Tracy, Billy Joel

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 1, 2020
DocketAP-77,076
StatusPublished

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Tracy, Billy Joel, (Tex. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS NO. AP-77,076

BILLY JOEL TRACY, Appellant

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

ON DIRECT APPEAL FROM CAUSE NO. 15F0677-102 IN THE 102ND JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT BOWIE COUNTY

K ELLER, P.J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which K EASLER, H ERVEY , R ICHARDSON, Y EARY, N EWELL, K EEL and S LAUGHTER, JJ., joined. W ALKER, J. concurred.

In 2015, while he was incarcerated in a penal institution, Appellant killed Correctional

Officer Timothy Davison. For this, a jury convicted Appellant of capital murder.1 In accord with

the jury’s answers to the special issues, the trial court sentenced him to death.2 In his direct appeal

1 See TEX . PENAL CODE § 19.03(a)(5)(A). 2 See TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 37.071 § 2(b), (e), and (g). Unless otherwise indicated, all future references to Articles refer to the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. TRACY - 2

to this Court,3 Appellant raises fourteen points of error. After reviewing them, we find them to be

without merit. Consequently, we shall affirm the judgment of the trial court.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

A. Background

Appellant began his life of crime at age seventeen. His arrest for a number of offenses led

to a three year prison sentence for retaliation in 1995. Over the next twenty years, most of which he

spent in prison, his offenses became more brutal.

One night in 1998, Appellant entered the home of an acquaintance, Kasey Kuhn, through an

open window and demanded that she have sex with him. Biting and hitting him, Kuhn refused.

Appellant covered her face with a pillow and choked her until he thought she was dead. Once she

lost consciousness, Appellant dropped her out of her window, put her in his car, and began driving

around. When Kuhn regained consciousness, Appellant pulled the car over and beat her until she

lost consciousness again. He then pulled her out of the car and dragged her into the woods.

Police Officer Paul Britt noticed Appellant’s car on the side of the road, found the situation

suspicious, and investigated. As he got out of his car, Officer Britt heard “help me help me.” He

saw Appellant on the ground by the car with blood on his hands and believed that he was drunk.

Officer Britt pulled his weapon and approached Appellant. Appellant ran away and, while evading

arrest, broke into and hid in a number of homes. He took cash and jewelry from some of the homes.

After Appellant ran off, Officer Britt noticed Kuhn, who was covered in blood and appeared

to have had her throat slit. Kuhn was transported to the hospital where she was treated for injuries

3 TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 37.071 § 2(h). TRACY - 3

that included a broken orbital bone, broken nose, and lost teeth. She underwent surgery to have a

plate put in the left side of her face to hold the bones together. Kuhn, sixteen at the time of the

assault, suffered debilitating migraines and permanent injury to her vision.

While awaiting trial on these charges, Appellant was involved in a number of incidents at the

Rockwall County Jail. He threw feces and urine at corrections officers, threatened inmates and

officers, attacked other inmates, and was found in possession of contraband. He was considered by

one law enforcement officer to be “the most difficult inmate he ever had to deal with.” Appellant

also attempted to escape from the jail. He slipped his handcuffs off, took an officer’s gun, pointed

it at officers, and fired two shots that, fortunately, missed the officers.

Appellant was convicted of aggravated assault, assault on a public servant, and several counts

of burglary of a habitation. He was sentenced to life in prison and sent to the Allred Unit of the

Texas Department of Corrections.

While at the Allred Unit, Appellant committed twenty-seven assaults on staff members,

threatened to kill correctional officers, threw darts at guards from his cell, and was caught in

possession of contraband so often that his cell was searched every four hours. His behavior was so

erratic and non-compliant that pepper spray and other chemical agents were used numerous times

to subdue him. Appellant converted a welding rod into a shank and stabbed a guard in the shoulder,

which resulted in his transfer to the Clements Unit.

There, in 2005, Appellant attacked Officer Katie Stanley with a piece of metal that had been

fashioned into a shank. He stabbed Stanley seven times, kicked her in the head, and lifted her up in

an unsuccessful attempt to throw her over the railing of the third floor. A video of this assault was TRACY - 4

created to show to new correctional officers during training. Appellant pleaded guilty to aggravated

assault with a deadly weapon on a public servant, aggravated assault causing serious bodily injury

on a public servant, and possession of a deadly weapon in a penal institution. He received a forty-

five year sentence and was transferred to the Robertson Unit.

Appellant’s behavioral issues continued. He was frequently found in possession of

contraband such as needles, homemade screwdrivers, protractors, sandpaper, razor blades, and

sharpened pieces of metal. He also tampered with a lock and threatened corrections officers. In

2009, Appellant attacked Officer Brian Lomas with a weapon fashioned from razor blades.

Appellant slashed the razor blades across Lomas’s face, resulting in injuries that required over 200

stitches. Appellant received a ten year sentence for assault on a public servant and was transferred

to the Hughes Unit.

At the Hughes Unit, Appellant was found in possession of contraband. He defeated the

facility’s x-ray machine, the purpose of which is to detect material coming into the prison, by hiding

contraband between two legal mail folders and using tape to deflect detection. In 2014, officers

noticed Appellant and two other inmates spending a significant amount of time together and

speaking in Spanish. An interpreter determined that they were discussing a plan to escape. Officers

separated them and searched their cells; they found sandpaper, saw blades, a homemade dremel tool,

and other contraband in Appellant’s cell. Officers discovered that the inmates had used the tools to

cut through metal bars in the recreation area to facilitate the escape, and then painted over the cuts

to conceal them. After this escape attempt, Appellant was transferred to the Telford Unit. TRACY - 5

B. Instant Offense

On July 15, 2015, Timothy Davison was employed at the Telford Unit as a correctional

officer. He worked in the section of administrative segregation housing to which Appellant was

assigned. Davison’s murder, as well as the events leading up to and after the murder, were captured

on prison surveillance cameras.

Appellant was escorted by a correctional officer to recreation, where he spent his time

stretching in preparation for his assault on Officer Davison. Appellant was then escorted back to his

cell by Officer Davison. Davison was equipped with chemical pepper spray and a metal slot bar used

by guards to open cell doors and food tray slots. The slot bar was a solid metal bar with a pipe-like

handle and a flat piece of metal at the end. As Appellant was escorted back to his cell, he

manipulated his hand restraints and placed them both on his right wrist. When Officer Davison

opened Appellant’s cell door, Appellant struck him with his fists until Davison was knocked to the

floor.

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