Timothy Wade Foth v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 4, 2019
Docket03-18-00085-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Timothy Wade Foth v. State (Timothy Wade Foth 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
Timothy Wade Foth v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-18-00085-CR

Timothy Wade Foth, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BLANCO COUNTY, 33RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. CR01392, HONORABLE J. ALLAN GARRETT, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Under a single indictment, Timothy Wade Foth was charged with one count each

of aggravated robbery and aggravated kidnapping and four counts of aggravated sexual assault.

See Tex. Penal Code §§ 20.04(a)-(c), 22.021(a), (e), 29.02(a), .03(a)-(b). The offenses all involved

the same alleged victim. A jury found Foth guilty of all of the charged offenses except one

count of aggravated sexual assault. At the punishment phase, the jury sentenced Foth to 50 years’

imprisonment for the aggravated robbery, to life imprisonment for each of the three aggravated-

sexual-assault offenses, and to 99 years’ imprisonment for aggravated kidnapping. See id. § 12.32.

The district court rendered its judgments of conviction per the jury’s verdicts. In three issues on

appeal, Foth contends that the district court’s allegedly improper involvement in the plea-bargain

process and in his decision regarding whether to testify at trial violated his due-process rights and that the district court erred by allowing into evidence testimony regarding pubic-hair comparisons.

We will affirm the district court’s judgments of conviction.

BACKGROUND

Before trial, the district court called a “plea deadline docket.” During that hearing,

the district court asked Foth whether he understood “that today was the plea deadline date,” and

Foth answered, “Yes.” Next, the district court confirmed that no plea offer had been made until

recently and asked the State to list the terms of the plea offer. The State explained that it was

offering a punishment of 40 years’ imprisonment for the offenses if Foth pleaded guilty “to one or

two or three of the counts” and that the punishments would run concurrently. Additionally, the State

related that there was a motion to revoke Foth’s community supervision in a separate case and that

the punishments assessed in this case would run “concurrently to” the punishment assessed as part

of the revocation proceeding. Both Foth and his attorney agreed with the State’s rendition of the

offer. Then, the district court asked Foth whether he understood that the punishments for the alleged

offenses could be “stacked” if the jury found him guilty of more than one of the charged offenses,

and Foth answered, “Yes, Your Honor.” Further, the district court asked Foth if he had time to

discuss with his attorney the potential punishments that might be assessed and if he understood the

State’s plea offer, and Foth answered, “Yes,” to both questions. Following that exchange, the district

court inquired whether Foth wanted to accept or reject the plea offer, and Foth stated that he wanted

to reject the offer. Shortly thereafter, Foth’s attorney questioned Foth regarding whether he would

still reject the plea offer if the State reduced the punishment to 30 years, and Foth explained that he

2 would reject a plea offer with those terms as well. Finally, the district court stated that the day of

the hearing was the last day that the court would have accepted a plea-bargain agreement.

After the hearing, the case was set for trial. During the trial, the State called as

witnesses K.R. (the victim); Officer Michelle Briggs, who responded to a 911 call regarding K.R.;

Detective Benjamin Ablon, who investigated the scene of the alleged crimes; Debbie Coats, who

performed a sexual-assault-nurse examination (SANE) on K.R.; Lindsey Bynum, who compared

hair fragments recovered from the scene with pubic hairs collected from K.R.; and Delilah Palmer,

who performed DNA testing on samples recovered from the scene and from K.R.’s SANE kit.

Foth offered to give K.R. a ride in his car but drove her to his house instead. At his

house, Foth forced K.R. to engage in multiple sexual acts over a period of several hours, strangled

her to the point of losing consciousness, tied her to a pool table, and shaved her genitals. During the

assault, K.R.’s personal property was taken, and the property was later discovered in Foth’s home.

During the investigation of the offense, the police found pubic hair in Foth’s home near where K.R.

had been tied to a pool table, a disposable razor, and a pair of electric clippers.

During the trial, the State called Bynum to testify regarding pubic-hair comparisons

that she performed between a pubic-hair standard collected from K.R. after the alleged offenses and

fragments collected from Foth’s home. Before discussing the comparisons, Bynum stated that the

structure and shape of pubic hairs can change over time and that the comparisons were made over

a year after the alleged offenses. Regarding fragments recovered from the razor collected from the

scene, Bynum related that three of the “pubic hair fragments [we]re microscopically dissimilar to

[K.R.]’s pubic hair standard” and concluded that those pubic hairs did not come from K.R. Next,

3 Bynum stated that she compared pubic-hair fragments collected from the electric clippers recovered

from Foth’s home with K.R.’s pubic-hair standard, that one of the fragments had similarities to and

differences from K.R.’s pubic hair so no determination could be made regarding whether it was one

of K.R.’s hairs, and that five fragments were so dissimilar from K.R.’s pubic hair that Bynum

determined that the fragments did not belong to K.R. Further, Bynum discussed comparisons that

she performed on 66 other hair fragments, including pubic-hair fragments, collected from Foth’s

home, and she revealed that the hair fragments were dissimilar to K.R.’s pubic hair and opined that

none of those fragments came from K.R. Bynum explained that she also compared another 100

pubic-hair fragments that were collected as a “clump” from Foth’s home and recalled that they were

“visually similar to the victim’s pubic hair standard,” but she stated that no determination could be

made regarding whether they belonged to K.R. because it was a limited comparison. Finally, during

her cross-examination, Bynum summarized her analysis as indicating that the fragments that she

examined were either not a match to K.R. or that the results were “inconclusive.”

In addition, the State called Palmer to the stand as its last witness to discuss DNA

testing that she performed as part of the investigation in this case. Regarding the results of her

testing, Palmer testified that testing performed on epithelial cells from a sample of a “dried

secretion” collected from K.R.’s body was consistent with a mixture of DNA from K.R. and Foth.

Palmer related that she performed DNA testing on samples taken from the handle and the razor of

the electric hair clippers collected from Foth’s home and that the results were consistent with a

mixture of DNA from K.R. and Foth.

4 After the State called its last witness, the following exchange occurred during a

hearing outside the presence of the jury:

[District Court]: I’ll step out if you need to speak with your client or do anything on the record.

[Foth’s attorney]: We’ve already spoken, Your Honor, so it can be on the record.

[District Court]: Okay.

[Foth’s attorney]: And for the limited purpose of my client’s rights against self- incrimination under the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution . . .

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