WOOD, DAVID v. the State of Texas ( 2024 )


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  •              IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    OF TEXAS
    NO. AP-77,107
    DAVID LEONARD WOOD, Appellant
    v.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS
    ON DIRECT APPEAL FROM DENIAL OF MOTION FOR
    FORENSIC DNA TESTING IN CAUSE NO. 58,486-171
    FROM THE 171ST DISTRICT COURT
    EL PASO COUNTY
    KELLER, P.J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which HERVEY, YEARY,
    NEWELL, KEEL, WALKER, SLAUGHTER and MCCLURE, JJ., joined. RICHARDSON, J., did
    not participate.
    OPINION
    Three young women and three teenaged girls disappeared from the El Paso area in the three
    and a half months between May 13, 1987 and August 27, 1987. Their bodies were later found buried
    in shallow graves. In 1992, Appellant was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death for
    WOOD — 2
    killing these individuals. We affirmed his conviction and sentence on direct appeal in 1995.1
    Appellant filed a state habeas application in 1997, and we denied relief in 2001.2
    Since that time, Appellant has litigated a second habeas application and has filed multiple
    motions (or amended motions) for DNA testing. The first DNA motion was granted in November
    2010, and DNA testing was conducted in 2011. But the remaining DNA motions resulted in
    proceedings that stretched over a decade, with the trial court ultimately denying DNA testing on
    March 3, 2022. During that more-than-a-decade-long period, Appellant filed serial DNA motions
    that have requested testing on progressively more or different items, and he filed a number of
    ancillary motions, including motions to disqualify the trial judge and to disqualify the assistant
    attorney general serving as counsel for the State. And after the denial of DNA testing, Appellant
    sought to disqualify the assistant attorney general on the basis of a new legal theory. Appellant has
    appealed the 2022 denial of testing and now raises six issues, only two of which directly address the
    question of whether he should have been granted DNA testing of biological evidence.3 Appellant
    has also filed several motions with this Court concurrently with his reply brief,4 including a motion
    1
    Wood v. State, No. AP-71,594 (Tex. Crim. App. December 13, 1995) (not designated for
    publication).
    2
    Ex Parte Wood, No. WR-45,746-01 (Tex. Crim. App. Sept. 19, 2001) (not designated for
    publication).
    3
    Before filing his brief, Appellant filed a motion asking for three things: (1) to abate for
    findings of fact, (2) to assign a new trial judge, and (3) to reassign the district attorney as the
    representative of the State. The requests in this motion duplicate issues raised and addressed in the
    appellate brief, and our disposition of his issues disposes of these requests as well. The motion is
    denied.
    4
    After asking for and receiving extra time to file a reply brief, Appellant has filed a motion
    to exceed the word count by 3,500 words. We deny his motion. The reply brief has not been filed,
    because it exceeds the word count and we have not granted his motion, but we have “accepted” the
    WOOD — 3
    to certify one of our judges as “disqualified” and to have the Governor appoint a replacement judge
    for this case. Concluding that none of Appellant’s issues have merit, we affirm the trial court’s
    order. Our holdings include a determination that Appellant fails to meet the second prong of Article
    64.03(a)(2): he has failed to show that his subsequent DNA testing requests have not been made to
    unreasonably delay the execution of sentence.5
    A. Absence of Findings of Fact
    In issue one, Appellant contends that the trial court was required to issue findings of fact.
    We disagree.
    Appellant did not request findings of fact from the trial court, so the issue here is whether the
    statute requires findings absent such a request.6 Whether findings of fact are required depends on
    the construction of the statutory scheme set out in Chapter 64. We interpret a statute in accordance
    with the plain meaning of its text unless the text is ambiguous or the plain meaning leads to absurd
    results that the legislature could not have possibly intended.7 In ascertaining the plain meaning of
    the text of an amended statute, “we consider the statutory language as if it had originally been
    enacted in its amended form, mindful that the Legislature, by amending the statute, may have altered
    brief, similar to how we accept amicus briefs. See Ex parte Taylor, 
    36 S.W.3d 883
    , 887 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2001). We have considered the contentions in that brief and have responded where appropriate.
    5
    See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 64.03(a)(2)(B).
    6
    We need not decide whether Appellant would have been entitled to findings on request
    under State v. Cullen, 
    195 S.W.3d 696
     (Tex. Crim. App. 2006). See 
    id. at 700
     (requiring a trial
    court, in the motion-to-suppress context, “to express its findings of fact and conclusions of law when
    requested by the losing party.”).
    7
    In re Smith, 
    665 S.W.3d 449
    , 460 (Tex. Crim. App. 2022); Boykin v. State, 
    818 S.W.2d 782
    , 785 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991).
    WOOD — 4
    or clarified the meaning of earlier provisions.”8
    Article 64.03(a) provides:
    (a) A convicting court may order forensic DNA testing under this chapter only if:
    (1) the court finds that:
    (A) the evidence:
    (i) still exists and is in a condition making DNA testing possible; and
    (ii) has been subjected to a chain of custody sufficient to establish that it has not been
    substituted, tampered with, replaced, or altered in any material respect;
    (B) there is a reasonable likelihood that the evidence contains biological material
    suitable for DNA testing; and
    (C) identity was or is an issue in the case; and
    (2) the convicted person establishes by a preponderance of the evidence that:
    (A) the person would not have been convicted if exculpatory results had been
    obtained through DNA testing; and
    (B) the request for the proposed DNA testing is not made to unreasonably delay the
    execution of sentence or administration of justice.9
    Article 64.03(a)(1) sets out some circumstances that must exist in order for a court to order DNA
    testing.10 It authorizes a court to order testing only if it “finds” that those circumstances do exist.11
    Subsection (a)(2) then requires the moving party to “show” by a preponderance of the evidence that
    8
    State v. Green, 
    682 S.W.3d 253
    , 264 (Tex. Crim. App. 2024).
    9
    TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 64.03(a).
    10
    
    Id.
     art. 64.03(a)(1). Examples are that the evidence still exists and that there is a
    reasonable likelihood that it contains biological material suitable for DNA testing. 
    Id.
    11
    
    Id.
    WOOD — 5
    he would not have been convicted and that the motion is not to unreasonably delay the execution of
    sentence or administration of justice.12 Subsection (c) then provides: “If the convicting court finds
    in the affirmative the issues listed in Subsection (a)(1) and the convicted person meets the
    requirements of Subsection (a)(2), the court shall order that the requested forensic DNA testing be
    conducted.”13 The only reference to a finding in the statute, then, is finding “in the affirmative” that
    the circumstances under Subsection (a)(1) have been established, as one step toward what is
    necessary to order DNA testing. There is no requirement that a court make findings if it determines
    that a person has failed to establish those matters.
    This contrasts with Article 64.04, which requires that, after DNA testing, the trial court make
    a finding regardless of which way the issue is decided: “After examining the results of testing under
    Article 64.03 and any comparison of a DNA profile under Article 64.035, the convicting court shall
    hold a hearing and make a finding as to whether, had the results been available during the trial of the
    offense, it is reasonably probable that the person would not have been convicted.”14
    In asking that this Court remand for specific findings, Appellant relies on Skinner v.
    State15 and on an unpublished order in Reed v. State16 and argues that we should adopt the reasoning
    in those cases. We disagree for several reasons. First, Reed is unpublished and therefore is not
    12
    
    Id.
     art. 64.03(a)(2).
    13
    
    Id.
     art. 64.03(c).
    14
    
    Id.
     art. 64.04.
    15
    
    122 S.W.3d 808
     (Tex. Crim. App. 2003).
    16
    No. AP-77,054, 
    2016 WL 3626329
     (Tex. Crim. App. June 29, 2016) (not designated for
    publication).
    WOOD — 6
    binding, or even persuasive, authority.17 Second, Appellant’s construction is contrary to the plain
    language of the Chapter 64 scheme as it existed at the time Appellant filed his motions (and as it
    exists today).
    A relevant portion of Chapter 64 was previously worded differently than it is today and
    resulted in the statutory scheme being construed more in line with Appellant’s contention. Before
    2003, Article 64.05 stated, “An appeal of a finding under Article 64.03 or 64.04 is to a court of
    appeals, except that if the convicted person was convicted in a capital case, the appeal of the finding
    is a direct appeal to the court of criminal appeals.”18
    In Kutzner v. State, we addressed whether an appeal could be made under the pre-2003
    scheme from the denial under Article 64.03 of DNA testing on the basis of “conclusions” that
    Kutzner failed to meet the requirements of Article 64.03(a)(2).19 We observed that Senate Bill 3
    (now codified as Chapter 64) as originally drafted did not authorize an appeal of any of the trial
    judge’s Chapter 64 determinations.20 Later, by amendment, wording was added to allow appeal of
    “findings” under Article 64.04.21 Even later in the legislative process, the language was revised to
    17
    See Skinner v. State, 
    293 S.W.3d 196
    , 202 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) (Rule 77.3 “prohibits
    the use of an unpublished opinion as authority of any sort, whether binding or persuasive.”); TEX.
    R. APP. P. 77.3 (“Unpublished opinions have no precedential value and must not be cited as authority
    by counsel or by a court.”).
    18
    TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 64.05 (West 2002).
    19
    
    75 S.W.3d 427
    , 432-35 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002).
    20
    Id. at 434.
    21
    Id.
    WOOD — 7
    authorize appeal of a “finding” under Article 64.03 or 64.04.22 In Kutzner, we read “findings” in
    Article 64.05 broadly, to include “conclusions of law.”23 We said that this reading was necessary
    to avoid absurd results that would occur by treating people differently based on whether a trial
    court’s determination was labeled a “finding” or a “conclusion.”24
    In Skinner, this Court addressed findings in a DNA motion that was denied under the pre-
    2003 scheme.25 There, the trial court’s findings consisted merely of the general statement that the
    moving party failed to meet the requirements of Article 64.03.26 The Court suggested that “the trial
    court should provide determinations under the statute,” that the trial court’s general statement “may
    not be adequate in every case, and [that] this Court would appreciate more detailed findings from
    the trial court to facilitate our review.”27 Nevertheless, under the circumstances of the particular
    case, this Court deemed the general statement to be “sufficient for the purposes of our review.”28
    But the statutory scheme in Kutzner and Skinner is not the scheme before us. In 2003, the
    legislature amended Article 64.05 to delete the word “findings” and any references to Articles 64.03
    and 64.04 and simply say, “An appeal under this chapter is to a court of appeals . . . .”29 Looking at
    22
    Id.
    23
    Id. at 434-35.
    24
    Id. at 435.
    25
    See 
    122 S.W.3d at 812-13
    . Our records show that notice of appeal in Skinner was filed
    on August 1, 2002.
    26
    
    Id. at 812
    .
    27
    
    Id. at 813
    .
    28
    
    Id.
    29
    See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 64.05 (current).
    WOOD — 8
    the language of statutory scheme afresh, without the “findings” language in Article 64.05, leads to
    the conclusion that not everything that is appealable in Chapter 64 is a finding and that the statute
    does not require a “finding” regarding denial of testing. In fact, the legislative change itself appears
    to be an acknowledgment that the word “finding” need not and should not be construed as broadly
    as it was in Kutzner.
    Moreover, the requirement of a finding only if the trial court rules in the movant’s favor is
    not irrational. An analogous situation occurs with respect to our factual sufficiency jurisprudence.
    When an appellate court reverses on factual sufficiency, it must “set forth in detail the evidence in
    the case along with its reasons for concluding that the jury’s verdict was contrary to the evidence,”
    but that requirement does not apply when an appellate court affirms on that issue.30 The historical
    rationale for the “detail” rule for reversals seems to be based on the constitutional right to a jury trial
    and the consequent need to respect jury verdicts, which is not implicated when a court of appeals
    affirms a conviction.31 A similar rule would seem rational in the post-conviction DNA testing
    context, to respect the finality of a judgment of conviction—requiring further proceedings only when
    circumstances dictate impinging on that finality interest. Requiring findings only when the trial court
    concludes that relief should be granted in the way of DNA testing would seem especially appropriate
    when, as here, the defendant has filed a subsequent motion for DNA testing.
    Also, the types of findings required for DNA testing are frequently established one way or
    the other by undisputed evidence: Often, there are not conflicts about whether biological evidence
    still exists and is in a condition making DNA testing possible or whether that evidence has been
    30
    Roberts v. State, 
    221 S.W.3d 659
    , 664-65 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007).
    31
    See 
    id.
    WOOD — 9
    subjected to a chain of custody sufficient to establish that it has not been substituted, tampered with,
    replaced, or altered in any material respect. Whether identity was or is an issue in the case generally
    depends on a review of the trial record.32 Whether a person would likely have been convicted if
    exculpatory results had been obtained through DNA testing is ordinarily a legal question.33 And
    whether the motion is made to unreasonably delay the execution of sentence or the administration
    of justice has been reviewed by looking at the defendant’s conduct in litigating his DNA motion and
    any delays in doing so.34 Regardless, nothing prevents an appellate court from concluding that the
    trial court should have granted DNA testing because it should have found in the convicted person’s
    favor on the issues that would have entitled him to such testing.35
    We conclude that the trial court was not required to make findings in support of its order
    denying relief. Issue one is overruled.
    B. Request to Remove the Trial Judge
    In issue two, Appellant contends that this Court should assign a new judge to preside over
    32
    See e.g. Prible v. State, 
    245 S.W.3d 466
    , 470 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) (evidence of another
    person’s DNA would not be exculpatory because of trial evidence).
    33
    See Ramirez v. State, 
    621 S.W.3d 711
    , 723 (Tex. Crim. App. 2021) (“In making that
    determination, we do not consider post-trial factual developments. Instead, we limit our review to
    whether exculpatory results would alter the landscape if added to the mix of evidence that was
    available at the time of trial.”) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted); LaRue v. State, 
    518 S.W.3d 439
    , 446 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017) (“Although there may be subsidiary fact issues that are
    reviewed deferentially, the ultimate question of whether a reasonable probability exists that
    exculpatory DNA tests would change the result on guilt-innocence is an application-of-law-to-fact
    question that does not turn on credibility and demeanor and is therefore reviewed de novo.”).
    34
    See Reed v. State, 
    541 S.W.3d 759
    , 778-80 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017); Thacker v. State, 
    177 S.W.3d 926
    , 927 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005). See also infra at nn.120-21 and accompanying text.
    35
    See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 64.05 (authorizing appeals under Chapter 64).
    WOOD — 10
    the Chapter 64 proceedings in the convicting court. He claims that Judge Richardson’s participation
    in his case while campaigning for election for a seat on the Court of Criminal Appeals creates a
    constitutionally intolerable risk of bias. He also claims that Judge Richardson’s participation in the
    case creates a risk of bias on our Court because Judge Richardson is a current judge on our Court.
    In a related motion filed in this Court, Appellant seeks to have this Court certify to the Governor that
    Judge Richardson is disqualified to hear the appeal so that the Governor can appoint a replacement
    judge for this case.
    1. Request to Remove from Trial-Level Proceedings
    Appellant points to the fact that Judge Richardson publicly announced his interest in the
    position on the Court of Criminal Appeals on July 20, 2013, while the Atkins and DNA proceedings
    were still pending. Appellant further avers that Judge Richardson ruled that Appellant was not
    intellectually disabled on October 4, 2013, just two days after formally declaring his candidacy.
    Appellant also points out that, less than a month before the March 2014 Republican primary, the
    campaign website included links to some news stories about cases that Judge Richardson presided
    over—including an article about the judge’s denial of Appellant’s intellectual-disability claim.
    Appellant says that the judge did not notify him, his attorney, or the State about the web-link.
    Appellant says that these facts show that Judge Richardson was disqualified from presiding
    over Appellant’s DNA proceedings on the basis of interest under both the Texas Constitution36 and
    the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.37 Appellant claims that, even if Judge
    36
    TEX. CONST. art. V, § 11 (“No judge shall sit in any case wherein the judge may be
    interested . . .”).
    37
    U.S. CONST. amend. 14, § 1 (“. . . nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty,
    or property, without due process of law . . .”).
    WOOD — 11
    Richardson harbored no actual bias, the judge created “an appearance of impropriety and an
    impression of possible bias.”
    Judge Richardson was elected to the Court of Criminal Appeals in November 2014 and began
    serving on the Court in January 2015. However, he continued to serve as the trial judge on the DNA
    proceedings. Appellant filed a motion to disqualify Judge Richardson on April 18, 2017. Judge
    Stephen Ables, the presiding judge of the Sixth Administrative Judicial Region, denied that motion.
    The order denying the motion stated that Judge Ables found “nothing in the motion that would
    constitute a ground for disqualification under Texas law” and “that the Motion does not allege facts
    that can form the basis for an Order of Recusal.”
    A judge is “interested” for purposes of disqualification under the Texas Constitution only if
    “an order or judgment in the case will directly ‘affect him to his personal or pecuniary loss or
    gain.’”38 A “personal” interest is one “affecting the individual rights of the judge.”39 “The rule is
    likewise elementary that the interest sufficient to disqualify a judge from sitting in a case must be
    a direct, real, and certain interest in the subject matter of the litigation, not merely indirect or
    incidental or remote or contingent or possible.”40
    Under due process, a judge is subject to removal on the basis of a financial interest or a
    38
    Freedom Communications, Inc. v. Coronado, 
    372 S.W.3d 621
    , 624 (Tex. 2012) (quoting
    from Elliott v. Scott, 
    119 Tex. 94
    , 99, 
    25 S.W.2d 150
    , 152 (1930)). Accord State ex rel. Millsap v.
    Lozano, 
    692 S.W.2d 470
    , 474 (Tex. Crim. App. 1985) (citing Blackstone for the proposition that “a
    judge was disqualified for direct pecuniary interest and for nothing else”).
    39
    Love v. Wilcox, 
    199 Tex. 256
    , 263-64, 
    28 S.W.2d 515
    , 518-19 (1930) (quoting an
    Alabama case).
    40
    Elliot, 
    119 Tex. at 98
    , 
    25 S.W.2d at 151
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    WOOD — 12
    conflict of interest.41 The Supreme Court has recognized that a financial interest does not have to
    be quite as personal or direct as at common law, but it still requires a “conflict resulting from
    financial incentives.”42 And there is a point at which a financial interest is “too remote and
    insubstantial” to violate due process.43 A non-financial conflict of interest can involve a judge’s
    prior participation in an earlier proceeding.44 This prior-participation conflict of interest is akin to
    another basis for disqualification found in the Texas Constitution—“when the judge shall have been
    counsel in the case”45—but (in the due-process context) can extend to any type of prior participation
    that objectively poses a risk to the neutrality or disinterestedness of the judge.46 Whether a financial
    interest or a conflict of interest is at issue, due process forbids a judge from presiding over a case if
    doing so “would offer a possible temptation to the average man as a judge . . . not to hold the balance
    nice, clear and true between the State and the accused.”47
    Appellant has not shown that Judge Richardson had a direct pecuniary or personal interest
    in denying the motion for DNA testing, nor has he shown a substantial financial, non-remote interest
    in such a denial. Appellant suggests that it was important to the judge’s campaign, but the judge had
    already won that campaign over two years before Appellant even filed his motion to disqualify, and,
    41
    See Caperton v. A. T. Massey Coal Co., 
    556 U.S. 868
    , 876-81 (2009).
    42
    Id. at 877-78.
    43
    Id. at 879, 884 (quoting from Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Lavoie, 
    475 U.S. 813
    , 826 (1986)).
    44
    Id. at 880.
    45
    See TEX. CONST. art. V, § 11.
    46
    Caperton, 556 U.S. at 880-83.
    47
    Id. (quoting from Tumey v. Ohio, 
    273 U.S. 510
    , 532 (1927)).
    WOOD — 13
    of course, the judge had not yet ruled on the DNA motion. A ruling on the DNA motion could not
    affect a campaign that was already over. If the claim is that a ruling on the DNA motion could affect
    a future campaign, such an effect is highly speculative and remote, and frankly, far-fetched. At the
    time Appellant filed the motion to disqualify, the next election would have been after the judge had
    served a six-year term on the Court of Criminal Appeals. It is fanciful thinking, at the least, to
    suppose that a ruling on a leftover trial assignment would have any significant effect in influencing
    voters to re-elect a judge who would have built a six-year record on the Court of Criminal Appeals.
    (And in fact, that election occurred, and Appellant has not suggested that Judge Richardson linked
    any of Appellant’s proceedings on that campaign website.) And if we look at the claim in light of
    when the judge actually ruled on the DNA motion, the judge’s next campaign would be after having
    built a twelve-year record on the Court of Criminal Appeals.
    Judge Richardson did issue findings and a recommendation in the habeas action (on the
    intellectual-disability claim) before he was first elected to this Court. But the DNA motion
    proceeding is a separate proceeding from the habeas action, though both are related to (but separate
    from) the judgment of conviction.48 It is a judge’s interest in the result of the proceeding at issue,
    not any relationship that proceeding has with some other proceeding, that disqualifies a judge on the
    basis of interest under the Texas Constitution.49 And even if we assume a more lenient due-process
    48
    See Cont’l Heritage Ins. Co. v. State, 
    683 S.W.3d 407
    , 416 (Tex. Crim. App. 2024) (“A
    habeas corpus action is related to a criminal proceeding being attacked but is nevertheless considered
    to be a separate action.”); Smith v. State, 
    559 S.W.3d 527
    , 536 (Tex. Crim. App. 2918) (observing
    that “a general notice of appeal filed after pronouncement of sentence would not invoke appellate
    jurisdiction over a later denial of a motion for DNA testing”).
    49
    See Cameron v. Greenhill, 
    582 S.W.2d 775
    , 776 (Tex. 1979) (“It is a settled principle of
    law that the interest which disqualifies a judge is that interest, however small, which rests upon a
    direct pecuniary or personal interest in the result of the case presented to the judge or court.”)
    WOOD — 14
    standard, the intellectual-disability habeas action and the DNA proceedings involve widely divergent
    inquiries—whether an admitted serial killer should be spared the death penalty versus whether a
    convicted person might be innocent—and the political implications of those two types of
    proceedings are not necessarily the same.
    And there is no conflict of interest flowing from the participation in multiple proceedings
    here. A trial judge of a convicting court is ordinarily expected to preside over any post-conviction
    litigation that occurs, including both habeas and DNA-motion proceedings.50 The denial of relief
    in one post-conviction proceeding does not in itself impede a judge from continuing to preside over
    the convicted person’s other post-conviction proceedings. And the act of placing a link to a media
    article about a judge’s decision in one of the post-conviction proceedings does not by itself change
    that. The placement of the link could be seen as a reaffirmation of the correctness of the trial judge’s
    decision, but that is not unusual or unexpected and does create a conflict between the proceedings.
    Even as to the habeas action, any interest attributable to Judge Richardson was at most
    (emphasis added); Elliot, 
    119 Tex. at 99
    , 
    25 S.W.2d at 152
     (quoting from City of Oak Cliff v. State,
    
    97 Tex. 391
    , 394, 
    79 S.W. 1068
    , 1069 (1904)) (“Where a judicial officer has not so direct an interest
    in the cause or matter as that the result must necessarily affect him to his personal or pecuniary loss
    or gain, then he may sit.”) (emphasis added); King v. Sapp, 
    66 Tex. 519
    , 520, 
    2 S.W. 573
    , 573-74
    (Tex. 1886) (“The law enumerates the only instances in which an interest not necessarily pecuniary
    will disqualify a district judge. These are where he has been of counsel in the cause, or where either
    of the parties may be connected with him by affinity or consanguinity, within the third degree. By
    naming those special cases where the judge’s feelings may be interested, though he may not gain or
    lose by the event of the suit, the law, doubtless, intended to limit all other cases of interest to such
    as should be of a pecuniary nature. The judge must, by the judgment in the case, gain or lose
    something the value of which may be estimated. Of the influence which previously formed opinions
    upon questions involved in the case may have upon him, or the moral effect which his decision may
    have upon another judge presiding in other causes, the law takes no account.”).
    50
    Although Judge Richardson was not the original trial judge, he was appointed to preside
    over the post-conviction litigation.
    WOOD — 15
    indirect and insubstantial. Ordinarily, even a monetary campaign contribution does not create a
    direct and substantial interest, though it can, depending on the relative size of the contribution
    compared to the total amount of money in a judge’s campaign.51 Here, no money changed hands,
    much less a disproportionately large amount of money. And Appellant’s habeas proceeding was only
    a part of the judge’s record linked on his website. Any assistance to a campaign provided by
    publicity surrounding Judge Richardson’s ruling in the habeas proceeding was speculative, remote,
    and intangible.
    Moreover, Appellant’s reasoning could conceivably apply to any judge who ran on his record.
    As the State points out, “If a judge cannot advise the public how he has ruled in particular cases for
    fear of being disqualified, the public would be left with scant information on which to base its vote.”
    And a judge’s record is always an issue that can arise in an election, whether the judge highlights it
    or not. An interest that would disqualify everyone is not a disqualifying interest at all.52 Further, if
    the cases a judge rules on before he is elected can disqualify him, then only cases decided after he
    is elected to a different-level court are safe. Of course, that is this case, since the DNA motion was
    decided after Judge Richardson was elected (twice) to the Court of Criminal Appeals.
    Relying on the Supreme Court case of Caperton, Appellant contends that “interest” must be
    interpreted to mean any situation “where a judge appears likely to be tempted to rule a certain way
    due to external factors.” But while that case recognized recusal statutes and rules eliminating even
    the appearance of impropriety to be something to “take into account” when considering the reach of
    51
    Caperton, 556 U.S. at 884.
    52
    See Lavoie, 475 U.S. at 825 (“[A]ccepting appellant’s expansive contentions might require
    the disqualification of every judge in the State. If so, it is possible that under a ‘rule of necessity’
    none of the judges or justices would be disqualified.”).
    WOOD — 16
    the Due Process Clause, it also emphasized that states are allowed to “adopt recusal standards more
    rigorous than due process requires” and that due process “demarks only the outer boundaries of
    judicial disqualifications.”53 Accordingly, the Supreme Court explained that the application of the
    Due Process Clause would be “confined to rare instances.”54 Caperton itself was an election case,
    and the Supreme Court found a due process violation only because the large monetary campaign
    contribution there exerted a “significant and disproportionate influence” that was “coupled with [a
    close] temporal relationship between the election and the pending case.”55
    Although Appellant alleges an appearance of impropriety, any appearance of impropriety that
    is not based on a substantial and non-remote interest necessary for disqualification goes only to
    recusal.56 Appellant’s motion in the proceedings below was for disqualification, not recusal. That
    may have been deliberate, because it is questionable whether a recusal motion filed two years after
    the judge was elected to the Court of Criminal Appeals would have been timely.57 And Appellant
    53
    Caperton, 556 U.S. at 888-89.
    54
    Id.
    55
    Id. at 886 (bracketed material inserted).
    56
    See TEX. R. APP. P. 18b(b)(1).
    57
    See TEX. R. APP. P. 18a(b)(1)(A) (“A motion to recuse . . . must be filed as soon as
    practicable after the movant knows of the ground stated in the motion”). The use of the word “must”
    for recusal motions contrasts with the use of the word “should” for disqualification motions. See id.
    18a(b)(2) (“A motion to disqualify should be filed as soon as practicable after the movant knows of
    the ground stated in the motion.”). This difference in wording suggests more leeway in filing
    disqualification motions. The Texas Supreme court has held that the constitutional disqualification
    of a judge in a proceeding can be raised at any time because it renders the actions of the judge void
    but that recusal is not fundamental error and can be forfeited. In re Union Pac. Resources Co., 
    969 S.W.2d 427
    , 428 (Tex. 1998). We have likewise held that a ground for recusal can be forfeited. Ex
    parte Thuesen, 
    546 S.W.3d 145
    , 151 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017). Our Court has held that the ability
    to raise a constitutional judicial disqualification claim is not completely without limits—barring such
    WOOD — 17
    alleges only constitutional disqualification on appeal. In any event, the Regional Presiding Judge
    who decided the motion to disqualify ruled that it also did not allege facts showing a basis for
    recusal. We agree with that assessment for reasons we have already discussed. We see no
    impropriety in Judge Richardson linking portions of his judicial record on his website. And he had
    already won the election to higher court, so the ruling after he was elected could not have affected
    that election, and the idea that a leftover trial matter would have any significant effect on a
    subsequent election to a higher court is fanciful.
    2. Request to Remove from Direct Appeal Proceedings
    In his opening brief, Appellant also contends that Judge Richardson’s decision to remain on
    the case even after being elected to our Court “rais[es] the specter of bias now that the other eight
    judges on this Court must review his Chapter 64 rulings.” If that is a complaint about the other
    judges on the Court, Appellant did not file a motion to recuse the other members of this Court from
    participating in this case. Regardless, such a complaint would be without merit. From time to time,
    a judge on this Court will refrain from participating in a case before us because of involvement in
    an earlier phase of the case. That judge’s status as a colleague does not somehow make the other
    judges biased or require their recusal. Because he was a judge at the trial level, Judge Richardson
    is not participating in the current appeal. That in no way prevents the remaining judges from fairly
    evaluating Appellant’s appeal.
    Concurrently with his reply brief, Appellant filed a motion with this Court to certify to the
    a claim for the first time in habeas proceedings when the defendant was aware of the issue at trial
    and chose to proceed anyway. See Ex parte Richardson, 
    201 S.W.3d 712
    , 714 (Tex. Crim. App.
    2006). In his reply brief Appellant suggests that his claim was made with reasonable diligence, but
    as we discuss later, we find that claim to be hollow. See infra at n.148 and accompanying text.
    WOOD — 18
    Governor that Judge Richardson is disqualified to participate in the case on appeal so that the
    Governor may appoint a replacement judge. Because he presided over the trial-level proceedings,
    Judge Richardson was never going to participate in this case on appeal. The issue here is whether
    this Court should ask the Governor to appoint a replacement judge under these circumstances.
    The Texas Constitution provides:
    No judge shall sit in any case wherein the judge may be interested, or where either
    of the parties may be connected with the judge, either by affinity or consanguinity,
    within such a degree as may be prescribed by law, or when the judge shall have been
    counsel in the case. When the Supreme Court, the Court of Criminal Appeals, the
    Court of Appeals, or any member of any of those courts shall be thus disqualified to
    hear and determine any case or cases in said court, the same shall be certified to the
    Governor of the State, who shall immediately commission the requisite number of
    persons learned in the law for the trial and determination of such cause or causes.58
    The constitutional language provides for certification to the Governor when a member of our Court
    is “thus disqualified.” This language unambiguously provides that certification occurs only for
    disqualification under one of the grounds outlined in the state constitutional provision. Appellant
    bases his certification request on both the Texas Constitution and federal due process. But a federal
    due-process ground for removing a judge that does not also involve one of the state constitutional
    grounds does not trigger the certification requirement.
    None of the state constitutional grounds apply here. Judge Richardson is not related by
    affinity or consanguinity to any of the parties in the case, and he was not an attorney for any of the
    parties in this case.
    That leaves the question of whether he now qualifies as “interested” due to his position as
    the trial judge. Our sister court has answered that question “no.” In Galveston & H. Inv. Co. v.
    58
    TEX. CONST. art. V, § 11.
    WOOD — 19
    Grymes, the Texas Supreme Court held that the Texas Constitution did not prevent a judge who
    participated in a case in the court of civil appeals from again participating in the case in the Texas
    Supreme Court.59 Pointedly, the Texas Supreme Court said, “The grounds of disqualification of the
    judges of the courts in this State are specified in the [Texas] Constitution and they are exclusive of
    all others; and the fact that a judge may have tried the case in a lower court or participated in the
    decision in such court is not made one of them.”60 This holding comports with other cases we have
    recited earlier, holding that “interest” under the Texas constitution refers to a pecuniary or personal
    interest in the outcome of the case. Any interest that a judge might have in his decision being upheld
    is neither of those.61
    Appellant also relies upon a Government Code provision, which says:
    (a) The fact that a judge of the court of criminal appeals is disqualified under the
    constitution and laws of this state to hear and determine a case shall be certified to
    the governor.
    59
    
    94 Tex. 609
    , 618, 
    63 S.W. 860
     (1901) (op. on mot. for reh’g). See also Robert Calvert,
    Disqualification of Judges, 47 TEX. B.J. 1330, 1332 (December 1984).
    60
    Grymes, 94 Tex. at 618 (bracketed material inserted).
    61
    The Texas Supreme Court has also held that certification to the Governor need not occur
    if a quorum of an appellate court is available to hear the case and a majority can agree upon a
    decision. Gwin v. O’Daniel, 
    85 Tex. 563
    , 
    22 S.W. 876
     (1893) (citing Nalle, infra) (“[W]hen one of
    the judges of the Court of Civil Appeals is disqualified, the other two members have jurisdiction,
    and may hear and determine the case. The fact of the disqualification need not be certified to the
    Governor, unless the two should be unable to agree.”); City of Austin v. Nalle, 
    85 Tex. 520
    , 537-38,
    
    22 S.W. 668
    , 671-72 (1893) (“It does not follow that an appointment is to be made in every such
    case. The requirement is, that the Governor ‘shall commission the requisite number * * * for the
    trial and determination of such cause.’ If three were required to make a quorum, then one being
    disqualified, another would be necessary to make the requisite number to decide the cause. So also,
    if one be disqualified and the other two disagree, the appointment of a special judge is requisite to
    enable the court to make a decision, although two may constitute a quorum. But if two be a quorum,
    and two be qualified and able to agree, no additional judge is requisite to a decision of the case,
    although the third member of the court be recused.”). We need not address that issue here.
    WOOD — 20
    (b) The governor immediately shall commission a person who is learned in the law
    to act in the place of the disqualified judge.62
    On the question of when certification to the Governor is required, the statute appears to merely
    codify what is in the Texas Constitution.63 Specifically, the words “under the constitution and laws
    of this state” make clear that the state constitution, not the federal constitution, is controlling. And
    “laws” here appears to be a reference to the “affinity or consanguinity” basis for disqualification,
    because the Texas Constitution makes the determination of the familial relationship to be “within
    such a degree as may be prescribed by law.”64 We also keep in mind that we reasonably construe
    statutes to avoid a constitutional violation.65 Reading the Government Code more broadly than the
    Texas Constitution on when certification is required could potentially violate the constitutional
    provision as well as the Separation of Powers provision.66
    Consequently, we conclude that the certification to the Governor is not required if none of
    the three grounds for disqualification in Article V, Section 11 of the Texas Constitution apply. We
    further conclude that none of the three state constitutional grounds for disqualification apply.
    62
    TEX. GOV’T CODE § 22.105.
    63
    We need not address whether the statute conflicts with the Texas Supreme Court’s holding
    that certification need not occur so long as a quorum and majority can decide the case. See supra
    at n.61.
    64
    See TEX. CONST. art. V, § 11.
    65
    Ex parte Ingram, 
    533 S.W.3d 887
    , 895 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017).
    66
    See State v. Stephens, 
    663 S.W.3d 45
    , 56-57 (Tex. Crim. App. 2021) (violation of
    Separation of Powers for executive entity to exercise judicial duties not expressly assigned by the
    Texas Constitution); Meshell v. State, 
    739 S.W.2d 246
    , 254 (Tex. Crim. App. 1987) (violation of
    Separation of Powers for legislature to remove or abridge constitutional functions of an entity in
    another branch of government).
    WOOD — 21
    Consequently, we hold that certification to the Governor in this case is not required.
    We overrule issue two, and we deny Appellant’s motion to ask the Governor to appoint a
    replacement judge.
    C. Request to Remove the Assistant Attorney General
    In issue three, Appellant contends that this Court should rescind the appointment of the
    assistant attorney general as attorney pro tem representing the State in these proceedings.
    District Attorney Jaime Esparza had briefly been appointed to represent Appellant in his
    capital-murder prosecution. Esparza was soon removed because he had previously worked in the
    District Attorney’s Office while the case had been under investigation. Esparza was elected District
    Attorney in November 1992 and served as District Attorney from 1993 through 2020. As the
    briefing deadline for Appellant’s appeal approached in 1994, Esparza asked the trial court to recuse
    him and his office (due to his prior brief appointment as Appellant’s attorney) and to appoint an
    attorney pro tem to represent the State on appeal.67 A private attorney was appointed and served as
    the State’s attorney for both the appeal and the first post-conviction habeas action. In 2008, that
    attorney indicated that he could no longer act as the State’s attorney pro tem, and the trial court
    appointed an assistant attorney general to replace him.68 That assistant attorney general represented
    the State in subsequent post-conviction litigation, including the habeas action raising the intellectual-
    67
    See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 2.07.
    68
    The assistant attorney general who was appointed had filed the motion to substitute for
    the private attorney. The motion stated that “John Haughton, current counsel for Wood, is not
    opposed to this motion.”
    WOOD — 22
    disability claim and the multiple motions for DNA testing.69
    In December 2017, Appellant filed a motion to remove the assistant attorney general and
    appoint a new attorney pro tem. He claimed that the Attorney General’s Office had withheld
    exculpatory information, and he called upon the trial court to exercise its authority under Article 2.07
    to appoint and remove an attorney pro tem. The trial court denied that motion on March 3, 2022
    when it denied DNA testing. More than two weeks later, on March 18, Appellant filed a new motion
    to remove the assistant attorney general. This new, post-order motion relied upon State v. Stephens,
    which had been handed down in December 2021,70 and argued that Article 2.07, to the extent it
    allowed the appointment of assistant attorneys general as attorneys pro tem, violated the Separation
    of Powers Clause of the Texas Constitution. Appellant now makes the argument he made in his
    post-order motion.
    1. Preservation
    The lateness of Appellant’s claim regarding the assistant attorney general prompts us to raise
    the issue of preservation. Preservation is a systemic issue that a first-tier appellate court must raise
    on its own before granting relief on a claim.71 Most complaints are forfeited by a failure to object;
    69
    On May 12, 2022, the Attorney General’s Office filed a notice of appearance in this Court
    that designated a different assistant attorney general as the new attorney pro tem to represent the
    State on appeal. According to the Attorney General’s filing, this was done pursuant to TEX. R. APP.
    P. 6.1(c), governing the designation of lead counsel on appeal. Appellant does not challenge this
    handoff of duties from one assistant attorney general to another, but even if he had, and even if we
    found the handoff to be invalid, we could accept the assistant attorney general’s brief as an amicus
    brief. See Taylor, 
    36 S.W.3d at 887
    .
    70
    
    663 S.W.3d 45
     (handed down December 15, 2021).
    71
    Darcy v. State, 
    488 S.W.3d 325
    , 327-38 (Tex. Crim. App. 2016).
    WOOD — 23
    that is, they have to be preserved.72 A party is exempt from preservation requirements if the legal
    issue is one that is waivable only or is an absolute requirement or prohibition.73 When a complaint
    has to be preserved, the party raising the complaint on appeal must have complained to the trial court
    in a timely fashion and stated the grounds for the ruling sought.74 The complaint at trial must match
    the claim raised on appeal.75 “[A]ll a party has to do to avoid the forfeiture of a complaint on appeal
    is to let the trial judge know what he wants, why he thinks himself entitled to it, and to do so clearly
    enough for the judge to understand him at a time when the trial court is in a proper position to do
    something about it.”76
    Several courts of appeals have held that a complaint about the appointment of an attorney pro
    tem must be preserved.77 All of the complaints in these cases were based on the idea that the
    72
    Moore v. State, 
    295 S.W.3d 329
    , 333 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009).
    73
    Burg v. State, 
    592 S.W.3d 444
    , 448-49 (Tex. Crim. App. 2020).
    74
    TEX. R. APP. P. 33.1(a)(1)(A) (requiring a “timely request, objection, or motion” that states
    “the grounds for the ruling that the complaining party sought”). The complaining party must also
    obtain a ruling or object to the trial court’s refusal to rule. Id. 33.1(a)(2). Appellant did not obtain
    a ruling on his motion. He claims in his reply brief that he made efforts to get Judge Richardson to
    rule on his motion. This claim is based on supposed emails to and from the judge that are not in the
    record. Ironically, these emails are not included in Appellant’s motion to supplement. Nevertheless,
    we will assume, without deciding, that his claim is not barred by the ruling requirement.
    75
    Butler v. State, 
    872 S.W.2d 227
    , 236 (Tex. Crim. App. 1994).
    76
    Rios v. State, 
    665 S.W.3d 467
    , 476 (Tex. Crim. App. 2022) (quoting Lankston v. State,
    
    827 S.W.2d 907
    , 909 (Tex. Crim. App. 1992)) (emphasis added).
    77
    Hartsfield v. State, 
    200 S.W.3d 813
    , 816 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2006, pet. ref’d); State
    v. Newton, 
    158 S.W.3d 582
    , 588-90 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2005, pet. dism’d); Modica v. State,
    
    151 S.W.3d 716
    , 720-21 (Tex. App.—Beaumont 2004, pet. ref’d); Marbut v. State, 
    76 S.W.3d 742
    ,
    749-50 (Tex. App.—Waco 2002, pet. ref’d); Stephens v. State, 
    978 S.W.2d 728
    , 730 (Tex.
    App.—Austin, pet. ref’d).
    WOOD — 24
    appointment of the attorney pro tem was in violation of Article 2.07, the statute that authorized such
    appointments.78 Appellant, however, does not claim that the appointment violated the statute; he
    claims the statute authorizing the appointment violated the Texas Constitution. But statutes are
    presumed to be constitutional, and that presumption means that a constitutional claim against a
    statute—even a facial claim—must be preserved at trial.79 There is an exception: if the statute has
    already been ruled facially unconstitutional in another case, a claim based on that unconstitutionality
    may be raised for the first time on appeal.80 But that exception is statute-specific unless the prior
    holding invalidating one statute would automatically invalidate a different statute.81 A defendant
    cannot use the holding of a case invalidating a statute to challenge an entirely different statute on the
    basis of a claim for extending that holding.82 That is what Appellant is trying to do here. Stephens
    involved a challenge to a statute that purported to confer authority on the Attorney General’s Office
    to unilaterally prosecute election law violations even when not requested by the district attorney who
    had authority to prosecute those violations.83 But the present claim involves a challenge to the
    constitutionality of a different provision that authorizes appointing an assistant attorney general to
    78
    See supra at n.77.
    79
    Karenev v. State, 
    281 S.W.3d 428
    , 434 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009). See also Ex parte Beck,
    
    541 S.W.3d 846
    , 852-53 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017) (applying the reasoning in Karenev to bar a
    constitutional challenge to a statute raised for the first time in a post-conviction habeas proceeding).
    80
    Smith v. State, 
    463 S.W.3d 890
    , 895-96 (Tex. Crim. App. 2015).
    81
    Beck, 
    541 S.W.3d at 857-60
    .
    82
    
    Id.
    83
    663 S.W.3d at 51-52, 55-57.
    WOOD — 25
    represent the State when the district attorney is disqualified or otherwise unable to serve.84 The
    statute before us is at least in some ways narrower than the statute at issue in Stephens because it
    requires the disqualification or unavailability of the district attorney before someone in the Attorney
    General’s Office can be appointed.85
    Moreover, the considerations in favor of requiring preservation are even stronger here than
    in the court of appeals cases that bar unpreserved attorney-pro-tem claims and our cases that bar
    unpreserved facial constitutional challenges. In the court of appeals cases, the State initiated a
    prosecution or an appeal through the attorney pro tem.86 In our facial-constitutional-preservation
    cases, the defendants were attacking the constitutionality of the statute proscribing the crime on
    which the prosecution was based.87 In both types of cases, there was at least a colorable claim that
    the alleged infirmity undermined the entire basis of the prosecution. Here, however, Appellant
    initiated the current post-conviction proceeding by filing his motion for DNA testing. Appellant
    84
    See Beck, 
    541 S.W.3d at 857-60
     (Even though the statute that was previously held
    unconstitutional contained a common element with the statute that was being challenged, they were
    nevertheless different statutes.). Even in the context of an election-code prosecution, an assistant
    attorney general being appointed as attorney pro tem under Article 2.07 to represent the State after
    the district attorney has been disqualified presents a distinct question from the issue in Stephens of
    whether the Attorney General possessed an unqualified, unilateral ability to initiate election-code
    prosecutions.
    85
    See 
    id. at 859
     (“This Court’s holding that the online-solicitation provision in Lo was
    facially unconstitutional because of its sweeping breadth in prohibiting all titillating talk between
    adults and minors is not a binding judicial declaration that the improper-relationship statute, which
    applies much more narrowly to educational settings, is also unconstitutional. Given the differences
    between these two statutes and the distinct manner in which they operate, we agree with the court
    of appeals’s assessment that this Court's holding in Lo did not automatically invalidate the
    improper-relationship statute.”).
    86
    See supra at n.77.
    87
    See Beck, 
    541 S.W.3d at 850
    ; Karenev, 
    281 S.W.3d at 429
    .
    WOOD — 26
    cannot advance even a colorable claim for undermining the basis for his proceedings, nor would he
    want to.88 Given our discussion, it is obvious that the sort of claim Appellant advances must be
    preserved. If a convicted person thinks the wrong person is representing the State in responding to
    his motion for DNA testing, the convicted person must raise that issue to the trial court.
    At best, Appellant’s issue was raised late. Despite the fact that an assistant attorney general
    had been representing the State as an attorney pro tem in connection with DNA motions since 2010,
    Appellant first sought removal in late 2017. Even then, he did not raise the reason he now raises on
    appeal. His current complaint was not raised until March 2022—five years after his last DNA
    motion and over a decade after the DNA litigation had begun. Moreover, his current complaint was
    raised after the trial court had denied his motion for testing. Even assuming the trial court still had
    plenary power to grant Appellant’s motion to disqualify, remove the attorney pro tem, and withdraw
    the order denying DNA testing,89 a lot of events had happened that the trial court could not
    effectively undo. The trial court could not undo the amount of time and effort spent by the assistant
    attorney general for more than a decade on this case: agreeing to and arranging testing on some DNA
    evidence, reading Appellant’s subsequent DNA motions and the other ancillary motions, and
    researching and responding to the various motions. The trial court also could not undo the amount
    of time it had spent reading and thinking about the material produced by the assistant attorney
    88
    See Karenev, 
    281 S.W.3d at
    436 n.8 (Cochran, J., concurring) (claiming that a facial
    challenge to a statute defining the offense should be immune to procedural default but
    acknowledging that facially “unconstitutional procedural statutes or evidentiary rules do not affect
    the jurisdiction of the court, its authority, or its power to render a judgment [and t]herefore, the
    failure to object in the trial court waives any appellate claim”).
    89
    See Swearingen v. State, 
    189 S.W.3d 779
    , 781 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006) (saying that trial
    court might have 30 days plenary power to rescind order denying testing).
    WOOD — 27
    general, as well as the time spent in hearings participated in by the assistant attorney general. And
    the trial court had a reasonable expectation that finally this litigation had been resolved—only for
    Appellant to suggest that the resolution should be undone on the basis of a claim he could have
    raised over a decade ago.
    To the extent that Appellant responds that our decision in Stephens was recent, such a
    contention is hollow. Stephens itself was handed down months before the trial court issued the order
    denying DNA testing.90 Even if Stephens were viewed as a triggering event for Appellant’s claim,
    a motion filed after Appellant’s case had been resolved is untimely.91 But the date Stephens was
    handed down is itself too lenient a benchmark. The salient cases on which Stephens relied were
    Saldano v. State92 and State v. Rhine,93 decided by this Court in 2002 and 2009, respectively.94 And
    the relevant constitutional provisions have been around for over a century. Nothing prevented
    Appellant from making a claim at the moment he first filed a motion for DNA testing, based on the
    salient authorities on which Stephens relied. Moreover, even if (1) Appellant’s claim were timely
    in relation to Stephens and (2) the holding in Stephens were totally unanticipated, that still does not
    get Appellant off the hook. It has been the law for decades that the novelty of a claim does not
    90
    The Stephens decision was not final when it was handed down, but it was not final when
    Appellant relied on it either. See State v. Stephens, 
    664 S.W.3d 293
     (Tex. Crim. App. 2022)
    (denying rehearing on September 28, 2022).
    91
    See Buntion v. State, 
    482 S.W.3d 58
    , 78-79 (Tex. Crim. App. 2016) (holding and citing
    cases holding that an argument presented for the first time in a motion for new trial was not
    preserved for review).
    92
    
    70 S.W.3d 873
     (Tex. Crim. App. 2002).
    93
    
    297 S.W.3d 301
     (Tex. Crim. App. 2009).
    94
    Stephens, 663 S.W.3d at 49.
    WOOD — 28
    exempt it from preservation requirements.95 Appellant failed to preserve his claim.
    2. Merits
    But even if Appellant’s claim had been preserved, it would be without merit. In Stephens,
    we held that the Attorney General could not unilaterally exercise a prosecution power that was
    assigned to the judicial department.96 We explained that the power to prosecute was constitutionally
    conferred within the judicial department to district and county attorneys.97 We further explained that
    the Attorney General can participate in criminal litigation if the relevant district or county attorney
    consents.98
    When District Attorney Esparza sought to recuse himself and have an attorney pro tem
    appointed, he consented to someone other than the elected district attorney or his subordinates to try
    the case. That would include an assistant attorney general, an option listed in the pre-2019 version
    of Article 2.07.99 Moreover, any attorney who acts as an attorney pro tem stands in the shoes of the
    district or county attorney being replaced.100 So the appointed attorney pro tem acts not with any
    95
    Sanchez v. State, 
    120 S.W.3d 359
    , 365, 367 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003) (“[T]his ‘right not
    recognized’ doctrine is inconsistent with our current law of error preservation. . . .The ‘right not
    recognized’ exception to the contemporaneous-objection rule relates to a kind of fundamental error
    . . . that Marin generally eliminated from our jurisprudence.”) (referring to Marin v. State, 
    851 S.W.2d 275
     (Tex. Crim. App. 1993)).
    96
    663 S.W.3d at 47.
    97
    Id. at 50.
    98
    Id. at 55-57.
    99
    See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 2.07(f)(effective September 1, 1999).
    100
    Coleman, 
    246 S.W.3d 76
    , 82 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) (“The attorney pro tem stands in the
    place of the regular attorney for the state and performs all the duties the state attorney would have
    performed under the terms of the appointment.”).
    WOOD — 29
    authority he has by virtue of his original employment (e.g., in the Attorney General’s Office) but uses
    the elected district or county attorney’s authority conferred by the appointment.101 Moreover, under
    the pre-2019 version of Article 2.07, which applied at the time the assistant attorney general was
    appointed in this case, the trial court was empowered to appoint “any competent attorney,”102 which
    included an assistant attorney general,103 so the fact that a particular appointed attorney was
    employed by the Attorney General’s Office seems entirely irrelevant to the authority being exercised
    by the attorney pro tem.104
    Because Esparza remained district attorney through 2020, the District Attorney’s Office
    remained disqualified until 2021. But even when a new non-disqualified district or county attorney
    takes office, the attorney pro tem retains authority to complete the subject of the appointment unless
    that appointment is modified or revoked.105 Notably, Appellant never argued to the trial court that
    the assistant attorney general should have been removed because the district attorney’s
    101
    This would be true in any type of case, even election-code prosecutions.
    102
    TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 2.07(a) (effective September 1, 1999) (emphasis added);
    Coleman v. State, 
    246 S.W.3d at 81
     (emphasis added).
    103
    TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 2.07(f) (effective September 1, 1999) (“‘competent attorney’
    includes an assistant attorney general”).
    104
    The 2019 amendment limited the attorneys who could be appointed to, “from any county
    or district, an attorney for the state or . . . an assistant attorney general.” See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC.
    art. 2.07(a) (effective September 1, 2019). In his reply brief, Appellant contends that “[o]nly the
    second category of attorneys eligible for appointment as an attorney pro tem—“an assistant attorney
    general”—encompasses attorneys who are not members of the judicial branch. But as our discussion
    shows, that statement is true for the current post-2019 version of Art. 2.07 but is not true for the
    version in effect at the time the assistant attorney general was appointed.
    105
    Coleman, 
    246 S.W.3d at 83
     (“[T]he appointment of an attorney pro tem lasts until the
    purposes contemplated by that appointment are fulfilled.”), 85-86 (rejecting claim that appointment
    of attorney pro tem ended automatically when non-disqualified district attorney assumed office).
    WOOD — 30
    disqualification no longer existed.106 So the assistant attorney general continued to validly serve as
    the attorney pro tem.
    Issue three is overruled.
    D. Loss or Destruction of Evidence
    In issue four, Appellant contends that the State lost or destroyed over a dozen pieces of
    potentially exculpatory biological evidence and that we should sanction the State in this DNA motion
    proceeding. In September 2016, he filed with the trial court a “Motion to Mitigate Harm Caused by
    the State’s Loss or Destruction of Potentially Exculpatory Biological Evidence.” On March 3, 2022,
    the trial court denied this motion.
    Appellant claims that we have “the authority under Chapter 64 to craft an appropriate remedy
    to deter such conduct by the State in the future and to mitigate the harm its actions have caused
    David Wood’s ability to prove his innocence.” We disagree.
    Notably, Appellant cites no authority for the claim that we can fashion the remedy he seeks
    in a Chapter 64 proceeding. And our cases are clear that the remedy in Chapter 64 proceedings is
    limited to obtaining DNA evidence and then findings based on any test results. “Chapter 64 is
    simply a procedural vehicle for obtaining certain evidence which might then be used in a state or
    federal habeas proceeding.”107 “[T]he evident legislative purpose behind Chapter 64 . . . was to
    106
    Had he done so, the equities would have strongly supported retaining the assistant
    attorney general because of the time and effort he had spent in this case and the burden that would
    be placed on any new attorney to get up to speed. See 
    id. at 85
     (concluding that the various factors
    supported the trial court’s decision to retain the attorneys pro tem, including that “the two attorneys
    pro tem had spent over twenty-one months researching, investigating, and preparing this case for a
    trial that was then imminent”).
    107
    Ex parte Gutierrez, 
    337 S.W.3d 883
    , 890 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011).
    WOOD — 31
    provide a convicted person who is eligible under its terms with an avenue for obtaining
    post-conviction forensic DNA testing—and no more,” other than “a favorable finding of fact” if
    DNA testing occurs and exculpatory results are obtained.108
    Nothing in any of the statutes in Chapter 64 suggests that a remedy can be imposed for the
    State’s destruction of evidence.109 In fact, the opposite is true. Under Article 64.03, a court “may
    order forensic DNA testing under this chapter only if,” among other things, “the evidence . . . still
    exists and is in a condition making DNA testing possible.”110
    And we have rejected the notion that constitutional principles require a court to “consider
    claims under a remedial statute that are not authorized by the language of that statute.”111 “Quite the
    opposite: if the statute is what creates the remedy, and the claim at issue does not qualify under the
    statute, then the court is prohibited from granting relief under the statute.”112 Chapter 64 creates a
    remedy only for evidence that does exist—authorizing testing if certain conditions are met. Chapter
    64 does not authorize a remedy for evidence that no longer exists because the State destroyed it. To
    complain about the State’s destruction of evidence in a post-trial setting, when a motion for new trial
    is no longer an option, a convicted person must file a habeas application.113
    108
    State v. Holloway, 
    360 S.W.3d 480
    , 487-88 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012), overruled on other
    grounds by Whitfield v. State, 
    430 S.W.3d 405
    , 409 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014).
    109
    See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 64.01, et seq.
    110
    TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 64.03(a)(1)(A)(i) (emphasis added).
    111
    Ex parte White, 
    506 S.W.3d 39
    , 51 (Tex. Crim. App. 2016).
    112
    
    Id.
    113
    See e.g., Ex parte Napper, 
    322 S.W.3d 202
    , 227-40 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).
    WOOD — 32
    Issue four is overruled.
    E. Denial of DNA Testing on Biological Evidence
    In issue five, Appellant contends that the trial court erred in denying his “motion for DNA
    testing of multiple pieces of evidence collected from the six crime scenes.” In issue six, he contends
    that the trial court erred in denying his motion for DNA testing of biological samples collected from
    Salvador Martinez, whom Appellant terms an “alternative suspect.” For reasons we will discuss
    shortly, we address these issues together.
    1. Alternative Suspect
    The State contends that Chapter 64 does not authorize the testing of samples from an
    alternative suspect. Article 64.01 specifies that a convicted person may request DNA testing “only
    of evidence described by Subsection (a-1) that was secured in relation to the offense that is the basis
    of the challenged conviction and was in the possession of the state during the trial of the offense.”114
    Subsection (a-1) refers to “evidence that has a reasonable likelihood of containing biological
    material.”115 “Biological material” is defined as “an item that is in possession of the state and that
    contains blood, semen, hair, saliva, skin tissue or cells, fingernail scrapings, bone, bodily fluids, or
    other identifiable biological evidence that may be suitable for forensic DNA testing” and “includes
    the contents of a sexual assault evidence collection kit.”116
    These statutes make clear that a convicted person cannot require the State to collect
    biological material that it does not already possess. So, the State could not be required to collect
    114
    TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 64.01(b).
    115
    
    Id.
     art. 64.01(a-1).
    116
    
    Id.
     art. 64.01(a).
    WOOD — 33
    DNA samples from an alternative suspect to test them. But as will be explained later, the State had
    already collected samples from Martinez. What is unusual about the motion to test these samples
    is that it relates to biological material collected from a known individual with the idea of obtaining
    that individual’s DNA profile instead of biological material of unknown origin collected from the
    victim or the crime scene. But it is not immediately self-evident that the literal text of the statute
    would not embrace Appellant’s request.
    We will assume, without deciding, that the samples from Martinez qualify as evidence that
    could be tested under Chapter 64 if other requirements are met. But because the motion to test these
    samples is markedly different from the more conventional crime-scene DNA motions that Appellant
    has filed, we will refer to the Martinez-samples motion as the “alternative suspect” motion rather
    than trying to fit it within the numerical sequence of Appellant’s DNA motions. We will refer to
    each of Appellant’s crime-scene DNA motions as a “motion for DNA testing” or a “DNA motion”
    and to the numerical sequence that the particular crime-scene motion was filed. That means we will
    refer to Appellant’s fourth crime-scene motion more generally as his fourth DNA motion, even
    though the “alternative suspect” motion was filed between it and Appellant’s third DNA motion.
    We now address whether the relevant requirements have been met with respect to all of the items
    Appellant wishes to test.
    2. Unreasonable Delay
    Article 64.03(a)(2)(B) requires a convicted person to establish “by a preponderance of the
    evidence that . . . the request for the proposed DNA testing is not made to unreasonably delay the
    execution of sentence or administration of justice.”117 The statute “does not contain set criteria a
    117
    TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 64.03(a)(2)(B).
    WOOD — 34
    court must consider in deciding whether a movant satisfied his burden that his request is not made
    to unreasonably delay a sentence’s execution,” but circumstances that may be considered include
    “the promptness of the request, the temporal proximity between the request and the sentence’s
    execution, or the ability to request the testing earlier.”118 But cases will “turn on the discrete facts”
    they present and there is “no definitive criteria for answering this inherently fact-specific and
    subjective inquiry.”119
    In Reed, we concluded that the convicted person failed to establish that his request was not
    made to unreasonably delay the execution of his sentence or the administration of justice because
    he untimely requested testing of a significant number of items, took four months to submit his own
    reference sample, engaged in protracted litigation since his conviction was affirmed in 2000, took
    a “piecemeal” approach to his post-conviction litigation, filed his motion on the same day the judge
    held a hearing on a request to set an execution date, and waited thirteen years after Chapter 64 was
    first enacted to file his motion for DNA testing.120 In Thacker, we held that the convicted person
    failed to make the required showing because he “waited over four years to file his motion, and that
    motion was filed less than a month before his scheduled execution.”121 The record convinces us that
    Appellant has failed to meet his burden here—a conclusion that is amply supported by the timeline
    of events we detail below.
    Because Appellant was convicted in 1992, he has had the entire time that Chapter 64 has
    118
    Reed, 541 S.W.3d at 778.
    119
    Id.
    120
    Id. at 778-80.
    121
    
    177 S.W.3d at 927
    .
    WOOD — 35
    been in existence—since April 5, 2001—to file a motion for DNA testing.122 In 2009, Appellant was
    granted a stay of execution so that he could raise an Atkins intellectual-disability123 claim.124 In
    November 2010, Appellant filed his first motion for DNA testing, which sought testing under a
    newer method (Y-STR) of three pieces of biological evidence (including a fingernail) that had been
    previously tested under an older method.125 Appellant alleged that Y-STR testing “was not available
    for forensic use until at least 2003.” In our 2005 Thacker opinion, we noted that Thacker claimed
    that Y-STR did not become available until 2002.126 We faulted Thacker for not filing a motion for
    DNA testing “in 2002, 2003, or 2004.”127 Regardless of whether Y-STR testing was available in
    2002 or 2003, Appellant waited even longer than Thacker to file his motion. Nevertheless, the State
    did not oppose the motion, and the trial court granted it.
    Concurrently with the first DNA motion, Appellant requested that the Atkins proceeding be
    stayed pending the outcome of the DNA testing. The trial judge did not agree to a stay but did
    extend all of the deadlines pertaining to the Atkins proceeding by 90 days.
    In January 2011, the DNA and habeas proceedings were transferred from Judge Peter Peca
    to Judge Bert Richardson. In February 2011, Appellant filed a second motion for DNA testing,
    122
    See Reed, 
    541 S.W.3d at
    779 & n.41.
    123
    See Atkins v. Virginia, 
    536 U.S. 304
     (2002).
    124
    Ex parte Wood, No. WR-45,746-02, 
    2009 WL 10690712
    , at *1 (Tex. Crim. App. Aug.
    19, 2009) (not designated for publication).
    125
    The fingernail was from the victim Angelica Frausto.
    126
    
    177 S.W.3d at 927
    .
    127
    
    Id.
    WOOD — 36
    seeking the testing of four additional fingernails. He stated that his attorney learned of the existence
    of these fingernails in the State’s possession on January 29, 2011, but Appellant did not explain why
    he could not have discovered their existence earlier.128 He claimed that the motion was not made to
    unreasonably delay the execution of his sentence because he did not have an execution date set and
    “[t]esting of these items should proceed efficiently and quickly.” And concurrently with his new
    testing request, Appellant filed a motion to further extend the deadlines in the Atkins proceeding.
    Testing of the three items from Appellant’s first DNA motion was later completed. The test
    results showed that a bloodstain on a yellow terrycloth sun suit belonging to victim Dawn Smith
    contained male DNA. A partial profile of this DNA was developed, and Appellant was excluded
    from this profile. In August 2011, the trial court issued an order finding that the results did not
    establish that it is reasonably probable that Appellant would not have been convicted.129
    In October 2011, Appellant filed a third motion for DNA testing. This time, he sought to test
    more than 69 items, none of which had previously been subjected to DNA testing.130 At the
    beginning of his argument in the motion, Appellant explained that, after the 2011 amendments,
    128
    Like the first fingernail tested, these fingernails were also from the victim Frausto but were
    not previously tested because, unlike the fingernail that was tested, a visual inspection revealed no
    tissue underneath them. Appellant argued that the technology that existed when he was convicted
    in 1992 had not been capable of providing probative results. Opposing the second DNA motion, the
    State contended, among other things, that Appellant had not shown that there was biological material
    on the fingernails that could be tested. Appellant responded that the State had argued at trial that
    scratches on Appellant’s face were inflicted by the victim to whom the fingernails belonged. So,
    Appellant surmised that microscopic biological material from another person could be on the
    fingernails. That surmise is problematic because it assumes Appellant’s guilt. If the scratches on
    Appellant’s face were of innocent origin, they could not be used to infer the likelihood of
    microscopic DNA existing on the victim’s fingernails.
    129
    Appellant filed a notice of appeal of that determination, but he subsequently withdrew it.
    130
    He enumerated 69 entries, but some of his entries consisted of multiple items.
    WOOD — 37
    “Chapter 64 no longer burdens a convicted person with demonstrating why evidence was not
    previously tested.” Appellant did not use this point to support his contention later in the motion that
    his motion was not made to unduly delay his execution, and he did not explain why these items could
    not have been brought in an earlier motion.131 In support of his contention that the motion was not
    made for purposes of delay, Appellant stated that no execution date had been set and that the parties
    were continuing to litigate the Atkins claim. Neither of these reasons explained why he could not
    have brought his request earlier.
    The 2011 version of Chapter 64 still required that the items to be tested “contain[] biological
    material.”132 Only a few of the 69 items listed in the motion—consisting of fingernails or containing
    hair—obviously consisted of or contained biological material.133 The vast majority of the items (e.g.
    shirts, pants, shoes, cigarette butts) did not self-evidently contain biological material, and Appellant
    did not attempt to explain why he thought they did, other than to rely upon the generalization that
    “[m]odern technology can identify male DNA from the mere traces of blood, skin cells, sweat,
    semen, or mucus left on a variety of surfaces.”
    In a December 2011 hearing, the trial judge remarked that Appellant was seeking testing on
    an “extraordinary amount of evidence.” It became clear at the hearing that the defense did not even
    131
    Pointedly, Appellant did not argue that he could not show, under the pre-2011 statute, that
    the failure to test these items for his trial was not his fault. See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art.
    64.01(b)(1)(B) (West 2002) (“through no fault of the convicted person, for reasons that are of a
    nature such that the interests of justice require DNA testing”); Skinner v. State, 
    293 S.W.3d 196
    , 197
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) (“[T]he interests of justice do not require testing when defense counsel has
    already declined to request testing as a matter of reasonable trial strategy.”).
    132
    TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 64.01(a-1) (West 2012).
    133
    And the fingernails were obviously biological material because they came from victims,
    not because they obviously contained biological material from a third party.
    WOOD — 38
    know whether these items contained biological material and that eyeballing the items would not help
    because any biological material would be, according to Appellant’s habeas counsel, “microscopic.”
    At some point in the hearing, Appellant’s habeas counsel suggested that DNA testing could occur
    a little bit at a time:
    [T]he Court doesn’t have to order all of the items to be tested immediately. A
    technical scientific expert can advise the Court as to the first five or ten items to test
    and make a determination at that point after testing is completed, whether it is
    dispositive, then we can move on in stages.
    The trial judge reacted negatively to that suggestion:
    I think if there is something to test, we’re just going to do it all and get this over with.
    So, if Mr. Wood is entitled to relief, he gets it and we’re done with it, if he’s not, then
    we just go to the next step. I’m opposed to dragging this thing out any longer than
    it should have been. You know, I’ve reviewed the hearings from August of 2009,
    and back at that time there was a request that this take place in about nine months.
    That’s what you requested and the Judge denied it, that request. We’re two and a
    half years into this almost.
    Later, the trial judge told the State, “I agree with you on the delays. I’m somewhat exa[sper]ated on
    how long this has taken.” The judge specifically attributed unwarranted delay to habeas counsel:
    I think the record is clear about what I think about the delays here that have taken
    place, including the Court’s threat to hold you in contempt. Previous deadlines
    warrant that. So I think it’s abundantly clear that there have been deadlines missed,
    that there have been delays, and we’ve concluded the Atkins hearing.
    Nevertheless, the trial judge appointed Dr. William Watson to assist Appellant in determining what
    evidence might be available for testing.134
    The record shows no further actions by Appellant with respect to his remaining DNA motions
    134
    According to the trial judge, Dr. Watson was willing to do so without charging a fee.
    WOOD — 39
    until January 2015, after this Court had denied relief on his Atkins habeas claim (November 2014)135
    and after the State had asked for an execution date to be set. Appellant filed a written document
    opposing the setting of an execution date on the ground that he “has been diligently litigating his
    right to DNA testing on nearly 100 items found at the crime scenes.” In a supplemental document
    opposing an execution date, Appellant set out a chronology of events spanning 2011 to 2015 that he
    claims are substantiated by emails between the parties, experts, and the trial court. This chronology
    claimed that Dr. Watson was appointed in March 2012 and outlines various events during the next
    few years. Even so, the chronology contained unexplained gaps, with nothing occurring between
    July 2012 and October 2013 or between October 2013 and March 2014.
    In April 2015, Appellant filed a motion to “order” DNA testing, which appears to have been
    a follow up to his third motion for DNA testing. In this follow-up motion, Appellant claimed that
    Allison Heard, a DNA supervisor at the Department of Public Safety’s Austin Crime Lab, had
    designated a list of at least 39 items that would benefit from DNA testing.136
    On November 2, 2015, Appellant filed a motion to create a DNA profile of Salvador
    Martinez, whom Appellant called an “alternative suspect.” In this “alternative suspect” motion,
    Appellant said that El Paso police officers had interrogated Martinez in 1987 in relation to the
    murders and had collected hair, saliva, and blood samples from him. Appellant further claimed that
    the police sent these samples to the Department of Public Safety for testing but that they were never
    tested. Appellant claimed that his request for testing was not made to unreasonably delay his
    135
    Ex parte Wood, No. WR–45,746–02, 
    2014 WL 6765490
     (Tex. Crim. App. November 26,
    2014) (not designated for publication).
    136
    The list contains 39 entries, but some of those entries consist of multiple items.
    WOOD — 40
    execution or the administration of justice because there was no execution date pending and because
    he intended to file a new DNA motion based on amendments that became effective on September
    1, 2015. He provided no explanation for why the 2015 amendments excused the more-than-a-decade
    delay in requesting this testing.
    In its response to Appellant’s “alternative suspect” motion, the State contended, among other
    things, that Appellant failed to show that his motion was not made to unreasonably delay the
    execution of sentence or the administration of justice. Appellant filed a reply claiming that it would
    not have mattered if he had filed his motion earlier because the 2015 amendment created a “far more
    lenient” testing standard than had previously existed by authorizing testing when there was a
    “reasonable likelihood” an item contained biological material, as opposed to showing that an item
    did in fact contain biological material.137 That response made no sense in the context of Appellant’s
    “alternative suspect” motion because the biological samples taken from Martinez were necessarily
    biological material, and the whole point of Appellant’s request was to obtain Martinez’s DNA
    profile.
    137
    The exact language in Appellant’s reply was as follows:
    Furthermore, the State admonishes Mr. Wood for failing to file the alternative-
    suspect DNA motion shortly after the Court noted that it was considering setting an
    execution date. However, doing so would not have aided in avoiding further delays
    in this case. On May 22, 2015, Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed a bill to amend
    the Chapter 64 DNA testing statute. The law did not take effect until September 1,
    2015. The amendment permits defendants to obtain DNA testing if they can show
    that the evidence to be tested has a “reasonable likelihood” of containing biological
    material. This standard is far more lenient than the previous standard. Thus, if Mr.
    Wood had filed the alternative-suspect DNA motion prior to September 1, 2015, he
    would have had to re-file the motion after the amended statute took effect for the new
    provisions to apply.
    (Citations omitted).
    WOOD — 41
    From May 2015 to January 2016, Appellant filed several other motions, including a motion
    to order the State to locate missing trial exhibits, a motion to re-file the DNA motion after September
    1, 2015, a motion for the appointment of Chapter 64 counsel, and a motion to unseal evidence.
    In a February 2016 hearing, the trial judge commented again about delays in the proceedings:
    “I think my findings are quite clear about the delays that have taken place in the case. And it’s my
    opinion at this point, it’s inexcusable.” The trial judge did, however, suggest that the defense was
    not dilatory after the passage of the 2015 amendments to Chapter 64. Appellant’s habeas attorney
    further argued that the State was not making a “fair accusation” in accusing the defense of
    “piecemeal litigation.” The trial judge responded, “I think it’s a fair accu—representation because
    I put it in my findings” and further elaborated:
    This was remanded back to El Paso in August of 2011 for an Atkins hearing. During
    that time period, you agreed to DNA testing along with the State to get done. It got
    done. I ruled on it and then subsequent to that, there [were] more requests for DNA
    testing. So it has been piecemealed. Whether it’s dilatory or not, I’ll just make that
    finding at the appropriate time but it has been piecemealed. There’s no question
    about it.
    The trial judge subsequently questioned Appellant’s habeas counsel on whether the defense
    did anything during the years to move the case, and habeas counsel did not give a responsive answer:
    THE COURT: So we concluded the Atkins matter and the DNA matter in late 2011
    I believe.
    [HABEAS COUNSEL]: That’s correct. I’m sorry.
    THE COURT: Were there any subsequent requests to anybody that you wanted more
    information pursuant to the DNA issues? I know I assigned -- I appointed an expert
    to take a look at it but most of that movement seems to come when I would make a
    phone call and see if there’s any movement going on. There wasn’t any request to
    come back to El Paso or anything for DNA matters. That was from your end.
    [HABEAS COUNSEL]: I know, Your Honor, but the appointment of that expert, the
    WOOD — 42
    Court’s expert and he was initially appointed --
    THE COURT: At your request. You wanted an expert.
    [HABEAS COUNSEL]: Right, and --
    THE COURT: Correct?
    [HABEAS COUNSEL]: -- that’s the Court’s independent neutral expert --
    THE COURT: Right.
    [HABEAS COUNSEL]: Dr. Watson who was to report back to you --
    THE COURT: Uh-huh.
    [HABEAS COUNSEL]: -- about the existence of biological material on the evidence
    that was contained in the 2000 motion -- 2011 motion for DNA testing.
    THE COURT: Okay.
    [HABEAS COUNSEL]: My point is it would have been extremely helpful to -- if I
    had been given a copy of this September 2011 exhaustive comprehensive catalog
    inventory list from the DPS expert. I didn’t have that and therefore when we did
    finally get a copy of it and received it not until last year. We recived a legible color
    copy of that document. And until we clearly read the spreadsheet did we realize there
    were a number of items that previously were not known to us based on the 1989
    spreadsheet we were working on.
    The trial judge later tried to nail down whether all the evidence that the defense wanted tested was
    accounted for:
    THE COURT: Are all of the items that you’re requesting to be tested, are they on
    these spreadsheets? Are those from the victims in the case and not extraneous items
    or do we know?
    [HABEAS COUNSEL]: They’re from the victims. They’re from the crime scene as
    far as we can tell.
    The trial judge further discussed the need to have a list of all the evidence the defense was seeking
    to have tested and for the defense to then file a new motion for DNA testing based on that evidence:
    WOOD — 43
    Put it all together. Say this is everything that could potentially be tested and then
    [habeas counsel] can file his motion saying I would like all of it tested, which I
    presume is what he will do and then you can either agree or just object to it. And if
    we have to come back for that, we can do that.
    The trial judge granted Appellant’s motion to make habeas counsel his appointed attorney, and the
    trial judge ordered that the El Paso Police Department allow habeas counsel and his agents to inspect
    and take photographs of any evidence in the case and to make copies of any documentary evidence.
    From July 2016 to January 2017, Appellant filed several motions, though none were the
    anticipated post-2015 motion for DNA testing. He filed a motion for clarification, a motion to
    compel the Attorney General to disclose evidence of a Crime Stoppers tip of an alternative suspect
    (not Martinez), a motion to mitigate harm caused by the State’s loss or destruction of potentially
    exculpatory biological evidence, a motion to compel the State to disclose correspondence between
    the State and a jailhouse informant, and a motion to compel disclosure of exculpatory evidence
    related to police misconduct.
    More than a year after the 2016 hearing, in March 2017, Appellant filed the anticipated fourth
    motion for DNA testing, titled as being under “Amended Chapter 64.” Attached to the motion was
    a “DNA spreadsheet” listing 142 entries. None of these items had previously been tested. Although
    Appellant conceded that he was required to show under the 2015 verison of Chapter 64 that the
    evidence to be tested had a “reasonable likelihood” of containing biological material, he claimed to
    have met that requirement only as to 86 of the entries.138 He further claimed that 15 of the entries
    were items that had been lost or destroyed by the State, and he sought to have the trial court presume
    that DNA testing on the missing items would have produced exculpatory results.
    138
    He claimed that either the Department of Public Safety or Dr. Watson had made such a
    determination with respect to 86 of the entries.
    WOOD — 44
    Appellant’s claim in this motion to have satisfied the “not to unreasonably delay”
    requirement was perfunctory, consisting of a half-page paragraph. In that paragraph, he simply
    stated that he did “not have an execution date at this time” and that the parties “have been litigating
    the DNA testing issue since 2011.” He mentioned the fact that his motion was filed after September
    1, 2015, and that there were amendments to Chapter 64 effective that date, but, pointedly, he made
    no attempt to explain how that fact supported his claim that his motion was not filed to unreasonably
    delay his execution. He did cite our prior decision in Skinner v. State139 for the proposition that a
    motion for DNA testing in that case was not dilatory because the convicted person did not have an
    execution date and a federal habeas appeal was pending.
    This new motion was discussed during a March 2017 hearing.140 Appellant’s habeas counsel
    reiterated an earlier suggestion that the evidence could be tested a little at a time, claiming that the
    Department of Public Safety could test only around 20 items every 60 to 90 days. The habeas court
    again pushed back against that idea:
    The problem with not doing it all at the same time is the problem we’re having now.
    We are now eight years removed from his initial stay, so if there needs to be any
    testing done, if that standard is met, it ought to be done now and then on the outside
    chance there is something from that testing that points to somebody else, so be it, but
    if it doesn’t, I don’t think you get to come back to the table over and over and drag
    this out forever.
    The parties and the trial judge discussed sending the judge briefs on several different legal issues.
    They agreed upon a deadline of April 10.
    But a little more than a week after that deadline, on April 18, 2017, Appellant created a
    139
    
    122 S.W.3d at 811
    .
    140
    This motion was attached as an exhibit to the hearing (on March 8) and was filed on
    March 13.
    WOOD — 45
    roadblock to resolving the DNA issues—his motion to disqualify Judge Richardson. As we have
    explained earlier, this motion was filed more than two years after Judge Richardson was elected to
    the Court of Criminal Appeals.
    And a few months after that roadblock was resolved, Appellant created another one—his
    December 2017 motion to disqualify the assistant attorney general. As we explained earlier,
    Appellant claimed that the Attorney General’s Office had withheld exculpatory information—the
    previously referred-to Crime Stoppers tip—and called upon the trial court to exercise its authority
    under Article 2.07 to appoint and remove an attorney pro tem. The earlier motion to compel
    production of the Crime Stoppers tip had been filed in August 2016 and had claimed that Appellant
    learned of the tip from documents received from the El Paso District Attorney’s Office in July 2016.
    Appellant did not explain why it took him over a year to file the disqualification motion.
    Not much happened during the years of 2018 to 2021. Appellant sought a status conference
    in February 2019, and later that month the State moved to set an execution date, which Appellant
    opposed. In his opposition pleading, Appellant proposed that the trial court wait to set an execution
    date until after the United States Supreme Court decided whether to grant certiorari on his Atkins
    claim. We had rejected his Atkins claim in 2014, but we reconsidered the claim in 2018 in light of
    the Supreme Court’s decision in Moore v. Texas141 and again denied relief.142 The Supreme Court
    denied certiorari on October 7, 2019.143 On October 22, 2019, the State advised the trial court that
    certiorari had been denied. But Appellant’s opposition pleading had also stated, “This Court should
    141
    
    581 U.S. 1
     (2017).
    142
    Ex parte Wood, 
    568 S.W.3d 678
     (Tex. Crim. App. 2018).
    143
    
    140 S. Ct. 213 (2019)
    .
    WOOD — 46
    unequivocally reject any request by the State to set an execution date now while the DNA motions,
    and related Chapter 64 motions, are pending.”
    On March 3, 2022, the trial judge denied Appellant’s motion for DNA testing, along with
    three other motions: his motions to mitigate harm, to disqualify the assistant attorney general, and
    to test biological samples from Salvador Martinez.144 The trial judge issued no findings of fact, and
    Appellant did not file a request for findings.
    As we explained earlier, Appellant filed a new motion to remove the assistant attorney
    general on March 18, 2022, and this motion relied upon our December 2021 decision in Stephens.
    On March 28, 2022, Appellant filed a motion to rescind the DNA orders signed on March 3. On
    April 1, 2022, he filed a notice of appeal.
    On April 11, 2024, Appellant transmitted a reply brief that exceeds the word limits.
    Concurrently with his reply brief, he transmitted three motions: (1) to allow his reply brief to exceed
    the word limits, (2) to disqualify Judge Richardson from the case on appeal and request the Governor
    to appoint a replacement judge, and (3) to supplement the record with seven items. His motion to
    supplement the record includes two reporter’s records of hearings that were already attached as
    exhibits in the clerk’s record forwarded to us, and it includes the order denying “alternative suspect”
    DNA testing that he had attached as an exhibit to his opening brief. The remaining four items,
    however, were brought to our attention for the first time on April 11, 2024, despite the fact that three
    144
    The order denying the motion to test biological samples from Martinez (the so-called
    “alternative suspect”) was not in the record forwarded to this Court. As explained later, Appellant
    filed a motion to supplement the record. We grant this motion solely as to the “alternative suspect”
    order and will assume that his Appendix C to his opening brief is an accurate copy of that order. We
    deny his motion as to his other supplementation requests. However, we have treated court reporter’s
    records that are included in the clerk’s record before us as part of the appellate record. See infra at
    text, two paragraphs down, discussing the motion to supplement.
    WOOD — 47
    were documents from the State dated March 17, 2022, and one was a court reporter’s record from
    hearings conducted in August 2011.145
    The above timeline shows a course of conduct designed to draw out DNA proceedings to try
    to delay Appellant’s execution as long as possible. Despite the fact that Chapter 64 was enacted in
    2001 and the appropriate testing technology was available in 2003, Appellant waited until 2010 to
    file his first DNA motion and until 2017 to file his most recent one. The tardiness of these filings
    exceed periods we have previously found to indicate unreasonable delay.
    Moreover, Appellant’s core DNA-motion filings consisted of at least four crime-scene
    motions for DNA testing, spread out over five years, with the last motion seeking the testing of more
    than 100 items. The piecemeal litigation of claims in a death-penalty case is a classic sign of
    purposeful delay.146    A convicted person ought to present his claims “with dispatch for
    determination, rather than doling them out one-by-one.”147
    Although amendments in 2011 and 2015 changed some of the standards for DNA motions,
    those changes do not show that Appellant’s piecemeal litigation of his DNA motions was necessary.
    The amendments cannot justify the delay in bringing his first two DNA motions because they
    preceded the 2011 amendments. Moreover, Appellant made no effort in his third and fourth DNA
    145
    And as we noted earlier, his reply brief quotes from supposed emails from March 2022
    that are outside the record. See supra at n. 74.
    146
    See Reed, 
    541 S.W.3d at 778
     (Referring to a prior habeas proceeding, “we noted that
    Reed has taken a ‘piecemeal approach’ in his post-conviction litigation.”); Ex parte Carr, 
    511 S.W.2d 523
    , 525 (Tex. Crim. App. 1974) (quoting Sanders v. United States, 
    373 U.S. 1
    , 18 (1963))
    (referring to “needless piecemeal litigation, to entertain collateral proceedings whose only purpose
    is to vex, harass, or delay”).
    147
    Carr, 
    511 S.W.2d at 525
    .
    WOOD — 48
    motions to explain how the amendments impacted the availability of testing under Chapter 64 for
    the various items for which testing was requested. As explained earlier, Chapter 64 places the
    burden on him to make the required showing. A detailed explanation with respect to each item
    would have been ideal, but at least a general explanation for classes of items was called for.
    Perhaps one might say that the 2015 “reasonable likelihood of containing of biological
    material” standard was the key to everything, because Appellant simply could not meet the earlier
    requirement of showing that the biological material existed. That would conflict with his third
    motion, but perhaps it could be argued that the third motion was just wishful thinking. But
    Appellant made no effort to show that. And considering the amount of time that had already been
    spent on DNA motions, one would expect a motion to be filed shortly after the 2015
    amendments—not in 2017.
    In any event, Appellant’s piecemeal litigation was not limited to his crime-scene motions for
    DNA testing. He also doled out various ancillary motions. He moved to delay Atkins proceedings
    on the basis of his pending DNA motions. He was partially successful in that effort and in turn relied
    upon that success—the continued pendency of Atkins proceedings—to contend that his DNA
    motions were not creating undue delay. Between some of his DNA motions, Appellant also filed
    various other motions upon which the parties and the trial court had to expend time, including his
    “alternative suspect” motion. After his last DNA motion, Appellant delayed proceedings further by
    moving to recuse the trial judge. And after that matter was resolved, he moved to recuse the assistant
    attorney general.
    Even if the ancillary motions had all been legitimate in the abstract, Appellant doled many
    of them out one at a time to further delay the proceedings. And regardless of whether there was a
    WOOD — 49
    procedural default, a number of the motions were clearly filed late. The “alternative suspect” motion
    was filed in 2015 even though the samples had been obtained from Martinez in 1987, and, as we
    explained earlier, Appellant’s 2015-based reason for the late filing does not stand up to scrutiny. The
    judicial-disqualification motion was filed in 2017 even though Judge Richardson started
    campaigning for our Court in 2013, was elected in 2014, and began serving in 2015.148 And the first
    motion to disqualify the assistant attorney general was filed more than a year after Appellant claims
    he discovered the information that formed the basis for his motion.
    Moreover, Appellant filed a post-order motion to disqualify the assistant attorney general on
    an entirely new basis. As we have explained earlier, that post-order motion was untimely. That
    motion also constituted more piecemeal litigation of ancillary motions.
    And the piecemeal litigation of ancillary motions that could have been filed earlier has
    continued even on appeal. At the last possible moment, when Appellant’s reply brief was due, he
    has filed a motion to supplement the record with at least some items he could have and should have
    brought to this Court’s attention earlier. And at the same time, he has filed a motion to have this
    Court seek an outsider to serve as a replacement judge for Judge Richardson. Appellant knew that
    Judge Richardson was a judge on this Court when he filed his notice of appeal more than two years
    earlier.
    And at least some of his ancillary motions were clearly without merit, as illustrated by our
    disposition of Appellant’s claims on appeal.
    148
    In his reply brief, Appellant says he filed his motion to disqualify “promptly after learning
    of the link on Judge Richardson’s campaign website.” Appellant does not say how or when he
    learned of the link, and he does not provide any record citations to support his assertion. In any
    event, all of the information Appellant has relied upon to advance his judicial disqualification claim
    was publicly available.
    WOOD — 50
    Moreover, the record also reveals large spans of time in which Appellant failed to exert any
    effort to timely obtain DNA testing. Appellant could have filed a motion for DNA testing in 2001,
    but his first DNA motion was filed in 2010. For most of the 69 items listed in his third DNA
    motion, Appellant gave no guidance on whether they were even suitable for testing. Instead, he
    sought expert assistance to make that determination but for years failed to adequately follow up on
    obtaining that assistance. In his fourth motion, he indicated that only 86 of his 142 requested entries
    had been designated suitable for testing. Even after accounting for the 15 lost or destroyed items,
    that still left 41 entries with an unknown status, potentially to be decided later.
    The record also indicates that Appellant sought even more delay than he was able to obtain.
    He sought to have his Atkins proceedings placed completely on hold until the DNA issues had been
    resolved. If he had succeeded, it is possible that the Atkins proceedings would still be pending. He
    also suggested that testing occur a little at a time, which had the potential to draw out proceedings
    for years.
    And the trial judge complained several times that Appellant was unduly delaying
    proceedings. The first of those complaints occurred in 2011, but Appellant’s proceedings were not
    resolved until 2022. And even now, on appeal, Appellant has filed tardy motions that seek to create
    further delay.
    Appellant’s main argument in his various motions for DNA testing on the “unreasonable
    delay” issue has been that no execution date was set. We find that to be a hollow contention when
    considered in light of the way Appellant has used DNA proceedings to delay his Atkins proceedings
    and to put off the setting of an execution date. And the Skinner case he cited is clearly
    distinguishable. Skinner and Appellant were each convicted before Chapter 64 was enacted. But
    WOOD — 51
    our decision in Skinner was issued in 2003, a mere two-and-a-half years after enactment.149
    Although the case does not recite when the motion was filed, it was obviously filed sometime before
    then. By contrast, Appellant did not even start filing DNA motions until nine years after Chapter
    64 was enacted, and the DNA order in this case was entered more than two decades after the advent
    of Chapter 64 and more than six years after the 2015 amendments. Appellant’s history of piecemeal
    litigation, the effect of this litigation in delaying his execution date, and his failure to advance final
    scrutiny of his claims in a timely fashion, all make this case different from Skinner.
    In his opening brief, Appellant’s only argument on the unreasonable delay issue is to set out
    a timeline of events consistent with the timeline we have set out. Appellant fills in this timeline with
    events occurring in 2013 and 2014 that relate to his Atkins claim in the habeas action, including
    Judge Richardson’s findings of fact and this Court’s adoption of those findings. Those events in no
    way excuse any delay by Appellant in the DNA case. And to the extent the timeline shows activity
    by Appellant, it also shows his piecemeal doling out of claims in various motions, as we have
    previously explained.
    In his reply brief, Appellant expands on his allegation that the timeline shows diligence rather
    than delay. He contends that he filed approximately 40 pleadings related to the Chapter 64 litigation
    and that there were four in-person hearings. He claims that this “demonstrates the seriousness of the
    issues raised and the uniqueness of the case” and that his “tenaciousness is not the consequence of
    pursuing a strategy of unreasonable delay. We disagree. The proliferation of pleadings shows the
    piecemeal nature of the litigation. And several of his key ancillary motions are clearly without merit.
    And many of his motions were, by any reasonable definition, late. The record amply shows that
    149
    See Skinner, 
    122 S.W.3d 808
    .
    WOOD — 52
    Appellant “doled out” various motions instead of pursuing them with dispatch.
    Appellant also contends that the judge found that his first DNA motion satisfied all of the
    Chapter 64 requirements for testing, which would include that the request was not made to
    unreasonably delay the execution of sentence. Even assuming that contention to be true, it does not
    help Appellant here. The first motion was filed at a time when it was less evident that it would delay
    his execution. Appellant had a pending intellectual-disability claim that we held needed to be
    litigated. That does not mean his first motion was not tardy. It was tardy. And Appellant still has
    to account for motions two, three, and four. And over the entire period that his subsequent DNA
    motions having been pending, he has a pattern of piecemeal litigation and delay. And as can be seen
    with his latest flurry of motions filed with his reply brief, he is still doing it.
    In light of all of this discussion, we conclude that Appellant has not met his burden to show
    that his request for DNA testing has not been made to unreasonably delay the execution of sentence.
    That failure is alone sufficient to support the trial court’s order denying DNA testing.
    We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
    Delivered: May 22, 2024
    Publish
    

Document Info

Docket Number: AP-77,107

Filed Date: 5/22/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/3/2024