Ryland Shane Absalon v. State

478 S.W.3d 1, 2014 WL 576083, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 1583
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 2014
Docket13-12-00666-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 478 S.W.3d 1 (Ryland Shane Absalon 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
Ryland Shane Absalon v. State, 478 S.W.3d 1, 2014 WL 576083, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 1583 (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by

Justice GARZA.

In 1984, eighteen-year-old Ginger Hayden was found stabbed to death in her bedroom. Twenty-six years later, appellant Ryland Shane Absalon was arrested and charged with the offense. In 2012, a Tarrant County jury convicted Absalon of capital murder and sentenced him to life imprisonment. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.03(a)(2) (West 2011). On appeal, 1 Ab-salon argues that: (1) the trial court erred by admitting evidence of confessions he allegedly made during the course of substance abuse treatment; (2) the trial court erred by admitting into evidence a towel found at the murder scene; (3) the properly-admitted evidence was insufficient to support his conviction; (4) the affidavit supporting the arrest warrant was insufficient; (5) he received ineffective assistance of trial counsel; arid (6) the cumulative effect of various errors resulted in an unfair trial. We affirm.

I. Background

A. Murder of Ginger Hayden

In the early morning hours of September 5, 1984, Sharon Hayden returned home from her post office job to the Fort Worth, Texas apartment she shared with her daughter Ginger. When Sharon went into the bathroom, she noticed “something like water on the floor with red around it.” She was too tired to clean it up, so she just put a blue towel over it. She then went to sleep in her bed. A few hours later, Sharon woke up to the sound of Ginger’s alarm clock. When she went into Ginger’s room, she found her daughter’s lifeless body slumped beside her bed. Ginger was covered in blood and was wearing only underwear. Sharon felt that Ginger’s leg was cold, and she realized Ginger was dead.

In a state of panic, Sharon left her apartment and went upstairs to the apartment of her neighbor, Ryland Shane Ab-salon, in order to call her boyfriend. Ab-salon, then seventeen years old, was .a friend of . Ginger and Ginger’s boyfriend, Jeff Green. According to Sharon, despite 'the fact that his neighbor and friend was just found dead, Absalon “was laying on the couch like he didn’t give a crap about anything, just laying there.”

B. Initial Investigation

Detective Brad Patterson of the Fort Worth Police Department investigated the scene. He noticed no signs of forced entry. However, a sliding glass door leading from Ginger’s bedroom to the apartment’s back patio was unlocked. Police collected various items for forensic testing, including a bent steak knife found near Ginger’s body, two red-stained socks found in the *5 bathroom, and a blue towel found on the bathroom floor.

An autopsy was performed on Ginger’s body later that day. A total of 57 stab and cut wounds were identified on her scalp, face, neck, chest, breasts, upper arms, forearms, hands, and legs. One of the stab wounds, on Ginger’s neck, was four and a half inches deep. Mark Krouse, M.D., the physician who performed the autopsy, testified that Ginger died of blood loss and that all of the injuries — even ones that would not be considered lethal by themselves — contributed to her death. Dr. Krouse testified that the bent steak knife found at the murder scene was the likely murder weapon. The autopsy report noted that Ginger was’ in the early first trimester of pregnancy.

Detectives contacted Jeff Green, Ginger’s boyfriend at the time of hér death. Green stated that he was with Ginger the night before her murder until about 11:30 p.m., when Ginger dropped him off at his home. Green stated that he later left his residence for about thirty minutes to go for a walk after he got into an argument with his father; he then returned home and went to sleep. Green was aware of Ginger’s pregnancy and believed ■ that he was the father. He stated that Ginger intended to abort the pregnancy. 2 Green stated that he was with Absalon the previous day and that he told Absalon to come down to Ginger’s apartment when he saw Ginger’s car return. At trial, Green testified that he and Ginger had intimate relations in Ginger’s bedroom on the night before her murder. He testified that Ab-salon knew that he and Ginger were in a romantic relationship.

• Mike Garvin, then a Fort Worth Police Department detective, contacted Absalon and his father, Ralph. Ralph indicated to the detective that, the morning after the murder, Absalon was wearing a white shirt with a red stain on it. Absalon stated that the stain was caused by spilled “strawberry soda,” but the detective believed it might actually be blood. Detective Garvin obtained consent of the Absalons to search their apartment for the stained shirt. The detective was unable to locate the stained shirt; however, he recovered an unstained shirt, a pair' of shorts, a pair of shoes with apparent blood stains, and a towel. Detectives interviewed Absalon .again at Arlington Heights High School several, days later. Absalon stated that he had, in the past, been in Ginger’s apartment and in her bedroom on several occasions. Once, he climbed over Ginger’s patio fence in order to obtain a dropped knife. Absalon stated that, on the night of Ginger’s murder, he, Green, and Ginger were hanging out at Ginger’s apartment until around 9:00 p.m. During the interview, the interviewing officer observed a small red dot on Absalon’s shoe; Absalon stated that it was blood from when he cut his finger while camping. 3

*6 Police concluded their investigation without making an arrest. The case remained cold for the next quartér century.

C. DNA Analysis

Detective Jose Hernandez of the Fort Worth Police Department stated that, in 2008, his agency received a grant from the United States Department of Justice “to go through cold cases and identify which ones could benefit most from DNA testing.” The unsolved murder of Ginger Hayden was one of the cases he assessed. Detective Hernandez reviewed the evidence on file and submitted several items for DNA analysis, including the socks and towel found in Ginger’s apartment and the shoes recovered from Absalon’s apartment.

Forensic analyst Yin Zhang examined the items. With respect' to the blue towel, a “presumptive test” was positive for blood. Zhang then performed a “confirmatory test” on the blue towel which was negative for blood. Although the confirmatory test on the blue towel was negative for blood, a DNA profile was obtained from the towel.

Orchid Cellmark (“Cellmark”), a private DNA testing laboratory, analyzed items recovered in the investigation. 4 The DNA profile obtained from a cutting of the blue towel was a mixture, with the major profile originating from an unknown male. 5 The same unknown male was identified as a likely contributor of DNA obtained from the shoe found in Absalon’s apartment. Based on these findings, Detective Hernandez applied for a search warrant for a direct sample of Absalon’s DNA. The following day, officers located Absalon at his residence in Sierra Vista, Arizona, and obtained DNA samples via buccal swabs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
478 S.W.3d 1, 2014 WL 576083, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 1583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryland-shane-absalon-v-state-texapp-2014.