Angel Lisandro Sanches-Zenteno v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 31, 2023
Docket05-21-00563-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Angel Lisandro Sanches-Zenteno v. the State of Texas (Angel Lisandro Sanches-Zenteno v. the State of Texas) 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
Angel Lisandro Sanches-Zenteno v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Modified and Affirmed and Opinion Filed May 31, 2023

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-21-00563-CR

ANGEL LISANDRO SANCHESZENTENO, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 204th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F-1770139-Q

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Reichek, Goldstein, and Kennedy1 Opinion by Justice Goldstein Angel Lisandro Sancheszenteno appeals his capital murder conviction. A jury

found appellant guilty, and the trial court sentenced him to confinement for life

without the possibility of parole. In five issues, appellant argues the evidence was

legally insufficient to prove a nexus between the underlying murder and the theft of

property, the jury charge failed to include a necessary instruction, the court failed to

conduct the polling of the jury, the judgment should be reformed, and the cumulation

1 The Honorable Justice David J. Schenck was originally a member of this panel. The Honorable Justice Kennedy succeeded Justice Schenck when his term expired on December 31, 2022. Justice Kennedy has reviewed the briefs and the record. order is invalid and should be stricken. In a single cross-issue, the State requests

that the judgment be reformed to comport with the record. As reformed, we affirm

the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

On July 26, 2014, Dallas police officer James Etchieson and his partner were

called to an apartment in Dallas where “there was a possible family member that was

possibly deceased.” At the scene, Etchieson discovered the decedent, fifty-five-

year-old Martin Ontiveros, on the floor inside the apartment and called other officers

to respond. Carmella Nuttroy, a crime scene analyst, came to the scene and took

photographs and collected evidence. Among other things, Nuttroy collected a

“metal rod” made of “heavy metal” and photographed a pair of tennis shoes with the

laces removed. Ontiveros’ wrists and ankles were tied with shoelaces, and “some

type of sheet” covered his face. A subsequent autopsy revealed that Ontiveros was

bound with very tight “complex ligature bindings” that “would have taken somebody

time to achieve.” Ontiveros’ body showed injuries that indicated he had been struck

in the head and body multiple times with a “metal rod.” Ontiveros’ nose and eye

orbit were fractured, and one eye was ruptured.

At the scene, police determined that Ontiveros’ Land Rover, a television, and

a “sword or knife” were missing. The Land Rover was later recovered across the

street from appellant’s uncle’s residence where appellant had been staying. Police

recovered Ontiveros’ cell phone and determined the last phone call Ontiveros made

–2– or received was from appellant’s cell phone. A detective called appellant’s phone

number, and appellant answered the phone and identified himself as “Angel

Sanches.” A detective’s attempt to arrange a meeting with appellant was

unsuccessful.

The case became inactive. Detectives Cayce Shelton and Pedro Trujillano

eventually received the case and began reviewing the file. From their review, they

determined they needed to speak with appellant. In August 2016, the detectives went

to a “facility where [appellant] was located”2 to speak with him. When the detectives

arrived, the staff at the facility gave them a letter from appellant in both the original

Spanish and a version translated into English. The letter stated the following:

My name is Angel. I have had problems because my actions want to come back on me like this.

1 person I remember who told me that his name was MARTIN SANCHEZ and he lived out by 1-35 in some apartments that are right next to it. I tied him up, I hit him on the forehead with a pipe, and I broke his face and he had a lot of blood coming out of it. Then I stole his things and his car. The police called me like a week later but I broke my cell phone but it wasn’t because of Martin. His body, I don’t know if it was found, but my conscience is bothering me and I want to take responsibility for his death. He was already older, like about 48 more or less. I hit him and I “rombati” several of his teeth with the pipe, I took pictures of him with my cell phone and then I left.

2 Both appellant and the State mention in their briefs that the “facility” is a prison where appellant was incarcerated. The record contains the State’s notice of intent to offer and introduce evidence of 77 extraneous offenses including multiple jail incidents. Among other things, the notice listed appellant’s October 2015 life sentences for capital murder of a child under the age of ten and aggravated sexual assault of a child. –3– The letter also contained a footnote beside the word “rombati” containing the

translator’s note: “The original appears to say ‘rombati’, which is not a word, but

somewhat resembles the word ‘rompi’ (I broke); the writer may have intended ‘I

broke’ or ‘I knocked out.’”

Shelton and Trujillano proceeded to meet with appellant and made a video

recording of the interview. Trujillano first advised appellant of his Miranda rights,

and appellant said he understood his rights and agreed to speak with Trujillano.

Appellant described how he met Ontiveros:

So I met him, he invited us, he invited us to a restaurant to eat, because he was gay, right? So, me and my buddy went to his house, we were drinking and then my buddy left after that. Well, he stayed with me, right? And we didn’t have any intercourse, right? Because I almost didn’t, I had my girlfriend, all the stuff and that. The dude, the dude tells me he’s gay, I left and he gave me a ride, right? Afterward he was sending me texts that, did I want to drink, did I want to take drugs, right? In response to Trujillano’s questioning, appellant gave the following description of

the murder:

So, after that, the dude was sending me messages, he was giving me money, and all the stuff, right? But I was seeing him as a buddy. But one day I had a .45, a pistol, so I went to his house, and he said to me how much would I charge him for, to suck my prick, right? My dick, and suck my ass, right? And I got angry, right? . . . I took out the pistol and I told him to get down on the floor. So, the dude didn’t want to lie down, right? And I told him that if he didn’t I would kill him. He lay down and I took the shoelaces out of his sneakers, I tied him up to a pipe, a pipe there in/on the door . . . I took it and I started to hit him with the pipe . . . His name was Martin or something like that. . . . I hit him first with the pipe, and the pipe had a sharp point, so I made a hole here in his forehead. A lot of blood started coming out. And that’s why I kept hitting him. I hit him more than 40 times. After that, he wasn’t –4– moving, he wasn’t moving, right? I touched him here and he wasn’t breathing, however, I kept giving it to him to kill him. After that I took all his things and I put them in his car and left.

In response to questioning, appellant clarified that he took a television, a DVD

player, and a rifle and left with Ontiveros’ car.

When asked about the police calling him after the murder, appellant stated the

police called him and said they wanted to talk to him. Although told not to hang up,

appellant “hung up and from there I broke the phone and I chucked it off a bridge.”

In April 2017, appellant was charged by indictment with capital murder in

association with the death of Ontiveros. At trial in July 2021, DNA analyst Courtney

Ferreira testified she tested the shoelaces used to bind Ontiveros’ wrists and ankles.

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