Theodore Charles Schmidt v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 15, 2012
Docket14-10-00713-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Theodore Charles Schmidt v. State (Theodore Charles Schmidt 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
Theodore Charles Schmidt v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed March 15, 2012.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-10-00713-CR

THEODORE CHARLES SCHMIDT, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 182nd District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 1204964

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Theodore Charles Schmidt appeals his conviction of capital murder, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction and the constitutionality of his life sentence without the possibility of parole. He also argues that the trial court should have included an instruction for aggravated kidnapping as a lesser- included offense in the jury charge. We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Law enforcement officers responded to a call from a trucker who had discovered the body of a young woman, complainant Sabrina Pina, in a ditch along a roadway. An officer observed that her wrists were bound together with duct tape and duct tape was wrapped in multiple, separate layers around her head, covering the eyes. The complainant had suffered a single gunshot wound to the back of her head. At the scene, investigators recovered a 9-millimeter Winchester Luger spent shell cartridge positioned six feet from the complainant’s body.

On the night before the complainant’s body was discovered, the complainant’s family had filed a missing-person report with authorities after she failed to show up for a family function. Investigators learned that the complainant had been shopping at a department store on the afternoon of her disappearance. The complainant’s vehicle remained in the store’s parking lot, but she never returned home that evening. Inside the vehicle, investigators located a number of receipts from nearby stores and a fast food restaurant along with purchased merchandise.

A latent fingerprint examiner discovered one identifiable fingerprint on the sticky part of the duct tape that was the under layer of duct tape wrapped around the complainant’s head. Investigators traced the fingerprint to appellant, prepared a ―probable cause‖ affidavit, and obtained a search warrant and arrest warrant for appellant. Officers executed the warrants and arrested appellant at his apartment. Officers recovered the following items from appellant’s apartment: a receipt bearing appellant’s name for purchase of a 9-millimeter Beretta handgun, a box containing 9-millimeter Winchester Luger bullets, and a roll of duct tape found in the garage. Officers also collected DNA samples from the apartment. Officers took a vehicle that was in appellant’s possession1 to process it for possible evidence. None of the complainant’s fingerprints were found in appellant’s vehicle.

In the course of the investigation, officers obtained video footage from a retail store, depicting the complainant’s vehicle entering and exiting those premises; the

1 The record reflects that the vehicle belonged to appellant’s sister, but that appellant had borrowed the vehicle during the time period in question. 2 complainant was alone. Employees from a nearby fast food restaurant testified that the complainant was alone when she ordered food. Other video footage from the department store depicted the complainant entering the department store. Investigators also saw appellant in the store’s video footage and observed that he wore a black ball cap, a black jacket, a blue shirt, jeans, and dark-colored boots. The video reflects that appellant entered the store several minutes behind the complainant; as appellant stood in line to purchase an item, he repeatedly looked back into the area of the store where the complainant was shopping. In the video, appellant can be seen exiting the store and walking to a particular area of the parking lot outside of the scope of the camera’s lens; the complainant can be seen leaving the store several minutes later and walking to the same vicinity of the parking lot, where her vehicle was later found by family members that evening.

After reviewing the video footage, investigators obtained a second search warrant for appellant’s apartment in an effort to locate the clothing appellant wore as shown in the video. In executing this search warrant, officers recovered clothing they believed to be the clothing appellant was wearing when his image was captured by the store’s video camera. The clothing was found in appellant’s garage. A dog’s hair was found on the jacket and shirt that investigators seized from appellant’s apartment; DNA testing revealed that the dog hair found on appellant’s clothing, and also on the complainant’s clothing, was identical to the hair and DNA samples taken from the complainant’s pet, a dachshund.

A medical examiner performed an autopsy of the complainant’s body and determined that the complainant suffered a fatal gunshot wound to her head. The medical examiner recovered a fragmented bullet lodged in the complainant’s skull. The medical examiner took DNA samples from the complainant’s body and underneath her fingernails. DNA samples taken from the complainant’s left breast revealed that appellant could not be excluded as a possible ―minor contributor‖ of the DNA; the

3 complainant’s husband was excluded as a source of the DNA. The DNA sample taken from the complainant’s fingernails was traced to appellant as a possible ―minor contributor.‖

The results of one DNA sample retrieved from a toilet seat in appellant’s apartment revealed the complainant was a possible ―minor contributor‖ of the mixture of DNA; this particular DNA sample revealed that two individuals contributed DNA and appellant was the ―major contributor.‖ One expert theorized that one person’s DNA could be found in another person’s sink by indirect transfer such as washing one’s hands after having contact with another. A small piece of paper attached to the duct tape that bound the complainant’s wrists yielded a mixture of DNA in which neither the complainant nor appellant could be excluded as possible contributors. The tape that bound the complainant’s wrists revealed a mixture of DNA from at least three people; the complainant was the major contributor of the DNA, but appellant could not be excluded as a minor contributor of the DNA along with an unidentified male contributor. The tape that bound the complainant’s head revealed appellant’s fingerprint; but, DNA evidence reflects an unknown male as a source of DNA.

Appellant was charged with the offense of capital murder, to which he pleaded ―not guilty.‖ At trial, several investigators testified, along with the medical examiner and others who handled and tested physical evidence.

The trial record reflects that appellant and the complainant both graduated from the same local high school in the same year. Following graduation, they both lived within a few blocks of each other in the Austin area and attended classes at the same community college on the same campus at the same time. According to one high school classmate, appellant admitted seeing the complainant in Austin after graduation and appeared disturbed that the complainant acted as if she did not know him. Investigators learned that appellant told another classmate that he had moved to Austin to pursue an unnamed female. A waitress who knew appellant from a local establishment testified that

4 one day before his arrest, appellant asked her to travel around the country with him the following day and expressed a desire to move to Europe.

Both appellant’s father and appellant’s former roommate testified that appellant owned a 9-millimeter handgun and both men had been shooting with appellant before. When the roommate moved out of the apartment, several months before the offense, appellant still had possession of the firearm.

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Theodore Charles Schmidt v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/theodore-charles-schmidt-v-state-texapp-2012.