Routier, Darlie Lynn

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 18, 2008
DocketAP-75,617
StatusPublished

This text of Routier, Darlie Lynn (Routier, Darlie Lynn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Routier, Darlie Lynn, (Tex. 2008).

Opinion







IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS

OF TEXAS



NO. AP-75,617
DARLIE LYNN ROUTIER, Appellant


v.



THE STATE OF TEXAS



ON APPEAL IN CAUSE NO. F96-39973-J

FROM THE CRIMINAL DISTRICT COURT NO. 3

OF DALLAS COUNTY

Price, J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which Keller, P.J., and Meyers, Johnson, Keasler, Holcomb and Cochran, J.J., joined. Womack and Hervey, J.J., concurred in the result.

O P I N I O N



This is an appeal from an order denying the appellant's motion for post-conviction DNA testing in a capital-murder case. (1) We will vacate the convicting court's order and remand the cause for limited DNA testing, as specified in this opinion.

PROCEDURAL POSTURE (2)

The appellant was convicted of stabbing her own son, Damon Routier, to death. Damon was younger than six years of age at the time. (3) Damon's older brother, Devon, was also stabbed to death. The appellant testified that she was sleeping on a couch in the family room in the downstairs of her home and that her sons were asleep on the floor in front of the television. She awoke to discover a stranger departing through the kitchen and utility room and out through the garage, leaving a bloody butcher knife from the kitchen behind on the utility room floor. She herself suffered a number of wounds, including a slash across her neck that came perilously close to severing her carotid artery. She denied having stabbed her sons. The State presented circumstantial evidence suggesting that there was no intruder, that the crime scene had been "staged," that the appellant had inflicted the wounds on herself, and that she had some pecuniary motive to murder her children. The jury found the appellant guilty of capital murder, and she was sentenced to death. We affirmed her conviction and sentence on direct appeal. (4)

After her conviction became final, but while her state post-conviction application for writ of habeas corpus was pending, the appellant filed a motion for post-conviction DNA testing under Chapter 64 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. She requested the testing of certain biological materials the results of which she contends will bolster her claim that an intruder was in the house and undermine the plausibility of the State's evidence that the crime scene was "staged." The trial court found that the evidence that the appellant wished to test had been adequately preserved so that DNA testing was available and that the evidence had been maintained by a proper chain of custody. (5) In addition, there can be no question that the identity of the killer is in question. (6)

Nevertheless, the trial court ultimately denied the appellant's motion, finding against the appellant on two specific issues. First, the trial court concluded that the appellant had failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the jury would not have convicted her if exculpatory results from the testing she now seeks had been presented to it during trial. (7) Second, the trial court made a finding of fact that DNA testing was available at the time of the appellant's trial and that the evidence she now seeks to have tested was either actually tested pretrial or else could have been tested at that time but was not. (8) In her appeal, the appellant challenges both bases for denying her motion.

The appellant lists nine items of evidence recovered from the scene that she contends she should now be allowed to test. She contends that, had the jury known of exculpatory results from the collective DNA testing of these various evidentiary items, it more likely than not would not have convicted her. The State argues that the appellant could and should have requested that at least some of these items be subjected to DNA testing at the time of trial. Before addressing the question of whether it is more probable than not that the appellant would not have been convicted had the results of the testing she now seeks been exculpatory, we deem it appropriate first to determine which of the nine items would qualify for post-conviction testing under the criteria of Article 64.01(b). Only those items that qualify for testing under these threshold criteria should be included in the collective calculus for determining whether the appellant would not have been convicted. We will therefore address the trial court's second holding first.

ARTICLE 64.01(b)

The Statute and Standard of Review

Under Article 64.01(b), a convicted person may request the convicting court to permit forensic DNA testing of evidence containing biological material that was in the State's possession during trial if that evidence:

  • •was not previously subjected to DNA testing because DNA testing was not available; (9) or


  • •was not previously subjected to DNA testing because DNA testing was available, but not technologically capable of providing probative results; (10) or


  • •was not previously subjected to DNA testing, through no fault of the convicted person, for reasons that are of a nature such that the interests of justice require DNA testing; (11) or


  • •was previously subjected to DNA testing, but can be subjected to testing with newer testing techniques that provide a reasonable likelihood of results that are more accurate and probative than the results of the previous test. (12)


If one or more of the items that the appellant wishes to subject to post-conviction DNA testing meet any of these criteria, the trial court may order such testing--but only if the appellant also satisfies other statutory predicates, including a showing, by a preponderance of the evidence, that she would not have been convicted if exculpatory results had been obtained from DNA testing of as many of the nine items as meet the Article 64.01(b) criteria. (13) In reviewing the trial court's ruling, this Court ordinarily gives "almost total deference" to the trial court's resolution of questions of historical fact and application-of-law-to-fact issues that turn on witness credibility and demeanor, but we consider de novo all other application-of-law-to-fact questions. (14)

Preliminary Matters

Before getting down to the specifics of the appellant's claims with regard to the biological materials for which she seeks to obtain post-conviction DNA testing, we must first address several general matters that will inform our analysis of all of her claims. We begin with the appellant's apparent assumption that she can invoke Article 64.01(b)(1)(B)'s no-fault provision to argue generally that she was not at fault for failing to obtain DNA testing simply because all of the biological materials were in the State's control.

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Routier, Darlie Lynn, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/routier-darlie-lynn-texcrimapp-2008.