Terrance Deering Black v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 23, 2015
Docket08-12-00338-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Terrance Deering Black v. State (Terrance Deering Black 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
Terrance Deering Black v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

§ TERRANCE DEERING BLACK, No. 08-12-00338-CR § Appellant, Appeal from § v. 296th District Court § THE STATE OF TEXAS, of Collin County, Texas § Appellee. (TC # 296-81761-2012) §

OPINION

Terrance Deering Black appeals his conviction of capital murder. A jury found Appellant

guilty, and because the State did not seek the death penalty, the trial court automatically

sentenced Appellant to life imprisonment. We affirm.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

Susan Loper began dating Appellant in the Spring of 2006. She was married at the time

to Craig Loper and they had a young son, but the marriage became strained because Craig

worked out of town for extended periods. The Lopers divorced in 2007. Appellant and Susan

dated for approximately a year on a steady basis and then off-and-on until late 2009. She

became pregnant with Appellant’s child in May 2009, and opted for an abortion. They broke up

permanently in August 2009.

Susan met Jayson Hayes through eHarmony in January 2010 and they began dating the following month. Appellant became aware of the relationship and he took flowers to Susan’s

mother, Katherine Miller, for her birthday in May 2010. Appellant told Miller that he knew

about Jayson and Jayson “had baggage.” Miller described Appellant as “very agitated” and

obsessive when he was talking to her about Susan. Appellant also told Miller that he did not

understand why Susan liked “bad guys” and he expressed his belief that he, Susan, and her son

would make such a nice family. Susan continued to date Jayson until her death in April 2011.

Susan taught Pilates at the Gleneagles County Club in Plano. She had been teaching

there for sixteen years, but had decided just a few months prior to her death to move her Pilates

studio to a different location and start her own business. Her last scheduled day to teach at

Gleneagles was April 19, 2011. Susan’s mother and father stayed at her home during the work

week to care for her eight-year-old son. Miller recalled that Susan kept a strict schedule during

the work week. Her routine included leaving the house every morning between 5:15 and 5:30,

stopping at Starbuck’s for coffee, and arriving at the Pilates studio around 6. When Miller arose

on the morning of April 19, 2011, Susan was already gone and Miller assumed that she had left

for work at the usual time.

Terry Kennedy had a standing appointment with Susan at 6:15 a.m., but when she arrived

at the studio, Susan’s car was not in the parking lot and the studio’s lights were off. Kennedy

was surprised because Susan never missed her appointments. Susan did not respond to

Kennedy’s text message.

A short time later, Cruz Hernandez, who worked in housekeeping at Gleneagles, found a

purse on the ground by the backdoor of the Pilates studio. The purse’s straps were caught in the

-2- door. Hernandez notified his supervisor, Egobio Mendoza, about the purse and Mendoza

collected the purse and turned it over to Human Resources. Neither man looked inside of the

purse.

At approximately 10 a.m., other Pilates clients arrived at the studio for class, but Susan

was not present and the lights were still turned off. Another Gleneagles employee stopped by

and turned on the lights. One of the women, Laura Curran, noticed that a room divider had

fallen over onto a piece of equipment, a plant had been knocked over, and other items were on

the floor. The women notified the club’s general manager who asked the receptionist to look

inside of the purse found earlier that morning. When they realized it was Susan’s purse, the

general manager called the police.

Officer Joel Scott was the first police officer at arrive at Gleneagles. He saw that a room

divider and plant had been knocked over and a Starbucks coffee cup had been spilled onto the

floor. He also saw blood on the floor along with an unfired round of ammunition. Scott made

these observations from a distance because he did not want to walk through the crime scene.

Based on his observations, Scott called his supervisor and requested backup. Several officers

arrived, including Detective Scott Epperson.

After waiting for the crime scene investigators to finish with their tasks, Epperson

examined the crime scene. Like Officer Scott, he observed that the area around Susan’s desk

was in disarray and it appeared that there had been a struggle. He found blood and two unfired

nine millimeter cartridges on the floor. Epperson found a significant amount of blood on the

driveway in front of the building, a small amount of blood outside the back door to the Pilates

-3- studio, a small amount of blood in the Pilates studio, and another unfired nine millimeter

cartridge in the bushes outside of the building’s front door. Epperson also noticed a Starbucks

cup on the floor which had a time-stamped receipt on it showing it had been purchased at 5:45

that morning.1 After learning that Susan’s purse and cell phone had not been taken, but her car

keys and SUV were missing, Epperson concluded that this was not a robbery. Based on the

evidence, he instead believed that Susan had been “violently kidnapped” at around 6 a.m. and

injured in the course of the kidnapping. Epperson was able to narrow the time of the offense to

6 a.m. because Susan had purchased coffee at Starbucks at 5:45 a.m., and Susan and her SUV

were missing from the facility at 6:15 a.m. when Susan’s first client arrived.

Detective Bruce Pfahning called Susan’s current boyfriend, Jayson Hayes. When

Pfahning told him that Susan was missing, Jayson initially did not believe the detective. Jayson

at first said that everyone loved Susan, but he then identified Appellant as someone who did not

like her. In Pfahning’s opinion, Jayson was extremely cooperative and his response was

consistent with someone who had just gotten bad news about a girlfriend.

Detectives Epperson and Pfahning went to Susan’s home to speak with her parents.

Craig Loper and two of Susan’s friends, Melanie Malone and Julie Mitchell, were also present at

the house and Jayson arrived later. Detective Epperson spoke with Jayson, and consistent with

Pfahning’s earlier assessment, he observed that Jayson was cooperative and willing to answer his

questions. Based on statements made by nearly everyone present, Appellant became a focus of

the investigation into Susan’s disappearance. The detectives went to Appellant’s residence in

1 Records maintained by Starbucks showed that Susan’s Starbucks card had been used to purchase coffee at 5:45 that morning at a Starbucks located near Gleneagles Country Club. -4- Frisco but he was not at home.

Detective Fred Garcia reviewed security video recordings from Gleneagles Country Club.

The video quality is poor and the area is poorly lit, but the video depicts a vehicle pulling into the

parking lot at approximately 5:55 a.m. and parking off-camera.2 Moments later, a person can be

seen walking towards the Pilates studio but the image is obscured by trees and foliage. At

around 6 a.m., a person can be seen walking toward the area where the vehicle parked and

seconds later, a white SUV with its headlights illuminated pulled up to the driveway by the

Pilates studio.3 At 6:01 a.m., the driver exits the vehicle, leaves the driver’s side door open, and

walks around the front of the SUV toward the Pilates studio. Less than a minute later, a person

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