Lori Elsie Cooper v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 19, 2006
Docket01-05-00764-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Lori Elsie Cooper v. State (Lori Elsie Cooper 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
Lori Elsie Cooper v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion issued October 19, 2006





In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01–05–00764–CR





LORI ELISE COOPER, Appellant


V.


THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee





On Appeal from the 179th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1016264





MEMORANDUM OPINION


          Appellant, Lori Elise Cooper, was charged by indictment with capital murder, to which she pleaded not guilty. See Tex. Pen. Code Ann. § 19.03 (Vernon Supp. 2005). A jury found appellant guilty of the lesser-included offense of murder and assessed punishment at 60 years’ confinement. See id. § 19.02 (Vernon 2003).

          In six issues, appellant contends that (1) the non-accomplice witness evidence was legally insufficient to connect her with the commission of the offense; (2) the trial court erred in admitting evidence of an extraneous offense; (3) the trial court erred in allowing the State to obtain testimony through leading questions; (4) the trial court erred in allowing the State to confer with a witness during a break in the witness’s testimony; (5) the trial court erred in allowing the testimony of a witness after he remained in the courtroom in violation of Rule of Evidence 614; and (6) the trial court erred in admitting a prejudicial photograph into evidence.

          We affirm.BackgroundDuring the 2001–2002 school year, appellant, then 16 years of age, told several friends that the complainant, Gary Cooper, her biological father, was abusive toward her and that she wanted him dead. Appellant asked her friend, Trusten Anderson, three times to kill the complainant, as outlined in a specific plan. When Anderson refused, appellant ended their relationship.

          Throughout the school year, appellant visited the home of her friend, Kelton Yates, after school. Appellant told Yates and his family that the complainant was abusive toward her and that she wanted to kill him or would get someone to kill him. Appellant told Yates’s mother, Tabitha Burrell, that the complainant was worth a lot of money dead.

          Toward the end of the school year and the early part of the summer of 2002, appellant dated Yates periodically and also dated Andre Reece. Appellant reported to Reece that she had been pregnant with Reece’s baby, but that she had miscarried due to being hit in the stomach by the complainant. Appellant asked Reece to kill the complainant. Reece refused and the relationship ended.

          In mid-July, appellant asked another friend, Arturo “Cheerio” Villarreal, to kill the complainant. Appellant told Villarreal that she would leave a key or the garage door opener in the mailbox when she and her mother left for summer school classes in the morning. Appellant told Villarreal to go into the complainant’s bedroom and to kill him. Appellant told Villarreal to make it look like a robbery and to take whatever he wanted as payment. Villarreal refused.

          On or about July 26, 2002, appellant offered Yates and his friend, Kiondrix Smith, $5,000 of the money appellant anticipated from the complainant’s life insurance proceeds to kill the complainant. Appellant told them that she would leave the garage door opener in the mailbox when she and her mother left for school in the morning. Yates and Smith were to go into the house and kill her father. Yates and Smith accepted the offer.

          On Saturday, August 3, 2002, before the plan had been carried out, Yates’s mother, Burrell, called appellant’s mother, Wanda Cooper, to report that appellant might be pregnant with Yates’s baby. Burrell and Yates met with appellant, Cooper, and the complainant at appellant’s house to discuss the matter. Appellant’s parents insisted that any pregnancy must be aborted. Appellant and Yates wanted to keep the baby. A heated exchange occurred between Yates and the complainant. While the group waited, appellant took a pregnancy test and the results indicated that appellant was not pregnant. The parents agreed that appellant and Yates would no longer be permitted to see each other unless supervised.

          The next day, on Sunday, August 4, appellant reported to her parents that she could not find her house keys. On Monday, September 5, appellant called Yates and told him that he should act to kill her father that night rather than wait until a morning before school, as originally planned. Appellant told Yates that she had left her house keys in his closet.

          That night, Yates called Smith and, shortly after 1:00 a.m., Smith drove Yates to appellant’s house and parked three houses away so the car would not be recognized. Yates and Smith walked to appellant’s house, where Yates unlocked the burglar bars outside the front door and Smith rang the doorbell. When the complainant opened the door, Yates stabbed him three times in the chest with a serrated hunting knife. Yates and Smith then fled.

          Wanda Cooper had been awakened by the doorbell that night and had initially gone downstairs with the complainant. Cooper saw Yates standing outside the burglar bars and went back upstairs to put on clothes. When she returned, the complainant was sitting on a bench on the front porch and she could see two men running away. Cooper saw the wounds and asked the complainant who had caused them. The complainant replied, “Kelton.”

          The emergency services report indicates that the 911 dispatcher received a call from Cooper at 1:57 a.m. Cellular phone records indicate that appellant called Smith immediately after the murder, at 1:56 a.m., and again at 2:09 a.m. In addition, the records show that appellant called Yates five times prior to the murder, between the hours of 9:13 p.m. and 12:34 a.m. that night, and four more times following the murder, between 2:32 a.m. and 4:42 a.m.

          The responding emergency personnel and investigating officers testified that

appellant was unemotional at the scene. Appellant and Cooper did not accompany the complainant to the hospital; rather, they went directly to the police station. The next morning, before appellant and Cooper returned home, a family friend discovered that a key, later identified as appellant’s, had been broken off in the lock of the burglar bars at appellant’s house.

          The medical examiner determined that the complainant died from a stab wound that penetrated his heart.

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