Marcus Levail Murphy v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 21, 2024
Docket14-22-00836-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Marcus Levail Murphy v. the State of Texas (Marcus Levail Murphy v. the State of Texas) 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
Marcus Levail Murphy v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed May 21, 2024.

In the

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-22-00836-CR

MARCUS LEVAIL MURPHY, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 230th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 1468718

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In appealing his conviction for capital murder, appellant Marcus Levail Murphy argues that the evidence is legally insufficient to support the verdict; that the trial court abused its discretion in admitting evidence extracted from victim Ebony Harris’s cell phone; and that the trial court denied appellant his constitutional right to present a defense by excluding certain hearsay. We affirm. I. BACKGROUND

In the weeks leading up to her death, complainant Ebony Harris was romantically involved with appellant, who was then a member of the U.S. Navy living in the area around Chesapeake, Virginia. Less than a week after learning she was pregnant with twins, Harris was found murdered in her Houston apartment. She had been strangled and repeatedly stabbed. There were defensive wounds on her hands, and appellant’s DNA was under her fingernails.

We first summarize the uncontroverted evidence before addressing conflicting evidence that was admitted or offered by appellant.

A. Uncontroverted Evidence

The evidence presented at trial showed that at around 2:00 a.m. on Thursday, February 19, 2015, Ebony Harris texted appellant, “OMG. I’m so scared.” The response message from appellant’s phone asked if Harris was okay. She answered, “No. I’m pregnant with twins.” Appellant, who had been dating Harris, lived at that time in Virginia with his wife and their children––also twins.

Appellant bought two pairs of gloves at a Wal-Mart in Danville, Virginia on the night of February 23, 2015, then drove to Charlotte International Airport, arriving at around 1:00 a.m. on February 24th. Appellant and his cousin then flew together to Houston with a layover in Detroit. They arrived at Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston shortly after 11:00 a.m.

Data extracted from appellant’s cell phone showed that appellant arrived in the area around Harris’s apartment at 11:56 a.m., about twenty minutes after Harris ended a phone call with her mother. There is no further user-generated activity from Harris’s phone after this time.

2 Starting at around 12:40 p.m., there were incoming and outgoing calls between appellant’s cell phone and a taxi service. An hour later, he arrived back at Intercontinental Airport. At 3:13 p.m., appellant and his cousin boarded a flight back to Charlotte, Virginia by way of Atlanta.

Harris failed to appear for work at 2:00 p.m. as scheduled, and she did not contact her employer or her half-sister, who was babysitting Harris’s four-year-old son.

The next day, that is, Wednesday, February 25, 2015, Harris’s naked body was found face down in the master bedroom by a pest exterminator who had entered to treat the apartment. He informed the property manager, who phoned the police.

The first police officer arrived at around 2:30 p.m. and secured the scene. Sabrina Holden, a member of the Crime Scene Unit, photographed and diagrammed the scene. Police discovered Harris’s phone under the bed in the master bedroom, where a struggle appeared to have taken place and where Harris’s body was found. Police noted that two knives were missing from the knife block in the kitchen, and they found a knife in a kitchen cabinet.

Also on that day, appellant’s phone shows that he searched Google for “Woman found in Greenspoint apartment,” “Woman found dead in apartment in Houston today,” and “February 24th, Houston woman found dead in apt.”

Officer Richard Ridel, who was then working as a homicide detective, arrived at Harris’s apartment at around 3:45 that afternoon. The apartment showed no signs of forced entry, which Ridel interpreted to mean that Harris had opened her door willingly. The apartment complex had surveillance cameras covering the apartment’s front door, and although Ridel arranged to meet with the property’s

3 manager to recover the film, Ridel forgot to do so, and the film was overwritten after a week.

Meanwhile, on Thursday, February 26th, appellant’s phone showed that he searched the internet for following:

• “Can police retrieve deleted text messages”; • “Can police pull flight manifests”; • “Can police pull travel records from airport”; • “Can police pull flight records”; • “Ebony Harris, Houston, Texas”; and • “Woman found in Greenspoint.” Although Ridel initially assumed that Harris was murdered on February 25th——the day her body was found––his investigation shifted to focus on February 24th after he learned that this was the date Harris last used her cell phone.

Harris’s mother identified appellant and five other men as people that Harris had been dating before her death. Ridel interviewed several of these men, who voluntarily gave Ridel buccal swabs of their DNA. Comparison of their DNA with DNA taken from Harris’s twin embryos later revealed that Marlon Townsend, 1 not appellant, fathered the twins.

Ridel obtained historical cell-tower data from that date for the men he was investigating. He also obtained flight records and appellant’s credit-card records. The credit-card records showed appellant’s purchase of two pairs of gloves in Virginia, and the cell-tower data and flight records showed appellant’s movements, described above. DNA analysis of some of Harris’s fingernail scrapings showed DNA of unknown origin, but for one particular scraping, the likelihood that the DNA

1 His name is sometimes spelled “Marlin” in the records.

4 present came from Harris, Harris’s four-year-old son, and appellant was “90.1 quattuordecillion times more likely than that the DNA was from Harris and two unknown unrelated individuals.” 2

In a recorded phone interview with Ridel, appellant denied being in Houston at all during the week that Harris was murdered, and the calls and texts between himself and Harris before her death had been deleted from his phone. That evidence remained, however, on Harris’s phone.

B. Conflicting Evidence of Harris’s Time of Death

All of the evidence that appellant has placed at issue concerns Harris’s time of death.

1. Testimony of Medical Examiners

At 10:00 a.m. on Thursday, February 26, 2015, Dr. Alex John, who was at that time an assistant medical examiner with the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences (f/k/a the Harris County Medical Examiner’s Office), performed Harris’s autopsy. He found fifteen sharp force injuries, including three to the left lung, two to the right lung, and one to the heart. Dr. John also found multiple strangulation injuries, including petechiae in both eyes, two fractures of cricoid cartilage, and hemorrhages of the left thyroid gland and of the muscles on the left side of Harris’s neck. In addition, there were defensive injuries to Harris’s hands, as well as multiple abrasions on her head and neck.

At trial, Dr. John explained that livor mortis is skin discoloration caused by blood settling in the body. He stated that it can begin as early as two to four hours after death. Initially, applying pressure to areas of livor mortis will cause blanching

2 In the United States, a quattuordecillion is 1045, that is, the number one followed by forty- five zeros.

5 as the pressure forces the blood back out of the area. According to Dr. John, pressure will cease to cause blanching after about twelve hours. This is called “fixed lividity.” By the time of the autopsy, Harris had fixed lividity.

Dr.

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Marcus Levail Murphy v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marcus-levail-murphy-v-the-state-of-texas-texapp-2024.