Stephanie Denise Jones v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 20, 2025
Docket02-23-00313-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Stephanie Denise Jones v. the State of Texas (Stephanie Denise Jones v. the State of Texas) 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
Stephanie Denise Jones v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

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

No. 02-23-00313-CR ___________________________

STEPHANIE DENISE JONES, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

On Appeal from Criminal District Court No. 3 Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 1748718

Before Kerr, Wallach, and Walker, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Kerr MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted Stephanie Denise Jones of injury to a disabled individual by

criminal negligence. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.04(a)(1), (a-1). Jones has appealed

this conviction, arguing in two issues that the evidence is insufficient to (1) establish

that she caused injury or impairment to the victim and (2) corroborate the accomplice-

witness testimony. We will affirm.

I. Background

Kristi Norris died at 36 years old while living in a group home and while under

Stephanie Jones’s care. Norris had lived in group homes for more than 20 years, due to

diagnoses of autism-spectrum disorder, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder,

profound intellectual-developmental disorder, epilepsy, and cerebral palsy. Jones was

aware of Norris’s diagnoses, as she had worked with Norris for more than ten years as

a caregiver.

Because of Norris’s diagnoses, a behavior analyst developed a care plan for her.

Norris’s care plan required that she always be in the “line of sight” of her caretakers.

Norris needed to be closely monitored because she had pulled a dresser onto herself

before and was a flight risk. The care plan also identified certain “rights restrictions”—

including locking up sharp objects and locking the kitchen to prevent Norris from

entering while a caretaker was cooking or preparing medications.

Norris’s caretakers were informed about her care plan and were also aware of

the seizure protocol for Norris. When Norris had a seizure, a magnetic piece had to be

2 rubbed across an implanted vagas nerve stimulator in her chest to regulate and stabilize

the electrical impulses in her brain. A seizure was especially dangerous because it could

quickly cut off Norris’s airway.

To support Norris’s care, a wheelchair and safety harness were prescribed to her

for community integration and transportation. The wheelchair was prescribed only for

those purposes and was not meant to be used as behavior management, as a rights

restriction, or as an attempt to “contain” Norris. Despite the use limitations, several

caretakers admitted that putting Norris in her wheelchair outside the prescribed uses

would help keep her in sight and would support her safety and care.

It was challenging for a single caretaker to meet all the requirements of Norris’s

care plan when that person was solely responsible for all four residents in the group

home.

Norris had made various attempts to “escape”—either to leave her wheelchair

or to run away from caretakers and the group home. Once, she had attempted to escape

her wheelchair while being transported. She wriggled so far down in her wheelchair that

she was able to wrap her legs around the van driver while he was driving. Norris had

also attempted to get out of the van while it was moving and thought that running away

was a game.

On the day Norris died, Jones and Leola Thomas, another caretaker, were both

on duty at the group home. Jones had worked overnight, and Thomas arrived around

8:00 a.m. When Thomas arrived, Norris and the other three residents were in their

3 respective rooms. The door to Norris’s room was closed. When she arrived, Thomas

did not check on Norris but began to bathe and care for another resident. Thomas

indicated that Jones was responsible for Norris’s care during that time. After bathing

one of the residents, Thomas checked in with Jones, who was mopping the floor and

had not yet bathed Norris.

Shortly after 10:00 a.m. Thomas heard Jones scream for her, and Thomas rushed

to Norris’s room. Jones was there with Norris, who was strapped in her wheelchair,

head tilted, and unconscious. It appeared to Thomas that Norris had wriggled down

and choked on her wheelchair’s harness. Jones and Thomas took Norris out of the

wheelchair, first moving her to the bed and then to the floor where Thomas began chest

compressions, and Jones called 9-1-1. Norris had no pulse when the paramedics arrived;

they began medical intervention in an effort to resuscitate her. Norris was ultimately

pronounced dead at the scene.

No internal autopsy was performed. After conducting an external examination

of Norris’s body, a forensic pathologist determined that Norris died from accidental

compressional asphyxia. A different medical examiner later reviewed the case and

amended the cause of death to be “undetermined.” Despite this modification, the

amended conclusion did not rule out asphyxia as a cause of Norris’s death. The marks

on her neck were consistent with its having something flexible wrapped around it—and

with injuries found on a hanging victim. There was also evidence of petechial

hemorrhaging of the eyes—dot-like red discolorations that can indicate asphyxia.

4 A grand jury later indicted Jones for her part in Norris’s death. In the indictment,

the State alleged—among other things1—that Jones had “recklessly, by placing Kristi

Norris in a wheelchair and by improperly strapping Kristi Norris into said wheelchair

and by leaving Kristi Norris unattended and by not keeping her within [eyesight],

cause[d] serious bodily injury to Kristi Norris, a disabled individual[,] by causing her to

asphyxiate.”

Although Thomas testified that she and Jones had found Norris strapped in her

wheelchair and unconscious, both Jones and Thomas initially told emergency

responders and investigators that they had found Norris unconscious under a dresser.

Thomas recanted the dresser story several weeks after Norris’s death. Eventually, Jones

also admitted the dresser story was a lie.

The jury found Jones guilty of the lesser-included offense of injury to a disabled

individual by criminal negligence.2 See id. § 22.04(a). The jury assessed punishment at

1 The State charged Jones with four paragraphs under Section 22.04: (1) causing serious bodily injury to Norris; (2) causing serious mental deficiency or impairment or injury to Norris; (3) as an employee of a group home, causing serious bodily injury to Norris; and (4) as an employee of a group home, causing serious mental deficiency or impairment or injury to Norris. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.04(a)(1), (a)(2), (a-1)(1), (a-1)(2). 2 Jones was also convicted of tampering with evidence, see id. § 37.09(c), for which the jury assessed punishment at six years’ confinement, to be suspended in favor of community supervision, and a $10,000 fine. The trial court sentenced Jones accordingly. Jones does not challenge this conviction on appeal.

5 confinement for one year in state jail and a fine of $10,000. See id. § 22.04(g). The trial

court sentenced Jones accordingly. Jones raises two evidentiary challenges on appeal.

II. Evidentiary Sufficiency—Serious Bodily Injury to a Disabled Individual

Jones’s first issue challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to prove that she

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