King v. State

189 S.W.3d 347, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 2100, 2006 WL 669636
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 16, 2006
Docket2-04-515-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by115 cases

This text of 189 S.W.3d 347 (King 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
King v. State, 189 S.W.3d 347, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 2100, 2006 WL 669636 (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

SUE WALKER, Justice.

I. Introduction

Appellant Krystal Rena King appeals her conviction for murder. A jury found King guilty and assessed her punishment at fifty years’ confinement, and the trial court sentenced her accordingly. In fifteen points, King complains that the trial court erred by admitting extraneous offense evidence, by admitting a eo-conspirator’s statements, by denying King’s requested accomplice witness charges, and by failing to include a proper application paragraph in its charge on duress. We will affirm.

*352 II. Factual and Procedural Background

On June 9, 2003, Lake Dallas police began investigating the disappearance of Denise Johnson. Four days later, Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation agents found Johnson’s body in a field in Oklahoma. The body was wrapped in plastic wrap and blankets and partially cemented inside a large trash barrel.

The State charged King, Steven Wieder-hold, Scott List, and Tammy Slone with Johnson’s murder. The State also charged King, Wiederhold, List, Slone, and Angela Smith with tampering with evidence, a charge stemming from the transportation and disposal of the body. Prior to trial, King’s trial counsel made an oral motion to sever the prosecution of the two charges against King, and the trial court granted the motion; the State proceeded to trial on only the murder charge.

At trial, the State’s evidence showed that King, Wiederhold, List, and Slone conspired to commit Johnson’s murder and murdered her one evening at her apartment. Initially, Wiederhold, List, and Slone attempted to kill Johnson by putting rat poison in her spaghetti. When this effort was unsuccessful, Wiederhold, List, and Slone held down Johnson while King suffocated and eventually stabbed her. The four co-conspirators then wrapped the body in plastic wrap and blankets and put it in the bedroom closet in Johnson’s apartment. Several days later, the co-conspirators partially cemented the body inside a large trash barrel. They left the body in Johnson’s bedroom closet for twelve days, and during that time they continued to wrap the body in plastic wrap, putting dryer sheets, baking soda, and baby powder between the layers of plastic wrap to mask the odor.

After the murder, King and Wiederhold went to Thomas Wiley’s house and asked him to help them dispose of the body and of Johnson’s belongings, but Wiley refused to help. Later, Wiederhold met Smith on a phone chat line. After several conversations and an in-person meeting at a Chuck E. Cheese restaurant, Wiederhold showed the body to Smith and requested her help in disposing of the body, allegedly threatening her life if she did not help. Smith agreed to help, and Wiederhold and List loaded the barrel containing the body into a U-Haul trailer attached to Smith’s truck. Wiederhold, List, Slone, and Smith drove the U-Haul trailer to Oklahoma, where they dumped Johnson’s body by the side of a road. King stayed at Johnson’s apartment while the others transported and disposed of Johnson’s body.

At trial, King testified on her own behalf that she went along with the murder only because of her fear of co-conspirator List. King testified that List threatened to kill her if she did not kill Johnson. She testified that she did not go to the police after the murder because she feared that List would “get to [her] before the police could get to him.”

III. Same Transaction Contextual Evidence

Before and during trial, King’s counsel objected to the admission of any evidence regarding the “purported attempt to dispose of a deceased body as evidence against Krystal Rena King.” Specifically, he objected under rules of evidence 401 through 404, 1 arguing that the evidence was not relevant to the murder charge, was inadmissable as extraneous offense evidence, and was unfairly prejudicial in relation to its probative value. Before opening statements, the following exchange took *353 place between the prosecutor and King’s attorney:

[The Prosecutor]: The body that [defense counsel] is referring to is the deceased in this particular case alleged in the indictment, Denise Johnson, and we’re going to have to offer evidence of the disposition of that body and the recovery of that body in proving our case. We’re also going to offer evidence of what happened to that body along the way. And the fact that there are also charges of tampering with evidence ... does not, I believe, prevent us from going into that evidence which proves our case.
[King’s Counsel]: And my objection would be furthered by the fact that’s why we did sever it. She’s standing trial for the murder of one Denise Johnson, not with tampering with evidence after some purposed murder of Denise Johnson. We feel that — again, reurge the 404 objection, as well as the 401 through 403.

The trial court overruled these objections.

The State initially sought to introduce evidence concerning the co-conspirators’ transportation of the body through the testimony of the U-Haul employee who rented the trailer to Wiederhold and Smith; King’s counsel again objected under rules 401 through 404. The trial court overruled those objections, and King’s counsel requested a limiting instruction, which the court also denied. King continued to object under rules 401 through 404 to all testimony concerning the events occurring after the murder. King also objected under rules 401 through 404 to the State’s evidence documenting the events after the murder. This evidence included photographs of Johnson’s apartment, the barrel containing the body, the location where the body was found, and the co-conspirators’ trip to Oklahoma to dump the body.

Each of King’s first eight points challenges, in some respect, the trial court’s admission of evidence concerning the events after the murder, which King contends relates only to the severed tampering with evidence charge.

A. No “Effective Denial” of Severance Right and Probative Value Not Outweighed by Prejudicial Effect

In her first point, King contends that although the trial court granted her motion for severance and the State proceeded to trial on only the murder charge, nonetheless, the trial court erroneously admitted evidence concerning the events occurring after the murder that was related to the tampering with evidence charge, 2 thereby “effectively depriving” her of the right to severance afforded by the Texas Penal Code. In her seventh point, King contends that this evidence was more prejudicial than probative.

A defendant may be prosecuted in a single criminal action for all offenses arising out of the same criminal episode. Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 3.02(a) (Vernon 2003); see id. § 3.01 (defining “criminal episode” as the commission of two or more offenses that are the repeated commission of the same or similar offenses). Whenever two or more offenses have been consolidated or joined for trial, the defendant has the right to a severance of the offenses. Id. § 3.04(a) (Vernon Supp.2005).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 S.W.3d 347, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 2100, 2006 WL 669636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-state-texapp-2006.