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FOX News: Clara Harris murder trial sentence - 20 years in prison, $10,000 fine
FOX News Channel ^ | February 14, 2003 | Fox News Channel Staff

Posted on 02/14/2003 2:51:00 PM PST by MeekOneGOP

Edited on 04/22/2004 12:35:31 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]


(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...


TOPICS: Breaking News; Crime/Corruption; News/Current Events; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: claraharris; houston; mercedesbenz; murder; texas
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To: twyn1
I think she snapped and forgot the daughter was there. Not to offer an excuse as this is totally sick however, I think she acted in a moment of intense passion. 20 years seems more than fair.
41 posted on 02/14/2003 3:06:26 PM PST by alisasny
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To: MeeknMing
If the situation was reversed and it was the husband that ran over the wife with the kid in the car, there would be zero sympathy for him and the guy would get life in prison with no parole. Just my opinion.
42 posted on 02/14/2003 3:06:43 PM PST by SamAdams76 ('Faithless is he that says farewell when the road darkens')
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To: twyn1
There had been some talk that the jury was going to delay the sentencing over the weekend because it would be ironic to sentence her on Valentine's Day. Well - don't mess with Texas!
43 posted on 02/14/2003 3:06:46 PM PST by Enterprise
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To: dennisw
excuse me....she's a doctor herself ...she has her own money...

think it is a very bad day for "justice"..

"justice" meaning doing the right thing which is not always legal "justice"..

for example....shouldn't the woman who caused all of this be on trial as well?...should the victim who purportedly mentally abused his wife and cheated on her and the family, perhaps his "estate" should pay a fine...

finding your scum husband in the clutches of his scum home-wrecker would send most people over the edge..

when she went there..she did not intend to do harm, at least not fatal harm...remember , she had a passenger that day...

so , flame me is you want...I see the likes of oj out there and question why we are sending a woman of good character to do 20 yrs in prison while he and his ilk are free..

that attorney for her was a total and complete failure at sentencing...he actually brought up the fact that the boys would lose two parents if Clara went to prison, even though it was Clara who got rid of the other parent...

why would he ever be hired again is beyond me...

afterall, he had the family of the slain man in the palm of his hand, and he still couldn't get the jury to give less than 20 yrs...unbelievable....

44 posted on 02/14/2003 3:06:46 PM PST by cherry
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To: johnb838
I hope the money is in trust for the kids -- the defense lawyer tried the "don't take mommy away from the twins" tactic to make the jury feel sorry for Clara -- I guess the jury didn't buy that one -- good for them
45 posted on 02/14/2003 3:07:30 PM PST by twyn1 (God Bless America !)
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To: mdittmar
Husbands and wives screw around all the time.

"80 percent of married men cheat in America.
The other 20 percent cheat in Europe." - Jackie Mason


I'm part of the 0.0001 percent who has not cheated ... yet ;-)

46 posted on 02/14/2003 3:08:14 PM PST by LO_IQ
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To: CharacterCounts
Thanks! Then she'll be squandering her own money.
47 posted on 02/14/2003 3:08:42 PM PST by dennisw ( http://www.littlegreenfootballs.com/weblog/weblog.php)
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To: goodieD
This sounds simplistic but it's true, two wrongs do not make a right. When my wife was cheating on me, my first thought wasn't to shoot her or run her down. I hurt her worse than a 4,000 lb Mercedes ever could have. I took her cheating @ss to court and got sole custody of my kids AND a good chunk of her check for child support every month. THAT is the proper way for getting rid of a cheating spouse.
48 posted on 02/14/2003 3:08:59 PM PST by txradioguy (HOOAH! Not just a word, A way of life!)
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To: LO_IQ
LoL!
49 posted on 02/14/2003 3:09:39 PM PST by mdittmar
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To: goodieD
sorry I can't agree -- cheating is wrong and this guy was an exceptionally nasty jerk -- bragged to Clara that his "girl" had bigger breasts and was a better lover -- but I can't condone running the guy over
50 posted on 02/14/2003 3:10:02 PM PST by twyn1 (God Bless America !)
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To: twyn1
On a side note..that woman who beat her kid on video, remember her> SHe got to pleed today to probation. Sad to know in Texas if she killed her baby she would have only gotten 20 years but its ok to just beat your kid in her area. Very sad.
51 posted on 02/14/2003 3:10:14 PM PST by alisasny
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To: mdittmar
I think the latest stats on spousal cheating was lower than 30% -- can't remember the number for sure but I know I was surprised at how low it was
52 posted on 02/14/2003 3:11:28 PM PST by twyn1 (God Bless America !)
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To: cherry
You are out of wack on this. She killed so in turn she should be tried and executed. She's lucky she got what she did. She is murderous scum decked out in expensive clothing.

She's in the slammer now and for a long time. May she rot!
53 posted on 02/14/2003 3:12:21 PM PST by dennisw ( http://www.littlegreenfootballs.com/weblog/weblog.php)
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To: mdittmar
I agree....10 years with good time while I've got pals doing 14 to life in the Feds for smuggling/growing pot....makes me want to puke.

Coupled with that travesty of sentencing today for those former SLA murdering cretins in LA today....retch.

We have absolutely no sense of proportion in sentencing anymore here.
54 posted on 02/14/2003 3:12:59 PM PST by wardaddy (and this was in texas.....in westchester county, they'd name a high school after her)
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To: twyn1
What was her reaction to the sentence??
55 posted on 02/14/2003 3:13:09 PM PST by KsSunflower
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To: Sweet Hour of Prayer
Guess if all spouses murdered the cheating one we'd need alot more prisons.BTW this could this have been classified as a hate crime?
56 posted on 02/14/2003 3:13:20 PM PST by mdittmar
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To: dennisw
She's gotta be the stupidest woman in America. She could have gotten a hefty divorce from her husband. Their assets are $10 million.

Clara could have just fired David. She owned 51% of the corp. that brought in the $$$.

Knowing the situation as well as I did I'll never be convinced that she set out to kill David. But the jury has spoken.

Maybe Clara's lawyer should have brought up more trash on David. But I heard Clara did not want to drag his memory through the mud.

Sad sad deal all the way around. Sad for David, Clara, the twins and the daughter.

57 posted on 02/14/2003 3:13:28 PM PST by isthisnickcool
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To: Enterprise
LOL ! Happy Valentine's Day, Clara !
58 posted on 02/14/2003 3:14:12 PM PST by MeekOneGOP (Bu-bye SADdam. You're soon to meet your buddy Stalin in Hades.)
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To: mdittmar
Yeah but the reason why it wasn't is so obvious.....
59 posted on 02/14/2003 3:14:29 PM PST by txradioguy (HOOAH! Not just a word, A way of life!)
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To: deport
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/topstory/1779046

Feb. 14, 2003, 5:12PM

Jury sentences Harris to 20 years in prison, $10,000 fine

By ALLAN TURNER
Copyright 2003 Houston Chronicle

Jurors today sentenced dentist Clara Harris to 20 years in prison and a $10,000 fine for the July 24 automobile attack on her adulterous husband, David Harris. They deliberated for over six hours before reaching the decision.

The jury also found that Clara Harris acted under "sudden passion." Twenty years in prison is the maximum sentence under that condition. She will be eligible for parole after 10 years.

As the sentence was being read, Harris stood with her attorneys, George Parnham and Emily Munoz, gripping her arms. Upon hearing the sentence, she put her hands to her face and crumpled, her knees apparently buckling. She was led from the room by a bailiff and her attorneys.

Jurors Thursday found Clara Harris guilty of murder after a total of eight hours of deliberation. She could have gotten a sentence as hard as life in prison, or as light as probation.

Harris learned her fate on the 11th anniversary of her marriage to the man she killed.

Final arguments in the penalty phase began this morning with prosecutor Mia Magness calling for jail time for Clara Harris, though she did not specify an amount.

"Probation -- scratch that," Magness said. However, she also told them to "scratch" a life-in-prison penalty.

Defense attorney Parnham asked the jury to spare his client from any jail time.

Parnham often spoke quietly and haltingly. He appealed for probation, telling the jury that the Harrises' twin sons should not be "ripped away" from the arms of their surviving parent.

Parnham warned that his opponent, prosecutor Mia Magness, would tell the jury in her rebuttal that their decision would "send a message."

"But it won't stop the Gail Thompson Bridges of the world from doing what they do," Parnham said, referring to the David Harris' mistress.

During Parnham's arguments, Clara Harris wept, occasionally holding her head in her hands. He painted a picture of his client as a model citizen prior to the killing.

"Clara Harris is respected by her neighbors, loved by her neighors, loved by the colleagues she employed, loved by the family that was closest to David," he said. "She worked hard. She was a good mother, a good wife. She has requested and she will be able to abide by terms of probation."

Parnham completed his arguments at about 10 a.m., and prosecutor Magness started her rebuttal, attacking the defense's strategy of painting the defendant as a good person.

"You are not asked to punish her as a person, you are being asked to punish her conduct," Magness said. "Her conduct of July 24 is what you should be basing your decision on."

Magness called Clara Harris "selfish" for the actions that led up to and caused her husband's death, and for involving David Harris' daughter, Lindsey Harris.

"To even involve a teenage daughter in what should have remained something resolved by adults -- to involve her to the point that that child has to witness the death of her father is unconscionable," she said.

Lindsey Harris was the prosecution's sole witness during the punishment phase.

The prosecutor also countered Parnham's argument that the boys should not be deprived of their mother.

"She is using her children as a shield," Magness said.

Magness said that, as the defense tried to paint Clara Harris as a woman who suffered humiliation, David Harris' humiliation was forgotten.

"How about drowning in your own blood while your teenage daughter watches?" she asked. "You talk about humiliation? What about his?

"Every single one of us has the right, no matter who you are, or what choices you make in life, to die with dignity. It is what you hope for. And she took that away from him," Magness said.

She completed her arguments at about 10:25 a.m. As state District Judge Carolyn Davies announced a brief recess before jury deliberations would start, defense attorney Munoz stood.

Munoz said she wanted it noted in the record -- though without an objection -- that the court reporter was crying and that Magness was near tears during her rebuttal. She called the behavior "prejudicial as the public displays of emotion that Clara has displayed during the trial."

Thursday, at least two members of the panel of nine women and three men wept as their verdict was read shortly after 9 a.m.

The conviction could send Harris to prison for five to 99 years or life. If sentenced to 10 years or less, she would be eligible for probation.

If jurors determine that Harris killed her husband in "sudden passion," she could be eligible for a prison sentence as short as two years.

The jury also found that Harris had used her S-body Mercedes-Benz sedan as a deadly weapon -- a finding that would keep her in prison during her appeals and require her to serve half of her assessed sentence before she could become eligible for parole.

The jurors, who received the case about noon Wednesday, deliberated for slightly more than eight hours before announcing the decision. They are set to begin considering Harris' punishment today.

Harris, 45, was accused of running over her husband, orthodontist David Harris, in a fit of jealous rage after she found him with his mistress at a Clear Lake-area hotel.

The victim, 44, suffered massive injuries in the attack, including 16 broken ribs and a broken back, jaw, collarbone and pelvis. His lungs were punctured and a blood vessel to his heart torn.

The murder vehicle, a 2000 model valued at $55,125, was impounded by police and will become part of David Harris' estate.

Clara Harris, who frequently cried openly during the trial, stood dry-eyed as the verdict was delivered. Defense attorneys Parnham and Munoz gently gripped her arms.

A short time later, however, she burst into tears as prosecutor Magness questioned the state's only witness in the punishment phase, the defendant's 17-year-old stepdaughter, Lindsey Harris.

Asked about the quality of her life since her father's murder, the teen was testifying about two incidents in which she slashed her wrists when state District Judge Carol G. Davies called for a short break.

As jurors filed from the courtroom, Clara Harris stood at the defense table and sobbed, "I'm sorry, Lindsey. I'm sorry, baby."

"Be quiet!" Davies commanded.

"I'm sorry. I'm sorry," Harris continued.

"Be quiet!" Davies said again before sternly warning Harris for the fourth time during the trial that she would be removed if she continued to disrupt proceedings.

Although Harris controlled her emotions and remained in the courtroom, two members of the audience later left when Davies admonished spectators to stop reacting emotionally to the proceedings or leave.

Lindsey Harris -- who lives with her mother and stepfather in Ohio -- told jurors she had a "great" relationship with her father.

"I talked to him on the phone every other day," she said. "We were the same person. We finished each other's sentences."

The teen testified that they shared interests, including music, athletics and dentistry.

"I planned to come to college down here and spend the rest of my life down here," she said. "Everything was planned. It was just perfect. And then it was ruined."

She told jurors of the harrowing minutes when, as a passenger in her stepmother's car, she recognized that her father would die.

"I saw his eyes," she said of the incident in the parking lot of the Nassau Bay Hilton. "I felt so bad that I couldn't help him. He couldn't get away. He was so scared and I couldn't do anything.

"It was terrifying. She was killing him. I would never see him again. I never got to say goodbye. I only got to spend 16 1/2 years with him. I had plans. It just wasn't fair."

Once she returned to the family's Friendswood home, she testified, she found her father's clothing in a garbage can -- placed there by a nanny on the instructions of Clara Harris.

The daughter said she brought the clothes upstairs and put them on her bed, then got her father's possessions from his bathroom and closet and brought them to her room.

"I felt like he was there with me," she said.

Lindsey Harris testified that she fantasized that the reason she could not talk with her father was that he was away on business. Once an A student, she said, she began making Ds. She dropped out of a cheerleading program, lost her friends and no longer cared about becoming an orthodontist.

The teenager said she slipped into depression, underwent counseling and was placed on mood-altering medication.

"It made things worse," she said. "I was just numb."

She told jurors she has become estranged from her grandparents, Mildred and Gerald Harris, who have continued to support their daughter-in-law. She suggested that their support of the killer stemmed in part from financial reasons linked to their son's estate.

Gerald Harris, the defense's first witness in the punishment phase, denied his granddaughter's claim.

"No, sir," said the former high school principal. "That hasn't anything to do with it. I don't expect to get anything out of it.

"Our motivation stems from the word `forgiveness,' " Harris said. "This tragedy has been a strong blow to our family. God has forgiven our sins. We can forgive a member of our family when she has erred."

He told jurors that he and his wife, Mildred, are seeking to gain guardianship of Clara Harris' 4-year-old twin sons.

Gerald Harris, his wife and son, Gerald Jr., were among witnesses called by Parnham to testify that Clara Harris would be a good candidate for probation. Others included her minister, an across-the-street neighbor and the former Colombian consul-general for Texas and Oklahoma.

Defense attorneys elicited testimony that Harris could support her children, hold a job, live as a law-abiding citizen and comply with community-service requirements -- all conditions for probation. She would not be able to perform dental work as community service, however, because she will lose her license because of the murder conviction.

As testimony continued into the afternoon, she continually wrote on a yellow legal pad or gazed at photographs she had placed in front of her on the defense table. The subject of her writing or the content of the photos could not be determined.

Both the prosecution and defense rested their cases late Thursday afternoon, with Parnham asking that all evidence introduced in the trial's guilt-innocence phase be made available to jurors to support a "sudden passion" defense.

David Harris was killed after his wife and daughter found him with his mistress, Gail Bridges, in the lobby of the Nassau Bay Hilton. Testimony showed that Clara Harris was involved in a physical altercation with Bridges before the group was escorted to the parking lot.

Final arguments are expected today, which would have been the 11th wedding anniversary for Harris and her husband.

Harris, who was required to remove her wedding ring and other jewelry, was allowed to say goodbye to her family before being taken to the Harris County Jail, where she will be lodged pending the completion of sentencing.

Chronicle reporters Lisa Teachey, Ruth Rendon and Leigh Hopper contributed to this story.


60 posted on 02/14/2003 3:16:12 PM PST by deport
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