Wright, Susan Lucille v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 17, 2005
Docket14-04-00244-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Wright, Susan Lucille v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion filed November 17, 2005

Affirmed and Opinion filed November 17, 2005.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-04-00244-CR

SUSAN LUCILLE WRIGHT, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 263rd District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 937,134

O P I N I O N

Susan Lucille Wright was accused of murdering her husband, Jeff Wright, whose body was found with almost 200 stab wounds.  Appellant admitted that she inflicted all the stab wounds, but claimed she began stabbing her husband in self-defense.  The State argued that she planned the murder and, to underscore that point, two prosecutors staged an in-court demonstration on the couple=s bed to show how appellant would have accomplished the murder.


A jury found appellant guilty of first-degree murder in the death of her husband, and assessed her punishment at twenty-five years= confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division.  Appellant=s primary issue on appeal is that the trial court erred in permitting the prosecution to stage an in-court demonstration of its theory of how Jeff Wright died, because it caused the jurors to confuse high drama with reality. 

Appellant claimed her husband raped her and then threatened to kill her with a knife.  Hearing the threat, appellant struggled with Jeff Wright for the knife and, during the struggle, stabbed him.  Thus, appellant claims she began acting in self-defense.  The State, on the other hand, claimed appellant seduced her husband, tied his arms and legs to the bed as part of the seduction, and then murdered him.  The in-court demonstration showed where and with what appellant tied her husband and the location of the knife wounds.

Appellant=s argument regarding the demonstration seems to be that, if the State has no eyewitnesses to the event, Rule 602 of the Texas Rules of Evidence prevents the State from staging the demonstration because its witness would have no personal knowledge of the staged events.  We hold that the demonstration was based on two types of valid testimony: (1) testimony about which the witness did have personal knowledge; and (2) lay opinion testimony presenting reasonable inferences from the evidence of which the State=s witness had personal knowledge.  See Tex. R. Evid. 602, 701. 

This valid testimony revealed a theory of the crime deduced from the crime scene itself and the many clues available at the sceneCincluding the deceased=s body, its many wounds, the bed, and the ligatures, or bindings, on the arms and ankle.  Because the demonstration was based on evidence and accurately portrayed that evidence, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in allowing it.  In addition, we conclude that the demonstration was not unfairly prejudicial to appellant.  We also overrule appellant=s other issues concerning alleged error (1) in the trial court=s refusal to hold a hearing on appellant=s motion for new trial, and (2) in the prosecutor=s arguments to the jury.  As a result of these rulings, we affirm the trial court=s judgment.


Factual Background

Appellant was married to Jeff Wright.  On Saturday, January 18, 2003, officers from the Harris County Precinct 4 Constable=s Office investigated a report of a dead body in the yard of the Wright home.  In the backyard, they discovered Jeff Wright=s partially-buried body in a shallow hole next to a patio.  The officers also found a mattress, box springs, comforter and headboard in the backyard.  The mattress was soaked with blood.  Inside the home, one wall of the master bedroom had been freshly painted and a piece of the carpet had been cut out; painting supplies, a box cutter, and scissors were found in the room.  Blood spatters were seen on the curtains and other items in the bedroom.  A receipt for two gallons of bleach, bleach-stained size 6 jeans, and a towel also were found.

The medical examiner concluded Jeff Wright died of multiple sharp-force injuries.  He had been stabbed at least 193 times.  Among these injuries, Jeff suffered 41 stab wounds to his face, 23 to his neck, 46 to his chest, 22 to his abdomen, 7 to his pubic region, including a superficial cut on his penis, 19 to his legs, 23 to his arms and hand, and one to his back.  The tip of a knife was broken off in the top of his skull.  Jeff Wright=s body was found nude, but he had what were described as Aligatures@ on his arms and one leg; specifically, tied around each wrist was a necktie, and tied around the right ankle was what appeared to be a part of a bathrobe sash.  Candle wax was found on Jeff Wright=s thigh and scrotum.  It was later determined that Jeff Wright had been killed on January 13, 2003, five days before his body was found.  Appellant was charged with his murder and, in early 2004, her trial began.

Opening Statements


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