Marie A. Reilly v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 13, 2008
Docket13-06-00563-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Marie A. Reilly v. State (Marie A. Reilly 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
Marie A. Reilly v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion



NUMBER 13-06-00563-CR



COURT OF APPEALS



THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS



CORPUS CHRISTI
- EDINBURG

MARIE A. REILLY, Appellant,



v.



THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 226th District Court

of Bexar County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION



Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Yañez and Benavides

Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Valdez

A jury found appellant, Marie A. Reilly, guilty of murder and sentenced her to twenty years' imprisonment. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 19.02, 12.32 (Vernon 2003). By two issues, Reilly challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence supporting her conviction. We affirm.

I. Background

On the morning of Monday, April 17, 1989, the San Antonio Police Department received a call regarding the murder of Jayne Hays, a seventy-five-year-old retiree. When police arrived at Jayne's apartment, they discovered Jayne's bloody body laying face-up on the kitchen floor; a pillow covered her face and there were flowers in the kitchen trash can. The apartment was in order except for the master bedroom. In the master bedroom the window was open; the screen to the window was on top of some bushes outside of the bedroom. The dresser, which sat below the window, was away from the wall, and the dresser had a shoe print on top of it. Investigators searched the apartment for fingerprints. They also identified DNA on several items, including a Buddha statue, which was found in the living room, and a kitchen rag. However, no suspect was immediately charged.

In 2003, the cold-case homicide division reopened the case. In 2005, Reilly, Jayne's former cleaning lady, was indicted on a single count of murder. The indictment alleged that Reilly caused Jayne's death by striking her with a statue and an unknown object. Reilly, who was born in 1928, pleaded not guilty to the indictment; the case was tried to a jury. Forensic experts, police officers, Jayne's family and neighbors, Reilly, and Reilly's acquaintances testified at trial.

A. Forensic Evidence

Vincent Dimaio, M.D., the chief medical examiner for Bexar County, testified about the autopsy report that his office prepared. According to the report, Jayne sustained fifteen wounds shortly before her death, which included: defensive wounds on her forearms, a broken nose, a depressed skull fracture, and numerous lacerations to her head and face. Dimaio testified that the lacerations were caused by a linear object and that the depressed skull fracture was caused by a different object. He opined that a sixty-year-old woman, such as Reilly, was capable of causing the wounds. Dimaio also opined that Jayne might have known the murderer because a pillow was placed over her face, and a murderer who knows the victim sometimes covers the victim's face because the murderer does not want to see what was done.

Erin Reat, a forensic scientist, testified about the results of genetic tests that he conducted on the Buddha statue, a kitchen rag, and other items found in Jayne's apartment. Reat compared genetic material found on those items to Jayne's and Rielly's DNA. According to the test results, the kitchen rag tested positive for blood and also tested positive for Jayne's and Reilly's DNA. Reat could not, however, specify whether the DNA came from the blood on the rag or other sources. The test results also showed that there were some "genetic markers which were foreign to both [Jayne and Reilly] on a swabbing from the Buddha statue."

B. Law Enforcement Testimony

Jimmy Porter, a detective in the evidence unit when Jayne was murdered, helped process the crime scene by drawing a diagram of Jayne's apartment. He testified that a brass clock and a Buddha statue both had blood on them and were found in the living room. Detective Porter testified that police officers had "mixed feelings" about whether the apartment had been burglarized. Some evidence technicians felt that the apartment had been burglarized, but others felt that it was made to look like a burglary.

George Saidler, a police officer in the cold-case division, testified about his investigation. Officer Saidler reviewed the case file and spoke to Detective Ernest Tavitas, who was the detective-in-charge of the case in 1989. Detective Tavitas had interviewed Reilly and provided Officer Saidler with a tape recording of his interview. Officer Saidler determined that Reilly had been a main suspect in the case from the beginning of the investigation. He located Reilly's whereabouts and, with the help of other police officers, obtained a DNA sample from Reilly.

Alvin Brown II, a detective at the time of the murder, testified that Detective Tavitas assigned him to locate Reilly and obtain her fingerprints and a photograph of her. On April 20, 1989, Detective Brown reviewed the case file and staked-out Reilly's home. When Reilly left her home in a car, Detective Brown followed her, witnessed her make a traffic violation, and called for a uniformed police officer to initiate a traffic stop. During the traffic stop, Detective Brown approached Reilly and she told him, "I didn't kill her." Reilly also told him that:

She--she indicated to me that she was--people had said she was a suspect but she said she wasn't, she hadn't done it. And at that time, I noticed that she had her finger on her right hand, I think it was her middle finger, was bandaged and had a splint on it and I asked her what had happened. And she indicated that she had slammed it in a car door and then she produced a handwritten note from--I think that name was Keller, a Ms. Keller, that supposedly said that she had witnessed the Defendant slam her finger in the car door. And I obviously thought that was really strange.



She told me that she had been treated at Brooke Army Medical Center for the injuries and she last saw the complainant on April the 12th and there was no problem between the two of them.



Detective Brown further testified that Reilly recalled taking flowers to Jayne a few days before the murder.

C. Keller's Testimony

Paulette Keller, a teacher, testified that Reilly was her cleaning lady around the same time that Jayne was murdered. Keller further testified that on Sunday, April 16, 1989, Reilly called between 9:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m. to advise her that she had taken soup to Keller's house, but that she hurt her finger on the car door and had not dropped off the soup. Reilly went to clean Keller's house the next day but she could not clean everything because of her injured finger. On Thursday of that week, Reilly called Keller at 6:30 in the morning, asking for a note explaining that she had injured her finger on Sunday.

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