Ronald Arthur Burdick v. the State of Texas

CourtTexas Court of Appeals, 2nd District (Fort Worth)
DecidedJuly 2, 2026
Docket02-25-00264-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Ronald Arthur Burdick v. the State of Texas (Ronald Arthur Burdick v. the State of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Court of Appeals, 2nd District (Fort Worth) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ronald Arthur Burdick v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________

No. 02-25-00264-CR ___________________________

RONALD ARTHUR BURDICK, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

On Appeal from the 89th District Court Wichita County, Texas Trial Court No. DC89-CR2023-1272

Before Sudderth, C.J.; Kerr and Womack, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Kerr MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Ronald Arthur Burdick was convicted of murdering Michael Randall

and sentenced to 35 years’ confinement. On appeal, Burdick raises four issues. First,

he contends that the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s rejection of his

self-defense claim. Second, he complains that the trial court erroneously excluded

certain testimony from his wife. Third, he argues that the trial court erred by

improperly instructing the jury on certain first-aggressor evidence concerning

Randall’s prior attack on a coworker. Fourth, he asserts that the trial court egregiously

harmed him by authorizing the jury to reject his self-defense claim and to convict him

based on his provoking Randall. We will affirm.

I. Background

Benny Lindeman owns a welding business and lives on its property. Ronald

Burdick and his wife Lisa were Lindeman’s neighbors, and they helped him from time

to time. Michael Randall and Lance Copeland worked for Lindeman’s welding

business.

On June 8, 2023, Randall left his personal car at Lindeman’s property and took

a work truck to a job site. While there, Randall and Copeland got into an altercation.

Among other things, Randall threatened Copeland with a hammer, left the job site,

and abandoned the work truck.

Lindeman decided to fire Randall. Later that day, Lindeman’s daughter, Cami

Thornton, texted Randall that he had been fired and told him he had 48 hours to get

2 his personal car. Thornton and Burdick requested that the sheriff’s office send a

deputy when Randall came to get his car and final paycheck. Randall did not

immediately come for his car.

Before the 48-hour deadline, Burdick—who neither worked for Lindeman nor

owned any part of Lindeman’s property or business—called the sheriff’s office to

request that they search and tow Randall’s car from Lindeman’s property. The officer

explained that he had no basis to do either, so Burdick had the car privately towed.

When Randall found out, he was mad at Burdick and sent him angry, curse-laden

texts.

Early the next morning, a sheriff’s deputy went to Lindeman’s and spoke with

Burdick. Burdick was irritated, wanted to file a complaint against Randall, and wanted

Randall barred from Lindeman’s premises. The sheriff’s deputy told Burdick that the

sheriff’s office could give Randall a criminal-trespass warning.

By mid-morning, Randall asked his brother for a ride to get his final paycheck.

Randall texted Thornton—who was not on Lindeman’s property—that he was

coming, and she told him to wait off premises until she got there. She texted that he

could find his paycheck at the end of the property’s driveway, and she told him not to

come up the driveway.

Thornton texted Lisa, who was at the property with Burdick. Instead of placing

the paycheck at the driveway’s end as Thornton had decided, Burdick told Lisa to put

it in a bucket on the property. Burdick again asked the sheriff’s office to come and bar

3 Randall from the property. An investigator told Burdick to keep Randall there “as

long as possible” so deputies could arrive. But the sheriff’s office did not tell Burdick

to keep Randall there at all costs, and Burdick said nothing about his planning to use a

gun to keep Randall there.

When Randall arrived, the paycheck was not where Thornton had told him it

would be. Randall texted Thornton. She at first asked him to drive away, but after

checking with Burdick, she sent Randall a photo of the bucket with the paycheck. She

wrote, “Get it and leave.”

When Randall’s brother drove onto the property, he saw Burdick and Lisa

standing outside. According to Randall’s brother, Randall got out and “walked straight

to the . . . bucket.” The brother kept the truck in drive and his foot on the brake.

Randall got his paycheck. While he was walking back to the truck, his brother said he

saw Burdick’s lips moving but did not hear anything. According to the brother,

Randall did not turn around but may have cursed, got in the truck, and calmly closed

the door.

According to the brother, Burdick walked toward the truck and raised his shirt,

revealing a gun in his right pocket. Burdick tried to open the door and knocked on

Randall’s window, which Randall lowered. Randall’s brother said that both of

Randall’s hands were on an armrest, and he described Randall as not “jumping out the

window,” “swinging,” or “punching the window.” Randall said, “You got a pistol; pull

that pistol.” The brother then heard a gunshot and saw blood pouring out of

4 Randall’s head. A “split second” later, he saw Randall facing forward in the seat with

his head down. The brother put the truck in park and heard Burdick tell Lisa, “[H]e

reached for my gun.” Randall’s brother called 911, and he told responding officers

that Burdick “came up with a gun and shot my brother.”

Burdick and Lisa told a different story. After Lisa had called 911, Burdick called

the sheriff’s office, and he admitted to shooting Randall. Burdick claimed that Randall

had “struck him,” “hit him,” and had been reaching for his gun. According to

Burdick, Randall said, “I’m going to get that fucking gun[,] and I’m going to kill you.”

He said that to avoid being shot with his own gun, he shot Randall. Burdick claimed

that he pushed Randall back into the truck.

Additionally, Lisa claimed that she saw Randall get his paycheck and that he

cursed at her, scaring her. She said that Randall had reached for and grabbed

Burdick’s arm and that “[t]here was a struggle.” She heard a gunshot, went into the

building, and called 911 because she thought her husband might have been shot.

Burdick shot Randall below his right nostril, and the bullet exited the back of

his head and hit the upper left corner of the truck’s front windshield. The bullet’s

trajectory became a debated point on whether Randall was simply turned within the

truck and facing Burdick—as the medical examiner had testified “would make

sense”—or had his head out of the window as he lunged at Burdick—as Burdick and

Lisa had claimed.

5 A responding deputy saw and photographed Randall in the truck, facing

forward, with his hands in his lap, grasping the paycheck. The medical examiner

testified that the bullet perforated Randall’s brain stem, and that the injury would have

caused immediate incapacity and would not have allowed him to do anything

voluntarily. She opined within a reasonable degree of medical certainty that Randall

was grasping his paycheck with both hands at the time he was shot and killed, and the

State argued that this proved that Randall was not grabbing Burdick’s arm or lunging

for his gun.

On the other hand, Burdick called an emergency-room doctor, Dr. Justin

Fairless, as an expert witness. Dr. Fairless reviewed the medical examiner’s autopsy

report and concluded that Randall had not died instantaneously from the brain injury

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