Anthony Reynaldo Martinez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 26, 2019
Docket02-18-00447-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Anthony Reynaldo Martinez v. State (Anthony Reynaldo Martinez 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
Anthony Reynaldo Martinez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________

No. 02-18-00447-CR ___________________________

ANTHONY REYNALDO MARTINEZ, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

On Appeal from the 371st District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 1557561R

Before Sudderth, C.J.; Gabriel and Bassel, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Bassel MEMORANDUM OPINION

I. Introduction

A jury convicted Appellant Anthony Reynaldo Martinez of six counts of

aggravated assault on a public servant while using a deadly weapon and one count of

aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.02(a)(2),

(b)(2)(B). The jury assessed punishment for each count of aggravated assault on a

public servant at eight years’ confinement in the Institutional Division of the Texas

Department of Criminal Justice. On the remaining count of aggravated assault, the

jury assessed punishment at two years’ confinement. The trial court imposed

sentence in accordance with the jury’s verdicts and ordered that the sentences were to

run concurrently.

On appeal, Appellant raises two points, both claiming that the trial court erred

by admitting evidence that deprived him of his Sixth Amendment right to

confrontation. The admission of neither statement violated Appellant’s right to

confrontation. Beyond a reasonable doubt, the statement he references in his second

point was not a contributing factor in the sentence assessed by the jury. Thus, even if

the trial court erred by admitting the complained-of statement into evidence, that

error was harmless.

We affirm.

2 II. Factual background

The guilt/innocence phase began with testimony that in response to a 911 call

made by Appellant’s father (Father), a police officer was dispatched to make a welfare

check at an apartment. Father suggested that there was a “situation [that could] be

detrimental to someone” in the apartment. The officer did not make contact with the

apartment’s occupants.

The next day, police received another 911 call involving the same apartment’s

residents; a recording of the call was played for the jury. This call came from

Appellant’s brother-in-law (the Caller) who stated that he had just received a call from

Appellant and Appellant’s girlfriend (Girlfriend). The Caller began by telling the 911

operator that police had responded to a complaint involving Appellant and Girlfriend

a day earlier but that the responding officer had told the Caller that nothing could be

done because Girlfriend would not open the door of the apartment.

The Caller reported that his wife had just received a call from Girlfriend, who

was in the apartment with Appellant and was “hysterically crying” during the call.

According to the Caller, Appellant was “threatening to kill [Girlfriend], and he’s got

her hostage” and “pointing a [loaded] gun at her head and threatening to kill her.”

Then, the Caller stated that he also spoke to Appellant during the call and that

Appellant had stated, “I’m gonna kill [Girlfriend]. If the police come over here, it’s

gonna be a problem . . . .” While speaking with the Caller’s wife, Appellant also

threatened to kill her. The Caller then quoted Appellant as saying that he was “going

3 to kill everybody.” The Caller told the operator that Appellant “ha[d] been smoking

meth. He has been on meth. So, he has lost . . . he has really lost his mind.” Though

Appellant objected at trial to the introduction of this call, he raises no issue on appeal

about its admission.

Multiple police officers were dispatched to the apartment. One officer related

what he was told by his dispatcher while responding:

The call details given to us over the MDT was apartment B, the caller’s girlfriend’s brother . . . had a gun pointed at the caller’s girlfriend . . . and that he was possibly high on meth, and that he also said that he would take care of police if they arrived [at] the location.

When officers arrived, they encountered a person who said that he too had

received a call from Girlfriend and directed the officers to the upstairs apartment

occupied by Appellant and Girlfriend. This person reported that Girlfriend was

crying during the call and said that Appellant had a gun. Later, this witness testified

that he came to the apartment because he had received a text from Girlfriend saying,

“[H]elp me.”

Six officers crowded on the stairs leading to the apartment. The officers’

dispatch and actions after their arrival were depicted both by the officers’ testimony

and badge camera videos.

Several of the officers spoke to Appellant through the locked apartment door.

They repeatedly asked Appellant to open the door so that they could speak with him

and Girlfriend. Appellant refused to open the door.

4 The officer in command decided that they would have to break down the

apartment’s front door. The door proved remarkably stubborn. Attempts to kick

open the door failed. An officer retrieved a breaching tool that was a combination

sledge hammer and ax. One officer struck the door with the tool repeatedly and to

the point of exhaustion. Another officer took over striking the door with the tool. At

that point, a sharp sound other than the striking of the tool was heard. An officer

asked if the sound was a gunshot. Others recognized the sound as a shot and felt

material falling from the wall though which the shot had passed. The shot fired from

inside the apartment had exited over the officers’ heads.

A few seconds after the sound of the shot, the officers broke through the door.

When they entered the apartment, the officers could only see Appellant’s reflection in

a mirror as he stood in the apartment’s bedroom.

The officers took Appellant into custody. They located Girlfriend crouching

on the floor of the bedroom closet. Badge camera video showed her crying

hysterically. She repeatedly told the officers how scared she was. She sobbed that she

had never seen Appellant “like this,” that “he had turned into someone that [she had]

never seen,” and that she was scared that “he was gonna shoot [her].”

In a chair in the bedroom, the officers found a loaded pistol that was within

arm’s length of the position where Appellant was standing when the officers entered

the apartment. A spent casing of the same caliber as the recovered pistol was found

on the floor of the apartment’s living room. The door of the apartment opened into

5 the living room, and the position of the casing indicated that the pistol had been fired

by a person standing in the living room. The bullet passed through the wall of the

apartment across the stair landing from the apartment that Appellant had occupied.

During the guilt/innocence stage, each of the responding officers and a crime-

scene investigator testified. Girlfriend did not. The State recounted its unsuccessful

efforts to subpoena Girlfriend to testify at trial. The State also called a man who

described himself as someone who had been in a relationship with Girlfriend before

she began a relationship with Appellant. This was the same person whom Girlfriend

had called on the day of the incident and whom the police had encountered when

they first arrived at the apartment.

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