Michael Shane Walker v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 8, 2002
Docket13-01-00568-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Michael Shane Walker v. State (Michael Shane Walker 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 Shane Walker v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

                                   NUMBER 13-01-568-CR

                             COURT OF APPEALS

                   THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                CORPUS CHRISTI

MICHAEL SHANE WALKER,                                                   Appellant,

                                                   v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS,                                                          Appellee.

                        On appeal from the 377th District Court

                                  of Victoria County, Texas.

                                   O P I N I O N

          Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Yañez and Castillo

                                  Opinion by Justice Castillo


Appellant, Michael Shane Walker, was charged with the felony offense of aggravated kidnapping.[1]  Walker was found guilty by a jury and sentenced to twenty years imprisonment.  In his sole issue presented, Walker contends that the trial court erred in holding the evidence legally sufficient to prove the abduction element of aggravated kidnapping.  We affirm.

FACTS


At around 4:00 on the afternoon of December 29, 2000, a mentally handicapped eleven-year-old boy, F.S., went  with his father and sister to Crescent Valley, between Bloomington and Victoria,  where they had a trailer and kept  horses.  F.S., a friendly boy, would go with people if he thought they were nice people.  The boy stayed in the trailer to watch television while his sister and father worked to repair the water well.   About twenty to thirty minutes after they began working on the well,  F.S.=s father and sister heard a loud Ahitting or banging@ noise coming from the trailer and believed it was F.S. Abumping a door back or something.@  After approximately thirty more minutes, the two started looking for F.S., because the well was fixed and his medicine was overdue.[2]  F.S. was not in the trailer, and so they began looking for him outside and calling him by his nickname.  F.S.=s father thought he heard F.S. say, AHere I am, Daddy@ but his daughter did not hear it.  He was unable to determine where the voice had come from, and so he concluded that perhaps he had imagined it.

Unable to find his son, F.S.=s father contacted the sheriff=s department and was advised that F.S. was at the hospital emergency room.  F.S. had been found in a shed behind the second house away from the trailer.  The resident,  Joyce Matchett, was not known to the family.   F.S. told his father that appellant appeared at the trailer door asking for John, who had previously worked on the property.  F.S. went with the man to take him to John.  The man lead F.S. away and over toward Matchett=s house.  The man asked F.S., AYou want to [engage in sexual intercourse]?@

F.S.=s father did not give permission for his son to be taken to the shed.   Previously, F.S. Anever left@ the trailer and Anever went out the gate@ unless his father was holding his hand.  He would wait until his father held his hand to walk him to the gate of the property because his father was afraid he might run out onto the road.   Two gates on the property were locked, one with a lock and key, the other with a wooden latch too high for F.S. to reach.  F.S. could not climb over the driveway gate because it had barbed wire on it. 



Joyce Matchett, a corrections officer with the Texas Department of Criminal Justice,  lived with appellant until early December 2000 in the house in front of the shed where F.S. was found.  After an argument on December 29, 2000, she drove appellant to his home in Bloomington.  Upon returning home, she decided to put appellant=s things in a box Ain the event  he came back@ because he needed to work the next day, but she did not want him at her house any more.   She put his clothes and snack foods in the box and placed the box on her front porch.   Appellant pulled into her driveway in a pickup truck and knocked on her front door.  When Matchett opened the door, she noticed appellant was on the porch and a child she did not know was behind him at the bottom of a ramp leading up to the porch.  The child was eating one of the fruit pies she had placed in the box for appellant.   When Matchett asked about the child and about his parents, appellant responded that Ashe@

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Michael Shane Walker v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-shane-walker-v-state-texapp-2002.