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  #1  
Old 05-01-2002, 02:28 AM
KnowledgeEternal KnowledgeEternal is offline
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^^^^She's 25?!?! She looks damn near 50!

Just say no, people. Damn.
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  #2  
Old 05-01-2002, 10:39 AM
ClassyLady ClassyLady is offline
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Didn't anyone see her driving down the street with a man stuck to her windshield?

Maybe it's just me, but I don't see how you hit someone and then drive home and there's absolutely not one witness.
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  #3  
Old 05-05-2002, 05:37 PM
Zetaphied Zetaphied is offline
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I'm sitting here cracking up not because this is funny because it isn't but at the last post. That is so true, how in the world did no one notice this chick driving home with a man attached to the front of her car? Hey but they could have seen it and just said nothing, there are enough cases of people being murdered in front of their houses and calling for help and their neighbors turning off the lights and blinds acting like nothing has happened.
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  #4  
Old 05-05-2002, 10:50 PM
brownsugakdphi brownsugakdphi is offline
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Didn't the article say that the woman was a nurse's aid.... Clue me in if I'm wrong, but isn't part of the job description to provide aid.... I guess that's why she isn't one anymore... Furthermore, people are saying she's not a murderer, just a scared woman, but I just can't help but think of that man and his fear.... he must've felt so alone and helpless, regardless if he had died, that in itself is killing someone...

I know this sounds pretty ridiculous, but things like this happen all too often. Did you all hear about the woman who went to McDOnalds put her baby (who was in the carrier) on the top of the car so she could get a better hold of her food, and ended up forgetting her kid as she drove.... I'm not sure if the kid died or not, but there are some stupid people out there.....
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  #5  
Old 09-06-2002, 07:11 PM
CrimsonTide4 CrimsonTide4 is offline
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UPDATE part dos

Another man charged in Texas windshield death
09/05/2002 01:31 AM EDT

FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) - A third person was indicted Thursday in the case of a homeless man who was hit by a car and allegedly left lodged in the windshield until he died.

Herbert Cleveland, 24, was charged with helping dump the man's body in a park to try to conceal the alleged hit-and-run.

According to police, Chante Mallard told investigators she was returning from a nightclub Oct. 26 when she hit the homeless man, Gregory Biggs.

She allegedly told police she drove home with Biggs, 37, stuck in the windshield, hid the car in her garage and apologized to him but didn't seek help because she was afraid.

Authorities say Biggs could have survived with medical attention.

Mallard, 26, was indicted in April on charges of murder and tampering with evidence.

Cleveland was charged with tampering with or fabricating physical evidence. Another man, Clete Jackson, 27, was indicted in July on the same charge.

All three remained jailed Thursday.
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  #6  
Old 09-07-2002, 02:01 PM
oneinamillion oneinamillion is offline
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and that's where they need to stay!!!!!!!!!
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  #7  
Old 06-23-2003, 08:21 AM
CrimsonTide4 CrimsonTide4 is offline
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Chante Mallard's Trial Begins Today

Woman stands trial for killing homeless man
Monday, June 23, 2003 Posted: 3:06 AM EDT (0706 GMT)


Chante Mallard cries before a hearing held to reconsider her bond in Fort Worth, Texas.

FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) -- It was hours before dawn on a highway southeast of downtown. A homeless man walked along a shoulder of the road as a former nurse's aide drove home after a night of drinking at a bar.

What happened next isn't clear. All Chante Jawan Mallard could remember, according to police reports, was that her Chevrolet Cavalier hit the man with such force that his head and shoulders jammed into the windshield, shattering it, and his legs bent over the roof, his pants tearing almost completely off his body.

Instead of stopping, police say, Mallard drove about a mile down the divided six-lane highway, the man still lodged and bleeding in the jagged windshield, then continued through town to her small yellow house in a working-class neighborhood.

She pulled into her garage, lowered the door, then sat in the car and cried, repeatedly apologizing to the man who was moaning, she later told detectives.

"Chante kept going in and out of the garage telling the man she was sorry," the police report states. "She does not know how long it took the man to die; she quit going out into the garage."

It wasn't until the next day that Gregory Biggs, 37, a former bricklayer who had been living in a Fort Worth homeless shelter, was found dead, his body dumped in a park a few miles from Mallard's house.

Now, nearly two years later, Mallard, 27, heads to trial Monday on charges of murder and tampering with evidence. She faces life in prison if convicted.

Two of her friends, Clete Deneal Jackson and Herbert Tyrone Cleveland, have pleaded guilty to dumping the body to help Mallard.

Jackson received a 10-year sentence for tampering with evidence; Cleveland, nine years. As part of plea agreements, they will testify at her trial.

Police initially said Biggs lived for several days in Mallard's garage, slowly bleeding to death from his multiple fractures and cuts.

But Tarrant County Medical Examiner Nizam Peerwani later said Biggs, whose left leg was nearly amputated, probably lived only a few hours after he was hit the morning of October 26, 2001. He could have survived if he had received medical attention, Peerwani has said.

Police, prosecutors, defense attorneys and others involved in the case have not commented about it publicly since state District Judge James R. Wilson imposed a gag order after Mallard was indicted last year.

When Biggs' body was found in the park, authorities had no leads until four months later, when a tipster said Mallard talked about the incident at a party.

The woman said they were discussing who would be the designated driver, because some in the group had been drinking, and that Mallard said she couldn't use her car, police said. The woman recalled that Mallard giggled when she said "I hit this white man," according to the police report.

The woman said Mallard told her she "was messed up" on ecstasy pills and drunk. Mallard and her boyfriend later went into the garage to see if the man was dead, but he was alive and even asked for help, the woman told police.

The day after interviewing the tipster in February 2002, detectives went to Mallard's house with a search warrant, and they said she confessed.

Police found the car in the garage, the seats missing and the windshield and rear glass broken. Officers said they found dark stains on the passenger-side floorboard and burned car seats in her back yard.

Mallard's attorney Reagan Wynn said at June 10 court hearing that some media coverage of the case -- including a report that Mallard had sex with her boyfriend after arriving home and that she left Biggs in the garage for days -- were inaccurate. Wynn requested that the trial be moved out of Fort Worth. The request was denied.

(Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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  #8  
Old 06-23-2003, 10:40 AM
RedefinedDiva RedefinedDiva is offline
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That binch deserves the stiffest penalty for that!! Does she really think that she would have been in more trouble if the police would have found out that she was drinking? I mean, all she had to do was get the man some help and face the small penalty for those acts. But now, she has a murder charge on her and she must face that judgment.
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  #9  
Old 06-26-2003, 01:23 PM
CrimsonTide4 CrimsonTide4 is offline
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CHARGED WITH MURDER

Jury finds 'windshield death' defendant guilty
Thursday, June 26, 2003 Posted: 12:53 PM EDT (1653 GMT)



FORT WORTH, Texas (CNN) -- Jurors delivered two guilty verdicts against the Texas woman who hit a homeless man with her car and left him to die still embedded in the windshield.

With unanimous verdicts reached in less than a hour, the jury determined Chante Jawan Mallard guilty of murder and tampering with evidence. She faces up to life in prison.

Attorneys for Chante Jawan Mallard admit she hit Gregory Biggs but contend their client then became hysterical and panicked. They describe the event as an accident. Both the defense and prosecution agree Mallard had been drinking and taking drugs beforehand.

The prosecution contends Biggs was moaning and could have survived if he had received immediate medical aid, and accuses Mallard of indifference in the hours after he was hit.

Bexar County Medical Examiner Dr. Vincent Di Maio cast doubt on some aspects of the prosecution's case, saying the impact of the crash would have knocked Biggs unconscious, so he probably wasn't moaning.

Mallard did not testify in the trial but could possibly address the court in the sentencing phase.

Thursday's sentencing concluded a trial that began on Monday. On Wednesday, Biggs' son testified his father was a "very loving" man who fell on hard times after trying to help a girlfriend.

Brandon Briggs, 20, said his parents divorced when he was a child. His father was a bricklayer who started his own company, he said. Gregory Biggs began dating a woman who started having financial troubles, and then he lost his car, business and home, his son said.

Gregory Biggs, 37, had been homeless about two years when he died, Brandon Biggs said.

He said his father also suffered from mild schizophrenia and a bipolar psychiatric condition, which hampered his ability to work.

"I'd say he was very hardworking, he was very friendly, although he didn't have many friends," the son said.

Earlier, the Tarrant County medical examiner testified Gregory Biggs could have survived for hours before succumbing to his injuries after he was hit while walking along a highway on the morning of October 26, 2001.

After hitting Biggs, Mallard is accused of driving her car home and parking it in the garage, with Biggs still lodged in the windshield.


Medical examiner Nizam Peerwani
According to Dr. Nizam Peerwani, Biggs had no "instantaneously fatal injuries. He did not have any spinal cord trauma, no brain trauma, no major cardiac lacerations or lacerations to the aorta or major blood vessels."

He had "serious injuries" but could have stayed alive for many hours, the doctor said. When he was hit, Biggs' left leg was almost amputated, and his right arm, right upper thigh and right lower leg were broken.

The body was found the next day dumped in a nearby park.

On Tuesday, Mallard's former boyfriend, Clete Jackson, testified she called him about 20 times the day Biggs was struck and he helped her dispose of the body in the park.

Jackson pleaded guilty to tampering with evidence and was sentenced to 10 years in prison. A cousin who helped received nine years.

Jackson said he tried to put the body in a place where it could be found so that the man's family could bury him. He also said that Mallard talked about killing herself when he spoke with her the next day.

The judge has imposed a gag order, preventing attorneys and family members from discussing the case publicly.

CNN Correspondent Ed Lavandera contributed to this report.
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  #10  
Old 06-26-2003, 04:47 PM
Steeltrap Steeltrap is offline
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Angry Po' Chante -- NOT!

http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/news/local/6145046.htm

This piece apparently shows Ms. Mallard as a spoiled lil' daddy's girl who basically doesn't face her problems, she runs. Sorry, I was a spoiled child, but I wouldn't go this far.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Posted on Sun, Jun. 22, 2003



Windshield case: Was it murder?

By Deanna Boyd and Melody Mcdonald
Star-Telegram Staff Writers

FORT WORTH - A mile and a half.

The curved stretch of dimly-lit highway and one exit were all that lay between Chante Jawan Mallard and her house in Fort Worth.

Maybe the homeless man was standing in the roadway. Maybe he was walking along the shoulder. Maybe he darted in front of Mallard's gold Chevrolet Cavalier.

What is known is that Mallard hit the man, Gregory Glenn Biggs. Police say it was probably an accident. What followed, they said, was anything but.

The decisions that the young nurse's aide made in the next few hours would catapult her into a glaring spotlight that has tormented her family and friends and set the stage for one of the year's most anticipated trials.

With Biggs, bleeding but conscious, lodged in her car's shattered windshield, Mallard kept driving. Not to the nearby police station. Not to the nearby fire station. But to her home.

She pulled into her garage.

She closed the door.

On Monday, her trial begins.

She is charged with murder.

What happened inside Mallard's garage in the early morning hours of Friday, Oct. 26, 2001, is still unclear.

She gave the following account to police, according to an arrest warrant affidavit:

Mallard, 25 at the time, was driving home from Joe's Big Bamboo Club in Arlington. She had had only two drinks but "felt funny," as if something had been slipped into her drink.

On the long curve from East Loop 820 to U.S. 287, a man crashed through her windshield, coming to rest partially inside the passenger side of the car.

Authorities have said his torso was dangling over the dashboard and his legs were curled onto the roof of the car.

Mallard told police that she panicked, drove home and sat inside her garage, crying and apologizing to the injured man.

She later went into the house, lay on the kitchen floor and cried more. She returned repeatedly to tell the man, who was moaning in pain, that she was sorry.

Eventually, she stopped going to the garage. She doesn't know how long it took for him to die.

She called a man named Vaughn, who came over, saw what had happened and took her to a friend's house. Vaughn left, and when he returned, he was with another man. Vaughn told Mallard, "Don't worry about it. I took care of it."

Mallard went home that Sunday. Days later, she looked into the garage and discovered that the man was gone.

But Mallard told a different story around Valentine's Day, according to a woman who tipped police to Mallard's involvement in the case.

That woman's statement, also revealed in the affidavit, goes as follows:

Mallard and a small group of women were planning to go out for the night when Mallard mentioned that she could not take her car.

She explained that she had hit a man while intoxicated and "messed up" on the drug Ecstasy. She told the women that, after leaving the injured man in her garage, she had sex with her boyfriend, Terrance, inside the house.

The couple later went into the garage and listened to the dying man plead for help. Then they went back inside the house.

Mallard told the women they waited until the man died a couple of days later, then Terrance and his brother dumped the body in Cobb Park, southeast of downtown Fort Worth.

Nizam Peerwani, the Tarrant County medical examiner, said the condition of Biggs' body when it was found the morning of Oct. 27 indicates that it had been dumped there within a day or so of the accident.

He also said that Biggs, whose left leg was nearly amputated, died within hours, not days, from blood loss and shock.

Peerwani ruled Biggs' death a homicide, stating that he would have survived had he received medical treatment.

Police, meanwhile, were still trying to determine who had disposed of the body.

Months later, with at least some help from a tipster, investigators with the Tarrant County district attorney's office found Clete Denel Jackson, 28, and his cousin, Herbert Tyrone Cleveland, 25. They eventually pleaded guilty to helping Mallard.

They are expected to testify against her.

Chante Mallard was born June 22, 1976, the youngest of three siblings, the only girl and the apple of her daddy's eye.

Her father, James Mallard Sr., worked at a Fort Worth trucking company. Her mother, Dorothy, stayed home, raising Chante and her brothers, James Jr. and Marcus.

Church was a central part of their lives, with the family regularly attending Sunday morning services and Wednesday night Bible study at Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church in north Fort Worth.

Even after the family moved from north Fort Worth to the city's southeast side, they never broke from the congregation. They traveled from their new home in the 800 block of Marion Street to the church at 2823 N. Houston St.

Lucille Hamilton, the church secretary, recalled that Chante was a quiet and reserved child. She said all three of the Mallard children were well-mannered and even spoiled a little by their parents.

"I don't think they ever lacked or wanted for anything," she said.

When Mallard entered high school, she began volunteering in the church's nursery, helping care for the children and teaching them the Bible.

She balanced that with an active high school life, playing in the O.D. Wyatt High School concert and marching bands for four years and serving two years as a trainer for the boys soccer team.

James Hamilton, the band director, said Mallard played saxophone and clarinet at a time when the high school boasted one of the largest marching bands in the city.

"She was kind of just a quiet kid, never gave me any problems that I recall," Hamilton said. "She wasn't a straight-A student. I guess she was right in the middle of the range."

Hamilton said Mallard was polite and dressed better than most of her classmates. VaDonna Banks Spruill, a childhood friend, said she used to tease Mallard, telling her that she was "uppity" because of her clothing and perfectly styled hair.

After graduating from high school in 1994, Mallard studied nursing part time at Tarrant County Junior College.

Her parents helped Mallard, then 19, buy a modest, yellow clapboard house, valued at about $20,000, at 3840 Wilbarger St.

Mallard had her freedom, but friends said she wasn't totally independent.

Occasionally, Mallard would rely on her parents to bail her out of financial trouble -- a fact that embarrassed her, Spruill said.

Spruill recalled once getting a phone call from a distraught Mallard, who had fallen behind in her bills.

Mallard moved in with Spruill and her husband and considered renting out her house rather than asking her father for help again.

"She's just her daddy's baby," Spruill said. "He's got her out of debt before. She said she didn't want to put that on him, and she was afraid to tell him.

"She cried the day she was here. I told her to stop crying. She had me crying. I said, 'It's OK. We're going to take care of it.' "

When Spruill learned that Mallard had placed a newspaper ad offering her house for rent, she finally persuaded her friend to seek her parents' help.

"She called me. She was so happy. She said her dad paid everything and got everything back on. She said she was going back to her house," Spruill said.

It was in that house's small attached garage that, police say, Gregory Glenn Biggs begged for his life.

Biggs, 37, had lost his truck, his home and his livelihood. .

But he never lost hope.

For almost two years, the former bricklayer lived on the streets and in homeless shelters.

But Biggs had a plan to get his life back on track. He and Rafael Gomez, whom he had met at the Salvation Army shelter in Fort Worth, discussed going into the masonry business together. Gomez had a car but needed to save enough money to buy a truck.

"He asked me to hold his tools for him," Gomez said. "I said I sure would; I would take care of them. He even loaned me $60."

Gomez later moved out of the shelter and became a cook at a boarding house. He still had Biggs' belongings and the hope that the men would work together. In October 2001, he tried to page his old friend.

Biggs didn't respond.

Months later, while watching the news, Gomez found out why.

"They mentioned Gregory Glenn Biggs. I had to look twice. When they showed his picture, it shocked me," Gomez said.

Gomez sent the tools to Biggs' son, Brandon, now a 20-year-old student at Southwestern Assemblies of God University in Waxahachie. Brandon Biggs was the only family member to maintain contact with Gregory Biggs after he became homeless.

Gregory Biggs' former mother-in-law, Carol Smith, said she learned about his plight in a phone call.

"He called Brandon one day. I said, 'Greg, do you have a phone number where Brandon can call you?' " Smith remembered. "He said, 'I wish I did,' which broke my heart because I didn't know he was in a shelter. That's when I found out."

Smith said Biggs married her daughter, Tammy, in October 1982 after the teen-ager became pregnant. About a year later, she said, he began showing signs of mental illness.

"It scared her to death," Carol Smith said of her daughter. "She was just 15. She didn't know what to do."

The couple divorced in December 1984. Gregory Biggs saw his son whenever possible, sometimes at a Fort Worth homeless shelter.

Carol Smith said Biggs was embarrassed by his situation.

"I didn't want everybody to think Greg was just a down-and-out -- no good," she said. "He wasn't. He was a great guy. ... He just had gotten out of work, lost his truck, and that's what happened. It did matter to him."

Kay Scaggs, facility supervisor for the Day Resource Center, a daytime refuge for the homeless, said Biggs often came by to shower, use the phone and pick up his mail.

Scaggs said she last saw Biggs several weeks before he died.

A card addressed only to "Dad" had arrived at the center. Inside was a picture of a boy wearing a football uniform and a message asking his father to call him. Scaggs could see the resemblance between the boy and Gregory Biggs.

She gave Biggs the card.

"I said, 'You call him and let him know you're OK ... he needs to talk to you," Scaggs said. "I made him call him that day.

"Next thing I know, I was hearing about him on TV."

Scaggs said she knew that Biggs had mental problems.

Still, she said: "He knew enough not to walk out in front of a car. He was an all-right guy. I sure hated to hear that she left him there to die."

Lisa Cook Schoensee graduated with Biggs from Evangel Temple Christian School in Grand Prairie in 1982.

She said she can't comprehend how the good-natured, well-mannered, quiet student she knew could end up as a homeless man who bled to death lodged in the windshield of a car.

Biggs was a handsome young man who was voted "Most Teachable" his junior year and was a member of the prayer club. Schoensee still has snapshots from a senior year carwash at which students threw a bucket of water on Biggs -- a prank that drew laughter from him.

She was heartbroken to learn how he died.

"Nobody deserves that," Schoensee said. "He was still a human being. He did have a past. He was a nice guy when I knew him. I don't know what happened to him later in life, but I'll always remember the nice, polite man who I went to school with."

When two elderly men found Biggs' body in Cobb Park, his legs were broken, his body was contorted and he had lacerations and glass fragments on his face.

Glass was also visible in his blood-stained blue sweat shirt, which he wore along with a gray sports coat and green shirt. His underwear and torn khaki pants, with his wallet and identification still tucked in the pocket, were around his left ankle.

He was faceup, but blood had settled on the front of his body, indicating that he had been facedown for a period of time, according to the arrest warrant affidavit.

It quickly became evident to investigators that he was a hit-and-run victim who had been struck elsewhere.

Brandon Biggs was notified the next day that his father was dead.

"They told me they were looking for a suspect and they were contacting wrecker services, things like that," Brandon Biggs recalled in an earlier interview.

Biggs planned his father's funeral and, on Oct. 31, he was buried in Dallas. Brandon Biggs, his mother and his grandparents were the only ones in attendance.

For four months, the investigation into his death went nowhere. Someone, somewhere, was keeping a horrible secret.

In the end, it was girl talk at a party that unraveled the mystery and uncovered a bizarre tale that made headlines across the nation.

On Feb. 26, 2002, more than a dozen police officers went to Mallard's house with a search warrant. She opened the door wearing a robe and, upon seeing the officers, broke down.

"I'm not a bad person," police quoted her as saying. "It was an accident. It happened so fast. I've never even had a speeding ticket."

Inside the garage, authorities found Mallard's 1997 Cavalier.

"I noticed there were not seats, nor hardly any interior left in the vehicle," Fort Worth police Detective Don Owings testified at a hearing this month.

Mallard agreed to accompany authorities to the police station and gave them a written statement.

Mallard told Owings that she had removed the car seats and burned one because she feared getting caught and going to jail, according to the arrest warrant affidavit. The seats, one of them charred, were found in her back yard.

Mallard's fear of going to jail came true -- three times.

She was arrested that day on a warrant accusing her of failing to stop and render aid, but was quickly released on bond.

She was arrested again a week later on a murder warrant. She was released again. The new bond was $10,000.

Two days later, a judge raised her bail to $250,000.

This time, Mallard remained in jail.

Tarrant County prosecutors portrayed Mallard as a coldblooded killer.

"I'm going to have to come up with a new word. Indifferent isn't enough. Cruel isn't enough to say. Heartless? Inhumane? Maybe we've just redefined inhumanity here," Richard Alpert, a Tarrant County assistant district attorney, said the day Mallard was arrested on the murder warrant.

Mike Heiskell, Mallard's attorney at the time, countered that the murder charge was overreaching.

"... In the end, I believe the law will shake out that this was simply a case of failure to stop and render aid," said Heiskell, who has been replaced by Fort Worth attorneys Jeff Kearney and Reagan Wynn.

Friends and co-workers described Mallard as a compassionate woman who was held in high regard by the nursing home residents for whom she cared.

She had dreams of becoming a nurse, of getting married, of having children.

"When we heard about it, we were all in shock that she could have actually done something like that," said Cynthia Washington, a former co-worker of Mallard's at Mariner Health in Fort Worth. "We thought she had to be on something because her demeanor at the nursing home was totally different than how they were describing her."

But some said that, looking back, there were subtle signs that something was wrong.

Spruill, the childhood friend, who also worked with Mallard at Mariner Health, said she remembered that Mallard stopped driving her car and began arriving at work late because she was depending on others to give her a ride.

"I said, 'Tay, what happened to your car?' She was smiling. She always had a smile on her face," Spruill said. "She said, 'Girl, I wrecked it.' She was scared to tell her dad because he was about to make the last payment on the car.

"I said, 'Where's the car now?' She said it was at home in the garage."

Spruill said she never suspected that Mallard might be keeping a secret.

"I didn't see any change in her. That's why I was so shocked when I did find out about it," she said.

Spruill said she believes that Mallard panicked and, once again, didn't seek help from her parents for fear of disappointing them.

"She's a daddy's girl," Spruill said. "She doesn't want to do anything to hurt her daddy. That man loves this girl to death. He would do anything in the world for Chante. When I saw him on the news crying, that just killed me. I know how he felt inside."

Paul "Mr. Froze" Munson, 26, was a classmate of Mallard's at O.D. Wyatt. He now owns a convenience store at 2706 Bishop St. and hosts "open mike" nights at clubs in Arlington and Fort Worth. He said Mallard often dropped by his store, sometimes to shop, sometimes to visit.

About seven or eight months before her arrest, he said, Mallard quit coming.

"I never understood why," he said.

When Munson heard that she had been arrested, he was shocked, but he was sympathetic as well.

"I would say she was real, real scared and didn't know what to do," he said.

Many of Mallard's friends said she liked to visit clubs, although they never knew her to take drugs.

"All the stuff they're saying about her is bogus," said Marcus Anderson, another former co-worker. "She's cool. They make her seem like she's some kind of psycho. That's not Chante. Chante's got a heart.

"They're making her out to be like a monster. She's not. Dude, you just hit somebody, you're going to freak out. The first thing that's going to pop in your head is, 'You're going to go to jail.' "

Cheri Orr, who lived across the street from Mallard, is not so forgiving.

She pointed out that a fire station and a police substation are near Mallard's house. She wonders why, if the accusations are true, Mallard didn't stop for help.

"All she had to do was say, 'Oh Lord, I hit this man, Mr. Fire Department man.' The police station was just right there on Miller. Why did you make all this burden on your family and yourself? She hit this man and she hid this ... for so long. She thought she was going to get away with it.

"I don't wish any bad luck on her, but whatever God's got in store for her, she deserves it."

What was Mallard's relationship with Jackson and Cleveland? And who are Vaughn and Terrance?

The answers are muddled.

Although the arrest warrant affidavit says Mallard originally implicated men named Vaughn and Terrance, it was Jackson and Cleveland who confessed to moving Biggs' body. Police have not said whether they have identified anyone named Vaughn or Terrance.

Jackson has been linked to Mallard romantically, his attorney, Bill Harris, has said. But just how close the three were remains unclear.

Relatives of Jackson and Cleveland say they had never heard of Mallard. Most of Mallard's friends said they, too, did not know Jackson or Cleveland, who have had previous run-ins with the law. Jackson served prison time for burglary of a habitation; Cleveland was on probation for aggravated robbery.

But one of Mallard's friends, Narkeshia Holloway, recalls seeing Cleveland with Mallard at an Arlington club a couple of times.

"He really didn't talk much," Holloway said. "I just thought maybe it was someone she knew, just a sociable friend."

Jackson and Cleveland struck deals with prosecutors, pleaded guilty to tampering with evidence and agreed to testify against Mallard. Jackson received 10 years; Cleveland got nine.

Their incarceration has been especially painful for their grandmother, Lue Dora Smith.

Smith said she raised Jackson after his mother was murdered when he was 6. Patricia Jackson was shot in the throat by her former brother-in-law, according to a 1981 Star-Telegram article. Her son witnessed the killing, Smith said.

"I told him when he was a little kid, 'Don't lie,' to tell the truth, and that's what he's done," Smith said.

She said she taught the same lesson to Cleveland, who spent much of his childhood in her east Fort Worth home.

"It doesn't make any difference if it hurts, tell the truth," Smith said. "That's the way I was brought up and that's the way I brought them up -- always tell the truth."

A lot has happened since that night in October 2001. . Two men are in prison. Mallard's house has been sold. A wrongful death lawsuit filed by Brandon Biggs has been settled out of court.

Friends say Mallard has changed, too.

When she was first jailed, Spruill said, Mallard told her in phone calls and letters that she was having trouble sleeping.

"The first time she called me, she cried," Spruill said. "She told me she loved me and she missed me. She didn't want to be there. I told her, 'I understand,' to be strong.

"I told her it was going to be OK. 'Put it in God's hands and he'll take care of it.' "

In their latest communications, Spruill said, Mallard seemed to be less troubled.

"She's been uplifting. She said she's turned to God and is willing to accept whatever is handed to her."

If convicted, Mallard faces a sentence that ranges from probation to life in prison.

On Monday, the day after her 27th birthday, her fate is placed in the hands of a jury.

Key players in the Chante mallard trial

THE PROSECUTORS

Richard Alpert, 43, left, has been chief of the misdemeanor section for the Tarrant County district attorney's office since 1994 and is recognized for his expertise in the prosecution of cases involving driving while intoxicated and intoxication manslaughter. He has tried more than 100 cases before juries, including 16 murders and 10 involuntary/intoxication manslaughter cases. Of those 26 homicide cases, only one ended with an acquittal. He won an intoxication-manslaughter conviction of a woman whose blood-alcohol level measured 0.05, half of what was then the legal limit. He also secured a life sentence for Eugene Standerford, who had eight previous DWI convictions, in the death of a Fort Worth police officer. Alpert is married and has three children.

Christy Jack, 37, has served as a prosecutor in the trial division since 1991 and was promoted to chief prosecutor in 1998. She has tried more than 125 cases before juries, including 10 capital murder cases. She won capital murder convictions against Robert Neville and Michael Hall, who are on Death Row for the kidnapping, torture and fatal shooting of Amy Robinson, a mentally challenged girl from Arlington. Jack is a member of the hiring committee for the district attorney's office and helps supervise and train 24 lawyers in the misdemeanor division. She is married and has one child.

Miles Brissette, 31, right, has served as a prosecutor in the trial division since 1998. He has tried more than 80 cases before juries, ranging from capital murders to DWIs. He is a member of the Texas Young Lawyers Association and the Texas Advisory Council on arson. He recently secured a life sentence for a man convicted of sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl, brutally stabbing her and leaving her for dead. He also secured a 70-year sentence for a man accused in a string of armed robberies. He is single.

DEFENSE ATTORNEYS

Jeff Kearney, 54, left, of the Kearney Law Firm in Fort Worth, is board-certified in criminal law and has been listed since 1991 in "The Best Lawyers in America," a referral guide based on the opinions of other lawyers. The current issue of Texas Monthly names the 30-year attorney a Texas Super Lawyer for 2003. He won an acquittal for a surviving Branch Davidian accused of murder. The Davidian was convicted on gun charges. He also defended a man in the first federal prosecution for telephone slamming and won 110 not-guilty verdicts. He is representing Hazim Elashi, co-owner of Richardson-based InfoCom Corp., who is accused in a federal indictment of doing business with the Palestinian terrorist group Hamas. Kearney is married and has one child.

Wm. Reagan Wynn, 32, is an associate with the Kearney Law Firm. He is listed in the "The Best Lawyers in America Consumer Guide," an offshoot of the referral publication, and was also recently named by Texas Monthly as a Texas Super Lawyer for 2003. He is board-certified in criminal law. He is representing Michael Hall before the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, arguing that Hall is mentally retarded and should be exempt from the death penalty. Wynn and his wife are expecting their first child.

THE JUDGE

James R. Wilson, 47, was elected in 1994 to the 371st state District Court. After graduating in 1989 from the California Western School of Law in San Diego, this former limousine driver and furniture repairman went into private practice, specializing in all areas of law. The so-called windshield case is the most high-profile trial he has presided over. He has imposed some restrictions on coverage, including issuing a gag order and allowing only pool cameras inside the courtroom. Court TV will be allowed to televise the trial and to disseminate footage to other news agencies. Wilson is married and has four children and four grandchildren.

Mallard trial

Chante Mallard's trial in the death of Gregory Biggs is expected to begin Monday in the 371st state District Court in Fort Worth. Court TV is scheduled to televise the proceedings. State District Judge James Wilson has placed a gag order on the lawyers and on others involved in the case.

The Star-Telegram will provide continuous updates at www.star-telegram.com.


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Deanna Boyd, (817) 390-7655 dboyd@star-telegram.com
Melody McDonald, (817) 390-7386 mjmcdonald@star-telegram.com





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© 2003 Star Telegram and wire service sources. All Rights Reserved.
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