State v. Terrance Germaine Wilkins

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 4, 2014
Docket05-12-00154-CR
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Terrance Germaine Wilkins (State v. Terrance Germaine Wilkins) 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
State v. Terrance Germaine Wilkins, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Vacate and Reinstate and Opinion Filed February 4, 2014

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas

No. 05-12-00154-CR

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellant V. TERRANCE GERMAINE WILKINS, Appellee

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court No. 6 Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F10-62224-X

OPINION Before Justices Bridges, FitzGerald, and Myers Opinion by Justice FitzGerald A jury convicted appellee of capital murder. The court imposed an automatic sentence of

life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. The trial court granted appellee’s motion for

new trial based on newly discovered evidence. The State of Texas appeals; appellee asserts seven

cross-points of error.

Issue

The issue presented is whether the trial court erred in granting appellee’s post-judgment

motion for new trial based on newly discovered evidence.

Factual Background On October 26, 2010, Officer Timothy Gilliam responded to a burglary call. He knocked

on the door of the apartment in question, and the door was opened by Sarah Malesky. Malesky

was frantic, crying, and appeared to be in a state of shock.

Malesky led the officer to a bedroom. The door was partially open, but there was an

object in front of the door that prevented it from being opened completely. When the paramedics

pushed the object away, the officer saw the decedent, Carlon Hellner, lying on the floor between

the bed and a chair. Hellner appeared to have been shot. The paramedics subsequently told the

officer they were unable to resuscitate Hellner and believed he was dead.

Detective Will Vick was dispatched to the apartment, where he met with Malesky and the

patrol officers. Vick observed that there was no forced entry into the apartment. As he did an

initial walk-through of the apartment, Vick noticed that the freezer door was open, a closet door

was off of its hinges, and a chair was knocked over. A glass table near Hellner’s bed had been

knocked askew, and held a crack pipe and drug baggie. There was a knife on the nightstand by

the bed in Malesky’s bedroom, and three baggies of marijuana, an aluminum container, a digital

scale, and a grinder were found in her closet. No weapons were found. Detective Vick also

found two empty prescription bottles of hydrocodone and an empty prescription bottle for

Alprazolam. There were no blood spatters or latent fingerprints.

Jill Urban, a forensic pathologist, testified about the autopsy that was performed on

Hellner. There were two gunshot wounds to the right shoulder, with no exit wounds. The gunshot

wounds resulted from a contact or close range shot, and it was difficult to determine if there had

been a struggle. The toxicology report showed no cocaine present but Hellner’s blood contained

cocaine metabolites. Urban explained that the presence of cocaine metabolites indicates it is

likely Hellner smoked or ingested cocaine several hours before he died.

–2– Although Hellner had a degree of heart function when he was transported by the

paramedics, Urban opined that he could not have survived longer than thirty minutes after

sustaining the gunshot wounds. Hellner also had a normal body temperature, which, according to

Urban, indicated that Hellner’s wounds were sustained within minutes of his receiving EMS

treatment. Urban further testified that a “head hair standard” and fingernail clippings were taken

from Hellner. The fingernail clippings were not examined.

A trace evidence examiner testified that she examined Hellner’s clothing and found two

holes in the right front shoulder of his t-shirt. The examiner testified that there was a nitrate

reaction, lead wipe, and vaporous lead reaction near the sites, indicating that the shots were

within an eighteen to twenty-four inch range. A trace evidence supervisor testified that he

examined the gunshot residue test performed on Hellner. The test showed gunshot residue

particles on the back of Hellner’s right hand.

Malesky testified Hellner resided with her in the apartment where he was found. She had

known Hellner for five years and lived with him for four months before he was killed. Malesky

described her relationship with Hellner as a “father daughter” type relationship. Malesky and

Hellner sold drugs out of the apartment, and he would drive for her, take phone calls for her, and

protect her. She sold one or two pounds of marijuana a month.

The apartment next door was a “trap house” where crack and cocaine were sold.

Appellee, whom Malesky had known for about a month, sold cocaine out of this apartment and

sold some cocaine to Hellner before his death. When the trap house opened, Hellner relapsed

and began using crack again. A man named “Nate” ran the trap house. At one point in her

testimony, Malesky recalled telling the police that Nate called her on the day of the incident.

Malesky said appellee had been in the apartment with her once. Malesky did not know if

appellee spent a lot of time in the apartment with Hellner when she was not there. She said

–3– Hellner would give appellee rides to another apartment complex, and appellee would pay him

with a nickel rock of crack. Malesky had also given appellee a ride in her car at least once.

According to Malesky, Hellner would get upset because appellee showed up and knocked on

their door a lot.

Malesky testified that on the night Hellner was killed, she was ill with a fever, sore

throat, and coughing. She and Hellner kept the front door locked and it was locked on this

occasion. She took twice the recommended dose of Theraflu, smoked marijuana, and took

Xanax. At around 6:00 p.m., she went to sleep with the lights on in her bedroom. She awakened

to find appellee standing over her pointing a gun at her. He did not wear a mask or try to hide his

identity. Before he woke her up, she heard the dogs barking. Appellee demanded money and

marijuana and picked up some change she had on her table. Appellee asked Malesky where her

stash was, and led her out into the living room. Malesky told appellee there might be some

marijuana in the freezer. When he walked to the refrigerator, she tried to run, but appellee caught

her by the arm and told her to stop playing. He forced her into the bathroom, and as he was

closing her door said, “Sorry about [your] daddy, but he started tripping.”

When she thought it was safe, Malesky picked up her knife and went to check on Hellner.

She could not get into Hellner’s room because the closet door was falling over and barricading

the door to the bedroom. She pushed the door open and saw Hellner lying on the floor. She

shook him by his left shoulder and touched his neck but felt no pulse. When she saw he wasn’t

breathing, Malesky pulled a cell phone out of Hellner’s pants pocket and called 911. After she

called 911, she took the marijuana that was hidden under Hellner’s mattress and put it in her

bedroom. Malesky said she did not see Hellner get shot.

Malesky admitted that when she talked with detectives, she tried to cover up the drug

activity and did not tell them she was selling and using drugs. Although she initially told the

–4– police that cash and other items were taken from her apartment, she subsequently found

everything she had reported missing. In her interview with the police, Malesky said she knew

nothing about the marijuana and it was something that only Hellner had. When she testified,

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