Michael David Fitzpatrick v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 27, 2005
Docket08-03-00015-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Michael David Fitzpatrick v. State (Michael David Fitzpatrick 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
Michael David Fitzpatrick v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS



MICHAEL DAVID FITZPATRICK,


                            Appellant,


v.


THE STATE OF TEXAS,


                            Appellee.

§


No. 08-03-00015-CR


Appeal from the


203rd District Court

of Dallas County, Texas


(TC# F-0140405-TP)


MEMORANDUM OPINION


           Michael David Fitzpatrick appeals his conviction for murder. A jury found Appellant guilty and the court sentenced him to fifty years in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

I. FACTUAL SUMMARY

           On May 20, 2001 around 6 p.m., twelve-year-old Angelica Spears was returning home from her grandmother’s house next door when she heard glass break. Angelica saw a man, who she did not recognize, hanging out of a window two houses down yelling “help me, help me, call the police.” Angelica then ran to her house and called the police. After her call, Angelica and her mother went outside to wait and saw the police coming down the road. Mesquite Police Officer Brandon Snyder was working that evening and was the officer dispatched to the disturbance call. Snyder arrived two to three minutes after the dispatch and saw Angelica and her mother standing outside on the sidewalk. The pair flagged him down and pointed him to 1522 Carson. Snyder initially saw that the window to the right of the front door was messed up--the blinds were pulled apart and there was blood on the blinds, window sill, and porch. Snyder did not hear a struggle inside the house. He then knocked on the door, and Appellant answered it wearing a bloody t-shirt but did not seem upset or nervous. Snyder also saw another person sitting on the couch, who was later identified as Don Brookins. In addition, there was a male lying face down on the floor badly beaten and moaning and wearing only a shirt. This individual was later identified as the decedent Robert Terry.

           Snyder entered the residence and called an ambulance. Terry was not responding but was still moaning and groaning, so Snyder believed that he was still alive. While awaiting the ambulance, Appellant and Brookins sat on the couch against the wall, not the love seat. Snyder found a lock blade knife on the love seat under the window. Appellant stated that the knife was the one Terry used to jimmie the window. Snyder noted that the house was disheveled and that there was a puddle of blood where Terry’s head was lying.

           Appellant told Snyder that he and Brookins were watching television when they heard a knock on the door and that Terry broke the window and entered the house before they could get up and answer the door. Terry was startled to find the house occupied and tried to make a run for the back door. Appellant then punched Terry and wrestled him to the ground while Terry was screaming for someone to call the police. The officer asked whether either of the men knew Terry, and Appellant responded that he did not and Brookins responded that he was Robert, the neighborhood thief. At this point, the paramedics arrived, and Snyder escorted Appellant and Brookins outside and had them sit on opposite sides of the house.

           Jeff Miller was one of the paramedics dispatched to the scene. Miller found Terry face down and naked except for a shirt. He noticed quite a bit of blood around on the floor and a mess in the living room. Miller nudged Terry and called his name, but there was no reaction. When Terry was turned over, his face was swollen and cut, and his eyes were fixed and dilated. Miller believed Terry was dead. The paramedics then proceeded to use EKG, CPR, and to insert an IV and called a fire engine to assist. Miller saw blunt trauma to Terry’s forehead and swelling and lacerations on the face. Terry was treated for cardiac arrest and administered Narcan, which reverses the effects of narcotics. Terry’s heart rhythm converted from PEA to a v-fib upon administration of the drug. However, Miller did not believe Terry’s condition to be consistent with a large overdose of drugs. The paramedic report noted that Terry was bleeding only minimally and had suffered a blunt trauma. There were no notations made of any lacerations. In the pre-hospital report, moderate bleeding was noted, and no drug use was noted.

           When Snyder arrived at the house, he noticed Appellant was wearing a black leather belt scabbard to hold a knife, but no knife was held in the scabbard. Snyder next transported Appellant and Brookins to the police department and held them in the break room. Later, Snyder mentioned the scabbard to Sergeant Bradshaw. Bradshaw called Investigator Long about the scabbard, but Long did not find it among Appellant’s possessions. Snyder found the scabbard in the trash can in the break room where Appellant had been sitting.

           Investigator Long was also called out where he made sure the scene was secure and spoke to the officers present. Brookins had told Officer Ivy that Terry had entered through the back door which had been previously broken out and that Terry was trying to take items. However, Appellant told Snyder that Terry entered through the front window. Long found pieces of a wooden pick axe handle, a bloody shirt in the driveway, and a bloody shirt beside the house outside. He never found a metal part of the axe. Long found several types of blood stains on Terry’s shirt: indications of impact spatter, back spatter, and a bloody hand on the back. Long did not notice any injuries on Appellant. Long also noticed that the back door of the house had been broken out previously and that there was plastic on the interior and wood slates nailed to the wall like a frame. In addition, a table was pushed against the plastic, and the plastic was not torn or ripped.

           Kelly Davis was a Mesquite Police Department Detective who went to the residence, surveyed the area, and was also briefed by officers at the scene. When Davis contacted Appellant, Appellant initially introduced himself as David Chandler. Davis interviewed Appellant and inquired about Appellant’s involvement in Terry’s death. Then, Appellant gave a voluntary written statement at the police department. Appellant indicated that he wanted Davis to write the statement due to an injury to his right hand. Davis noticed some swelling to Appellant’s right hand. Appellant’s statement provided that he arrived at Brookins’s house around 2-3 p.m. that day to watch the playoff game. Appellant stated that he fell asleep on the couch and awoke to see Terry standing in front of him on the other side of the table. Terry looked at Appellant and Brookins and acted like he did not know what he was doing. Appellant then hit Terry, and Terry stumbled back. Appellant then jumped over the table, and Appellant tried to grab Terry’s right hand. Terry tried to run, so Appellant tackled Terry, and Terry grabbed a pillow and stuck it in Appellant’s face and raised his right hand.

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Michael David Fitzpatrick v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-david-fitzpatrick-v-state-texapp-2005.