Kevin Wayne LaFitte v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 10, 2005
Docket03-03-00505-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Kevin Wayne LaFitte v. State (Kevin Wayne LaFitte 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 Wayne LaFitte v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

444444444444444444444444444 ON MOTION FOR REHEARING 444444444444444444444444444

NO. 03-03-00505-CR

Kevin Wayne LaFitte, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 390TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 9020409, HONORABLE CHARLES F. CAMPBELL, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Our opinion and judgment of November 18, 2004 are withdrawn and the following

substituted therefor.

Appellant Kevin Wayne LaFitte was convicted of capital murder. See Tex. Pen. Code

Ann. § 19.03(a)(2) (West Supp. 2004-05). In this case, we will review the trial court’s decision to

admit into evidence appellant’s videotaped statements allegedly made after he invoked his right to

remain silent and to consult with an attorney. We will also consider whether hearsay statements

made by third parties and introduced by the State against appellant are admissible as statements

against the declarant’s penal interests. For the reasons stated below, we affirm the judgment of

conviction. BACKGROUND

On October 20, 2001, Jeffrey Burns was shot and killed. Burns was a known drug

dealer who trafficked in large amounts of marihuana. He lived in South Carolina and traveled

frequently to Austin. On these trips, he would visit a small circle of friends who acted as suppliers

for him, and he would carry large amounts of cash to make his purchases. On this occasion, Burns

came to Austin intending to purchase about 200 pounds of marihuana and carried approximately

$70,000 in cash. During this visit, Burns was stying with a friend, Christopher Marschner.

On the night of his death, Burns told Marschner that appellant had located marihuana

for him to purchase from appellant. Burns asked Marschner to go with him to appellant’s house to

make the purchase, but Marschner declined. Instead, Marschner gave Burns directions, and Burns

proceeded on his own at about 8:30 that evening. He took $42,000 in cash with him. Marschner had

one last contact with Burns when he received a telephone call from him asking for directions. By

10:00 p.m., Burns had not returned to meet Marschner. At about the same time, Burns’s body was

found behind his car in the parking lot of Bull Creek Park.1 He had died from multiple gunshot

wounds. Crime scene investigators found on Burns’s car palm and fingerprints that later were found

to match those of appellant.

On October 21, appellant gave a $200 gift card and another $200 in cash to his friend

Latrice McDuffie. He also signed nine money orders totaling $4,500. Anthony Dankworth,

appellant’s brother-in-law, told one of his friends that he had received $25,000 from someone.

Dankworth’s brother later gave that friend $25,000 in cash, asking him to hold the cash for

1 Neighbors in the area had reported hearing gunshots coming from the park at around 9:41.

2 Dankworth. In the next few days, Dankworth also paid off several loans. Evidence in the record

also establishes that appellant is legally blind and that Dankworth frequently drives him around

Austin.

Believing appellant to be a witness to the homicide, Austin Police Department

homicide detective Detective Eric De Los Santos questioned him for three hours on October 21, after

which appellant returned home. De Los Santos interviewed him again on October 24 and made a

videotape of the questioning. De Los Santos testified that because he then believed appellant might

have been involved with Burns’s homicide, he read appellant his Miranda rights. See Miranda v.

Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966). Appellant related a version of events of the evening of October 20

different from that he gave at his previous interview. During the second interview, appellant stated

that he was at a point where he thought he needed to talk to a lawyer and that he wanted to return

home. De Los Santos responded, “Okay, that’s fine.” As De Los Santos started to leave the room,

appellant stated, “I’m going to finish answering” the question De Los Santos had asked and

continued talking on his own. De Los Santos attempted to leave the room at several additional

points, but appellant kept insisting that the interview continue. Appellant then stated that he did not

want to finish the interview that evening because he had been drinking beer and smoking marihuana,

but he also staid that he wanted to continue in the morning, if possible.

De Los Santos agreed to take appellant home at that time. He left the room to speak

with his supervisors and then re-entered the room. The interview continued, and appellant did not

request to terminate it. During the interview, De Los Santos told appellant that his friends, Artium

Prov. and Anthony Brian Dankworth, were making statements to police in other rooms. Because De

Los Santos became concerned that appellant would alert other suspects about possible searches, De

3 Los Santos decided to place appellant under arrest. Appellant then asked for an attorney. In

response, De Los Santos asked appellant to clarify if a request had been made. Appellant confirmed

that he was requesting an attorney. The interview ended at that point, and De Los Santos left the

room. The videotape, however, continued recording.

On May 21, 2002, appellant was charged by indictment with capital murder. See Tex.

Penal Code Ann. § 19.03(a)(2). At a pretrial hearing, appellant argued that his incriminating

statements made and recorded during the October 24 interview should be suppressed because he had

invoked his right to counsel and his right to terminate the questioning.2 The trial court overruled his

motion to suppress. It also filed findings of fact and conclusions of law, in which it found that

appellant did not invoke his right to terminate the interview or his right to an attorney before De Los

Santos ceased talking with him. Thus, it denied the motion to suppress the videotape of the October

24 interview. At trial, the State offered an edited version of the videotape, which included only those

statements made before De Los Santos decided to arrest appellant and statements made when

appellant was left alone in the room. De Los Santos also testified about the interview.

In addition, the State offered the testimony of Jenny Vanrens, a friend of appellant,

who testified that she had seen appellant on two occasions with a gun similar to the type used in

Burns’s homicide. She also testified about a telephone conversation she had with Dankworth two

weeks before the homicide. She had been living in Wisconsin, and Dankworth was trying to

convince her to move back to Austin. She told Dankworth she could not move because she did not

have any money. Dankworth then told her that appellant had approached him with a plan concerning

2 We will discuss the relevant portions of the videotape when we examine appellant’s issues on appeal.

4 “a guy coming from out of town and they just—they had planned to rob him for the money and the

drugs and they were splitting it and he would have cash pretty much.” She stated that Dankworth

told her that this robbery was to occur about two weeks after the conversation, and she identified the

weekend that the homicide occurred.

John Paul Wile also testified. He shared a duplex with Artium Prov. and lived next

door to appellant. Prov. and Wile also worked together at an Arby’s restaurant. One day at work,

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