Bleys v. State

319 S.W.3d 857, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 3550, 2010 WL 1904130
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 12, 2010
Docket04-09-00360-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 319 S.W.3d 857 (Bleys 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
Bleys v. State, 319 S.W.3d 857, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 3550, 2010 WL 1904130 (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by: MARIALYN BARNARD, Justice.

Following a plea of guilty, appellant Kevin Bleys was convicted of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. The jury sentenced Bleys to sixteen years confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice-Institutional Division. On appeal, Bleys complains the trial court abused its discretion when it waived juvenile jurisdiction and transferred Bleys’s case to adult court. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

*859 Background

Bexar County Deputy Sheriff Santos Chavarria Jr. was dispatched to the scene of a stabbing. When he arrived, he found a chaotic scene that included neighbors, family members, the victim, and Bleys. The victim, twelve-year-old Mohammad Martinez, was lying face down near a wooded area. Martinez suffered multiple stab wounds and was covered in blood. Deputy Chavarria believed Martinez would likely die. Deputy Chavarria asked Martinez, who was conscious, who had done this to him. Martinez said it was a long story. Martinez was airlifted to the hospital where he underwent emergency surgery. Martinez’s lungs had collapsed, his liver, small intestine, and duodenum were punctured, and his gall bladder had to be removed. He also suffered stab wounds to his right arm that caused nerve damage, two stab wounds to his chest, and one stab wound on his left arm. In all, it appeared Martinez suffered as many as seventeen stab wounds. He remained in the hospital for a month. An expert stated Martinez would have likely died but for the emergency surgery.

When Deputy Chavarria arrived, Bleys was sitting next to Martinez. Bleys was covered in blood and hyperventilating. The deputy asked Bleys what had happened, and Bleys told him he heard screaming in the woods and then saw Martinez come out of the woods limping and bleeding. Deputy Chavarria noticed Bleys had a cut to his finger that was “serrated.” When the deputy went into the woods, he found the foliage disturbed, blood, and a serrated steak knife. Deputy Chavarria believed Bleys might have been involved in the stabbing. Bleys was acting desperate and crazy.

Initially, Martinez continued to proclaim it was a “long story” whenever he was asked what happened. However, after a time, Martinez told his mother Bleys stabbed him. When he testified at trial, Martinez said he and Bleys were good friends even though Bleys was older and taller. According to Martinez, he and Bleys had a third friend, Brian Tolliver. Tolliver was a couple of years older than Martinez, and Bleys was about a year and a half older than Tolliver.

Martinez testified that on the day of the stabbing, he went to Tolliver’s house to say good-bye to Tolliver because Tolliver and his family were going on vacation. Bleys was at Tolliver’s house as well. Martinez said he and Bleys left Tolliver’s house to play basketball at Martinez’s house. Bleys left Martinez’s house, but in a short while he returned and suggested they go into the woods behind Martinez’s house. Martinez said they went further into the woods than they usually did, and when they got to a place where the brush was thick, Martinez decided to go home. Martinez testified he was leading the way back to his house when Bleys knocked him down. Bleys then stabbed him several times. Martinez tried to resist, to scream, but it became increasingly difficult. Martinez said that after the stabbing, Bleys picked him up and tried to strangle him and cut his throat. Bleys panicked, and Martinez, in an attempt to calm Bleys, told Bleys he would tell whatever story Bleys wanted him to tell. At Martinez’s request, Bleys helped him make his way closer to the house.

Bleys apparently gave several stories about the stabbing. He told two neighbors Martinez had fallen on a stick. He told one of those same neighbors a hunter had injured Martinez, but then said he did not really know what happened. Bleys gave three different explanations to an investigator from the Bexar County Sheriffs Department. In each version, Bleys and Martinez entered the woods together, *860 but the story changed each time as to subsequent events.

On the evening of the stabbing, Bleys was brought to the Sheriffs Department by his father. Bleys turned over his bloody clothing. That same evening, in a videotaped interview with the investigator handling the case, William Spaulding, Bleys insisted someone else had injured Martinez. Two days later, Bleys and his father returned to the Sheriffs Department and spoke to a different investigator, Aaron Von Maldau. Bleys’s father told Investigator Von Maldau that Bleys stabbed Martinez and wanted to do the right thing. Investigator Von Maldau called Investigator Spaulding, who was at the hospital interviewing Martinez, and told him Bleys confessed. Investigator Spaulding returned to the Sheriffs Department and took Bleys’s videotaped statement. Bleys confessed during the statement. The investigators subsequently obtained a warrant and arrested Bleys.

Bleys testified at trial. According to Bleys, he had known Tolliver for about ten years. Tolliver introduced Bleys to Martinez approximately two years before the trial. Bleys admitted he got along better with Tolliver than he did with Martinez, but felt his friendship with Tolliver was weakening. Bleys said he believed Martinez was the cause of the growing distance between himself and Tolliver. 1 Bleys admitted that by the day of the stabbing, he had become angry with Martinez, and contradicted himself by stating he thought of Martinez as a friend, but then denying being friends with him or spending much time with him. Bleys testified he decided to kill Martinez because Martinez made some negative remarks about Tolliver, which Bleys did not like. Bleys admitted that after he and Martinez entered the woods, he stabbed Martinez approximately thirteen times. He claimed he stopped because he realized what he was doing was “absolutely crazy.” Bleys told the jury he could not believe he had stabbed Martinez. Bleys stated Martinez told him to calm down and take him back to his house, which he attempted to do, eventually dropping Martinez near the house. Bleys said he apologized to Martinez after the stabbing. Bleys claimed he initially lied about what happened because he was afraid of going to jail.

In addition to testifying on his own behalf, Bleys called Dr. Brian Skop, a forensic psychiatrist, as a witness. Dr. Skop stated he believed Bleys is intelligent, but very shy and socially immature, with an almost pathological attachment to Tolliver. According to Dr. Skop, Bleys saw Martinez as a threat to his relationship with Tolliver, causing him to lose control and attack Martinez.

Bleys, who was sixteen-years-old at the time of the stabbing, was originally under the jurisdiction of the juvenile court system. However, the State subsequently filed an “Original Petition for Waiver of Jurisdiction and Discretionary Transfer to Criminal Court,” asking the juvenile court to waive jurisdiction and transfer the case to the district court. A certification hearing was held, after which the trial court granted the State’s petition, waiving jurisdiction and transferring the case to criminal district court. Bleys was thereafter indicted for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
319 S.W.3d 857, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 3550, 2010 WL 1904130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bleys-v-state-texapp-2010.