Lucky Lamon Odom v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 10, 2010
Docket02-09-00096-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Lucky Lamon Odom v. State (Lucky Lamon Odom 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
Lucky Lamon Odom v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 2-09-096-CR

LUCKY LAMON ODOM APPELLANT

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS STATE

------------

FROM THE 297TH DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION 1

In six points that all challenge either the sufficiency or admission of the

evidence against him, appellant Lucky Lamon Odom appeals his conviction for

capital murder. W e affirm.

1  See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. Background Facts

On the afternoon of August 19, 1982, Tommy Stone, who at that time was a

Fort W orth Police Department crime scene investigator, was called to an elementary

school located near residential housing on W est Seventh Street in Fort W orth.

W hen Stone arrived, he saw another officer who directed him to Kathryn Munroe’s

dead body. The body was starting to decompose, had some insect bites, and was

unclothed except for an unbuttoned black shirt. Munroe was a student at the Texas

College of Osteopathic Medicine (TCOM) and lived near the college on W est

Seventh Street with another TCOM student, Jacqueline Tuttle, about a hundred

yards from where the body was found.

Stone began to take photographs and notes of what he saw; for instance,

Stone discovered panties in a sandy playground area that he measured as being

seventy-two feet away from Munroe’s body. 2 Stone stayed at the scene for about

an hour and collected evidence (including the panties) in paper sacks.

Tarrant County Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Nizam Peerwani, a certified

pathologist who is responsible for determining the cause of suspicious deaths, went

to the crime scene and examined Munroe’s body. At the scene and later in his

laboratory, Dr. Peerwani found and concluded, among other things, the following:

• Munroe had a darkened, swollen face, which had hemorrhages that were consistent with strangulation;

2  Another officer reported that the panties were twenty-five feet north of the body. Later DNA testing confirmed that Munroe had worn the panties.

2 • she had scratches on her neck that may have occurred from her attempt to release a strangler’s grip;

• she had hemorrhaged muscles, including a hemorrhage of the lining of the left carotid artery that could have been caused by applying pressure to her neck;

• her lungs were congested and her brain was swollen, and “both of these are part and parcel of the picture of strangulation”;

• she had recent scrapes along her vaginal cavity and an abrasion on her clitoris with a “profuse amount of white watery fluid in the vaginal canal” that looked like semen discharge;

• the large amount of white watery fluid was deposited into Munroe’s vagina “at or near the time of her death and had not been discharged,” which indicated to Dr. Peerwani that Munroe had sexual intercourse prior to her death; and

• Munroe’s body had lain in its location at the school between eight and twenty-four hours before it was found. 3 Dr. Peerwani collected vaginal and anal smears and swabs from Munroe, 4 samples

from her pubic and scalp hair, a sample of her cardiac blood, and her fingernail

clippings from both hands, which showed signs consistent with her trying to remove

a perpetrator’s hands. Dr. Peerwani did not examine Munroe’s panties. The next

3  Dr. Peerwani testified at trial, “So all and all, all of this was consistent with a strangulation. . . . And so the most consistent findings were associated with a manual strangulation.” Dr. Peerwani defined manual strangulation as one caused by a strangler’s bare hands, and he gave a detailed explanation about how death occurs when someone is strangled, including his opinion that “one has to apply consistent pressure for three to five minutes before a person really will suffer a brain death.” 4  Dr. Peerwani testified, “The vaginal smear is collected by inserting a sterile Q-tip into the vaginal canal . . . . And then the swab is then smeared on a dry glass slide in a circular motion. And then the glass slide is air-dried.”

3 day, Tommy Reed, who was also a crime scene investigator, went to Munroe’s

house; Reed collected two partial fingerprints of poor, unusable quality from a

doorknob and did not see any evidence of forced entry or other apparent disarray.

The police investigated Munroe’s murder for many years—through interviews

of males who may have dated Munroe and conversations with residents of the area

where the school was located, among other individuals—but the murder remained

unsolved. However, in 2003, the Fort W orth Police Department began a process to

take DNA from the evidence that had been gathered in 1982 from Munroe’s body,

send it off for testing to Orchid Cellmark (a private company), and then upload the

DNA profile results that were obtained from Orchid Cellmark into a Combined DNA

Indexing System (CODIS). 5

In 2007, CODIS informed the department that there was a match between the

unknown DNA profile taken from Munroe’s body and a DNA sample taken from

appellant, who was living in Florida. The department then obtained warrants in

Texas and in Florida and gained another DNA sample from appellant through a

swab from the inside of his cheek. The department took that swab, along with

5  The department originally sent a blood swatch, a cutting from Munroe’s panties that had semen on it, and a vaginal swab to Orchid Cellmark. Orchid Cellmark uses polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing to create an individual’s DNA profile. Orchid Cellmark did not test many of the items discovered around Munroe’s body in 1982, including her black shirt. Appellant has not contended on appeal that there are any particular deficiencies in Orchid Cellmark’s general testing procedures or in the specific results that the company obtained related to this case.

4 Munroe’s fingernail cuttings, blood swatches, and a vaginal smear, to Orchid

Cellmark for further testing. Orchard Cellmark’s testing revealed the following:

• Munroe’s fingernail cuttings from her right hand had DNA from more than one person but not enough DNA to link to any specific individual;

• the vaginal smears and swabs contained a male’s sperm fraction profile;6 • the DNA profile obtained from the sperm found inside Munroe’s body matched the DNA profile obtained from appellant in 2007, and the odds of finding that complete “profile in the population is one in 53.76 quadrillion”; 7 and

• the testing of Munroe’s panties revealed DNA from more than one individual, including an unknown male, and appellant was excluded as a contributor to the DNA on the panties.

A Tarrant County grand jury indicted appellant for capital murder; the

indictment alleged that appellant killed Munroe by strangling her with his hands while

in the course of committing aggravated rape. After appellant pled not guilty and the

State presented its evidence at trial, a jury convicted appellant. He received

imprisonment for life as his punishment. He filed a motion for new trial and notice

of this appeal.

Evidentiary Sufficiency

6  Appellant theorized at trial that more than one male’s DNA profile could have been found from Munroe’s vaginal swabs and smears, but the testimony from Orchid Cellmark’s representative, Matthew Quartaro, does not support this theory. Quartaro specifically testified that he found “a sperm cell fraction which was consistent with Lucky Odom,” not that he found more than one sperm cell fraction. 7  The department excluded three specific individuals from being contributors to the biological samples that were found in Munroe’s body.

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Lucky Lamon Odom v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucky-lamon-odom-v-state-texapp-2010.