Bryce Wade O'Neil v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 19, 2006
Docket11-04-00209-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Bryce Wade O'Neil v. State (Bryce Wade O'Neil 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
Bryce Wade O'Neil v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion filed January 19, 2006

Opinion filed January 19, 2006

                                                                        In The

    Eleventh Court of Appeals

                                                                   __________

                                                          No. 11-04-00209-CR

                                   BRYCE WADE O=NEIL, Appellant

                                                             V.

                                    THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

                                        On Appeal from the 142nd District Court

                                                        Midland County, Texas

                                                Trial Court Cause No. CR 29,327

                                                                   O P I N I O N


Bryce Wade O=Neil was indicted for two counts of intoxication manslaughter and one count of intoxication assault.  Appellant filed motions to suppress statements he made to law enforcement officers while in the hospital emergency room and the results of tests on two blood samples taken at the hospital.  The trial court granted appellant=s motions in part and denied them in part.  Appellant then pleaded guilty and waived his right to a jury trial.  The trial court sentenced appellant to twenty years confinement for one intoxication manslaughter count and five years each for the second intoxication manslaughter count and the intoxication assault count.  Appellant challenges the trial court=s ruling on his pretrial motions to suppress.  We find no error and affirm.

                                                               Background Facts

Appellant was in a serious two-vehicle accident in Midland County on January 30, 2004, shortly before 9 p.m.  The accident involved a Ford Ranger pickup, owned by appellant, and a Chevrolet Astro van.  Angela Dawn Lester, the driver of the van, and Nicanor Lopez Hernandez, a passenger in the pickup, died as a result of the accident.  Appellant and Rachell Warmuskerken, also a passenger in the pickup, were injured.  Appellant sustained broken bones in both arms.  He and Warmuskerken were taken by ambulance to the hospital for treatment.

Kaci Beth Schulte, an emergency room nurse, took two blood samples from appellant.  The first was taken at 9:42 p.m. at the request of an emergency room doctor and was submitted to the hospital laboratory.  The second was taken shortly after midnight at the request of DPS Troopers Oscar Villarreal and Nathan Lann who were investigating the accident.

Trooper Villarreal had previously investigated the accident scene.  He was advised by another officer that Hernandez was deceased and was seat-belted into the passenger side of the pickup.  Trooper Villarreal helped extract Lester from the van.  Lester was alive at the scene, but Trooper Villarreal learned that she died in route to the hospital.  Trooper Villarreal was able to determine that the pickup had been occupied by three persons:  Hernandez, Warmuskerken, and appellant.  The pickup had a strong odor of alcoholic beverages.  There were two bottles of liquor in the cab of the pickup, and numerous beer bottles and beer cans were in the debris field near the vehicle.

Troopers Villarreal and Lann went to the hospital.  Warmuskerken could not be interviewed because of her condition, but Trooper Villarreal confirmed that she had injuries consistent with being the middle seat passenger in the pickup.


Trooper Villarreal then contacted appellant who was being treated in the emergency room.  Trooper Villarreal smelled a strong odor of alcohol emanating from appellant.  Trooper Villarreal identified himself and Trooper Lann to appellant and administered a Miranda[1] warning.  Appellant waived his rights and agreed to an interview.  Trooper Villarreal conducted the interview.  Appellant initially stated that Hernandez was driving the pickup but later admitted that he was the driver.  After interviewing appellant, Trooper Villarreal read him the DIC-24 warnings[2] and requested a blood sample.  Appellant consented, and Schulte took the second blood sample.

Appellant was arrested under warrant on February 3, 2004, upon his release from the hospital and was charged with intoxication manslaughter of Lester and Hernandez and intoxication assault of Warmuskerken.  Appellant filed motions to suppress the hospital blood tests and results and his statements to police officers while in the emergency room.  The trial court held an evidentiary hearing and granted appellant=s motion to suppress his statements to Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission Agent Rodney White Allee but denied his requests to suppress his statements to Troopers Villarreal and Lann and the results of his two blood tests.

Appellant waived his right to a jury trial and pleaded guilty.  The trial court held a punishment hearing and sentenced appellant to twenty years confinement for the intoxication manslaughter of Lester, five years for the intoxication manslaughter of Hernandez, and five years for the intoxication assault of Warmuskerken. 

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