Winfrey, Megan AKA Megan Winfrey Hammond

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 27, 2013
DocketPD-0943-11
StatusPublished

This text of Winfrey, Megan AKA Megan Winfrey Hammond (Winfrey, Megan AKA Megan Winfrey Hammond) 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
Winfrey, Megan AKA Megan Winfrey Hammond, (Tex. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS

NO. PD-0943-11

MEGAN WINFREY, A.K.A. MEGAN WINFREY HAMMOND, Appellant

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

ON APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW FROM THE NINTH COURT OF APPEALS SAN JACINTO COUNTY

J OHNSON, J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which P RICE, W OMACK, K EASLER, H ERVEY, C OCHRAN, and A LCALÁ, JJ., joined. K ELLER, P.J., filed a dissenting opinion. M EYERS, J., dissented.

OPINION

In August 2004, Murray Burr, a man who worked at the local high school that appellant

attended, was found dead in his home with numerous stab wounds and multiple sharp- and blunt-

force injuries. Appellant was sixteen years old in 2004. In 2007, after an investigation that included

dog-scent lineups, appellant and her father and brother were taken into custody and charged with the

murder. Her indictment contained two counts: capital murder during the course of robbery and

conspiracy to commit capital murder. Her father and brother were named as co-conspirators in the 2

conspiracy count. A jury convicted appellant of both counts. The trial court sentenced appellant to

life imprisonment for the capital-murder count and forty-five years’ imprisonment for the conspiracy

count. The court of appeals affirmed the convictions, with one justice dissenting. Megan Winfrey

v. State, 338 S.W.3d 687, 689 (Tex. App.–Beaumont 2011).1 We reverse the judgment of the court

of appeals and render acquittals on both counts.

Facts

In August 2004, Murray Wayne Burr was found murdered in his home. Evidence at trial

indicated that the victim had been stabbed or cut twenty-five times in the head and neck area and

three times in the torso and had also received multiple blunt-force trauma that produced a broken

right jaw and eye orbit. No other injuries were noted by the assistant medical examiner.

There was no evidence of forced entry into the victim’s home. A blood trail indicated that

the victim had been dragged from his living room into his bedroom, where his body was found, but

there was no indication of a violent struggle. Shortly after the murder, family members reported that

the only item that they thought was missing from the victim’s home was a Bible. His wallet was in

the house, and except for the blood and the body, nothing in the home appeared to be disturbed.

Some time later, a relative said that he thought that two guns were missing.

Investigators collected hair, blood and DNA samples, a bloody footprint, and fingerprints

from various places in the house and a DNA swab from women’s underwear that was found in

Burr’s bedroom. They also took a casting of a footprint in the front yard. Hair samples recovered

1 Appellant’s father, also accused of this capital murder, was convicted of the lesser-included offense of murder. His conviction was affirmed by the court of appeals but, on discretionary review, we reversed his conviction and entered a judgment of acquittal. Id. at 885. A jury acquitted appellant’s brother of this same capital murder and conspiracy. Richard Winfrey v. State, 323 S.W .3d 875, 876, n.1 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010). 3

from Burr’s body contained a partial female DNA profile. The DNA profiles that were developed

from the collected items either matched the victim or did not match any of at least nine individuals

who were questioned in regard to the murder. No physical evidence connected appellant or her

family to the scene, nor were she or any member of her family connected to the property assumed

to be missing from Burr’s home. Megan Winfrey v. State, 338 S.W.3d at 689. The only evidence

that purported to directly connect appellant to the crime scene was a “scent lineup” conducted by

Keith Pikett.

At appellant’s trial, before Deputy Pikett testified, Ranger Grover Huff testified that he had

witnessed the scent lineup for appellant’s scent samples. He noted that the grass was too high to see

the cans on the video of the lineup and that Deputy Pikett “is having me reposition the cans. She [the

bloodhound] doesn’t react. The wind had switched or something. You could tell by the way the

grass was.”

Deputy Pikett testified that, at the 2007 dog-scent lineups, the two dogs both alerted on

appellant’s scent sample.2 Pikett indicated that the dog alerts reflected that the dogs alerted to her

scent being on Burr’s clothes, indicating that appellant had had contact with Burr’s clothing.3

In August of 2004, appellant voluntarily consented to an interview with a Texas Ranger who

was investigating this murder and voluntarily provided buccal swabs, scent pads, and fingerprints

to him. In August of 2006, pursuant to a court order, a deputy sheriff attempted to obtain a pubic-

2 An “alert” occurs when the dog matches a scent collected from the victim to the suspect’s scent pad. Richard Winfrey v. State, 323 S.W .3d at 877, n.3. In this case, Deputy Pikett indicated that the dogs alert in different manners. E.g.,“James Bond is going to turn 90 degrees if he finds the right can[,]” while “Quincy is going to turn sideways and bark, and Clue is going to turn and jump on [Pikett].” V R.R. 74. But ultimately Pikett makes the decision as to whether a dog has alerted. V R.R. 75-76.

3 W e note that the time at which a scent was left on an item cannot be determined. 4

hair sample from appellant, but it was determined that she had shaved that morning; the deputy did

obtain such a sample thirty days later. The deputy testified that appellant voluntarily consented when

the second request was made.

Appellant’s ex-boyfriend, Jason King, who had dated her for six months after the murder,

testified that appellant had received information that a search warrant was going to be conducted for

her pubic hair and that she then shaved herself. King also testified that, after the shaving incident,

when appellant received a phone call informing her that her brother had been arrested, she went to

see her ex-husband, Hammond, and spoke with him about having attended a concert together around

the time of the murder. “King understood the conversation as an attempt to establish an alibi.”4

Megan Winfrey, 338 S.W.3d at 695. King also related that, while they were “partying and drinking,”

appellant had told him that going into Burr’s home “was an easy lick,” which he took to mean she

would get money.

Karen Robertson, a teacher or teacher’s assistant from appellant’s high school,5 testified that,

in the summer of 2004, she saw appellant approach Burr at school and ask him, “When are you going

to take me out and spend that money that you have? We know you have that money hid [sic] at

home.” In the state’s rebuttal, another teacher testified to overhearing appellant refer to Burr and say,

“Somebody should beat the shit out of him,” although that teacher acknowledged that appellant then

apologized to the teacher and said she did not mean to have said that aloud and that she lived near

Burr and “was just tired of all his cats.” Other evidence showed, and appellant conceded, that on

4 It was established at trial that the concert that appellant and Hammond attended was on the day the victim’s body was discovered. Appellant did not raise the concert as an alibi.

5 At the time of trial, Robertson was employed as the Crime Victim Assistant Coordinator for the local district attorney’s office. 5

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