Stephen Craig Whitworth v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 30, 2014
Docket11-12-00114-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Stephen Craig Whitworth v. State (Stephen Craig Whitworth 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
Stephen Craig Whitworth v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion filed May 30, 2014

In The

Eleventh Court of Appeals __________

No. 11-12-00114-CR __________

STEPHEN CRAIG WHITWORTH, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 441st District Court Midland County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. CR38839

MEMORANDUM OPINION The jury convicted Stephen Craig Whitworth of murder and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. §§ 7.01 (parties to offenses), 7.02 (criminal responsibility for conduct of another), 19.02(b)(1), (2) (murder), 22.02(a) (aggravated assault) (West 2011). The jury assessed his punishment at confinement for twenty years on each count. The trial court sentenced him accordingly and ordered his sentences to run concurrently. Appellant raises four issues on appeal. Because we find that the trial court erred when it failed to instruct the jury on the defense of duress as to the aggravated assault charge, we reverse and remand with respect to Appellant’s conviction for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. We affirm Appellant’s conviction for murder. The evidence at trial showed that Appellant and Paul Lee picked up Anne Bostic and Chris Easley at approximately 4:00 a.m. on June 6 to go smoke marihuana. Lee drove the four of them to a shut-down pump jack in Midland. Bostic testified that, after the four of them finished smoking a marihuana blunt, Lee called Easley to the trunk of the car and said he wanted to show Easley something. Easley walked to the rear of the car. Bostic was sitting sideways in the rear seat on the driver’s side with her feet hanging out of the car when she heard the trunk slam and someone get hit. She stood up and saw Easley’s legs on the ground. Lee was kneeling over the top of Easley and hitting him multiple times. Lee stopped, and Bostic could hear Easley gargling and wheezing. Lee went back to Easley, and Bostic could hear air escaping from Easley’s lungs, like he had been stabbed. Easley suffered four crushing blows to his face and four stab wounds to his chest. His heart was perforated by two of the stab wounds, and bone fragments penetrated his brain due to the crushing blows to his forehead; he died as a result of the injuries. There was no dispute that Lee killed Easley. Bostic testified that, as Lee was attacking Easley, Appellant held her and forced her to watch the murder. She said that Appellant told her that she needed to watch and that Easley needed to be taught a lesson. Appellant took her to the front of the car, and she asked him if they were going to hurt her. He told her that they were not going to hurt her but that they were going to have to take her somewhere 2 and that she could not talk to anyone for six months. Bostic testified that Appellant left her at the front of the car and went and talked to Lee. When she started walking away, Appellant came up behind her, started choking her, and popped her neck. Bostic let her body go limp, and she fell to the ground and “played dead.” Appellant dragged her over to a bush at the place where he had already dragged Easley. Bostic heard him say, “She’s dead. It’s okay. She’s dead.” Bostic then heard footsteps coming toward her. Someone lifted her head by her hair and cut her throat. She felt blood pouring out of her throat and felt a hand on her back. Bostic testified that she passed out, woke up next to Easley, and heard Lee and Appellant getting in Lee’s car and leaving. She waited until the sun came up and started walking down the road. Bostic was able to get back to the main road where a man saw her running and waving her hands as if she was in need of help. The man stopped to help her, called 911, and gave her water and a shirt that she could use to stop the bleeding from her neck. Bostic was treated at Midland Memorial Hospital. She required immediate surgical intervention in order to survive. She had suffered major trauma to her neck; her internal jugular veins had been cut. Bostic also suffered multiple stab wounds to her torso. Appellant testified that he, Lee, Bostic, and Easley were standing around the trunk of the car smoking marihuana when Lee, out of nowhere, attacked Easley with a set of bolt cutters that Lee had gotten from the trunk of the vehicle. Appellant testified that he did not try to stop Lee when Lee was hitting Easley because he knew that Lee could overpower him and that Lee had a weapon; he was afraid of Lee. He grabbed Bostic by her hand and walked her to the front of the car. Appellant made her sit on the car and face him. He told her not to watch and to stay calm. Both he and Bostic were “freaking out.” Appellant saw Lee hit Easley over and over again with the bolt cutters and saw Lee stab Easley in the 3 neck and in the chest. He did not want to run because Lee had the keys to the car and because he was afraid Lee would chase him down in the car. He also did not want to leave Bostic and did not think she would be able to run because Easley had had to help her to the car when Lee and Appellant picked them up to go smoke marihuana. After Lee had killed Easley, he walked over to Appellant and told him that he needed to get rid of Easley’s body. Appellant, according to his testimony, just stood there. Lee gave Appellant “a look” and again told him to get rid of the body. Appellant walked to the back of the vehicle and was horrified and shocked by what he saw. He was scared of what Lee could do to him and Bostic after he saw what Lee had done to Easley. Lee told him again to get rid of the body, and because Appellant did not want Lee to kill him, Appellant dragged Easley to a nearby bush. Appellant went back to check on Bostic. Lee asked to see Appellant’s cell phone, and he typed a message on Appellant’s phone that said it was Appellant’s turn to finish Bostic and, if he did not finish her, he would be next. Appellant testified that he believed that meant, if he did not kill Bostic, Lee would kill him. Appellant took Bostic fifty feet away from the vehicle and pretended to break her neck by putting her in a choke hold and cracking his knuckles loudly. He testified that he was trying to make her pass out. Her body went limp, and he put her on the ground. He told Lee that she was dead. Lee said, “She’s still breathing. You’ve got to stab her.” Appellant told Lee that he could not do that and tried to convince Lee that he had broken her neck and that she was already dead. Lee told Appellant to give him his knife. Appellant testified that he was scared and that Lee had this look on his face like he was going to do something to Appellant if he did not comply. Appellant gave Lee his knife, and Lee stabbed Bostic four times in the back. Lee then told Appellant to help move her body next to Easley’s body. The two moved her body and started 4 walking away. Lee began to have second thoughts about Bostic being alive. Appellant again tried to convince him that she was dead and that he should just leave her alone. Lee walked back to her body and stabbed her in the neck. Lee and Appellant went back to the Travelodge where they were living at the time, and Lee ordered him to take a shower. Appellant testified that he started taking sleeping pills in an effort to overdose because he did not want to live after what he had seen. He then decided that he still needed to tell the police what had happened, so he stopped taking the pills. After they had showered and picked up their roommate from work, Lee told Appellant that Appellant had to go with him to get rid of the clothes that they had been wearing. They drove to a dirt road and set the clothes on fire. Appellant and Lee then returned to the Travelodge and went to sleep. Appellant testified that he could not leave because Lee was watching him and never let him out of his sight. He tried to stay awake until Lee fell asleep, but the sleeping pills made him fall asleep first.

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Stephen Craig Whitworth v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephen-craig-whitworth-v-state-texapp-2014.