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Susan Wright was born Susan Lucille Wyche on
April 24, 1976 in Houston, Texas. At the age of 18, she worked as
a topless dancer at Gold Cup for two months. In 1997, while
working as a restaurant waitress in Galveston, she met Jeff Wright
and they married in 1998 while she was eight-and-a-half months
pregnant with their first son, Bradley. A few years later, a son
Cody was born. Wright claims that her husband began to abuse her
during the first few years of their marriage.
Crime
According to evidence presented by the
prosecution, on Monday, January 13, 2003, Susan Wright, 26, tied
her husband, Jeff Wright, 34, to their bed and stabbed him 193
times with two different knives. She then buried his body in their
Houston backyard. She attempted to cover up the crime scene by
painting the bedroom. The next day, Wright filed a domestic abuse
report in order to get a restraining order against her husband,
intended to explain his absence.
According to the evidence adduced during the
2010 punishment trial, it was shown that the prosecution's theory
that Jeff was tied to the bed was not supported by the medical
examiner who excavated the body. The medical examiner testified
that Jeff had a significant amount of cocaine in his body the
night he died - so much so that Jeff's body had not metabolized
all the cocaine. The cocaine evidence supported the defense's
assertion that Jeff was intoxicated the night of his death, when
he came home from a boxing class and punched his son. Jeff also
had several knife wounds on his hands, forearms, back, and the
backs of his legs, indicating defensive wounds inconsistent with
being tied to a bed.
On January 18, Wright asked her attorney, Neal
Davis, to come to her home and admitted to stabbing her husband.
Davis contacted the Harris County district attorney's office to
inform them a body was buried under Susan Wright's house and that
she had confessed to the crime.
Wright turned herself in to authorities at the
Harris County Courthouse on Friday, January 24 and was arraigned
on murder charges the following Monday.
Trial
Only thirteen months after her arraignment,
Susan Wright's murder trial commenced on February 24, 2004. She
had already plead not guilty to killing her husband by reason of
self-defense.
Wright's prosecutor and defense attorney had
very different portrayals of her. Assistant district attorney
Kelly Siegler depicted Wright as a scheming wife who seduced her
husband into bed, tied him up, repeatedly stabbed him, and then
buried his body in their backyard, all in hopes of collecting a
$200,000 life insurance policy. Wright's defense attorney Neal
Davis claimed that his client had suffered years of physical and
emotional abuse by her husband, and killed him to protect herself
and her two young children.
At her trial, Susan Wright testified in her own
defense. In her emotional testimony on the stand, Wright claimed:
"I couldn't stop stabbing him; I couldn't stop. I knew as soon as
I stopped, he was going to get the knife back and he was going to
kill me. I didn't want to die." She testified that on the night of
the murder, Jeff Wright was on a cocaine binge and was violent,
having allegedly beaten her. Wright once again persisted that she
stabbed her husband in self-defense. Susan Wright's mother, among
others, testified for the defense, claiming they witnessed
Wright's bruises.
ADA Siegler was not impressed by Wright's
statements; Siegler believed that Wright's tears were faked for
the jury's benefit. While presenting their case, the prosecution
presented an unusual demonstration by bringing the Wrights' actual
bed into the courtroom. Using her co-counsel, Siegler depicted how
she believed Susan Wright had tied her husband to their bed and
stabbed him to death.
During closing arguments, Siegler brought up to
the jury how Wright had been a topless dancer, and reiterated how
she believed Wright's emotions were insincere. She contended that
Susan Wright was a "card-carrying, obvious, no-doubt-about-it,
caught-redhanded, confirmed, documented liar", whose frequent
shows of emotion during the trial were deliberate efforts to
influence the jury. Wright's defense never strayed from their
claims, however, that Wright had stabbed her husband to death in
order to protect herself and her young children.
Verdict
On March 3, 2004, after only five-and-a-half
hours of deliberations, Wright's jury convicted her of murder. In
sharp contrast to her emotional testimony during the trial, Wright
showed little reaction to the guilty verdict.
The following day came Wright's sentencing.
Prosecutors were hoping for at least a 45-year sentence, while
Wright's attorneys argued for probation for their client. In the
end, the jury met in the middle, sentencing Wright to 25 years in
prison.
Appeal
In 2005, the Fourteenth Court of Appeals of
Texas in Houston upheld Susan Wright's conviction.
In 2008, Wright re-appealed. This time, a new
witness, Misty McMichael, the wife of former NFL Super Bowl
champion Steve McMichael and ex-fiancee of Jeff Wright, came
forward to tell her story of how she endured abuse and violence
during her four year relationship with Jeff Wright.
In 2009, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
granted Wright a new sentencing hearing, after determining that
Wright's “counsel rendered ineffective assistance during the
punishment phase of trial” in 2004. On November 20, 2010, Wright
was re-sentenced to 20 years in prison, five years less than her
original sentence. Barring another appeal, Wright will be eligible
for parole on February 28, 2024, when she will be 48 years old.
In popular culture
Author Eric Francis wrote a book about the case
entitled A Wife's Revenge in June 2005.
Wright's murder trial had been nationally
televised on CourtTV. Wright's case was first profiled on
Snapped in 2004, 48 Hours Mystery in 2005, on an E!
special entitled Women Who Kill and on the Deadly Women
episode "Lethal Love" on ID in 2011.
Wright's case is also the subject of the 2012
Lifetime original movie, Blue Eyed Butcher, starring Sara
Paxton and Lisa Edelstein.
Court TV
CBS News
*****
CBS News
What followed is summarized from the trial
transcript. Ms. Siegler began by having Detective Reynolds
confirm that she and appellant were approximately the same weight
and were both about five feet, three to five inches in height.
Ms. Siegler next established that a prosecutor from her office,
Paul Doyle, was approximately the same height and weight as Jeff
Wright, based on Detective Reynolds' testimony that Jeff was six
feet, two inches in height, and weighed 220 pounds. Ms. Siegler
then presented two neckties and two bathrobe sashes that Detective
Reynolds confirmed were similar to those he saw used as ligatures
on Jeff Wright's body. Before the demonstration commenced, defense
counsel took Detective Reynolds on voir dire. Reynolds admitted
that he was not present on the night of the alleged incident, and
the only person who was in the bedroom that night besides the
deceased was appellant. Reynolds also did not know exactly where
on the bed Jeff Wright was tied.
The State then began the demonstration. Ms.
Siegler instructed Mr. Doyle to lie down with his back on the bed,
his head at the headboard, and his feet at the footboard. Next,
she instructed Detective Reynolds to step down from the witness
stand and tie one of the neckties to Mr. Doyle's left wrist. Ms.
Siegler asked Detective Reynolds this question:
The State: (Ms. Siegler) Okay. And if [the
necktie] were tied to a bed, it would be tied similar to what, in
your opinion?
Witness: (Detective Reynolds) Speculate, I
guess. That a-
Defense counsel objected that the testimony, by
Reynolds' own admission, was based on speculation. In response,
the trial court stated, “Well, the Jury should understand that as
far as the exact location as to where and if this ligature was
tied to the bed, that's not being presented as the exact spot; is
that correct?” Ms. Siegler acknowledged that was correct, and
proceeded to have Detective Reynolds tie both of Mr. Doyle's
wrists to the bed.
Ms. Siegler next sought to have Mr. Doyle's
ankles tied to the bed with the two bathrobe sashes. Over the
defense's objections, one ankle was tied, but when Ms. Siegler
instructed Detective Reynolds to tie the other ankle, defense
counsel objected that only one sash was recovered and argued that
“this is just theatrics.” In response, the trial court commented
that there was no evidence of a second sash. Ms. Siegler then
instructed Detective Reynolds to remove the sash from one ankle.
Continuing, Ms. Siegler got on top of Mr. Doyle
on the bed, holding a knife, and-while questioning Detective
Reynolds-demonstrated the State's theory that, while Jeff Wright
was tied to the bed, appellant straddled him and stabbed him
repeatedly:
The State: (Ms. Siegler) All right.
So, if-if the defendant were to get up on top
of Jeffery [sic] Wright, something like this, and straddle him,
and she's right-handed-and how do you think she held the knife?
Put it in my hand.
Defense: (Mr. Davis) This is just total
speculation.
* * *
The Court: Excuse me. If you'd go into a
little more questions with the witness as to how he comes to the
conclusion as to how the knife was held.
The State: Yes, sir.
Based on the injuries you saw and the direction
of the cuts, tell the Jury why you believe ․ the knife was held
that way in my hand?
Witness: (Detective Reynolds) The locations or
the injuries themselves are slicing and they're, ‘em, top to
bottom lengthwise. The length is greater than the width, to tell
me that the blade was parallel with the body.
The State: And otherwise-in other words,
vertical instead of horizontal?
Witness: I guess a good way to say it,
vertical.
The State: That would be consistent with the
knife going in this way, vertical, not this way, horizontal?
Witness: Correct.
The State: Is it a more natural fit in your
hand to do it this way, as opposed to this way?
Witness: Yes.
The State: Okay. So if I'm on top of Paul, and
I'm holding the knife this way in my right hand and I attack the
head area first, which side of his face are most of the injuries
going to be on?
Witness: On the left side.
* * *
The State: Okay. And most of the injuries were
where?
Witness: Concentrated to the left side of the
head.
Ms. Siegler, still “straddling” Mr. Doyle on
the bed, then moved from the head to the penis:
The State: (Ms. Siegler) Do you recall the
photographs of the injuries in the area of his penis?
Witness: (Detective Reynolds) Yes.
The State: Okay. If I wanted to do stab areas,
stab movements to his penis, did you see anything consistent with
a stab to the penis?
Witness: Not to the penis itself, no.
The State: Because you saw what?
Witness: It was nicked. It was a superficial
cut instead of a slicing.
The State: Superficial slicing, like this?
Witness: Yes.
Turning to the injuries on the legs, Detective
Reynolds testified that he did not believe it was possible that
the attacker could make those wounds while straddling the body.
Instead, he testified that it would be more consistent with the
attacker being on the side of the body. Apparently dismounting
Mr. Doyle and standing next to him as she continued the
demonstration, Ms. Siegler asked, “Like I am right now?”
Detective Reynolds answered, “Yes.” Ms. Siegler then turned her
attention to the chest area, where most of the wounds on Jeff
Wright's body were concentrated, and made stabbing motions toward
Mr. Doyle's chest with the knife.2
Next, at defense counsel's request, Ms. Siegler
and Mr. Doyle demonstrated Mr. Doyle's limited ability to move his
hands and feet as Ms. Siegler sat on top of him holding the knife.3
Finally, Ms. Siegler sought to portray the
“hypothetical facts” of appellant's self-defense claim as stated
in defense counsel's opening statement in an attempt to discredit
her claim. After the trial court sustained several objections to
Ms. Siegler's questions to Detective Reynolds, Ms. Siegler
concluded her demonstration and the court recessed for lunch while
the bed was disassembled.
Appellant's Testimony
Appellant testified that on the evening of
January 13, 2003, Jeff Wright came home from a boxing lesson with
red, glassy eyes and was extremely agitated. After hitting their
son in the face when he refused to box, Jeff took a shower. When
he came into their bedroom wearing a towel, appellant told him
that unless he got help with his drug abuse and anger, she
“couldn't take anymore.” Jeff became angry, and threw appellant
down, kicked her, and sexually assaulted her. Appellant closed
her eyes during the sexual assault, “like [she] always did” when
he forced her to have sex.
When appellant felt Jeff get back on top of
her, she heard him say, “Die, bitch,” and when she opened her
eyes, she saw a knife in his right hand. She grabbed the knife,
and as it came down, it hit her left knee, drawing blood. Her
leg jerked up and hit Jeff in the groin. Because she “didn't
want to die,” appellant found the strength to get the knife and
push him off her. She stabbed Jeff in the neck, and as he fought
with her for the knife, she stabbed him again, this time deep in
the chest. Terrified that he would get the knife back and kill
her, she could not stop stabbing him. Appellant stopped when the
couple's young son knocked on the bedroom door. She tied Jeff's
right arm to the bed to keep him from getting up while she put her
son to bed. Still terrified that Jeff was alive and was going to
kill her, appellant returned to the bedroom and continued to stab
him repeatedly. When she finally stopped, appellant tried to get
Jeff's body out of the house. But, when she tried to drag him,
his head and shoulder hit the nightstand, causing a candle to fall
off the nightstand onto him. Appellant then tied him to a dolly
by the ankles and left arm and pushed the dolly out to the patio.
I. Issues on Appeal
On appeal, appellant raises seven issues,
contending the trial court erred by (1) permitting the in-court
demonstration in violation of Texas Rule of Evidence 602, (2)
permitting the in-court demonstration in violation of Texas Rule
of Evidence 403, (3) denying appellant a hearing on her motion for
new trial,4
A. The Demonstration: Issues One and Two
and the State's Claim that We Cannot Consider the DVD
In her first two issues, appellant contends the
State's in-court demonstration violates Texas Rules of Evidence
602 and 403. As an initial matter, however, the State argues
that appellant cannot prevail on these issues because the
appellate record is inadequately developed. Specifically, the
State contends that, to determine whether the demonstration
accurately portrayed the murder or how prejudicial it was, it is
necessary to actually view the demonstration, but the appellate
record contains no recorded images of it.
1. The Court TV DVD of the Demonstration
The State acknowledges that appellant attached
a DVD of Court TV's television coverage of the demonstration as an
exhibit to her motion for a hearing and new trial, and we note
that, in their appellate briefs, both parties refer to and (in
varying degrees) rely upon this exhibit. However, the State
maintains the exhibit was never introduced as evidence and was
never subjected to adversarial examination to ensure its
authenticity, and so cannot be considered on appeal.
Three problems in this record complicate our
ability to consider the DVD. First, the State cites the general
proposition, contained in Martins v. State, that affidavits
attached to a motion for new trial are merely pleadings and are
not in themselves evidence. See 52 S.W.3d 459, 468
(Tex.App.-Corpus Christi 2001, no pet.).5
Second, appellant did not declare to the trial
court that she wanted the DVD to be part of the evidence. She
never requested that the trial court admit it into evidence. She
also never authenticated the DVD.
Third, the rules of evidence and of appellate
procedure give us no guidance on whether and to what degree we may
consider the DVD of the demonstration in these circumstances. It
is a highly unusual exhibit for us to consider. Although it is a
recording of the trial, unlike the official record, it was not
prepared by a neutral court employee under the court's control.
Instead, it is the product of a third party completely independent
of the court. Without some guidance from the procedural rules of
this state, and with the State's objection to its use, we are
unwilling to rely on it when we have an acceptable alternative,
and when we might jeopardize the validity of our appellate review
by considering it.
The demonstration is captured in detail in over
twenty pages of explicit trial testimony. In reading this
testimony it is clear that Ms. Siegler, using a male prosecutor to
represent Jeff Wright, positioned the prosecutor on the Wrights'
bed, had a witness tie his arms to the bed posts with neckties and
tie one leg to the bed with a bathrobe sash. Ms. Siegler then
proceeded to sit astride him, holding the knife and demonstrating
the types and angles of stabbing motions as instructed by
Detective Reynolds. From these descriptions we can appreciate
the dramatic nature of the demonstration. For years, appellate
courts have decided the admissibility of in-court demonstrations
without the benefit of videos. This particular demonstration is
not so unique that we cannot adequately assess it without the
video. We can tell where the two prosecutors were positioned-the
male face-up on the bed, Ms. Siegler atop him. We know the
Wrights' bed was used and that the blood stains were still
visible. These, and the other details we can glean from the
record, are sufficient to paint an image of what happened in the
courtroom.7
2. The In-Court Demonstration Did Not
Violate Rule 602.
Throughout her first and second issues,
appellant contends that the State's in-court demonstration of its
theory of the case confused “high drama” with reality and thereby
deprived appellant of her right to a fair trial. In appellant's
first issue, she contends that the court should not have allowed
the demonstration because
● the State's witness testifying in support of
the demonstration had no personal knowledge of the events about
which he testified, and
● the State failed to show that the
demonstration was substantially similar to the events it sought to
portray.
Appellant apparently claims that both of these
problems violated Rule 602 of the Texas Rules of Evidence. We
disagree. As we explain below, Rule 602 does not bar the
demonstration. Detective Reynolds had personal knowledge of a
great many of the details about which he testified, and the
remaining details he could reasonably deduce from those details he
personally knew. In addition, Rule 602 is not the primary
guidepost courts use to determine if a demonstration was
appropriately admitted. Rather, case law sets out the
requirements for the admission of demonstrations. That case law
requires that the demonstration be substantially similar to the
event it depicts. We turn first to Rule 602 and explain our
holding there.
a. The witness had personal knowledge of
many things about which he testified.
Rule 602 provides that a witness may not
testify to a matter unless evidence is introduced showing that the
witness has personal knowledge of the matter. TEX. R. EVID. 602.8
However, we know Detective Reynolds had
personal knowledge of a number of key facts because he was present
at the crime scene, viewing both the body and the scene itself.
For example, Detective Reynolds knew Jeff Wright was tied to some
object because he saw the ligatures on Jeff's body (and appellant
admitted tying Jeff to the bed at one point). He knew Jeff
Wright was stabbed and that the wounds were inflicted on the
couple's bed because he saw the bloody mattress and remnants of
blood stains on the bedroom walls by the bed. He was able to
study the wounds themselves, noting the direction of the stabs and
the location of the wounds. He knew the relative sizes of Susan
and Jeff Wright, surmising that Susan could not overcome her
husband without some plan. Finally, he observed appellant's
erratic behavior after the crime. All of these facts Detective
Reynolds knew from personal knowledge and experience, and his
testimony about them did not violate Rule 602.
b. The witness could make reasonable
inferences from the facts he knew.
Those parts of the demonstration for which
Detective Reynolds lacked personal knowledge were admissible as
lay opinion because they were reasonable inferences from those
facts he did know by personal knowledge. TEX. R. EVID. 701.
Under Rule 701, a witness, even a lay witness, may make reasonable
inferences from the evidence.9
In short, Rule 602 does not bar the
demonstration and, in fact, it is not the controlling factor in
the demonstration's admissibility. Instead, case law contains
the most commonly cited requirements for admission of
demonstrations.
3. Case Law Generally Focuses on whether the
Demonstration was Substantially Similar to the Event.
a. What the proponent of the demonstration
must show.
Case law generally focuses on whether the
demonstration was substantially similar to the event. See, e.g.,
Valdez v. State, 776 S.W.2d 162, 168 (Tex.Crim.App.1989) (en
banc); Cantu v. State, 738 S.W.2d 249, 255 (Tex.Crim.App.1987)
(en banc); Key v. State, 149 Tex.Crim. 200, 192 S.W.2d 563, 566
(1946). The proponent of the demonstration must show that the
conditions under which the demonstration is conducted are
sufficiently similar to the event in question. Valdez, 776 S.W.2d
at 168; Cantu, 738 S.W.2d at 255. It is not essential that the
conditions of the demonstration be identical; dissimilarities go
to weight and not to admissibility. See Valdez, 776 S.W.2d at
168. All parts of the demonstration must be supported by the
evidence or testimony. See Cantu, 738 S.W.2d at 255; Fort Worth
& Denver Ry. Co. v. Williams, 375 S.W.2d 279, 281-82 (Tex.1964);
Ginther v. State, 706 S.W.2d 115, 119-20 (Tex.App.-Houston [1st
Dist.] 1986, pet. ref'd). We review the trial court's ruling for
abuse of discretion. See Valdez, 776 S.W.2d at 168; Cantu, 738
S.W.2d at 255. Out of necessity, reviews of trial court rulings
on demonstrations depend on the facts of the case.
b. This demonstration was supported by, and
consistent with, the testimony.
(i) Undisputed facts.
Many of the details of the scene were not
disputed, and the State's demonstration accurately portrayed them.
The State used the actual mattress that was the site of the
stabbing. The participants portraying appellant and Jeff Wright,
Ms. Siegler and Mr. Doyle, were shown to be of similar height and
weight to appellant and her husband. Detective Reynolds
testified that, based on his observations of Jeff Wright's body,
the ligatures used to tie Mr. Doyle to the bed were substantially
similar to the ones actually used, and appellant did not dispute
this. The parties also did not dispute the general location and
grouping of the stab wounds on Jeff Wright's body. Detective
Reynolds testified to these facts based on his personal
observations. As a result, appellant cannot validly complain
that these details vary too greatly from the actual event.
(ii) Disputed facts.
Although some details were disputed, such as
when appellant tied Jeff Wright with the ligatures and where on
the bed they were tied, the main differences between appellant's
version of her husband's death and the State's version are global
in nature. Thus, the parties disagree as to how Jeff Wright came
to have 193 stab wounds. The appellant says it was the result of
a rape, the ensuing struggle, and a psychotic condition induced by
the horror of the event; the State claims it was, plain and
simple, a murder. With the only eyewitness being the defendant,
the State had to reconstruct the progression of the event. As
discussed in the previous section, the State did this by
deductions from the clues given by the physical evidence and the
statements and actions of the defendant.
For example, the deductions from the clues
given by the physical evidence led to the prosecutor's positioning
on the bed (supported by Detective Reynolds' testimony that Jeff
Wright's body was discovered with tightly tied ligatures on his
wrists and ankle, and that the large number of wounds on the front
of his body indicated he had been restrained face-up).12
In short, all parts of the demonstration, both
disputed and undisputed, were supported by facts in evidence.
Detective Reynolds' testimony was based on his personal
observations as well as his deductions. Given the State's
evidence and the reasonable inferences that may be drawn from it,
we find the demonstration was substantially similar to the actual
event as theorized by the State. See Valdez, 776 S.W.2d at
168-69 (upholding in-court demonstration of six disarming
techniques by which a person might take police officer's weapon
when sufficient evidence supported inference that defendant was
able to disarm officer and use his weapon to shoot him);
Stembridge v. State, 94 Tex.Crim. 207, 250 S.W. 180, 181 (1923)
(upholding demonstration in which State re-created how husband's
body was found in bed and wife was asked to demonstrate how she
claimed to have shot husband in self-defense); see also United
States v. Wanoskia, 800 F.2d 235, 238 (10th Cir.1986) (upholding
in-court demonstration using estimate of length of deceased wife's
arms to show she could not have shot herself as husband claimed).
c. Appellant's cited cases do not require a
reversal.
Appellant cites a number of cases in which
filmed or in-court demonstrations were held to be not
substantially similar to the actual event and argues that they
reveal the flaws in this demonstration. We find these cases
distinguishable. The demonstrations in those cases were either
plainly inaccurate or unsupported by any evidence.13
For example, appellant does not deny that, at
some point, she stabbed him while he was on the bed. Under her
version of events, after Jeff Wright raped her on their bed, he
got back on top of her with the knife, and she wrestled it from
him and began stabbing him in the neck and chest. When asked
where she was while she was stabbing him, appellant testified:
“Originally I was to the side. But then eventually I climbed
over like he was on me because I couldn't stop stabbing him.”
Appellant then described where she repeatedly stabbed her husband:
In his head, in his chest, and in his neck and
in his stomach. And his leg from when he kicked me. I stabbed
him in his penis for all the times that he made me have sex and I
didn't want to. And I couldn't stop because he was going to kill
me and I couldn't stop.
Appellant also admitted that she tied ligatures
to her husband's limbs, but when she did it and why she did it
conflict with the State's version of events. Appellant claimed
that, after she had stabbed her husband several times, her son
knocked on the bedroom door. Believing her husband was alive and
that he would come after her again, appellant tied his right arm
to the bed to restrain him while she checked on her son. She
then testified that she returned to the bedroom and continued
stabbing her husband, and when she finally stopped, she put her
husband's body on a dolly and tied his ankles and left arm to the
dolly to get the body out of the house.
Thus, there is no dispute that Jeff Wright was
stabbed on the bed and that he was somehow restrained with
ligatures; at the crux of the case is when he was restrained and
how he came to be stabbed. Supported by sufficient evidence, the
State was entitled to demonstrate its theory for the jury, not
only to show that a murder could have occurred as the State
theorized, but also to show that the incident could not have
happened as appellant contended. See Valdez, 776 S.W.2d at
168-69; Stembridge, 250 S.W. at 181; Wanoskia, 800 F.2d at
238-39.
d. The demonstration is not invalid because
it was based on reasonable inferences from the evidence.
Appellant also maintains that the demonstration
is not substantially similar to the actual event because Detective
Reynolds had to “speculate” where on the bed the ligatures may
have been tied. We already have held that this testimony is a
reasonable deduction from facts in evidence; it was not
“speculation.” Detective Reynolds saw the ligatures tied to Jeff
Wright's wrists and leg, at the death scene, at the morgue, and in
photographs. Although Detective Reynolds admittedly did not know
where on the headboard of the bed the ligatures were tied, it was
reasonable for him to infer that appellant secured the ligatures
to the bed in some fashion. See Valdez, 776 S.W.2d at 169.
Moreover, the precise location where the ligatures were tied is an
insignificant fact; the more important question is when appellant
tied Jeff Wright's arms and legs. As we have noted, it is not
necessary that the demonstration be identical to the event in
every respect. See id. at 168; Cantu, 738 S.W.2d at 266; see
also Key, 192 S.W.2d at 566 (holding minor differences in details
of demonstration and actual event did not render reenactment
substantially dissimilar).14
In conclusion, based on the State's evidence
and the reasonable inferences drawn from it, we find that the
State's demonstration of its theory of the case was substantially
similar to the conditions of the actual event. We therefore
overrule appellant's first issue.
4. The In-Court Demonstration Did Not
Violate Rule 403.
We now turn to appellant's second issue, her
claim that the demonstration deprived her of the right to a fair
trial because it violated Rule 403 of the Texas Rules of Evidence.
Rule 403 provides that relevant evidence may be excluded if its
probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of
unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury.
TEX. R. EVID. 403. Evidence is unfairly prejudicial if it has
“an undue tendency to suggest that a decision be made on an
improper basis.” Montgomery v. State, 810 S.W.2d 372, 389
(Tex.Crim.App.1991) (en banc) (op. on reh'g). A Rule 403
analysis by the trial court should include, but is not limited to,
the following factors: (1) the probative value of the evidence;
(2) the potential of the evidence to impress the jury in some
irrational but nevertheless indelible way; (3) the time the
proponent needs to develop the evidence; and (4) the proponent's
need for the evidence. Erazo v. State, 144 S.W.3d 487, 489
(Tex.Crim.App.2004) (citing Montgomery, 810 S.W.2d at 389-90).
We review the trial court's Rule 403 decision for an abuse of
discretion, meaning it will be reversed only if it is outside the
zone of reasonable disagreement. Salazar v. State, 38 S.W.3d 141,
151 (Tex.Crim.App.2001). Rule 403 favors the admission of
relevant evidence and carries a presumption that relevant evidence
will be more probative than prejudicial. Threadgill v. State, 146
S.W.3d 654, 671 (Tex.Crim.App.2004) (en banc). We will consider
each of the factors.
a. The probative value of the in-court
demonstration.
Appellant contends that the first factor, the
probative value of the in-court demonstration, weighs in her favor
because the demonstration was not substantially similar to the
events it sought to portray; a verbal description would have been
sufficient. We already have determined that the demonstration
was substantially similar to the State's version of the
progression of events the night appellant killed her husband. As
noted in the preceding discussion of Rule 602, the State's theory
of how appellant killed her husband is supported by both the
evidence and testimony explaining the reasons the State reached
this conclusion. Being an accurate portrayal of the State's
version of events, it had probative value; it enabled the jury to
visually evaluate the plausibility of both the State's theory and
appellant's self-defense claim. For example, it allowed the jury
to see first-hand the relative height and weight of appellant and
her husband, their ability to maneuver on or around the bed, and
their ability to take defensive actions. The demonstration
therefore conveyed the evidence more effectively than if a witness
had merely described it. Thus, this factor weighs in favor of
the admissibility of the demonstration.
Although appellant argues forcefully that this
presentation was marred in the same way as the presentation in
United States v. Gaskell, we disagree. In Gaskell, the Eleventh
Circuit held that the probative value of an in-court reenactment
by a prosecution witness demonstrating shaken baby syndrome using
an infant mannequin was substantially outweighed by its potential
for unfair prejudice. See 985 F.2d at 1061-62. But the reasons
for this conclusion were many and were warranted. The court held
the presentation was of slight probative value and overwhelmed by
its unfairly prejudicial effects because (1) the weight of the
mannequin's head was different than a live baby's head, (2) the
flexibility and length of its neck was different, (3) the
mannequin had to be shaken with “a considerably greater degree of
force” to produce the head movement characteristic of shaken baby
syndrome, (4) the witness's presentation was not shown to be based
on reliable information, and (5) there was no evidence of the
number of oscillations needed to produce the infant's injuries.
Id. Thus, the court concluded that “the demonstration tended to
implant a vision of Gaskell's actions in the jurors' minds that
was not supported by any factual basis for the demonstration.”
Id. at 1061. Here, we have no similar deviation from the
evidence. The demonstration was adequately supported by the
evidence and accurately depicted the State's claim that appellant
killed her husband, not in self-defense, but intentionally.
Consequently, we find Gaskell distinguishable.
b. The in-court demonstration's ability to
impress jurors irrationally yet indelibly.
The second factor is the demonstration's
ability to impress jurors in some irrational yet indelible way.
Appellant contends this factor also weighs heavily in her favor.
She compares the demonstration to a sensationalized murder scene
in a provocative movie, urging that it bore only “a fleeting
connection to reality.” Its impact had the potential to mislead
the jurors, she claims, and to cause them to decide the case on
the basis of emotion rather than relevant evidence. The State
responds that, although the demonstration may have impressed the
jury, it did not do so in an irrational way. As we explain
below, we agree with the State.
We recognize that courts have spoken to the
dangers of filmed or in-court demonstrations that may have the
potential to encourage jurors to resolve the material issues on an
improper basis.15
(i) Six aspects ensured that the
demonstration and trial did not impress jurors irrationally and
indelibly.
But the question before us is not whether the
demonstration “impressed” the jury. The question is whether it
impressed the jury in an irrational yet indelible way. Several
factors keep this demonstration from being one that would impress
the jury in an irrational way.
First, this was not a reenactment or dramatic
presentation per se. Nothing in the appellate record suggests
that the two prosecutors attempted to re-create the struggle or
the facial expressions of appellant and her husband that must have
occurred when appellant stabbed her husband. See Lopez, 651
S.W.2d at 414-15 (“The general appearance of an actor, his facial
expression or slightest gesture whether intended or not may sway a
juror who has listened to lengthy testimony.”). Nothing in the
appellate record suggests that the prosecutors used gestures or
their voices to portray the intensity of the scene. And although
we do not rely on the DVD and cannot verify with 100% certainty
that no facial expressions were used, the transcript does not
create the impression that harmful expressions were used, and
appellant does not point to facial expressions as being the
problem. The purpose of this demonstration was to highlight the
specific details that supported the State's theory that appellant
murdered her husband.
Second, the demonstration was not intended to
re-create the event in minute detail, showing where every blow
landed and where appellant was when she inflicted each wound.
This demonstration was intended to convey appellant's plan to kill
Jeff Wright and generally how appellant accomplished her goal.
When Detective Reynolds was asked to tie the ligatures to the
headboard, he made it clear he did not know exactly where on the
headboard they were tied. At the same time, he made it clear
that, in his opinion, appellant had to have restrained Jeff Wright
in some way and that the headboard-along with the ligatures-was
the most logical place and prop to be used for that.
Third, the demonstration appears to have been
presented in a matter-of-fact, methodical manner. The purpose of
the demonstration was two-fold: to depict how appellant killed
her husband and to illustrate why the State reached this
conclusion. The testimony focused on the details leading to this
conclusion: the location of the wounds, the appellant's
positioning to have made those wounds, the direction of the knife
blade as it made the wounds, Jeff Wright's ability to move his
arms and legs to defend himself if tied with the ligatures, and
the height and weight of appellant and her husband.
Fourth, any juror confusion related to the
ligatures was likely alleviated when the trial court instructed
the jury that the State was not attempting to show the exact
location where Jeff Wright's wrists were tied to the bed. See
Foremost Paving, 796 S.W.2d at 480-81 (noting that “the offering
party's affirmative acknowledgement [sic] to the jury of
dissimilarities between a videotaped reconstruction and the actual
occurrence can serve to alleviate unfairness”).
Fifth, when appellant's counsel cross-examined
Detective Reynolds, it was quite clear that Detective Reynolds (1)
was not there when appellant killed Jeff Wright, (2) deduced how
Jeff Wright was killed, and (3) did not know where on the bed the
ligatures were tied because Jeff Wright's body was not on the bed
when the police found it. Thus, the jury understood that the
demonstration presented the State's theory of how Jeff Wright was
killed. Moreover, appellant could have used the bed for her own
demonstration of the night's events. But, she chose not to
demonstrate what she claimed happened the night of Jeff Wright's
death.
Sixth, in many ways, the demonstration was less
graphic than the actual event. For example, although there were
at least 193 stab wounds on Jeff Wright's body, Ms. Siegler did
not attempt to re-create them all, but merely demonstrated the
stabs generally, consistent with Detective Reynolds' testimony.
The State also did not attempt to re-create the gruesome, bloody
scene depicted in the photographs admitted into evidence. Nor
was there any attempt to depict that portion of the State's theory
that appellant was able to tie her husband to the bed by seducing
him with candles and promises of sex. Nor was it misleading or
confusing; rather, it depicted events relevant to appellant's
guilt or innocence. Cf. Reese v. State, 33 S.W.3d 238, 242
(Tex.Crim.App.2000) (stating that photograph tended to impress
jury in irrational way when it showed much more than facts
relevant to trial).
In short, although the demonstration surely was
dramatic, these factors outlined above tethered each part of the
demonstration to reality and to details that supported the
demonstration. For these reasons, we find that the demonstration
did not impress the jury irrationally and indelibly.
(ii) Other aspects relied on by appellant do
not alter our conclusion.
Other aspects of the demonstration pointed out
by appellant do not alter our conclusion. We are aware that the
lead female prosecutor straddled a male prosecutor lying face-up
on the bed to show how appellant accomplished the crime, and we
are aware that the State claimed appellant was able to tie her
husband by seducing him. However, this in itself does not
invalidate the demonstration and give it an irrational aura. The
questions were relevant and informational. There were no
innuendos, no side-bar comments, no excessive illustrations of the
stabs. When the prosecutor held the knife, it was to show how
appellant most likely held it. When the lead prosecutor
straddled the male prosecutor, it was to illustrate why the
majority of Jeff Wright's wounds were on the front and left side
of his head, neck, and chest area. The discussion was of a
violent killing, not of a seduction scene.
We agree with appellant that the demonstration
went to the heart of her case and that it hurt her defense. But
all State's evidence, if effective, hurts a defendant's defense.
The demonstration was supported by the evidence, and it is not
rendered inadmissible solely because it may have been prejudicial
to appellant's case; it must be “unfairly” prejudicial. See
Manning v. State, 114 S.W.3d 922, 927-28 (Tex.Crim.App.2003)
(noting that while evidence may be prejudicial, it may not be
unfairly prejudicial). As the Court of Criminal Appeals
explained in Cohn v. State: “ ‘Unfair prejudice’ does not, of
course, mean that the evidence injures the opponent's case-the
central point of offering evidence. Rather it refers to ‘an
undue tendency to suggest decision on an improper basis, commonly,
though not necessarily, an emotional one.’ ” 849 S.W.2d 817, 820
(Tex.Crim.App.1993) (en banc) (citing 1 STEVEN GOODE, ET AL.,
GUIDE TO THE TEXAS RULES OF EVIDENCE: CIVIL AND CRIMINAL § 403.2,
at 93 (2d ed.1993)). And, any unfair prejudice must
substantially outweigh the probative value of the demonstration.
See Robbins v. State, 88 S.W.3d 256, 263 (Tex.Crim.App.2002)
(noting that Rule 403 requires that danger of unfair prejudice
must substantially outweigh probative value). This demonstration
did not have the undue tendency to suggest decision on an improper
basis.
In conclusion, this factor weighs in favor of
admissibility.
c. The time needed to develop the in-court
demonstration.
Appellant concedes this factor weighs in favor
of admissibility, as the demonstration took less than twenty
minutes.
d. The State's need for the in-court
reenactment.
In resolving the fourth factor, the State's
need for the staged in-court demonstration, we consider three
subparts: (1) does the proponent have other available evidence to
establish the fact of consequence that the evidence is admissible
to show? (2) if so, how strong is that other evidence? (3) and is
the fact of consequence related to an issue in dispute? See
Montgomery, 810 S.W.2d at 390; Reese, 33 S.W.3d at 242.
Appellant argues that this factor weighs in her favor because the
State had numerous photographs and expert testimony to buttress
its theory. She also contends the State did not need the
demonstration to rebut her self-defense theory because she had not
yet testified when the State presented it, and the State had
available to it the less prejudicial alternative of
cross-examining her.
The State largely concedes the first subpart,
noting in its brief that it “[o]bviously” had other evidence with
which to communicate its theory of the stabbing to the jury,
including the testimony of Detective Reynolds and the medical
examiner. However, the State emphasizes the effectiveness of the
dramatic demonstration, and contends it had a compelling need for
the demonstration to enable the jury to visually evaluate both the
State's theory and appellant's defense on a relevant issue-whether
Jeff Wright was restrained when appellant began to stab him or, as
appellant testified, he was not. We agree that the demonstration
was a much more forceful and clear illustration of the State's
theory than mere testimony.
The jurors were able to see for themselves the
difference in size between appellant and her husband. The jury
was able to see how the ligatures worked-according to the
State-and assess how plausible the State's theory was.
The photographs of Jeff Wright's body and the
explanation given by Detective Reynolds and the medical examiner
adequately explained the State's theory, but the demonstration
almost certainly heightened the jury's comprehension of the
theory. Although it is a close call, this factor favors the
admissibility of the demonstration.
In summary, we find that all of the four
factors weigh in favor of admissibility under Rule 403, and hold
that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in permitting
the demonstration on this basis. We overrule appellant's second
issue.
B. Issue Three: The Motion for Hearing and
New Trial
In her third issue, appellant contends the
trial court erred in denying her motion for a hearing and new
trial based on “the prosecution's speculative and overly
prejudicial bed demonstration.” We disagree.
The right to a hearing on a motion for new
trial is not absolute. Reyes v. State, 849 S.W.2d 812, 815
(Tex.Crim.App.1993) (en banc). However, a defendant is entitled
to a hearing on her motion for new trial if the motion and the
supporting affidavits raise matters not determinable from the
record that could entitle her to relief. Wallace v. State, 106
S.W.3d 103, 108 (Tex.Crim.App.2003) (en banc). To be sufficient
to entitle the defendant to a hearing, the motion for new trial
and accompanying affidavits do not need to establish a prima facie
case for a new trial. Jordan v. State, 883 S.W.2d 664, 665
(Tex.Crim.App.1994) (en banc). These documents need only reflect
that reasonable grounds exist for holding that a new trial could
be granted. Martinez v. State, 74 S.W.3d 19, 22
(Tex.Crim.App.2002) (en banc). We review the trial court's
decision not to hold a hearing on a motion for new trial under an
abuse of discretion standard. Wallace, 106 S.W.3d at 106.
Appellant contends that a post-trial article in
the Houston Chronicle raised matters not determinable from the
record. Specifically, she alleges that the article demonstrates
that the lead prosecutor, Ms. Siegler, acted in bad faith and
contrary to her ethical duties as an officer of the court when she
assured the trial court that the demonstration was not based on
speculation and was not unfairly prejudicial. The March 13, 2004
Houston Chronicle article, entitled “ ‘Pushy’ Wright Prosecutor
knows Drama,” describes Ms. Siegler as knowing the bed
demonstration “would make good courtroom drama,” and quotes her
explaining that she did not attempt to demonstrate appellant
stabbing Jeff Wright at least 193 times because “[f]irst of all,
we don't know where she stabbed first. We don't know when she
stopped and took a break. We don't know how the penis slices
came in the middle of all this. I didn't go that far because I
wasn't sure how that happened.” 16
At most, the article reflects that Ms. Siegler
did not attempt to re-create every aspect of the alleged murder
because she did not know the exact order in which the wounds were
inflicted on Jeff Wright or at what points appellant may have
stopped or rested. Nothing in the article suggests that any part
of the demonstration actually presented to the jury was inaccurate
or based on speculation. The trial judge obviously witnessed the
demonstration and ruled on appellant's objections to it and the
supporting testimony of Detective Reynolds based on the evidence
that was presented. We have determined that, based on the
evidence, the demonstration was conducted under conditions
substantially similar to the actual event. In this case, the
exact order in which the injuries were inflicted or the moments at
which appellant may have taken a break did not affect the
admissibility of the demonstration. The newspaper article raised
nothing that could not be determined from the record, and
therefore appellant's motion failed to demonstrate reasonable
grounds for a hearing on the issue of whether the demonstration
was based on speculation. Accordingly, the trial court did not
err in denying her motion for a hearing. See Reyes, 849 S.W.2d
at 816 (reaffirming that a hearing is not required when the
matters raised in the motion for new trial are subject to being
determined from the record).
C. Issue Four: The State's Allegedly
Improper Reference to Punishment During Final Argument in the
Guilt-Innocence Stage of the Trial
In her fourth issue, appellant contends the
trial court erred in overruling her objection after the State
allegedly made a reference to the issue of punishment during final
argument in the guilt-innocence stage of the trial. We disagree.
1. The Standard of Review
The four general areas for proper jury argument
are (1) summation of the evidence, (2) reasonable deduction from
the evidence, (3) answers to argument of opposing counsel, and (4)
pleas for law enforcement. Guidry v. State, 9 S.W.3d 133, 154
(Tex.Crim.App.1999). The prosecutor may draw all reasonable
inferences from the facts in evidence that are reasonable, fair,
and legitimate. Allridge v. State, 762 S.W.2d 146, 156
(Tex.Crim.App.1988) (en banc). Error exists when facts not
supported by the record are interjected in the argument, but such
error is not reversible unless, in light of the record as a whole,
the argument is extreme or manifestly improper. Id. at 155.
2. Analysis of the Prosecutor's Argument
During the prosecutor's rebuttal argument, the
following exchange ensued:
The State: (Ms. Siegler) Can we just for a
minute take a deep breath and look at this case with the fresh eye
of common sense?
Don't think like a lawyer. Don't think like a
cop. Don't think like a prosecutor. Don't think like a defense
lawyer. Just use your common sense and think like a normal
person.
Do you really think anything else happened in
that bedroom when a body is discovered in a hole with ligatures
around both wrists and around the ankle except for the fact that
he was tied up, as hard as he could be tied up, and stabbed all
over the front, not the back, same as a right-handed person would
do, to a bed, perfect bedposts, 193 times.
And the only way that that could happen when a
defendant is the size she is, and her husband was the size he was,
was if she tied him up.
And to talk about self-defense under this
scenario is a joke. Really, it's a joke.
And I want you to think about the reality of
what the defense strategy is. Think about it really hard.
They tell you that their defense is
self-defense.
No one really expects y'all to believe it's
self-defense. But see, self-defense means you get to say
battered wife. And you get to say, Jeff's a jerk, and Jeff's an
abuser, and Jeff's all these horrible things.
See, that let's all that into evidence. You
get it.
And why is that all important?
Because tomorrow, when we talk again, you won't
care about Jeff being killed. See. This pretty little beautiful
blonde lady won't be punished as severely because Jeff is such a
jerk. Who cares about what happened to Jeff.
Defense: (Mr. Davis) Your Honor, this is
totally improper. This is punishment argument.
The State: I'm talking about their strategy,
Judge.
The Court: It's overruled.
The State: That's what's going on here.
Appellant contends the highlighted argument was
improper because it told the jury to ignore its duty to decide
appellant's guilt or innocence and get to the only real issue in
the case-punishment. To support her argument, appellant cites
Cherry v. State, 507 S.W.2d 549 (Tex.Crim.App.1974), and Kelly v.
State, 903 S.W.2d 809 (Tex.App.-Dallas 1995, pet. ref'd). In
Mann v. State, the Court of Criminal Appeals explained that the
prosecutors' comments in both Cherry and Kelly were improper
because they essentially told the jury to ignore their duties to
decide guilt or innocence because the only issue in the case was
what punishment should be assessed to the defendant. Mann v.
State, 718 S.W.2d 741, 744 (Tex.Crim.App.1986).
It is generally improper for the State to
comment on punishment during the guilt-innocence stage of the
trial. See McClure v. State, 544 S.W.2d 390, 393
(Tex.Crim.App.1976); Cherry, 507 S.W.2d at 549. However, not
every reference to punishment at the guilt-innocence stage is
improper. Cf. Mann, 718 S.W.2d at 744; see also Barnes v.
State, No. 01-01-01086, 2002 WL 31388820, at *2 (Tex.App.-Houston
[1st Dist.] Oct. 24, 2002, no pet.) (not designated for
publication) (holding prosecutor's isolated argument referencing
punishment was not improper because it was responsive to evidence
in the record and was not intended to inflame the jury). We find
that the prosecutor's argument here did not encourage the jury to
ignore their duties to decide guilt or innocence, nor did it
suggest that punishment was the only real issue. The prosecutor
was urging the jurors to be suspicious of appellant's claim of
self-defense as a possible trial strategy ploy to get before the
jury evidence of Jeff Wright's alleged bad character that
otherwise would be inadmissible. Thus, the argument was in
answer to opposing counsel's argument that appellant acted in
self-defense and was a response to the presentation of appellant's
case.
The prosecutor was not telling the jury to
disregard the guilt-innocence stage because it was not important.
To the contrary, she did not mention punishment again; she
spent the remainder of her argument discussing the guilt-innocence
evidence and focusing the jury on its duty to evaluate this
evidence and render a verdict. We therefore find Cherry and
Kelly distinguishable, and hold that the trial court did not err
in overruling appellant's objection to the prosecutor's argument.
We overrule appellant's fourth issue.
D. Issues Five, Six, and Seven: The State's
Allegedly Improper Arguments During the Punishment Stage
In her remaining three issues, appellant
contends that, during the prosecutor's rebuttal argument in the
punishment stage, the trial court erred in overruling appellant's
objections to the prosecutor's allegedly improper arguments in
three instances. Appellant contends the prosecutor's arguments
were outside the record, were not reasonable deductions from the
evidence, and injected new facts harmful to her case into the
trial. We address each separately.
1. “Take your fist back there and pound that
wall as hard as you can.”
In her fifth issue, appellant complains about
the following exchange:
The State: (Ms. Siegler) Their domestic
violence theory. That's absurd.
Guys, you know good and well if you took your
foot and you kicked as hard as you could into another man's ribs,
much less a woman, that man would be crippled up and going to a
hospital. Y'all know that.
Take your fist back there and pound that wall
as hard as you can and tell each other that she wouldn't have had
a broken bone.
Defense: (Mr. Davis) Object, your Honor.
The State:-and a break-
Defense: Objection, your Honor. Fist back in
the jury room.
The Court: Overruled.
The State: Think about it then.
As an initial matter, the State contends that
appellant failed to preserve error by failing to raise a
sufficiently specific objection. See TEX. R. APP. P. 33.1(a)(1)
(to preserve error, objection must be timely and specific unless
specific grounds are apparent from the context). We agree.
There are two main purposes for requiring a timely, specific
objection: (1) to inform the trial court of the basis of the
objection and give the trial court the opportunity to make a
ruling on it; and (2) to give opposing counsel the opportunity to
take appropriate action to remove the objection or provide other
testimony. Garza v. State, 126 S.W.3d 79, 82 (Tex.Crim.App.2004).
Here, appellant's counsel simply objected to the argument and
quoted the allegedly objectionable phrase. On appeal, appellant
contends the statement was improper because it was outside the
record and it encouraged the jurors to conduct an experiment.
However, appellant did not inform the trial judge of either
objection she now raises. Nor can we say that the nature of the
objection now before us is apparent from the context and the
circumstances presented. See Heidelberg v. State, 144 S.W.3d
535, 542-43 (Tex.Crim.App.2004) (en banc) (holding appellant
failed to preserve error when trial judge overruled objection
without comment and record gave no indication of basis for
objection asserted on appeal). We overrule appellant's fifth
issue.
2. “[L]et God take them if it would bring
Jeffrey back.”
In her sixth issue, appellant complains of the
following argument:
The State: (Ms. Siegler) Those of you who have
kids, you know what you think. Y'all-y'all are lucky when you
get to leave here later today or tomorrow and you get in your car
and you drive away․
․ And you know that Kay and Ron would stand up
right now and let God take them if it would bring Jeffrey back.
You know that.
Defense: (Mr. Davis) I'm-
The State: They have to live-
Defense: Object to that, Your Honor, that's
not-that's-there is no evidence of that. Telling things she
knows.
The Court: It's overruled.
Appellant contends the above-highlighted
argument was improper because neither of Jeff Wright's parents
made the statement attributed to them by the prosecutor, and no
reasonable deduction can be made from this non-evidence.
However, we find the prosecutor's argument was an appeal to common
knowledge. See Nenno v. State, 970 S.W.2d 549, 559
(Tex.Crim.App.1998); Carter v. State, 614 S.W.2d 821, 823
(Tex.Crim.App. [Panel Op.] 1981). In addition, Jeff Wright's
parents testified to the extreme grief and pain they experienced
from losing their son. Thus, the prosecutor's argument simply
acknowledged the devastating effect Jeff Wright's death had on his
parents. We overrule appellant's sixth issue.
3. “To give them stability, not traumatic
dealings with their murdering mother.”
In her seventh issue, appellant complains about
the prosecutor's argument that appellant should be given a lengthy
sentence to keep her away from her children:
The State: (Ms. Siegler) Give this family the
opportunity to raise them normally, to provide for their college
education like they've already started. To give them stability,
not traumatic dealings with their murdering mother.
Give them the opportunity to raise Bradley and
Kaily away from her until they are grown adults.
To this argument, appellant objected that the
argument was not proper because it “goes against the testimony of
the ad litem.”
We hold that appellant's objection failed to
preserve her complaint because the objection made at trial does
not correspond to the arguments she raises on appeal. An
objection stating one legal basis may not be used to support a
different legal theory on appeal. Cook v. State, 858 S.W.2d 467,
474 (Tex.Crim.App.1993) (en banc); Rezac v. State, 782 S.W.2d
869, 870 (Tex.Crim.App.1990) (en banc). At trial, appellant
objected that the argument was inconsistent with a witness's
testimony; on appeal, she contends that the argument was outside
the record, was not a reasonable deduction from the evidence, and
injected new facts harmful to her into the trial. An objection
that the argument conflicts with the evidence is different than an
objection that the argument is outside the record. An argument
may conflict with one witness's testimony but still be supported
by other evidence or inferences from other evidence. Therefore,
nothing is presented for review. See Rezac, 782 S.W.2d at 871.
II. Conclusion
In summary, we hold that the State's in-court
demonstration of its theory of the case was conducted under
substantially similar conditions to the actual event-as deduced by
the State-and was not unfairly prejudicial in violation of Rules
of Evidence 602 and 403. We further hold that the trial court
did not err in denying appellant's motion for a hearing and new
trial, because appellant failed to raise reasonable grounds for a
hearing. Finally, we hold that the trial court did not err in
overruling appellant's objections to the prosecutor's arguments
during the guilt-innocence and punishment stages of the trial.
We affirm the trial court's judgment.