Bluntson, Demond Depree

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 30, 2021
DocketAP-77,067
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Bluntson, Demond Depree, (Tex. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS NO. AP-77,067

DEMOND DEPREE BLUNTSON, Appellant

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

ON DIRECT APPEAL FROM CAUSE NO. 2012CRO000674-D1 IN THE 49TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT WEBB COUNTY

RICHARDSON, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.

OPINION

In May 2016, a jury convicted Appellant of two counts of capital murder for fatally

shooting twenty-one-month-old D.B., Appellant’s son with Brandy Cerny, and

six-year-old J.T., Cerny’s son from a former relationship. See TEX. PENAL CODE

§ 19.03(a)(8). Based on the jury’s punishment phase verdicts, the trial court sentenced BLUNTSON – 2

Appellant to death for each count. See Art. 37.071, § 2(g).1 Direct appeal to this Court is

automatic. Art. 37.071, § 2(h).

Appellant raises twenty-six points of error, none challenging the sufficiency of the

evidence to support either his convictions or death sentences. Five points of error relate

to his competence to stand trial and the competency proceedings below. In two of these

points of error, Appellant asserts constitutional and statutory violations based, in part, on

the trial court’s failure to comply with the statutory procedures set forth in Chapter 46B.

After reviewing the competency proceedings in the trial court, we abate the appeal and

remand the cause to the trial court to conduct a retrospective competency review.

THE COMPETENCY PROCEEDINGS BELOW

Eight months after a Webb County grand jury indicted Appellant for capital

murder, Appellant’s counsel filed a “Motion for Jury Trial on Issue of Incompetency.” In

support of the motion, counsel attached his affidavit and an excerpt from a report of Dr.

John Enriquez, a psychiatrist who had conducted “a general psychiatric examination” of

Appellant. In the excerpt, Enriquez opined that Appellant “is going through a brief

psychotic break” and that “[h]is mental state has decompensated and is now becoming

delusional.”

Appellant’s counsel presented the motion to the trial court at a pretrial hearing two

days later. He read aloud the excerpt from Enriquez’s report and informed the court that,

1 Unless otherwise indicated, all subsequent citations in this opinion to “Articles” or “Chapters” refer to the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. BLUNTSON – 3

based on his “own personal observations” of Appellant, he believed that Appellant was

incompetent to stand trial. Counsel noted the “very low” threshold for a jury trial on the

issue of competency—“it only requires that counsel show that there is some evidence that

would support a finding that the defendant may be incompetent to stand trial”—and

reminded the court that Article 46B.005 requires the court to order an examination if that

evidentiary threshold is met. He then asked the court to appoint an expert and order a

competency examination. In response to counsel’s request, the State “agree[d] that there

is sufficient evidence that there may be some incompetency.” The trial court orally

granted counsel’s request, indicating that it would appoint an expert and order a

competency examination. The court subsequently signed an order granting the motion for

a jury trial on the issue of competence and, a week later, signed an order for a competency

examination. The order for the competency examination, however, did not appoint an

expert.2 Therefore, the following month, the trial court signed another order for a

competency examination that appointed Dr. Gabriel Holguin to examine Appellant.

Two weeks later, Appellant’s counsel filed a motion to abate the competency

examination. The trial court conducted a hearing on the motion the following month. At

the hearing, Appellant’s counsel asked the court to abate Appellant’s competency

evaluation “pending at least a preliminary mitigation investigation by the mitigation

specialist.” Counsel explained that the mitigation investigation might uncover relevant

2 It appears that the date of the order was mistakenly written in the blank intended for the expert’s name. BLUNTSON – 4

personal history, including information about mental illness, that “should be made known

to the mental health examiner.” The State objected to abating the competency

examination. The trial court orally denied the motion at the hearing and signed an order

memorializing that ruling the same day.

Approximately two weeks later, the State filed a motion seeking to amend the trial

court’s order for a competency examination so as to have the order track the statutory

language of Chapter 46B.3 On the same date, the trial court granted the motion and

signed an amended order for a competency examination that again appointed Holguin.

Almost five months later, Appellant’s counsel filed a “Motion to Withdraw

Request for an Incompetency Examination and for a Jury Trial on the Issue of

Incompetency.” Three months after the motion was filed, the trial court conducted a

hearing on the motion. At the hearing, Appellant’s counsel noted that he initially

requested a competency examination “exactly a year ago” and that “for various reasons,”

the examination had not been done. Counsel asserted that in consulting with Appellant,

both of Appellant’s attorneys felt that Appellant was now competent to stand trial.

Counsel explained that since the time the defense requested the competency examination,

counsel had listened to recordings of Appellant’s phone calls in the jail and observed that

Appellant was “able to carry on a normal conversation.” Counsel acknowledged that

3 In the motion, the State expressed concerns that the language in the order limited the type of testing that the appointed expert could conduct in the competency examination. BLUNTSON – 5

Appellant “makes comments which are somewhat unusual” but expressed that counsel did

not believe that “that rises to the level of incompetence.”

The trial court, however, noted the statute’s evidentiary standard—“[I]t doesn’t

have to rise to the level of incompetence. It merely has to show some evidence of

incompetence.” The court remarked that it had previously made a finding that there was

some evidence to support a finding of incompetency. The court also expressed that it

“had the benefit of seeing [Appellant] in and out of court over the last six to eight

months” and “his behavior alone would have probably required [the court] sua sponte to

order the examination in any event.” The trial court orally denied Appellant’s motion at

the hearing. Two days later the court signed an order memorializing the ruling, as well as

a second amended order for a competency examination. The second amended order again

appointed Holguin to examine Appellant and also emphasized that the evaluation should

occur within thirty days of the order.

Approximately six weeks later, the trial court signed another order for a

competency examination, this time appointing Dr. Brian P. Skop to examine Appellant.4

Three weeks after signing that order, the trial court signed an amended order for a

competency examination that again appointed Skop. Apparently, the trial court signed

4 The record does not reflect what prompted the issuance of this order. BLUNTSON – 6

this order in response to the State’s motion to amend the order to have the order track

Chapter 46B’s statutory language.5

Five months later, the State filed another motion to amend the trial court’s order

for a competency examination.

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