Canava, Dante Alexander v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 18, 2003
Docket08-01-00163-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Canava, Dante Alexander v. State (Canava, Dante Alexander 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
Canava, Dante Alexander v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Criminal Case Template


COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS



DANTE ALEXANDER CANAVA,

Appellant,



v.



THE STATE OF TEXAS,



Appellee.

§


§







No. 08-01-00163-CR



Appeal from the



106th District Court



of Gaines County, Texas



(TC# 01-3112)



MEMORANDUM OPINION



This is an appeal from a jury conviction for the offense of engaging in organized criminal activity. The jury assessed punishment at thirteen (13) years' imprisonment in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and a fine of $10,000. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

I. SUMMARY OF THE EVIDENCE

Appellant was charged by indictment with the offense of engaging in organized criminal activity alleged to have occurred on February 5, 2000 in Gaines County, Texas. The indictment maintained that Appellant did with the intent to establish, maintain, and participate in a combination consisting of Appellant, Anthony Jamael Savage, Jesse John Barrientes III and Felipe T. Castillo, intentionally and knowingly commit the offense of deadly conduct. The indictment also alleged that Appellant participated in that same combination and did intentionally and knowingly commit the offense of deadly conduct as members of a criminal street gang.

The application paragraph in the court's charge to the jury charged on engaging in organized criminal activity by committing the offense of deadly conduct. The jury was instructed regarding engaging in organized criminal activity as a member of a criminal street gang and committing the offense of deadly conduct. There was also an instruction regarding the lesser included offense of deadly conduct both individually and as a party.

The case revolves around a drive-by shooting that occurred in Seminole, Texas on February 5, 2000. The State presented the testimony of Anthony Savage, one of the individuals involved in the incident. He testified that he was in a vehicle with Jesse Barrientes, Felipe Castillo, and Appellant. Appellant was driving the vehicle. As they drove through a block, Savage was told to lean his seat forward. Appellant and Barrientes had handguns. Appellant started shooting out the window at a truck and Barrientes joined in. They then sped off.

At the pretrial hearing on Appellant's motion to suppress the evidence, the parties stipulated to the facts that would be adduced concerning the seizure of various items of evidence pursuant to a warrantless search of Appellant's vehicle. The stipulation revealed that the Ensor family lived at 715 Southwest Avenue J in Gaines County, Texas. A neighbor of the Ensor's, Janet Smith, heard some loud sounds that she took to be exploding firecrackers. She went outside and saw a dark colored car with a fin on the back turning the corner while "peeling its tires." As she spoke to Martin Ensor, she noticed that the window of Ensor's truck was shattered and there were several bullet holes in the truck. She called the police to report the incident. This information was relayed to local law enforcement entities.

Gabriel Medrano, a Texas Department of Public Safety Officer, responded to the call. He proceeded to a county road leading from Seminole to Odessa. After positioning his vehicle on that road for a period of time, he proceeded back to Seminole. He then observed a dark colored vehicle with a fin on the back which matched the description of the vehicle involved in the drive-by shooting. When he met the vehicle, the four occupants turned and stared at him. As Medrano followed the vehicle, he observed movement and shuffling about on the part of the backseat passengers. One of the passengers in the rear seat was wearing a red bandana, red cap, and a red shirt. From training and experience, Medrano associated this type of dress with the Blood street gang. As the reported crime was a drive-by shooting, he felt that this was the vehicle involved in the incident. The officer followed the four individuals in the vehicle to a residence. All four quickly got out of the vehicle without looking at Medrano and they rapidly proceeded toward the house. The officer called them back and he made contact with the four individuals. He looked through the window of the vehicle and he saw two boxes of ammunition. Through communication with other officers he observed that one of the boxes matched the caliber of shells found at the crime scene.

Another police officer arrived at the scene who had assisted in processing the shell casings found at the crime scene. He also observed through the car window that one of the ammunition boxes matched the shell casings found at the crime scene. He asked Appellant, the driver of the vehicle, for permission to search the car. Appellant refused permission. He informed Appellant that he was going to search the vehicle and he asked Appellant for the car keys. Appellant gave the officer a set of car keys to a Honda vehicle but they would not open the door of the Saturn Appellant had been driving. Appellant stated he did not know the location of the keys. The officers opened the car door utilizing a "slim jim" device. They seized the ammunition and guns from inside the vehicle. After hearing the testimony, the court denied the motion to suppress the evidence.

During the trial, the State approached the bench and informed the court of its intent to present evidence of an extraneous drive-by shooting committed by Appellant in Odessa, Texas approximately one month prior to the shooting that occurred in the present case. Appellant argued that the cases were dissimilar in that in the Odessa shooting there had been an altercation between the parties, a rifle was used instead of a handgun as in the instant case, and, in the Odessa case, Appellant turned himself in and admitted to the offense. The prosecutor asserted that the proffered evidence was for the purpose to show Appellant was a member of a gang, and that the extraneous offense would prove motive and intent. After arguments of counsel, the court ruled that it would allow the introduction of the testimony to demonstrate proof of Appellant's intent, knowledge, motive, and membership in a criminal street gang. The court gave the jury a limiting instruction regarding their utilization of the extraneous offense.

The State then utilized the testimony of Ricky Smith of the Odessa Police Department. He testified that he had received the assignment to investigate a drive-by shooting that occurred in Odessa on December 28, 1999. During this shooting, several vehicles and a house were struck by bullets. Appellant was a suspect in the shooting. The next day Appellant and his mother voluntarily appeared at the police station and spoke to Smith. Appellant admitted that he had participated in the drive-by shooting and he had driven the car during the shooting. He related that he knew the shooting was to occur and he had instructed the shooter on how to do the shooting and he selected the targets.

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