This question has been addressed in 1 Texas court opinion:
COA05 — February 20, 2026
In Woods v. State, the Dallas Court of Appeals affirmed a murder conviction, focusing on how a defendant's actions after a crime can prove their intent. After killing a woman with a box cutter, Andre Woods sanitized the scene with bleach, moved the body, and fled from police. Woods argued on appeal that he should have received jury instructions for lesser offenses like manslaughter, claiming he "lost control." The court disagreed, holding that his deliberate efforts to conceal evidence and his own testimony regarding the attack established an intentional mental state. The court also ruled that graphic autopsy photographs were admissible because they were essential to explaining the medical examiner’s findings.
Litigation Takeaway
“Actions speak louder than words—especially actions taken after an incident. Evidence of "consciousness of guilt," such as cleaning a scene, deleting digital evidence, or fleeing, can be used to legally establish that an act of violence was intentional rather than accidental. In family law, this "bleach analogy" is a powerful tool to secure protective orders or a disproportionate share of property by negating claims that an injury was merely a reckless accident.”