Nathaniel Briscoe v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 28, 2013
Docket03-11-00014-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Nathaniel Briscoe v. State (Nathaniel Briscoe 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
Nathaniel Briscoe v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-11-00014-CR

Nathaniel Briscoe, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 390TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. D-1-DC-10-904064, HONORABLE JULIE H. KOCUREK, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted appellant Nathaniel Briscoe of murder and tampering with physical

evidence and sentenced him to life imprisonment on the murder charge and twenty-five years on the

tampering charge. See Tex. Penal Code §§ 19.02(b), 37.09(a). He appeals, arguing the evidence is

insufficient to support the verdicts and the trial court abused its discretion in denying two motions

for mistrial and admitting certain evidence. We affirm the trial court’s judgments.

BACKGROUND

Amy Dickey worked as a prostitute through Craigslist. After midnight on May 21,

2009, a friend drove her to an apartment complex for a prostitution call. The client was appellant

Nathaniel Briscoe. On the drive to appellant’s apartment, Dickey’s driver noted that Dickey smoked

crack cocaine and took naps but that her demeanor was calm. Dickey did not complain of any

injuries, and her driver did not notice any bruising or other injuries. When they arrived at the apartment, appellant met Dickey at the entrance gate. Her

driver watched Dickey walk away with appellant and was later able to provide the police with a

physical description of appellant. Cell phone records confirm that appellant had been in contact with

Dickey that evening. For security purposes, Dickey and her driver had agreed that she would call

and let him know appellant’s apartment number when she arrived and that he would wait outside the

apartment complex for her for thirty minutes to an hour. At 1:24 a.m., Dickey called and told her

driver she was alright. The driver heard Dickey ask a man which apartment she was in and heard

the man say “apartment 251.” Dickey, however, was actually in apartment 241 where appellant

resided; apartment 251 was vacant. Dickey’s driver waited outside for hours but never saw Dickey

alive again.

Later that morning, a landscaper discovered Dickey’s naked body in a wooded green

belt area located approximately one half block from the home of appellant’s father. Dickey was

lying face down with duct tape matted in her hair and dried blood on the right side of her face. DNA

testing done on the duct tape was consistent with a mixture of both Dickey’s and appellant’s DNA.

The body had been covered with a mound of grass clippings, leaves, rocks, and bamboo sticks. A

team of investigators searched the green belt area for evidence. During the search, investigators

discovered several sticks of bamboo behind the home of appellant’s father. This was the only

location in the entire search area where bamboo was found. Appellant’s father testified that, prior

to Dickey’s death, he and appellant had been doing a gardening project using bamboo procured

by appellant. When questioned by investigators four days after Dickey’s death, appellant’s father

noticed that bamboo from the project was missing from the garage.

2 During a four-hour taped interview with the police which was admitted into evidence,

appellant initially denied knowing Dickey. When shown a picture of Dickey, appellant wrote on

the photograph, “I do not recognize this person.” Later he acknowledged contacting Dickey for

prostitution services but alleged that the incident occurred in December—months prior to her

death—and that Dickey had never been in his apartment. When confronted with the possibility that

Dickey’s DNA could be found in his apartment, appellant eventually acknowledged she had been

in his apartment on the night of her death and alleged that they had engaged in sexual intercourse.

Appellant told police that Dickey had become upset during sex after he bit her on the shoulder and

the condom broke. Appellant also told police that he enjoyed squeezing a woman’s neck during sex

and admitted that while he was lying on top of Dickey during intercourse he used her neck as a brace

to push himself up while squeezing her neck with both of his hands for up to five minutes. Dickey

responded, according to appellant, by asking him to “lighten up” on her neck but appellant denied

that she became unconscious during sex. Appellant told police that Dickey then left his apartment

alive with her payment of $150.

On the morning after Dickey’s death, appellant told police that he had parked his car

to smoke at a location about 100 yards from where Dickey’s body was found. Then, after going to

his father’s house to do laundry, he claimed he ate at a nearby restaurant close to where the body was

discovered. The restaurant, however, was closed and under construction that day.

Upon searching appellant’s home, police found a small piece of rolled-up duct tape

on the bedroom carpet at the foot of the bed and a larger piece of duct tape tacked to the back corner

of the dresser. DNA testing on the duct tape discovered on the bedroom floor revealed a mixture of

3 DNA from at least three contributors. The DNA supervisor for the Austin Police Department

testified that Dickey and appellant could not be excluded as contributors to the DNA profile. A

small blood stain on the carpet by the bed was also discovered. The DNA supervisor testified that

Dickey was the source of the stain, excluding identical siblings. Photographs of appellant taken

during the search show what appears to be an injury below appellant’s left nipple, an injury near the

shin of his right leg, and a scratch on his left thigh. Upon searching appellant’s rental car, police

found dead grass and leaves consistent with the material found concealing Dickey’s body.

The chief medical examiner for Travis County concluded Dickey died as a result of

homicidal asphyxia from suffocation or strangulation. The medical examiner made his conclusions

prior to and without the benefit of appellant’s statement to the police. Dickey’s body had several

injuries, including a large bruise on her left neck muscle, tiny hemorrhages on her eyes and eyelids,

lacerations and bruising on her lips, bruising on her upper arms, faint abrasions resembling ligature

marks on her wrists, a one-inch bruise on the top of her head, and hemorrhaging in the lining of her

sinuses. Her lungs had also filled with fluid but her voice box was intact. The medical examiner

concluded that the blood on her face likely came from her mouth as part of the dying process but was

not the result of a pre-mortem injury.

The medical examiner testified that it would take a “good amount of force” to cause

the bruise on Dickey’s neck, it was unusual to see a bruise that large on the neck, it was a recent

injury because there was no evidence of healing, and the injury was consistent with someone

pressing their hand against that portion of the neck for about five minutes or punching hard on the

side of her neck. Although she did not have a corresponding bruise on the right neck muscle typical

4 in strangulation, the medical examiner testified that this could be caused by many variables,

including if the victim was lying on her side and pressure was only coming from one side of her

neck. The medical examiner additionally testified that the hemorrhaging in her eyes and fluid in

her lungs were consistent with death by asphyxiation. Although hemorrhaging in the eyes may also

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