007

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed June 19, 2007.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-06-00327-CR

KEVIN ALLAN LINDSEY, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 182nd District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1059660

M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N

A jury found appellant, Kevin Allan Lindsey, guilty of felony murder and assessed his punishment at forty years= confinement in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, and a $10,000 fine.  In two issues on appeal, appellant contends the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction.  We affirm.


Factual and Procedural Background

The relevant facts are drawn from appellant=s trial in April 2006, twenty-two years after the crime for which he was indicted was committed. 

In late February 1984, Elizabeth Gargano, age 71, was found stabbed to death in her home on Maxey Road in east Harris County.[1]  Blood and a pair of slippers were found on the porch, and from the pattern of the blood, it appeared that Ms. Gargano had been dragged inside and left there.  Her home appeared to have been ransacked and her phone was on the floor with its cord ripped out of the wall.  Officers at the scene noted possible points of entry through a window or the living room door, which had glass broken out and appeared to have been forced.  Officer Stephen Fingerhut of the Houston Police Department=s newly-formed Crime Scene Unit took photographs of the crime scene and collected evidence for analysis, including blood and fingerprints.[2]  The evidence gathered was connected to the complainant only; no physical evidence linking any suspects to the crime was found at the scene.  Ms. Gargano=s car, which was missing, was later found about two miles from her home, burned.  An investigation ultimately yielded no suspects.


Seventeen years later, in 2001, a man named Rick Moran identified Gregory Helms and someone named AKevin,@ whose last name was possibly ALindsey@ as suspects in Ms. Gargano=s murder.  Helms and Lindsey were reportedly brothers-in-law.  At appellant=s trial, Officer Paul Motard of the Homicide Division, who had originally investigated Ms. Gargano=s death, testified that Moran was in prison and offered the information in exchange for a transfer to a prison unit closer to his family.  Officer Motard testified that he spoke to Moran and was able to corroborate some of Moran=s information by speaking to Lisa Vinson, who was Moran=s girlfriend in 1984.  Motard testified he eventually found Helms in 2004 living in Montgomery County.  At first, Helms denied involvement, but later admitted involvement and gave a statement.  Motard filed murder charges against him in June 2004.

Motard also located appellant, who was then living in Collinsville, Illinois.  In April 2005, Motard, his partner, Officer Clement Abandado, and a Collinsville police officer, arrived at appellant=s trailer home.  Appellant went with them to the police station, but made no admissions during their conversation.  Motard then contacted appellant=s older sister, Debbie Lindsey, who lived nearby, and told her he was investigating a 1984 murder in Houston.  When Motard told Debbie Lindsey that appellant denied any involvement in the murder, she became very emotional and angry.  Debbie called appellant and then led Motard and Abandado back to appellant=s trailer.


Debbie went into appellant=s house, and when they both came out, appellant appeared Anervous, a little rattled, and agitated.@  Motard secretly tape-recorded his conversation with appellant, who was not under arrest at the time.[3]  Motard testified that appellant told him that he was present at Ms. Gargano=s house, he and Helms went there to do a burglary, he helped Helms get into the house through a window, and he went around to the front of the house but did not go in.  Appellant also said that he heard a commotion inside the house, and through the front door he saw Helms with a knife and a woman lying on the floor.  At first, appellant denied taking any property from the house and denied riding in Ms. Gargano=s car with Helms.  Later, however, appellant said he did ride with Helms in her car part of the way, and then Helms let him out and he walked the rest of the way.  Appellant also made a drawing of the house and the front door, and demonstrated where he said he helped Helms into the window.[4]  Motard testified that appellant told him that this had been bothering him for some time and he had lost a lot of weight.  Motard also testified that appellant=s description was accurate and consistent with the way Motard had seen the scene.  According to Motard, appellant did not say he had a knife that night, and he could not remember if appellant said he knew Helms had a knife.

At trial, Debbie Lindsey testified that, when she lived in Texas, she and Gregory Helms had a daughter together, and at one point, appellant came to live with them at the Mimosa apartments.  During that time, Debbie testified, Helms regularly abused drugs.  Helms also hung out with Rick Moran, whom she did not like.  Debbie remembered hearing of Ms. Gargano=s murder on the news one night.  She also testified that, several years after she and appellant moved back to Illinois, appellant told her Athat him and Greg did a robbery and something went wrong.@

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