Abel Rios v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 24, 2008
Docket08-06-00211-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Abel Rios v. State (Abel Rios v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abel Rios v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

§ ABEL RIOS, No. 08-06-00211-CR § Appellant, Appeal from § v. 210th District Court § THE STATE OF TEXAS, of El Paso County, Texas § Appellee. (TC # 20040D00922) §

OPINION

This appeal arises from the tragic death of four-year-old Tangie Vargas. Abel Rios appeals

his conviction of injury to a child. Appellant was charged by indictment with one count of capital

murder and one count of murder in the death of Tangie Vargas, a child under six years of age. A jury

found him guilty of the lesser-included offense of injury to a child and assessed punishment at life

imprisonment. The judgment includes an affirmative deadly weapon finding. For the reasons that

follow, we affirm.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

Janice Garcia Rodriguez met Appellant in El Paso in March of 2003 and they began living

together a month later. Rodriguez had three daughters, four-year-old Tangie, seven-year-old Valerie,

and one-year-old Jayceen. Tangie required constant care because she was born with Cornelia de

Lange Syndrome, also known as Brackman Syndrome In addition to certain physical features,

Cornelia de Lange is characterized by mental retardation and developmental delay as well as and

difficulty in feeding and communicating. Rodriguez had learned to understand Tangie’s non-verbal

sounds and gestures. Tangie was also prone to respiratory infections and required treatment with a nebulizer and albuterol. She had been hospitalized on multiple occasions. Despite her challenges,

Tangie was a happy child.

On December 27, 2003, Valerie was staying with her aunt and needed clothes. Rodriguez

left Tangie with Appellant while she dropped off the clothes and stopped by her mother’s house, but

she was gone less than half an hour. Tangie was fine when Rodriguez left. When she returned, she

found Appellant kneeling on the floor with Tangie and holding the nebulizer to her face. Appellant

told her that Tangie was not breathing. Tangie was limp, her eyes were not blinking, and she was

vomiting through her mouth and nose. Rodriguez had seen Tangie when ill and not breathing but

she had never seen her like this. Rodriguez told Appellant to call 911, but he refused and told her

to drive Tangie to the hospital herself so that she would not waste time waiting for the ambulance.

Rodriguez insisted and she spoke with the 911 operator. Appellant wanted to leave the apartment

because he had outstanding warrants but Rodriguez asked him to stay.

Police units and EMS arrived at the scene. Paramedics Abel Duque and Alex Miranda found

Tangie lying on the floor, not breathing, with her pupils fixed and dilated. Duque was unsuccessful

in establishing an adequate airway but Tangie was sufficiently stabilized for transport to the hospital.

Duque asked what had happened to Tangie but Rodriguez was hysterical and Appellant remained

in a bedroom. If Duque had known that Tangie had suffered blunt trauma, he would have taken her

to Thomason Hospital because it is a level-one trauma center. Instead, they transported her to Del

Sol Medical Center.

Rodriguez did not remember the details of what happened after the ambulance arrived, but

she recalled riding with Tangie in the ambulance. Appellant remained at home with Jayceen. At the

hospital, the medical staff asked Rodriguez what had happened to Tangie. Because she did not

know, she called Appellant and begged him to come to the hospital and explain what had happened. When Appellant eventually arrived at Del Sol, he spoke with Officer Jose Martinez of the El Paso

Police Department. Appellant said that he had left Tangie in her bedroom while he was doing the

laundry. When he returned, she was on the floor and having difficulty breathing. Appellant picked

her up and took her into another room where there was a machine which helped her breathe. She

began throwing up and he tapped her on the back and attempted to clear her mouth. At that point,

the child’s mother returned and they called 911.

Detective Oscar Morales was dispatched to Del Sol because a four-year-old child had

sustained a brain hemorrhage by unknown means. He approached Appellant in the emergency room

and asked whether Appellant would speak to him at the police substation. Appellant agreed and

followed Detective Morales to the substation. Appellant waived his constitutional rights and gave

a voluntary written statement. He said that he found Tangie on the bedroom floor gasping for air.

He took her into the living room because that is where the “vapor machine” was located but she

started vomiting. He tapped her back gently and used his finger to try to remove food from her

mouth but she continued to vomit and gasp for air. When Rodriguez came home, he called 911.

The CT scan revealed that Tangie had suffered brain hematomas. Her pupils were fixed and

unresponsive and she was placed on a ventilator. Her pediatrician decided to immediately transfer

her to the pediatric intensive care unit at Las Palmas Medical Center. Steroids were administered

to reduce brain swelling and Tangie remained on the ventilator while the doctors waited to see how

much damage she had sustained. A brain flow scan performed at Las Palmas revealed a lack of

blood flow in the brain. An EEG showed a flattening of the waves indicating a lack of electrical

activity in the brain. Three neurologists examined Tangie and performed clinical tests which

indicated the absence of reflexes. These test results indicated that no brain function remained and

Tangie could not survive without artificial life support. On December 30, the doctors informed Rodriguez that Tangie was brain dead and she decided to disconnect life support. Tangie died some

two hours later.

Dr. Corinne Stern, the chief medical examiner of El Paso County, performed the autopsy.

When Dr. Stern reflected the scalp, she found two separate areas of subgaleal hemorrhage indicating

two separate impact sites. These injuries are indicative of blunt force injury caused by something

striking the child’s head or having her head struck against an object. Dr. Stern removed the cranial

vault and found a subdural injury. Tangie had bleeding underneath the dura covering the left

occipital lobe. Further examination showed diffuse subarachnoid hemorrhage covering the

convexities of the brain. Subarachnoid hemorrhage occurs when the small vessels that connect the

pia mater to the brain are torn when the brain moves around in the vault. Dr. Stern examined the

brain further and found a contusion or bruise of the parynchemal. She characterized it as a

contrecoup injury from one of the two impact sites identified on the subgaleal tissue. Dr. Stern

concluded that the cause of death was abusive head injuries caused by striking her head with an

object or striking her head against an object. She added that the abusive head injuries occurred with

shaking. She based the latter conclusion on her examination of the eyes. She found bleeding in both

optic nerve sheaths which is caused exclusively by a shaking-type motion of the head. Through

additional testing, Dr. Stern found retinal hemorrhage on the left side.

In Dr. Stern’s expert opinion, a hand can be a deadly weapon. A hand can generate enough

force to cause subdural hemorrhage and contusions in the brain from direct impact of the hand or by

knocking the individual down and causing a contrecoup injury. A hand can cause subarachnoid

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