Whitaker, Thomas Bartlett

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 24, 2009
DocketAP-75,654
StatusPublished

This text of Whitaker, Thomas Bartlett (Whitaker, Thomas Bartlett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitaker, Thomas Bartlett, (Tex. 2009).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS NO. AP-75,654

THOMAS BARTLETT WHITAKER, Appellant

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

ON DIRECT APPEAL FROM CAUSE NO. 42,969 IN THE 400 TH DISTRICT COURT FORT BEND COUNTY

HERVEY , J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which KELLER , P.J., MEYERS, WOMACK , KEASLER , HOLCOMB and COCHRAN , JJ., joined. PRICE, and JOHNSON , JJ., concurred.

OPINION

Appellant was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death. He raises nine points of

error. Finding no merit in any of these points, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Appellant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction. We,

therefore, set out only a brief summary of the facts. The evidence shows that appellant led his family

to believe that he was enrolled in college and was about to graduate. None of this was true. On Whitaker--2

December 10, 2003, appellant and his father, mother and younger brother went out to dinner to

celebrate appellant’s “graduation.” When they arrived home, appellant’s roommate (Brashear) was

inside, and he shot and killed appellant’s mother and brother and wounded appellant’s father as they

entered the home. Appellant knew that Brashear was waiting inside the home intending to murder

appellant’s entire family. He knew that another individual (Champagne) was waiting outside in a

getaway car.1 Since at least 2000, appellant had planned with several other individuals, at different

times, to murder his family.2 He made at least one unsuccessful attempt to murder his family prior

to December 10, 2003. His motive was money.

In June 2004, as the police investigation focused on appellant, appellant stole $10,000 from

his father and fled to Mexico where he was apprehended about 15 months later. Appellant’s father

(Kent) hired a lawyer to represent appellant. Appellant’s family attempted to persuade the

prosecutor not to seek the death penalty against appellant. Appellant’s original lawyer, or another

lawyer in his office, also made a written “proffer” to the prosecutor. This proffer apparently

contained admissions of guilt by appellant, appellant’s offer to plead guilty in exchange for two

consecutive life sentences, and appellant’s father’s plea to the prosecutor to accept the offer. This

proffer was not admitted into evidence and is not part of the appellate record.

Appellant was represented by another lawyer at trial. The defense all but conceded

The evidence also shows that appellant walked past his wounded father, his dying mother and his dead brother so that Brashear could shoot appellant in the shoulder, as they had planned, in order to direct suspicion away from appellant’s involvement in the offense. 2

Champagne testified that, in February 2004, appellant “was talking about how his father survived, and it wasn’t finished.” Whitaker--3

appellant’s guilt at the guilt phase.3 At the punishment phase, appellant’s mitigation case was,

among other things, that appellant was sorry and that neither his father nor members of his mother’s

side of the family wanted him to be sentenced to death and that these family members had to bear

the ordeal of a trial because the State would not accept appellant’s offer to plead guilty in exchange

for the two consecutive life sentences. Emphasizing that the State did not seek the death penalty

against the shooter (Brashear),4 the defense also seemed to suggest that the prosecution unfairly

sought the death penalty against appellant over issues related to the proffer. The defense argued to

the jury at the punishment phase:

The bottom line, too, is, let’s just talk about this: How we got here, how you actually got into these chairs. All right? After all of the crimes that were committed, and the coward is running, [appellant] was actually retrieved and put in jail. He has a lawyer, a long-time friend of Bo Bartlett’s, Dan Cogdell, who is a very good lawyer. I used to office with him at one time, I’ve tried cases with him. He is a good lawyer. And he comes in, and he’s talking to, I guess the prosecutor, Mr. Felcman, who has been involved in this case from day one. And whatever communications they’re having, I don’t know. I have no idea what they were talking about, but, obviously, there is some miscommunication going on, because they’re talking about trying to settle this case at that time, trying to not have a jury in the box to make a life-and-death decision, not having to put the Whitakers and the Bartletts through this horrible event, and somehow it breaks down. Now, where does it break down? We know. We know by the way that Mr. Felcman reacts in the courtroom with it. It breaks down with this phone call to [appellant’s] dad talking about a number of years. You know, “bring in the big guns.” You know, Dan Cogdell is a big gun, there’s no question about it. Okay? And apparently, somebody else in his office has been over there preparing proffers, and the proffers are wrong, and they’re not even [appellant’s]. He told you that yesterday. So, obviously, Mr. Felcman, “Well, you know, I look at this case, and this manipulation, I see this conspiracy thing going on,

The evidence of appellant’s guilt is overwhelming. We also note that, during its closing jury arguments at the guilt phase, the defense stated that appellant is “absolutely guilty,” but still urged the jury to examine the evidence until it knew that “the State actually has proven their case.” 4

Members of appellant’s family testified that a life sentence would be an appropriate punishment for appellant especially since the State did not seek the death penalty against Brashear. Whitaker--4

and you know what? That guy hasn’t learned his lesson yet.” That’s what he’s thinking. “You know, I’m not going to be manipulated with lawyers, I’m not going to have ‘Lawyer 101’ played on me. I’m not going to do that.” And they make the decision to seek the death penalty, the only two options in that case. For whatever reason, Mr. Cogdell is off the case, and I’m on the case. I don’t know one fact about this case other than what I might have read in the paper, and I probably wouldn’t have paid any attention to it, to be honest with you. And I come in here, and the first day that I actually come into court and substitute in, I go to the District Attorney’s office and meet with Mr. Healey and Mr. Felcman, and we are talking about trying–they’re already seeking the death penalty–trying to resolve this case, and we are offering to plead to a life sentence. That’s not something taken lightly. We are offering to end this and to put him in the penitentiary for life. That is rejected. I do get familiar with the facts, and they are horrible facts, killing of one’s family, a mother and brother. We come back, we offer more, more life sentences. We bring the family in. We bring Bo Bartlett in here. And, you know, he is an incredible person. I don’t really know him, but that testimony yesterday, he is telling you the honest truth about this case. He is a victim. His family is a victim. We’re telling the same things to the prosecutor, Mr. Healy and Mr. Strange. More life sentences, any way you want to structure it for him to be in life–in prison for life, and he is going to plead guilty, you know. That’s almost why it bothers me so much when they say, “Why didn’t you just plead guilty? Why didn’t you just plead guilty?” We have offered to plead guilty. That offer was never withdrawn. It’s open right now, throughout the trial. And you need to know those facts. Okay? *** Now, let’s look at this. The State, in pursuing this instead of settling it–and it’s certainly their call, and I cannot do a thing about it.

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