Antonio Marquez A/K/A Tony Marquez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 2009
Docket04-09-00018-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Antonio Marquez A/K/A Tony Marquez v. State (Antonio Marquez A/K/A Tony Marquez 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
Antonio Marquez A/K/A Tony Marquez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion



                      • • • •



MEMORANDUM OPINION


No. 04-09-00018-CR


Antonio MARQUEZ a/k/a Tony Marquez,

Appellant


v.


The STATE of Texas,

Appellee


From the 198th Judicial District Court, Kerr County, Texas

Trial Court No. B08-422

Honorable Emil Karl Prohl, Judge Presiding

Opinion by:    Catherine Stone, Chief Justice

Sitting:            Catherine Stone, Chief Justice

Karen Angelini, Justice

Marialyn Barnard, Justice

Delivered and Filed: November 4, 2009        


AFFIRMED IN PART; VACATED IN PART; AND REMANDED

            Antonio Marquez was convicted of attempted murder. On appeal, Marquez claims: (1) the evidence is factually insufficient to sustain a conviction for attempted murder; and (2) his sentence is illegal because it is outside the maximum range of punishment authorized by law. We affirm the trial court’s judgment of conviction and remand to the trial court for a new sentencing hearing.

Background

            The Bandidos Motorcycle Club is recognized by various law enforcement organizations as a criminally organized motorcycle gang. Marquez is a member of the Kerrville, Texas chapter of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club and served as the local chapter’s vice president and sergeant of arms. Marquez regularly stayed at the Bandidos’s clubhouse, and he was there on the morning of February 24, 2007, when an unidentified man appeared at the clubhouse carrying a knife.

            After Marquez disarmed the man, Marquez began to fight with him outside the Bandidos’s clubhouse. Marquez readily defeated the individual, but nevertheless decided to retrieve his pistol from inside the clubhouse. He proceeded to fire several shots at the individual as the unidentified man attempted to run from him.

            Officers from the Kerrville Police Department arrived at the scene and found empty shell casings for a .45 caliber pistol outside the Bandidos’s clubhouse as well as a loaded .45 caliber Para-Ordnance pistol inside the clubhouse. Although the officers were unable to locate the shooting victim or establish his identity, Marquez was subsequently arrested and indicted for the attempted murder of the individual seen running from the clubhouse.

            Marquez pleaded not guilty and the case was set for trial before a jury. At trial, the jury heard the testimony of several witnesses, including an officer from the Texas Department of Public Safety, several officers from the Kerrville Police Department, and two eyewitnesses. Marquez did not testify at trial.

            Texas Department of Public Safety Officer Brian Vaughn testified his organization considers the Bandidos Motorcycle Club a “criminal[ly] organized motorcycle gang.” Vaughn stated he interviewed Marquez following his arrest and confirmed Marquez is the sergeant of arms and vice president of the Kerrville chapter of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club. He also learned that an individual came to the Bandidos’s clubhouse on the morning of the shooting looking for drugs. Marquez reported to Officer Vaughn the individual was carrying a steak knife and shot a look at Marquez that made him uncomfortable. Marquez threw the individual’s knife into the clubhouse and began to fight with the individual. Despite being defeated by Marquez, the individual purportedly “wanted a little bit more” from Marquez. Marquez told Officer Vaughn he intended to “finish it” so he retrieved his .45 caliber pistol from the clubhouse to shoot the individual “point blank.” When Marquez tried to shoot the firearm, however, it allegedly would not fire because the magazine had fallen out. Marquez further told Officer Vaughn that by the time he could retrieve another magazine from the clubhouse, the unidentified individual was gone.

            James Hale, a local resident, lives next door to the Bandidos’s clubhouse. Hale testified he observed Marquez and an unknown individual fighting in the street. After the fight ended, Hale saw Marquez return to the Bandidos’s clubhouse while the unidentified man attempted to run from the clubhouse. According to Hale, it was at this time he heard two gun shots and called 911. Hale testified he did not see who had fired the shots.

            Jason Doss, who was working at a nearby bar at the time of the shooting, testified he observed an unknown individual running away from Marquez, who was holding a pistol. Doss stated he witnessed Marquez fire at least two shots at the individual. He testified “the guy that was running away . . . [acted] as if he had been hit.”

            Officer Scott Gaige of the Kerrville Police Department testified he was dispatched to the Bandidos’s clubhouse in response to a “shots-fired call.” Gaige arrived at the Bandidos’s clubhouse and observed Marquez and another club member, Joseph Cunningham, looking for something on the ground outside the clubhouse. Gaige further observed something protruding from Marquez’s waistband. Gaige immediately confronted Marquez and Cunningham, and he ordered them to get on the ground. Cunningham complied with Gaige’s command, but Marquez kept his hands on his waistband and ran back inside the Bandidos’s clubhouse. Marquez emerged from the clubhouse a short time later without the bulge in his waistband and was taken into custody by police. Officer Gaige noted that empty .45 caliber shell casings were found close to where he first observed Marquez and Cunningham.

            Officer Matthew Cotts of the Kerrville Police Department also testified at trial. Cotts testified he heard two gun shots on the morning in question as he was standing outside the police station. Although Cotts was not officially dispatched to investigate the shots-fired call, he nevertheless proceeded to the Bandidos’s clubhouse to assist his fellow officers. Cotts stated he attempted to locate the shooting victim after he reached the crime scene, but was unsuccessful in locating him. He further testified officers discovered two empty shell casings outside the Bandidos’s clubhouse.

            Lastly, Officer Jonathan Lamb of the Kerrville Police Department testified he was the evidence technician responsible for processing the crime scene. He stated he found pieces of a necklace laying outside the Bandidos’s clubhouse as well as two empty shell casings from a .45 caliber pistol. Lamb testified there was a .45 caliber Para-Ordnance pistol laying on a counter of the clubhouse when he assessed the crime scene. He reported the firearm had its safety disengaged and hammer cocked, and was loaded with 11 live rounds of ammunition. According to Lamb, a .45 caliber Para-Ordnance pistol is capable of holding 13 rounds of ammunition when fully loaded. Lamb further explained officers located only one magazine for the .45 caliber Para-Ordnance pistol during their search of the crime scene area — the one inside the firearm itself.

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Antonio Marquez A/K/A Tony Marquez v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antonio-marquez-aka-tony-marquez-v-state-texapp-2009.