Brian Pak Cyr v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 16, 2009
Docket04-08-00771-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Brian Pak Cyr v. State (Brian Pak Cyr 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
Brian Pak Cyr v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

i i i i i i

OPINION

No. 04-08-00771-CR

Brian Pak CYR, Appellant

v.

The STATE of Texas, Appellee

From the 186th Judicial District Court, Bexar County, Texas Trial Court No. 2008CR5916A Honorable Maria Teresa Herr, Judge Presiding

Opinion by: Karen Angelini, Justice

Sitting: Catherine Stone, Chief Justice Karen Angelini, Justice Marialyn Barnard, Justice

Delivered and Filed: December 16, 2009

AFFIRMED

Brian Pak Cyr was found guilty of murdering Corey Baxter and was sentenced to

imprisonment for ninety-nine years and a $10,000 fine. On appeal, Cyr argues that (1) he suffered

egregious harm from the trial court’s failure to instruct the jury that the witness Dane Batterton was

an accomplice as a matter of law; (2) the trial court erred in denying his request for juror

information; and (3) the trial court erred in failing to hold a hearing on his motion for new trial. We

affirm. 04-08-00771-CR

BACKGROUND

In the early morning hours of March 5, 2007, Corey Baxter was brought to the garage of a

house on Chelmsford Street in San Antonio, Texas. He was then severely beaten by several different

individuals. He was hit over the head with a baseball bat and a brick, which caused him to suffer

severe head injuries. Baxter was hog-tied and wrapped in a rug and blanket. Dane Batterton, who

had been beaten in the same garage earlier after being accused by Cyr and others of stealing from

a woman, was then called into the garage from the house, handed a gun, and told to shoot Baxter in

the head. Batterton picked up the gun and shot Baxter. Batterton testified that he did so only because

he was afraid that he would “end up in the same spot Corey’s in.” Batterton then handed the gun

back and left the garage.

One of the individuals in the garage recorded video images and photos on a cell phone that

Batterton later identified as one he had given Cyr. The video clips each last about fifteen seconds.

The first one shows Baxter walking into the garage, surrounded by several people, and then being

hit in the face, causing blood to run down his cheek. One video clip shows a man standing behind

Baxter, holding something similar to a baseball bat. The man appears to be about to swing the bat

toward Baxter. Another video clip shows Baxter lying on the garage floor, bloodied, and with severe

injuries to his head. Yet another video clip shows individuals hog-tying Baxter and wrapping him

in a rug. Still another video clip shows a blanket shoved in Baxter’s mouth as “duck” tape is being

wrapped around Baxter’s head and blanket. Cyr’s voice can be heard on the video clips.

Clifford Vansycke, an accomplice witness, testified that he was frequently called by Cyr and

others to help them “discipline” certain individuals and considered himself, at 6' 4" and 330 lbs., to

be “the unofficial enforcer of the group.” On the day of the murder, Vansycke was using crystal

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methamphetamines with Rudy Hettler, Bobby Cruz, Terry Adams, and a few others. According to

Vansycke, Adams told him that Corey Baxter “had confided in him [Adams] that he [Baxter] was

hired by . . . Rudy Hettler to take out Bobby Cruz.”1 About forty-five minutes later, Vansycke saw

Adams talking with both Hettler and Cruz. According to Vansycke, Adams was “telling them the

story.” Vansycke testified that both Hettler and Cruz were upset:

We’re all a group of friends. We all hung out together. We all did dope together. We all did a lot of things together. But all of a sudden now one guy is claiming that he’s supposedly – you know, supposedly some – one person is supposed to be taking out another person. That’s just not what happens with friends. That’s not supposed to happen with friends.

According to Vansycke, “[t]here was talk about – about disciplining [Baxter].” When Vansycke,

Hettler, and another man named Justin Berban got to the house on Chelmsford, Corey Baxter and

Lupe Villarreal were standing at the front door of the house. John Boyer opened the door, and

everyone went straight to the garage because “[t]hat’s where we always hung out.” On his way to

the garage, he noticed Batterton in the living room. According to Vansycke, Batterton looked like

he had been beaten: one of his eyes and his cheeks were swollen.

Cruz, Michael Yaws, and Yaws’s girlfriend Michelle were already in the garage. Cyr then

came in with a large group of people. Vansycke testified that at that point, he thought that they were

going to “discipline” Baxter and that he was going to be the person to do it:

Well, I started circling around. I guess it’s right at the point I was getting ready to start hitting on [Baxter] . . . when the door opened up and in walked [Cyr] and everybody else. That’s when the whole group showed up. And at that point, that’s when I decided I didn’t need to have anything to do with this. I went ahead – you know, I had taken my jacket off, taken my shirt off. I was in a tank top. I was – like to – getting ready to beat on him. When everybody walked in, I was like, no, no. This ain’t me. I’m not going to do anything. I’m not going to touch this dude. . . I’ve been

1 … Vansycke also testified that Cruz was upset with Baxter because he believed Baxter was the reason his little brother had been beaten by some other gang members.

-3- 04-08-00771-CR

around. I’ve seen what happens when groups get into a frenzy. . . . And I didn’t feel that was necessary. I mean, one person beating up on a guy . . . I mean, he wasn’t a very big guy. That’s one thing. But a whole group beating up on him? Wasn’t needed.

According to Vansycke, the first person he saw hit Baxter was Villarreal. Villarreal hit Baxter on his

right cheek. As Vansycke was putting his shirt back on, he saw “Bobby Cruz pick up a baseball bat.”

Vansycke heard the hit and turned to see Baxter on the ground. “It sounded kind of like a golfball

being struck.” According to Vansycke, Baxter was looking at him with his eyes “glazed over” - “the

lights were on but no one was home.”

From the video clips, Vansycke identified Cyr as the person with black clothing, yellow shirt,

and white shoes. Vansycke testified that a voice heard on the video clips belonged to Cyr. According

to Vansycke, on the video clips, Cyr made the following audible statements: “You’re a bitch, bro”;

“It’s not between you and him”; “Tony Montana, say hello to my little friend”; and “Hey, look at me,

bitch. We spit on our enemies.” Vansycke also testified that a still from one of the video clips depicts

Cyr’s hands in latex gloves holding a rope.

According to Vansycke, when Michael Yaws started hog-tying Baxter, he and Hettler left.

Vansycke also testified that one of the video clips shows Cyr with his left foot on Baxter’s head as

Yaws is tying Baxter up.

Vansycke testified that a few hours after he and Hettler had left the house on Chelmsford,

they returned because they had Justin Berban’s truck and Berban had called saying he was hungry.

Vansycke went into the garage and gave Berban a hamburger. When he went into the garage,

Vansycke noticed that Baxter had been moved from right by the door leading to the house to the big

garage door. According to Vansycke, Baxter was on a “carpet or tarp or something” and looked

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significantly worse, but was still alive. Besides the bat, Vansycke thought that a brick in the garage

had been used on Baxter:

I had been asked to hold another video – a little video recorder.

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