Mark Bethel v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 8, 2023
Docket07-21-00297-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Mark Bethel v. the State of Texas (Mark Bethel 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
Mark Bethel v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo

No. 07-21-00297-CR

MARK BETHEL, APPELLANT

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, APPELLEE

On Appeal from the 140th District Court Lubbock County, Texas Trial Court No. 2021-423232, Honorable Douglas H. Freitag, Presiding

March 8, 2023 OPINION Before QUINN, C.J., and PARKER and YARBROUGH, JJ.

A jury found Appellant, Mark Bethel, guilty of capital murder by murdering more

than one person pursuant to the same scheme or course of conduct. 1 Appellant was

sentenced to life imprisonment without parole. In this appeal, Appellant raises issues

relating to jury charge error, sufficiency of the evidence, comments on the weight of the

evidence, and cautionary instructions. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

1 See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 19.03(a)(7)(B). BACKGROUND

In the summer of 2015, Appellant moved into a house at Buffalo Springs Lake,

near Lubbock. Not long after, Appellant’s cousin, David Bethel, along with his girlfriend,

Kristina Theony, came to live in the home. Appellant soon began dating Jessica Payton,

who also moved in with him. Around September of 2015, David 2 and Theony moved into

a mobile home near 86th Street and Ash Avenue in Lubbock.

One early morning in October of 2015, Appellant woke to find Payton gone. He

discovered that Payton had taken some of his money and was having an affair with a man

named Shawn Summers. On October 25, Appellant sent numerous text messages to

Payton expressing anger at her actions, telling Payton he had loved and trusted her, but

that he now hated her. On Monday, October 26, Appellant told one of his neighbors that

Payton had left him and taken some of his things. The neighbor testified that Appellant

looked hurt and brokenhearted. He and his wife took a meal to Appellant later that day.

Appellant, David, and Theony were all at Appellant’s house. When the neighbor went

inside the house, David showed him his 9mm Ruger pistol.

Sometime in the week before Halloween, David and Theony hosted a cookout,

attended by Appellant, his sister, and his teenaged niece, at their mobile home.

Appellant’s niece noticed that Appellant seemed upset rather than his usual lighthearted

self. She heard David tell Appellant, “We’ll get them back,” which she understood was

an effort to lighten Appellant’s mood.

Because Appellant and David Bethel share a last name, we will refer to David Bethel by his first 2

name only to avoid confusion.

2 Theony testified that, in this same time period, she heard Appellant and David

discuss trying to find Payton. She also heard Appellant say, “I want to kill that b****.”

David responded that if Appellant did not do it, he would do it himself.

Appellant and Payton reconnected on October 26. Summers and his sister saw

the couple driving into Buffalo Springs Lake on the neighborhood’s sole road. On

Tuesday, October 27, Appellant texted Payton again, stating that he loved her and that it

was good to see her. He told her he would see her the following day. On October 28, he

sent her a text saying, “I will be there at lunch time.” Appellant clocked out of work at

12:20, picked up Payton, and drove to Buffalo Springs Lake. Payton’s cell phone pinged

off a cell tower at Buffalo Springs Lake at 1:02 p.m. Her cell phone had no more outbound

activity after October 28.

That same day, a neighbor heard a man’s voice coming from Appellant’s house

yell, “Shut up.” The yelling was followed by four pops “like a pistol gunfire.” 3 The neighbor

saw the curtain on Appellant’s patio door move back, then saw a man look to the left and

the right. Within 15 to 30 minutes, the neighbor saw Appellant’s truck drive away from

the house. Appellant made a phone call to David at 1:20 p.m. and clocked back in to

work at 1:37. Several hours after hearing the gunfire, the neighbor called the chief of

police at Buffalo Springs Lake to report the incident. Around 5:00 or 5:30 that evening,

the neighbor saw Appellant’s truck, along with David’s truck, back at the house.

3 The neighbor testified that he did not know the exact time he heard the gunshots. He initially told the police he thought it was around 2:00 or 2:30.

3 On Saturday, October 31, David and Theony went to Appellant’s house. Theony

noticed that the living room carpet was gone and the house had an unusual chemical

smell. Theony testified that Appellant and David had had discussions about “taking care

of” Summers, but they seemed more serious about it on Halloween. She said they wanted

to “get him” for cheating with Payton. Theony had indicated to David that she did not

want to participate in anything happening to Summers, but that afternoon David held

Theony against the wall in Appellant’s kitchen, pressed his gun to her head, and told her

to get Summers to a place where David could “get him.” David told her that she would

do it or else she would end up “with that b**** in the lake.”

That afternoon, Theony began sending text messages to Summers. Theony told

him that she and David had broken up and that she wanted to hang out with Summers.

As their message exchange progressed, Theony promised Summers sexual activity if he

would meet up with her that night. He agreed to meet her at 86th and Ash. Around 9:00

that night, Summers arrived at the location, where David was waiting. While Summers

was still in his vehicle, David shot him with his 9mm Ruger pistol. At 9:20 p.m., Summers

made a 9-1-1 call to report that he had just been shot. Shortly thereafter, David entered

Summers’ vehicle, pushed Summers into the passenger seat, and drove the vehicle to a

field off east 19th Street. David shot Summers again before pouring gasoline onto him

and lighting the vehicle on fire. Cell phone records indicated that Appellant picked David

up and drove him home. 4 David and Theony quickly left Lubbock, traveling to Oklahoma,

then Missouri, then Arizona, where they were arrested. David confessed to murdering

4 David told investigators that he walked to a hotel after starting the fire, then called Theony to pick him up.

4 Summers but did not implicate Appellant in the crime. When called as a witness at

Appellant’s trial, David refused to answer any questions.

On November 1, 2015, a passerby saw a body, wrapped in a comforter, beneath

the spillway at Buffalo Springs Lake. Rescue crews recovered the body, which was

weighted down with a chain and cinder blocks. It was Payton. She had been shot four

times in the head. The comforter matched pillow shams found in Appellant’s home. Paint

chips on the cinder blocks matched paint chips found in David’s vehicle. Payton’s blood

was found in Appellant’s home and on a floor mat from the bed of Appellant’s vehicle.

Two of Payton’s gold rings were found in Appellant’s vehicle.

Appellant was indicted on June 15, 2021, by the grand jury of Lubbock County for

the offense of capital murder. After a two-week trial, at which more than 30 witnesses

testified, the jury found Appellant guilty.

ANALYSIS

Issue 1: Failure to Include Definitions in Jury Charge

In his first issue, Appellant asserts that the trial court’s charge was too vague with

respect to the meaning of the words and phrases used to elevate the offense of murder

to capital murder. We review alleged jury charge error in a two-step process. Kirsch v.

State, 357 S.W.3d 645, 649 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012).

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