Robert Saint James v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2006
Docket03-05-00202-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Robert Saint James v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-05-00202-CR

Robert Saint James, Appellant



v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 147TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 3040112, HONORABLE WILFORD FLOWERS, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N


The jury convicted appellant Robert Saint James of the offense of felony murder. See Tex. Pen. Code Ann. § 19.02(b)(3) (West 2003). Punishment was assessed at fifty years' confinement. In five issues on appeal, Saint James challenges the district court's denial of his motion to suppress his confession and asserts ineffective assistance of counsel. We will affirm.



BACKGROUND

The jury heard evidence that, between 12:30 and 1:00 a.m. on November 20, 1982, the body of 20-year-old Dallas resident Mark Dougherty was found along IH-35 near the Slaughter Creek overpass in Austin. Police officers who discovered Dougherty testified that he was bloodied and barely alive when they found him, and that he was ultimately "pronounced dead on the scene." One of the officers testified that Dougherty was found covered in "scrub-type brush" that indicated to him that someone had tried to hide the body. An autopsy revealed that Dougherty died from massive loss of blood from stab wounds to his neck.

During their investigation into Dougherty's death, police began looking for Saint James and Don Bouldrey, two individuals who allegedly were supposed to meet with Dougherty on the night he was murdered. Officers first interviewed Bouldrey, but determined that they lacked "enough probable cause" to arrest him.

Sergeant Jerry Fearn of the Austin Police Department testified that, on December 3, 1982, he received a phone call from Saint James, who volunteered that "our investigation was going in the wrong direction, that we were looking for the wrong people and that he could straighten us up." Saint James then asked to meet with Fearn at a restaurant the next morning "to give his version of what happened." Fearn testified that Saint James refused to meet with him at the police station. Fearn explained that, when he met with Saint James the next day, Saint James told him that "he was a broker. He put people together and admitted that normally these contacts that he arranged were for drug deals." Fearn testified that Saint James also told him that "Don Bouldrey was wanting to expand his business as a drug dealer" and that Bouldrey "was trying to put together a deal with Mark Dougherty" and "Dougherty was supposed to be coming to Austin to buy drugs for his customers in Dallas." Saint James went on to tell Fearn that Dougherty had planned on flying from Dallas to Austin and meeting Saint James at the airport, but that the meeting never happened. Saint James also told Fearn that he had been at his girlfriend's house the night of the murder, and that he had learned from Bouldrey the next day that Dougherty had been murdered. Fearn testified that when he asked Saint James if he thought Bouldrey had been involved in the murder, Saint James responded that "Don wasn't the kind of person that could do something like that."

On December 21, 1982, Sergeant Fearn was contacted a second time by Saint James. This time Saint James told Fearn "that he had been out investigating this murder and had all the information and evidence that we needed to arrest, indict and prosecute Don Bouldrey for Mark Dougherty's murder." This evidence supposedly included a knife that was the murder weapon and a bloody boot that belonged to Bouldrey. Fearn testified that Saint James wanted to be paid $5,000 for this evidence. Believing that this "evidence" would probably be inadmissible at trial, Sergeant Fearn declined the offer. Fearn testified that, on December 23, Saint James called him again and asked for the phone number of Dougherty's father. It appeared to Fearn that Saint James was interested in selling the evidence to Dougherty's family. Fearn did not give Saint James the family's phone number. This was the last time Fearn had contact with Saint James. After that, information about Dougherty's murder "cease[d] to come in" and the case, although never closed, was set aside.

In 1986, Detective Dusty Hesskew, who had assisted with the murder investigation in 1982, decided to follow up on some leads. Hesskew ran a criminal history check on Saint James and discovered that he was in a penitentiary in Colorado. Hesskew testified that he spoke with Gregory Boodakian, a counselor at the Colorado Department of Corrections, who told him that Saint James had been talking to him about Dougherty's murder. Boodakian took a taped statement from Saint James, transcribed it, and sent it to Hesskew. In the statement, Saint James explained his version of the events surrounding Dougherty's murder, giving a "very graphic description of the crime scene" and acknowledging that he was present when the crime occurred. In the statement, Saint James also admitted to assisting Bouldrey in hiding some of the evidence related to the murder. Based on the contents of this statement, Hesskew "put the case together and . . . presented it to the District Attorney's Office for their review." Hesskew thought he had enough information to "get the case before a grand jury." Hesskew did not know what happened to the case after he turned the evidence over to the district attorney's office. It is undisputed that the district attorney's office decided not to prosecute the case at that time.

The case was later reviewed in 2001 by the Austin Police Department's cold case unit. Detective Rick Blackmore examined Saint James's 1986 statement and began looking for him. He found Saint James in Arizona. Detective Donald Byers, a police detective with the City of Mesa, Arizona, was asked by Blackmore to speak with Saint James about Dougherty's murder. Byers asked Saint James to come into the Mesa police station and make a statement, which he did on December 15, 2002. The statement was recorded and sent to Austin. Based on the information in the statement, Detective Blackmore decided to go to Arizona and interview Saint James himself.

Detective Blackmore and his partner Detective Hardesty first interviewed Saint James on February 12, 2003. Blackmore testified that Saint James "voluntarily came to the Mesa, Arizona Police Department" and gave a statement about his involvement in the murder. The meeting lasted "about seven-and-a-half hours." Blackmore testified that, although there were some differences between Saint James's statement to Detectives Blackmore and Hardesty and his 1986 statement to Boodakian, "It was still a relatively consistent story in that he was negotiating the sale of this MDA product or love drug that he and Mr. Bouldrey had begun producing and was trying to negotiate that sale to Mr. Dougherty." When asked about the inconsistencies in the statements, Blackmore testified:



A lot of it involved--from my perspective, a lot of it involved the discussion between Mr. Bouldrey and Mr. Saint James. And at some point on the first day Mr. Saint James told us that Mr. Bouldrey told Saint James that he was going to get Mark's money. And that began sounding more to me as though they intended to rob him. The first day Mr. Saint James continued to deny that.

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Robert Saint James v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-saint-james-v-state-texapp-2006.