Bustillos, Norma v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 20, 2003
Docket08-01-00467-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Bustillos, Norma v. State (Bustillos, Norma 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
Bustillos, Norma v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Criminal Case Template


COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS



NORMA BUSTILLOS,

Appellant,



v.



THE STATE OF TEXAS,



Appellee.

§


§







No. 08-01-00467-CR



Appeal from the



409th District Court



of El Paso County, Texas



(TC# 980D00348)



M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



Appellant was charged by indictment for the offense of capital murder. This is an appeal from a jury conviction for the lessor-included offense of criminally negligent homicide. The court assessed punishment at two (2) years' confinement in a Texas State Jail Facility and a $10,000 fine. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

I. SUMMARY OF THE EVIDENCE

The record in the instant case shows that on the morning of November 16, 1997, two hunters found an abandoned infant wrapped in a white towel behind some brush near an unpaved levee road located in the outskirts of El Paso near Canutillo, Texas. Both hunters testified that the first freeze of the year had occurred overnight. The infant was cold and unresponsive to the touch. The two men drove their truck for help. They flagged down Stephen Haack, a deputy with the El Paso County Sheriff's Department. Haack followed the two men back to the infant's location. When Haack opened the white towel, he found her in a fetal position with part of the umbilical cord attached, and covered in afterbirth. There were no signs of life. The infant had what appeared to be human hair clutched in her hand. The infant was taken to the El Paso County Medical Examiner's office for an autopsy.

On January 12, Detective James Reuter of the El Paso County Sheriff's Department, received a call from an individual who indicated that Appellant might be a suspect in the case. The next day Reuter and Detective Onesimo Esparza went to Marisa Escobar's trailer home where Appellant was staying. Inside the trailer in a bedroom, they observed apparent blood stains on the wall and a door frame and some stains on the carpet that appeared as if someone tried to clean the carpet with bleach.

Several hours later, Bustillos and Victor Romero, Appellant's boyfriend, arrived at the trailer. Both consented to go to the police station. At the station, Appellant gave the following statement:

I became pregnant with my boyfriend's child around February 1997. I was living with my father, Manuel, and my stepmother Clara Escalera. Also living there, at 110 Ashtray Road, were my stepmother's children. My brother Danny, would come and visit now and then. I moved to my sister's house at 7840 Kiely Road #25, sometime in late August 1997. I moved there because she was also expecting a baby and to help take care of her two other boys. On 09-20-97, the whole family attended my brother Manny's wedding. During the wedding reception, my father Manuel, had been drinking and started crying. My brother Manny told me that someone had told my father that I was pregnant. My boyfriend, Ismael Romero, knew I was pregnant. On 11-15-97, I was at my sister's house by myself. My sister and her husband and the children went to visit some relatives in Juarez. I called Ismael. Ismael came to my sister's house around 5:00 p.m. He stayed for about fifteen minutes, then left. He told me that if I needed anything to call him. I had felt bad all day long. After Ismael left I went and took a shower. I had taken some painkillers earlier. After my shower I went into the bedroom next to the bathroom and laid down on the bed. I was having a lot (sic) of pain. I got up from the bed and stood. The baby just came out, and fell to the floor. I just stood there shocked. Initially, the baby was crying. I had a towel wrapped around me from the shower. I picked the baby up from the floor and wrapped the baby in the towel. I then placed the baby on the bed. When I placed the baby on the bed she was not crying any longer. I sat on the bed for awhile next to the baby. I didn't know what to do. I remembered my brother in law (sic) Jesus telling me that the car was there if I needed it. I got dressed. I cleaned the baby alittle (sic). I carried the baby to the car and placed the baby on the front seat. The baby was still and not moving. I drove off from my sister's and really do not know where I went. I remember crossing a bridge and then turned left right after the bridge. I drove down that road a little then made a U-turn and stopped the car. I got out of the car and carried the baby across a ditch and placed the baby in some brush. I went to the car and sat there awhile. I was very dizzy and that started in the afternoon. I was still dizzy. I went back to my sister's house. I stayed outside for a little while. I then went inside the trailer and sat on the couch where I sleep. I was bleeding quite a lot (sic). I went to the restroom and threw-up (sic). I sat there for awhile. I tried to clean up the bedroom before I left the trailer. I then went into the first room. I had a small puppy that Ismael gave me. I let him out and he went to the couch where I sleep. I went to the couch and later fell asleep. Later, my sister and her husband came home. I had locked the door. I heard them knock, I got up and opened the door. I sat on the couch with my nephews for a few minutes and talked with them. I told my sister as she was walking toward the back of the trailer that I had gotten sick and threw-up (sic) blood in the room. Neither my sister or her husband questioned what I told them. I never told them that I was pregnant. I really didn't show very much throughout my pregnancy.



As a result of this statement, Reuter placed Appellant under arrest for the murder of the abandoned infant.



Three medical experts testified at trial. The first expert to testify was Dr. Juan Contin, the pathologist who performed the autopsy on the infant. Contin testified that the cause of death was hypothermia due to cold weather exposure. Contin stated, "The child was exposed to a low temperature and I concluded that the cause of death was hypothermia." Contin also stated that the infant was alive after her birth because he found air in her stomach and intestines. He testified that a newborn child wrapped in a towel and left out in the freezing night would become unconscious fairly quickly. Contin speculated that it would take from one-half hour to an hour to die. If the infant were wet, death could occur sooner.

When Contin was cross-examined, he agreed with the defense that the infant could have died of hypothermia inside an unheated mobile home. (1) With hypothermia, death would be accelerated in freezing temperatures if the infant was wet and if the infant had been wrapped in a wet towel.

Dr. Harry Wilson, a pediatric pathologist, assisted Dr. Contin with the autopsy. Wilson prepared some slides from the infant's brain tissue.

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