DocketNumber: WR-53,613-08
Filed Date: 1/27/2009
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 9/16/2015
Applicant files last-minute, but facially appealing, claims (1) of actual innocence of this capital murder based upon (1) affidavits from three medical examiner pathologists that the murder victim must have died within a day or two of December 30, 1998, which was some twenty days after applicant had been arrested and continuously jailed; and (2) specks of blood found under the victim's fingernails that contain DNA that does not match that of applicant. These claims are not new. This is applicant's eighth writ application and most of this evidence has been previously considered and rejected by Texas courts. More importantly, this is an instance of focusing solely on a couple of twigs of apparently exculpatory evidence instead of the veritable forest of inculpatory evidence.
To assess applicant's latest claims, one must weigh their merits relative to all of the other evidence in this case. In his fourth writ application, filed two days before his scheduled execution on January 24, 2007, applicant contended that Melissa Trotter's body could not have been placed in the Sam Houston National Forest on December 8, 1998, because entomological activity did not begin on her body until December 17th or 18th. He provided expert affidavits to this effect. We granted applicant a stay of execution and remanded his writ to the trial court to consider whether applicant could, in fact, establish that Melissa either did not die or was not transported to the Sam Houston National Forest until December 17th or 18th, at which time applicant was already in jail and therefore could not have committed the murder.
The trial judge granted applicant additional expert funding and an evidentiary hearing was held in July, 2007. At some point, applicant filed affidavits from two medical examiner pathologists, Dr. Glenn M. Larkin and Dr. Lloyd White. Both of these affidavits were signed on March 29, 2007, and they attack certain findings of Dr. Joye Carter, the Medical Examiner of Harris County who had performed Melissa's autopsy on January 3, 1999.
The trial judge's written factual findings and conclusions of law evaluated and rejected this evidence, along with other evidence. The trial judge's factual findings from the fourth writ hearing include the following summary of the trial evidence supporting the conclusion that applicant murdered Melissa Trotter on December 8, 1998:
Two of the most inculpatory pieces of evidence proving that applicant murdered Melissa on December 8th were: (1) the pieces of potato, chicken, and green vegetable that Melissa ate for lunch immediately before disappearing that were found in her stomach during the autopsy on January 3, 1999. Doctor Joye Carter testified at trial that food remains in the stomach for about two hours after eating it. (2) Cell phone records showing applicant used his cell phone at 3:03 p.m. on December 8th near the cell phone tower at FM 1097, a highway that crosses I-45 well north of applicant's trailer house (or the Montgomery County College). This is directly on a logical path to the Sam Houston National Forest where Melissa's body was found three weeks later.
The original affidavits from Dr. Larkin and Dr. White attacked Dr. Carter's trial testimony that the results of her autopsy were consistent with Melissa having died on December 8th. (3)
It was their opinion, then and now, that the pathological evidence indicated that Melissa could not have been dead until long after December 8th. (4) Strangely, applicant did not call either of these pathologists to testify at the July 2007 hearing, although their opinions were known to him three months earlier. Instead, he called Dr. Luis Sanchez, the Medical Examiner for Harris County who replaced Dr. Carter. Dr. Sanchez testified that he did not see any evidence of vaginal bruising in the autopsy photos. Dr. Sanchez gave his opinion that Melissa's body was not in the Sam Houston Forest environment for more than two weeks, although it was probably somewhere else before that, because the state of decomposition-especially that of the pancreas- was not sufficiently advanced for having been on the forest floor for three weeks. The pancreas "normally" autolyzes (5) quite rapidly, but Dr. Carter had said that she sectioned and examined the pancreas. Similarly, Dr. Sanchez thought that both the liver and the intestinal system appeared to be less decomposed than is consistent with the body lying outside for three weeks. When asked, Dr. Sanchez did not think that it was impossible for Melissa to have been killed on December 8th. He thought that it was possible (especially because of the remnants of her lunch from December 8th still present in her stomach) and that clothing would serve as a preventative barrier to some degree. When the judge asked whether cold temperatures would preserve a body for longer, Dr. Sanchez said yes: "Low temperatures can delay the process of decomposition." It would also delay the activity of insects and maggots. Dr. Sanchez concluded by telling the judge that "the pattern of decomposition in this case is a little bit unusual. It's not what we tend to see in most of our cases, especially with the mold that she [Dr. Carter] saw all over her body."
Dr. James Arends, an entomologist, testified at the July 2007 hearing and stated that he thought that Melissa could have been murdered on December 8th and then the "body was stored someplace cold. And the head got warm, or the head increased in temperature, and at that point in time, did in fact begin to decompose. And once it did, the odors attracted this particular fly, as well as some of the other flies that were there. And that's why we only see fly activity in this body at that point in time. And at some point in time, this body was in-at some later point in time, then transported to where it was eventually discovered out in the Sam Houston Forest." In sum, Dr. Arends suggested that Melissa's body was "frozen" before it was taken to the forest.
The State called an entomologist from Texas A&M, Dr. Jeffrey Tomberlin, who testified that it is not uncommon for bodies to remain outside, for several days without any entomological activity, even in warm weather. "It's highly variable." He thought that there was nothing odd about Melissa's body being deposited in the forest on December 8th, even though this particular fly colonization did not start until the 18th. Dr. Tomberlin explained that the specific fly species that began colonizing Melissa's body on December 18th is a secondary colonizer, (6) which indicates that her body was in an advanced state of decomposition at that time. He, like Dr. Arends, had a scientific opinion that the cynomyopsis fly colonization began on Melissa's body on December 18th, but that she could have been lying on the cold forest floor since December 8th with little entomological activity for a few days, then initial colonization by some fly species, and secondary colonization by cynomyopsis beginning on the 18th.
After the hearing, the trial judge signed extensive findings of fact and conclusions of law that addressed the entomological evidence, Dr. Sanchez's testimony, and the fact that the jury had been told at trial of the unidentified DNA found in blood flakes from under Melissa's fingernails. (7) Based upon the original trial evidence, the affidavits, and testimony submitted, the trial court concluded that the new evidence was not exculpatory, nor was it material to applicant's conviction or sentence. It did not undermine confidence in the verdict. This Court independently reviewed the record, adopted the trial court's findings and recommendations, and denied applicant's fourth writ application on January 16, 2008.
In the meantime, applicant had obtained an affidavit from Dr. Carter, signed on October 31, 2007, (8) an addendum to Dr. Larkin's original report, signed on October 1, 2007, (9) and another report by Dr. White, signed on December 12, 2007. (10) On the very day that this Court denied applicant's fourth writ, he filed his fifth writ, once again alleging that his forensic evidence conclusively demonstrated that applicant did not murder Melissa Trotter, as well as raising other claims that he had evidence that another person, Robbie Grove, was a suspect in Melissa's murder. Once again, this Court, in an abundance of caution, remanded applicant's subsequent writ to the trial court for additional evidence on the "Robbie Grove" claim, but not on the forensic evidence because that claim had already been rejected in the prior writ. Once again, the trial court considered affidavits, conducted a live hearing, and entered extensive findings of fact and conclusions of law rejecting applicant's claims. We denied relief on applicant's fifth writ on December 17, 2008.
Now, just days before applicant's rescheduled execution, he has filed a pro se motion for a stay based on the same forensic evidence that was submitted with the fifth writ, and applicant's attorney has filed another writ application with a third affidavit signed by Dr. White. This time Dr. White states that he has reviewed autopsy sectional slides of cardiac muscle tissue and nerve tissue as well as samples of lung and fat tissue. He now concludes that "[i]f these tissues were obtained at autopsy, then the tissues are of an individual that has been dead no more than two or three days." He states that "the microscopic appearance of the tissue in this section is entirely incompatible with the body having been left at this location earlier than 29 or 30 December 1998."
So, when did Melissa die? The scientists are all over the board. Theirs is like the Indian tale of the blind men touching the various parts of the elephant and coming to entirely different conclusions about the animal.
At trial, Dr. Carter testified that her autopsy findings were consistent with Melissa having been murdered on December 8, 1998, and placed in the cold, dark, dank environment of the Sam Houston National Forest. She relied, in part, on the level of external decomposition as is outlined in note 3, supra. She also relied upon the fact that slow-growing fungus was attached to Melissa's back-a fungus that takes at least two weeks to develop. She relied on the maggot colonies and activity and the mold on Melissa's body. At the hearing on applicant's fourth writ, the expert entomologists-both for the applicant and the State-agreed that the Cynomyopsis fly colonization began on Melissa's body on December 18, 1998. Dr. Tomberlin also noted that this specific fly species is a secondary colonizer that does not "come in" until initial colonization has occurred by other species and the body is in an advanced state of decomposition. Dr. Tomberlin thought Melissa had been in the forest since her death on December 8th. Dr. Arends thought that she had been killed, then kept in a very cold environment- perhaps frozen-and finally transported to the forest on or about December 18th.
Dr. Carter, in her 2007 affidavit, stated that, based upon her recent review of her internal organs findings in her autopsy report, she now thought that Melissa's body more likely had not been in the forest for more than two weeks, which would be approximately December 17th or 18th (when the secondary fly colonization began). She states no opinion about the date of death, only a revision of her opinion on how long the body was in the forest.
Dr. Sanchez, the current Medical Examiner for Harris County, testified that he didn't think that Melissa's body had been in the forest environment for more than two weeks, although her dead body was probably somewhere else before that. He thought that the pattern of decomposition was "a little bit unusual."
Both Dr. Larkin and Dr. White originally thought that Melissa "was dead for far less than the twenty-five (25) days opined by Dr. Carter." And that "[p]athologists cannot accurately estimate a post mortem internal with the precision that Dr. Carter indicated she was capable of." In their subsequent written opinions, these pathologists were capable of great precision, opining that Melissa did not die until December 29th or 30th, based on their review of the autopsy report's findings, slides, and photographs of her relatively intact internal organs and the lack of significant bloating.
The hallmark of a scientifically sound hypothesis is that it is consistent with, and accounts for, the totality of the known facts. So let us assume applicant's hypothesis and see how it accounts for the rest of the facts. If Melissa did not die until December 29th, where was she and what was she doing from her disappearance from applicant's trailer on December 8th until 21 days later? Why did she still have the remnants of the lunch she ate on December 8th in her stomach when she died 21 days later? Why did she leave her cigarettes and lighter at applicant's trailer? Who took her and what could that person have done with her for 21 days? Why didn't applicant notice Melissa's sudden disappearance from his trailer? Why was she still wearing exactly the same clothes when she died on the 29th that she was wearing when she disappeared on the 8th? And, if she was wearing those clothes for 21 more days, why are they in the same condition that they were in on December 8th?
Why didn't applicant admit to being with Melissa on the 8th? Why did he not admit to his two friends, the Fosters, that he had told them the day before Melissa's disappearance that he was meeting Melissa for lunch on the 8th? Why was applicant driving by the cell phone tower on FM 1097, located between his trailer in Conroe and the Sam Houston National Forest, at 3:03 p.m. on December 8th? Why did he lie and say that he was taking his grandmother to the post office in Conroe-many miles south of FM 1097-at that particular time? Why was the distinctive missing half of the panty hose with which Melissa was strangled found in the garbage can behind applicant's trailer? (11)
Why did Mrs. Swearingen find their trailer house in such disarray when she returned on the evening of December 8th? Why did applicant have scratches and bruising on his face that afternoon? And why did applicant then call the police and report a burglary at his trailer when nothing was missing and then lie to them, saying that he was out of town from 11 a.m. on December 7th until 7:30 p.m. on the 8th? Why did applicant tell a former girlfriend on the evening of December 8th that he was in trouble and the police might be after him? Why were fibers similar to those from Swearingen's jacket, from the rug in his trailer, and from his truck found on Melissa's body? Why were fibers similar to those from Melissa's jacket found in applicant's truck? Why was a hair that appeared to have been forcibly torn from Melissa's head found in applicant's truck? Why were torn papers containing Melissa's class schedule and health insurance information found scattered in the road in front of the home of applicant's mother and stepfather on December 17th?
Why was Melissa's body found in the particular secluded area in the Sam Houston forest where applicant had previously taken a date? Why did Melissa's body have fungus on it that takes "several weeks" to develop? Why, if she died just a couple of days before her body was found, did she have bluish mold all over her body? Why did applicant suddenly wipe down the interior of his truck with Armor All and leave two empty containers of Armor All wipes in his garbage?
Why did applicant ask a good friend, who visited him in jail, to lie and say that she had been with him on December 8th? And why, when he was in jail, did applicant write a letter in Spanish, using a Spanish-English dictionary, that purported to come from a person named "Robin" and send it to his mother? Why was the letter able to set out many of the details of Melissa's murder, including the facts that (1) she was wearing red panties at the time she was murdered; (2) the murderer had hit her on the left side of her face (a fact that Dr. Carter noted in her autopsy report); and (3) one of her shoes came off when he "jerked" her into the bushes? (12)
All of this evidence is wildly inconsistent with the hypothesis that Melissa magically "disapparated" from the earth for twenty-one days and then reappeared, as if from suspended animation, dead on the floor of the Sam Houston National Forest on December 29th or 30th. And why was her supposedly living body infested with "secondary colonization" carrion flies on December 18th? This is beyond peculiar.
When all of the other known facts and evidence are wholly inconsistent with a particular scientific hypothesis, the reasonably objective scientist revisits that original hypothesis, looking for a flaw. Although one does not doubt the honesty and sincerity of these medical examiners, their theory that Melissa did not die until December 29th or 30th because of the relatively intact state of some of her internal organs is flatly contradicted by an incredible wealth of other evidence. They have made no attempt to account for or explain this other evidence or provide an alternate hypothesis.
One plausible explanation, suggested by Dr. Tomberlin, is that it was much colder and wetter on the floor of the forest than at the Conroe airport, many miles south, where the official temperature data was gathered. This is a very shady, damp forest, close to Lake Conroe, filled with towering pines, covered with decomposing vegetation, and containing many low-lying cold pockets. Perhaps the cold, dank conditions acted as a drag on the body's internal decomposition. (13) None of these pathologists expressed any expertise in climatological impact upon decomposition. Or, as suggested by Dr. Sanchez, the variations in the decomposition of Melissa's body are simply "quite unusual." But not unheard of.
Our "actual innocence" jurisprudence includes the requirement that the newly discovered evidence (14) of innocence must satisfactorily explain all, or at least the vast majority, of the original inculpatory evidence. (15) In this case, the pathologists' opinion concerning the date of Melissa's death is wholly inconsistent with all of the other inculpatory evidence, and applicant has provided no common-sense context for the uncritical acceptance of those opinions.
Texas is one of the very few American jurisdictions that recognizes, in the habeas corpus context, a free-standing claim of actual innocence. We first crossed over the bridge of addressing post-conviction claims of actual innocence fifteen years ago in State ex rel. Holmes v. Court of Appeals for the Third District. (16) And we have not wavered in our basic commitment to permitting an inmate to prove his innocence while enacting a suitably high threshold to weed out the frivolous from the potentially meritorious claims. (17) We do this because
we fail in our primary duty of protecting the innocent and punishing the guilty if we intentionally slam the courthouse doors against one who is, in fact, innocent of wrongdoing. ...[I]f the criminal justice system-even when its procedures were fairly followed-reaches a patently inaccurate result which has caused an innocent person to be wrongly imprisoned for a crime he did not commit, the judicial system has an obligation to set things straight. Our criminal justice system makes two promises to its citizens: a fundamentally fair trial and an accurate result. If either of those two promises are not met, the criminal justice system itself falls into disrepute and will eventually be disregarded. (18)
But in this case, the pathologists' opinion that Melissa did not die until December 29 or 30, 1998, cannot be reconciled with the mountain of inculpatory evidence and therefore cannot be accepted at face value or as sufficient to unquestionably demonstrate applicant's actual innocence of Melissa Trotter's murder on December 8, 1998.
I therefore join the Court's Order.
Filed: January 27, 2009
Do Not Publish
1. A pro se application was filed in the trial court on January 23, 2009, and numerous subsequent claims were filed by applicant's attorneys on January 23, 2009. I address only the actual innocence claims.
2. This letter is quoted, in full, in the direct appeal of this case. Swearingen v. State, 101 S.W.3d 89, 94-95 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003).
3. Her autopsy report includes the following observations about the level of decomposition of Melissa's body:
4. In their first affidavits, the doctors criticized Dr. Carter for testifying that the date of death was 25 days prior to the recovery of the body. Dr. White stated, "Pathologists cannot accurately estimate a post mortem interval with the precision that Dr. Carter indicated she was capable of. Pathological estimates of the time of death, using the type of evidence on which Dr. Carter relied, cannot be made with confidence after a body has been left unprotected for far less time than 25 days. A pathologist could only estimate a relatively broad range of weeks or even months during which Ms. Trotter died." Both Dr. White and Dr. Larkin are pathologists themselves.
Both doctors reviewed Dr. Carter's autopsy report, looked at some of the autopsy and crime scene photos, and were familiar with Dr. Sanchez's criticism of Dr. Carter's finding of vaginal bruising. Most importantly, they concluded that the pancreas liquefies almost entirely within a day or so of death, sometimes within hours, therefore either Dr. Carter's finding that the pancreas was intact was wrong or her testimony about the date of death was wrong. Dr. Larkin agreed that Melissa's "body was in the liquefaction phase, but not far into it," and that Dr. Carter's report on the weight of Melissa's organs show the "absence of significant shrinkage due to dehydration, autolysis and subsequent drainage strongly indicates a date of death well after December 11, 1998."
Neither doctor mentioned that what appeared to be the remnants of Melissa's lunch on
December 8th were still in her stomach or how that finding might affect their opinion on the
death date.
5. Dr. Sanchez explained that, when an organ autolyzes, "it's the breakdown of the tissues
due to their own, again, enzymes and chemicals. It's not due to bacteria. It's due to the
breakdown of those cells that are releasing enzymes that basically break down the tissues."
6. Dr. Tomberlin explained:
When we talk about decomposition of human remains as we relate it to
insect succession, if you look at the most comprehensive studies that have been
published on the colonization of human remains, primarily we're [talking] about
obtaining 65 through 68. What you find is that there is a series of species that will
come in. There are those that are initial colonizers. Once those have come in,
then you will have secondary colonizers. When you have the secondary
colonizers, which is Cynomyopsis in this case, it's considered an advanced stage
of decomposition.
7. The trial judge's findings relevant to the blood flakes are as follows:
8. In her affidavit, Dr. Carter stated that her opinion at trial that her autopsy findings were consistent with Melissa being murdered on December 8, 1998, was based primarily upon "the external appearance of the body, including marked decomposition of the head and neck region, and on the degree of maggot activity in this region of the body. I also remarked on the presence of fungal growth, noting that these organisms thrive in dark, dank and wet environments and are slow growing."
Now that she had reviewed the temperature data for Conroe during the appropriate time
period (the temperature was that registered at the Conroe airport, about twenty miles south of
where Melissa was found in the middle of the Sam Houston National Forest), she discovered that
the average temperature was 50 degrees, with an average high of about 62 degrees and an average
low of 40 degrees. Dr. Carter now noted that decomposition was strikingly uneven with "partial
skeletonization of the head and neck region due to decomposition and insect and mammalian
scavenging." But the amount of decomposition of internal organs "appears less advanced." She
thought that if the temperature was approximately 50 degrees and the high occasionally as high
as the mid-70's, Melissa's body could not have been exposed in the forest until some time after
December 12th. "These internal findings support a forensic opinion that the body had not been
exposed more than two weeks in the forest environment."
9. Dr. Larkin, in his addendum, opines that "December 23, [1998] is the soonest that
Trotter's body could have been left in the woods" and that he thought that the evidence most
likely suggested a date as late as December 30, 1998. He also stated that even if the temperatures
in the forest were five degrees or more colder than at the Conroe airport, the forensic evidence
would still strongly support the dates of December 23rd as an outer limit and December 30th as a
very likely date because "the pancreas would not have been present in the condition described by
Dr. Carter unless exposure in the Sam Houston forest occurred after December 28 or December
29, 1998." He also said that the liver and spleen would not have been intact had Melissa been in
the forest since December 8th, and her body weight would have been much less than 105 (her
regular weight was 109 shortly before her death) because it would have lost 90% of its weight
during that time.
10. In this report, Dr. White agreed with Dr. Carter's affidavit and her re-evaluation of her
autopsy report and trial testimony. He concurred that her "internal examination of the body
support[s] the forensic conclusion that Melissa Trotter's body was left in the woods within
fourteen days of the discovery of the body on January 2, 1999[.]" He also agreed with Dr. Larkin
that Dr. Carter's description of the internal organs "indicate that the body was left in the woods at
on or about December 23, 1998, at the soonest, and probably left there no sooner than December
27 or 28, 1999."
11. Applicant now requests that DNA testing be done on the half of the pantyhose that was
around Melissa's neck in case there was some one else's DNA on that panty hose. One would
naturally assume that there would be: the DNA of the owner of the pantyhose. Melissa was not
wearing pantyhose that day. But because the other half was found outside applicant's trailer, the
hose might well have belonged to Mrs. Swearingen, who was not at home on the afternoon of
December 8th. Her DNA might well be on both sections of the pantyhose. And, of course, one
might find the DNA of various people who handled Melissa's body or handled the other section
of pantyhose found in the garbage can.
12. When Melissa's body was found, she had one shoe on and the other was lying nearby.
13. Dr. Carter's autopsy report notes, in three different places, how "cool and damp"
Melissa's body was. She stated:
* The body was damp due to external weather conditions.
* The body was cool and damp to the touch.
* The skin of the left hand was intact but was too moist for fingerprinting.
Drs. Larkin and White relied, in part, upon the fact that Melissa's body had lost very little of its
normal weight-going from 109 to 105 pounds-but it is common knowledge that the body is
composed of between 50-75% water, at the lower end for obese people, higher for thin people
like Melissa. A dead body loses water by evaporation. It would not be unusual to think that a
body lying in cold, damp-perhaps intermittently wet depending upon rainfall-conditions would
lose significantly less water due to evaporation than one lying in a dry, open area with blowing
wind acting as a natural evaporator. I am unable to find anything in the record that indicates that
the pathologists consulted 1998 rainfall charts for the Sam Houston National Forest or that they
took into account the generally high humidity levels in forests of this type.
14. Of course, the State is technically correct that the pathological evidence concerning
Melissa's body is not "newly discovered" in legal terms because it was always available once Dr.
Carter completed her autopsy on January 3, 1999, and could have been brought forward at trial
had applicant exercised due diligence.
15. See Ex parte Brown, 205 S.W.3d 538, 546 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006) (in assessing "actual
innocence" claims, the trial judge "assesses the witnesses' credibility, examines the 'newly
discovered evidence,' and determines whether that 'new' evidence, when balanced against the
'old' inculpatory evidence, unquestionably establishes the applicant's innocence."); Ex parte
Elizondo, 947 S.W.2d 202, 206 (Tex. Crim. App. 1994) ("in evaluating a habeas claim that
newly discovered or available evidence proves the applicant to be innocent of the crime for
which he was convicted, our task is to assess the probable impact of the newly available evidence
upon the persuasiveness of the State's case as a whole, we must necessarily weigh such
exculpatory evidence against the evidence of guilt adduced at trial."); see also Ex parte
Thompson, 153 S.W.3d 416, 428 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005) (Cochran, J., concurring) ("Before an
applicant could meet this [actual innocence] legal standard, he must show that the 'new'
evidence satisfactorily rebuts or nullifies all of the State's primary inculpatory evidence from the
'old' trial.").
16. 17. See, e.g., Ex parte Elizondo, 947 S.W.2d at 202; 18. Ex parte Thompson, 153 S.W.3d at 421 (Cochran, J., concurring).