Luther Caldwell v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 21, 2011
Docket06-10-00088-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Luther Caldwell v. State (Luther Caldwell 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
Luther Caldwell v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana ______________________________

No. 06-10-00088-CR ______________________________

LUTHER CALDWELL, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 202nd Judicial District Court Bowie County, Texas Trial Court No. 08F0846-202

Before Morriss, C.J., Carter and Moseley, JJ. Opinion by Justice Moseley Dissenting Opinion by Justice Carter OPINION

After Luther Caldwell was convicted by a Bowie County jury for the murder of Greg

Thomas and sentenced to life imprisonment, he has appealed. Caldwell complains that the trial

court erred in limiting the evidence Caldwell was allowed to present regarding a possible

alternative perpetrator of the charged murder and that the trial court should have granted

Caldwell‘s motion for new trial based on an allegation of the discovery of new evidence. After

reviewing the record and considering the parties‘ oral arguments, we find no reversible error and

affirm the judgment.

The Shooting

The State‘s central witness was a sometime prostitute, Donna Taylor, who testified that she

was personally acquainted with Caldwell. Taylor indicated that she had previously lived with

Caldwell, had regularly purchased illicit drugs from him (including a purchase on the morning of

the shooting), and had previously driven Caldwell‘s Nissan Sentra, which she alleged that

Caldwell had driven while shooting Thomas.

The crux of Taylor‘s testimony was that on the night of September 12, 2007, she was

walking along Nettie Street in Texarkana and encountered Thomas, whom she knew. As Taylor

and Thomas walked along together, Taylor saw Caldwell driving his Sentra. 1 Since Taylor

wanted to purchase more crack cocaine, she attempted to attract Caldwell‘s attention. At that

time, she observed Caldwell point the barrel of a gun out the car‘s passenger window, shoot 1 On the stand, Caldwell said he did not own the Sentra on the date of the killing.

2 Thomas, and then drive away. Taylor, frightened, ran and hid in an alley, emerging after about

ten minutes. A few blocks from the location of the shooting, she encountered another person

familiar to her, Johnny Ward. Taylor told Ward she had just seen someone get shot, but testified

she did not tell Ward the identity of the victim. A short time later, Taylor approached a police

officer and told him she had seen ―something bad.‖ At the police station, Taylor told

investigators that Caldwell was the shooter, and she identified a picture of him in a photographic

line-up.

In her first statement to police the night of the killing, Taylor said she saw the gun barrel

protruding from the passenger window and repeated that at the time of trial. On

cross-examination, Caldwell established a temporary change in her story, pointing out that in

2008, Taylor had told the police that the gun protruded from the driver‘s side window and not the

passenger‘s side window. Taylor acknowledged having misspoken in that intervening statement

to police, and reaffirmed that the gun barrel projected from the passenger‘s side window when

Caldwell drove past and shot Thomas.

In the hours after the shooting, even though Taylor had given a positive identification of

Caldwell as the perpetrator, police still rounded up other persons of interest in the neighborhood

and brought them in for questioning; those persons brought in for questioning included Ward and a

companion, Curnediles Larry, both of whom were swabbed to test for gunshot residue. Gunshot

residue tests were negative for both men. As one detective was swabbing Ward, Ward inquired

3 about the purpose of the test and, in particular, regarding the length of time which could pass

between a test subject firing a gun and the ability of the test to detect a residue of gunpowder.2

The chief investigator for the case, Detective Scott Sartor, interviewed both Ward and Larry, found

their alibis persuasive to him,3 and concluded that neither man had any connection to Thomas‘

slaying.

Leonard Bolton testified4 that the day after the shooting, another person (Little Charles

Ray) brought Caldwell to Bolton, and told Bolton that Caldwell had shot Thomas. Bolton said

that although Caldwell was present and overheard Ray‘s statement, Caldwell made no attempt to

deny the crime. Bolton (who admitted having engaged in the sale of illicit drugs with Caldwell)

stated that Caldwell enlisted Bolton‘s assistance in leaving Texarkana. Bolton said that Caldwell

related that he wanted to avoid the Texarkana bus station because he feared that police monitored

that station with drug-detection dogs. Bolton chauffeured Caldwell to Atlanta, Texas. Missing

the bus there, they proceeded south to the bus station in Marshall, Texas, from whence Caldwell

departed for Stockton, California. Bolton said that throughout the drive to the various bus

2 Part of Caldwell‘s defensive theory was to stress Ward‘s curiosity while being questioned by police. Ward‘s questions were described by Detective William Buttram:

Ward asked me while I was taking [the swab for gunshot residue] what it was good for, or how long it was good for, what I was doing, and I didn‘t understand what he was asking. He wanted to know how long it would last, I guess, if he‘d fired a gun, you know, a year ago if it was still there is what I presumed. 3 The nature of these alibis was not developed. 4 Caldwell was tried for the killing a month before the trial, which resulted in his conviction: that first trial resulted in a mistrial where the jury could not reach a unanimous verdict. Bolton did not testify at the first trial.

4 stations, Caldwell said he had ―fucked up,‖ but Bolton would not allow Caldwell to explain what

he meant by that.5 Shortly after arriving in Stockton, California, Caldwell called Bolton to tell

him that he had arrived; in that conversation, Caldwell told Bolton that he had seen his picture

being broadcast on a television in the Marshall bus station as a wanted man. On at least two

occasions, Bolton sent money to Caldwell in California. Later, Bolton contacted police and

Caldwell was located and arrested in California.

Caldwell testified in his defense. Although he admitted to being a drug dealer, he denied

that he was a murderer, denying that he had anything to do with the shooting of Thomas. His

explanation for going to California the day after the killing was that a shooting in the neighborhood

generated the wrong kind of attention for his drug business, and he also intended to attend his

brother‘s wedding.

Caldwell’s Alternative Perpetrator Theory

Caldwell‘s defensive theory focused on Ward: through cross-examination of the State‘s

witnesses, Caldwell suggested Ward was the killer.6 The trial court limited the evidence Caldwell

was allowed to present to the jury, precluding him from showing a possible motive Ward may have

possessed to kill Thomas, as well as a short document (generated by prosecutors or law

5 Bolton was evidently trying to limit his knowledge of the crime and his own culpability. In acknowledging he could be indicted for his involvement, and explaining why he would not let Caldwell say more, Bolton said, ―I didn‘t want to know about it. I didn‘t want to be -- I didn‘t want to be here [testifying] today.‖ 6 In law enforcement circles, this is often known as the SODDI (―some other dude did it‖) defense. James v. State, 48 S.W.3d 482

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