Houston Chronicle

22 pieces of evidence missing in 2 slayings

Armstrong’s lawyers say only now are they learning about items

- By Samantha Ketterer STAFF WRITER

Prosecutor­s told Antonio Armstrong Jr.’s defense that 22 pieces of evidence went missing during his first trial in the 2016 slayings of his parents, just days before jury selection was scheduled to begin in the 20-year-old’s retrial, his lawyers said.

The new trial, which was set to begin Monday, has now been reschedule­d to March 26 in state District Judge Kelli Johnson’s court — overlappin­g with another prominent trial in her court for the sentencing of David Temple, an exKaty-area football coach found guilty in the murder of his pregnant wife.

Given the conflict, it’s unclear when Armstrong’s trial will actually begin. But defense attorney Rick DeToto said he and his cocounsel are determinin­g how to proceed since he feels prosecutor­s are using “tactics to violate AJ’s constituti­onal rights,” considerin­g state attorneys might have known the full contents of a lost garbage bag of evidence months ago.

“It’s significan­t in that it appears to be a pattern of conduct by the state,” DeToto said.

The Harris County District Attorney’s Office declined to comment past denying that prosecutor­s were at fault for the loss of any evidence. At the time of the incident, the judge spoke with both parties’ lawyers at the bench and speculated that the garbage bag had possibly been thrown out by maintenanc­e, according to court transcript­s. She said it also could have been lost as the result of rotating court locations between the Harris County civil and criminal court buildings each week — which occurs because Hurricane Harvey flooded parts of the criminal building — and thus having to shuttle evidence between buildings.

“Defense lawyers are once again lying to the public and potential jurors about the facts in the horrific murders of Dawn Arm

strong and her husband, Antonio Armstrong Sr.,” spokesman Dane Schiller said in a written statement. “Last April, the judge determined that any loss of evidence was ‘obviously, no fault of either party.’”

That garbage bag of evidence — only stated at the time to contain Armstrong’s cellphone — got lost in April 2019 mid-trial, according to court proceeding­s. Attorneys spoke quietly while conferring at the bench over the issue in April, and it was never made clear what the bag contained until December, when DeToto filed a motion to suppress transcript­s of the thousands of text messages on the device.

Johnson issued a gag order and held a hearing Friday, during which prosecutor­s and defense attorneys met with her in a back room about the evidence, DeToto said Monday. During that conversati­on, prosecutor­s told the judge and defense that they made a list of 22 items that were in the lost bag following the conclusion of Armstrong’s trial, which ended in a hung jury, DeToto said.

Those items included the cellphone, shell casings, a gun case and swabs taken from the murder weapon, the attorney said, first reported by KTRK-TV. The gag order has since been lifted, but Johnson hasn’t made a decision on whether to suppress Armstrong’s cellphone records.

Because prosecutor­s allegedly had that informatio­n more than six months ago and didn’t make it known until days before the scheduled start of the new trial, DeToto said he believes his opponents violated the Michael Morton Act, as well as rules establishe­d by the 1963 U.S. Supreme Court decision Brady v. Maryland.

The Michael Morton Act requires state attorneys to hand over evidence to defendants and catalog that evidence. And as a result of Brady v. Maryland, prosecutor­s have to give defense attorneys any informatio­n that could show a client is innocent, plus any informatio­n that could call into question witnesses testifying against them.

This is the second time defense attorneys have claimed prosecutor­s improperly handled evidence. They previously accused prosecutor­s of concealing claims that his father was involved in a prostituti­on ring and received death threats.

Armstrong, who has maintained his innocence from the start, was 16 when police say he gunned down his mother and father, who formerly played in the NFL.

Armstrong’s first trial lasted weeks, but jurors ultimately couldn’t decide whether he killed his parents, who also owned a small chain of fitness centers. They were found on July 29, 2016, fatally shot in their bed with pillows covering their faces. Police discovered a gun and a threatenin­g message on the kitchen counter, but the home showed no signs of forced entry.

Investigat­ors said they were certain Armstrong was the only possible culprit. He called authoritie­s to report an intruder who shot his parents but deactivate­d the home’s alarm system to let Houston police inside. Doors and windows at the family’s three-story townhouse were also locked from the inside, according to testimony.

While he was a star athlete at school, Armstrong had troubles at home, prosecutor­s alleged. His parents caught him in multiple lies, and he had been discipline­d for marijuana use. He also got kicked out of the Kinkaid School because of poor grades and was transferri­ng to Lamar High School, where he likely wouldn’t have started on the football team, witnesses said.

Armstrong’s attorneys were successful in the first trial in casting reasonable doubt in the case, citing a lack of direct evidence tying the teen to the crime. An alarm expert testified that the home security system wasn’t reliable, and family members said that many people had access to the garage through a keypad.

Defense lawyers said an intruder was to blame, possibly the Armstrong’s older brother.

Jury selection is scheduled to begin March 26. Armstrong faces life in prison with the possibilit­y of parole after 40 years. Because he was a juvenile at the time of the killing, he would not be eligible for the death penalty.

 ?? Brett Coomer / Staff photograph­er ?? Antonio Armstrong Jr., shown at his trial in April, will face a new trial on March 26 in the 2016 slayings of his parents. They were found shot to death inside their home.
Brett Coomer / Staff photograph­er Antonio Armstrong Jr., shown at his trial in April, will face a new trial on March 26 in the 2016 slayings of his parents. They were found shot to death inside their home.
 ?? Jon Shapley / Staff file photo ?? A photo of Dawn Armstrong and her husband Antonio is seen during their 2016 funeral. The couple was fatally shot, and their son is accused in the deaths.
Jon Shapley / Staff file photo A photo of Dawn Armstrong and her husband Antonio is seen during their 2016 funeral. The couple was fatally shot, and their son is accused in the deaths.

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