McKinney, Nathan Neil v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 4, 2003
Docket01-02-00859-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
McKinney, Nathan Neil v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Opinion issued December 4, 2003





In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


NO. 01-02-00859-CR

____________

NATHAN NEIL MCKINNEY, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee


On Appeal from the 339th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 877895


MEMORANDUM OPINION

          A jury found appellant, Nathan Neil McKinney, guilty of capital murder. The State did not seek the death penalty, and the trial court assessed appellant’s punishment at confinement for life. In five points of error, appellant contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence and the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction. We affirm.

Facts

          Michelle Parson, appellant’s girlfriend, testified that, on the night of April 7, 2001, appellant sold “tabs” of ecstasy to Nathan Pratt, the complainant, for $1,000. After appellant delivered the narcotics to the complainant and began counting the proceeds from his sale, he realized that the complainant had given him counterfeit money. Appellant immediately telephoned the complainant and arranged to meet him at a nearby gas station. Appellant, with Parson, went to the gas station, but the complainant never showed up. As a result, appellant was “real[ly] angry” and he stated that he had to “get a hold” of the complainant.

          After they were “stood up,” Parson contacted Michelle Roden, a friend of the complainant. Appellant and Parson then, at around 1:30 a.m., went to Roden’s house, where they found several people, including Roden, Ashley Daulton, and Jonathan Jones, having a party. Appellant told everyone what had happened, and then he devised a plan to lure the complainant to Roden’s house so that he could recover “the tabs or the money.” Roden telephoned the complainant and invited him over to her house. After the complainant arrived, Jones invited him outside to “smoke a joint.” The complainant accepted the invitation, and once they were outside, appellant jumped out from behind some bushes and pointed his shotgun at the complainant’s head. Appellant then walked the complainant over to appellant’s car, shoved him into the back seat, and instructed Parson to drive them to Birnamwood Road. Along the way, appellant ordered the complainant to empty his pockets, but he was only carrying two counterfeit $20 bills.

          When they arrived at Birnamwood Road, Parson parked near some “woods,” and appellant immediately got out of the car. He pointed his shotgun at the complainant, “got him out” of the car, and then walked him into “the woods.” At this point, Parson telephoned appellant’s best friend, Kathy Kalich, and told her what was happening. While the two women were talking on the telephone, they both heard a gun shot. Parson abruptly “hung up” on Kalich and then she heard another gun shot. About five minutes went by, and then appellant returned to the car carrying his shotgun. He told Parson to “move over,” and then he got behind the wheel of the car and drove them back to their apartment.

          Bobbie Pratt, the complainant’s mother, testified that, on April 8, 2001, she telephoned the Montgomery County Sheriff’s office and reported her son missing. Twelve days later, the Montgomery County Sheriff’s office turned the case over to the Harris County Sheriff’s office.

          Harris County Sheriff’s Detective F. Barnes testified that he was assigned to investigate the complainant’s disappearance. During his investigation, he interviewed Michelle Roden, Ashley Daulton, and Johnathan Jones. From these interviews, Barnes determined that the complainant had been kidnapped and that appellant and Parson were his primary suspects. After consulting with the Harris County District Attorney’s office, Barnes obtained a warrant to search appellant’s apartment and arrest appellant and Parson for aggravated kidnapping.

          Harris County Sheriff’s Detective W. Kuhlman testified that, on April 26, 2001, he and Detective Barnes executed the search and arrest warrant at appellant’s and Parson’s apartment. During their search of the apartment, the Detetctives found a “pistol grip pump” shotgun, a “scoped” .22 caliber rifle, and a small “tote bag” containing .12 gauge shotgun shells and .22 caliber ammunition. Following the search, the detectives arrested appellant and Parson for aggravated kidnapping and transported them to the sheriff’s office.

          At the sheriff’s office, Detective Kuhlman questioned Parson concerning “the whereabouts” of the complainant. Parson confessed to her role in kidnapping the complainant and she took Kuhlman and another deputy to “the woods” on Birnamwood Road. In the “the woods,” Kuhlman found a decapitated body, a skull with a stick in it, one “spent” .22 caliber casing, and a couple of “spent” .12 gauge casings.

          Matthew Clements, a forensic firearm and tool mark examiner with the Harris County Sheriff’s office, testified that the shotgun pellets found in the complainant’s body were identical to the shotgun pellets found in the brand of ammunition used by appellant. However, Clements was unable to determine whether the shotgun pellets found in the complainant’s body were fired from appellant’s shotgun because, unlike ammunition fired from rifles, shotgun pellets never come into contact with the barrel of a shotgun so “[there are] never any markings left on the pellets from the barrel.”

          Kathy Kalich testified that, while appellant was in jail, he wrote her several letters instructing her to tell the police that Ross Saylor and his brother killed the complainant. Furthermore, appellant told Kalich in one of his letters that she needed to know the details of his story “inside and out” so that “[his] story [would be] believable.”

          Appellant testified that he kidnapped the complainant, but that Ross Saylor forced him to do it. Moreover, he testified that, on the night in question, he met up with the Saylor brothers in “the woods,” they told him to leave, and then they shot the complainant as appellant walked away.

          Ross Saylor testified that he never pointed a handgun at appellant’s head and never threatened to kill him. He also stated he was not in “the woods” that night. Furthermore, Saylor testified that appellant admitted to him that appellant walked the complainant into “the woods” and shot him twice.

Motion to Suppress Evidence

          

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McKinney, Nathan Neil v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinney-nathan-neil-v-state-texapp-2003.