Cantu v. Collins

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 21, 1992
Docket91-5512
StatusPublished

This text of Cantu v. Collins (Cantu v. Collins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Cantu v. Collins, (5th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

_______________________

No. 91-5512 _______________________

RUBEN MONTOYA CANTU,

Petitioner-Appellant,

versus

JAMES A. COLLINS, Director, Texas Department of Corrections,

Respondent-Appellee.

_________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas _________________________________________________________________

July 22, 1992

Before GARWOOD, JONES, and DUHÉ, Circuit Judges.

EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:

Ruben Montoya Cantu challenges his murder conviction and

death sentence. His application for a writ of habeas corpus was

denied by the district court, but the court granted a certificate

of probable cause.

I.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

A Bexar County, Texas grand jury convicted petitioner for

the November 8, 1984 murder of Pedro Gomez during the commission of

a robbery, in violation of § 19.03(a)(2) of the Texas Penal Code

(Vernon Supp. 1984). The murder took place at the house of Eusebio

Moreno in San Antonio. The house was under construction, and

because Moreno had been experiencing numerous incidents of theft from the building site, his brother, Juan Moreno, and brother-in-

law, Pedro Gomez, were sleeping in the house to prevent any further

loss. Some time after 10:30 p.m., Gomez and Juan Moreno were

awakened by two intruders: a man who was poking Moreno with a

rifle, whom he later identified as the petitioner, and an

accomplice.1 Cantu and his companion took wristwatches from Moreno

and Gomez, as well as Gomez's wallet. Cantu then told Gomez to

pull back the mattress on one of the beds, under which a pistol

owned by Eusebio Moreno was wrapped in a rag. According to Moreno,

as Gomez was handing the bundle to the petitioner, Cantu shot him

once in the head. Gomez fell to the ground, and Cantu shot him

eight more times. Petitioner next trained his rifle on Juan

Moreno, shooting him eight or nine times.

Gomez died from multiple gunshot wounds to the body and

head. Juan Moreno survived.

On November 14, two detectives from the San Antonio

Police Department visited Juan Moreno at the intensive care unit at

Wilford Hall Medical Center. The detectives showed him photographs

of possible suspects. Cantu's photograph was not in the photo

spread, and Moreno did not identify any of the photos.

1 The accomplice was later identified as David Garza, a juvenile. According to evidence adduced at trial, the room in which Juan Moreno and Gomez were sleeping was equipped with a 75- watt bulb, which lighted the room well. The lamp had been turned off when the two men went to sleep, but was on later that night when Cantu awakened Moreno. Moreno testified that the lamp illuminated the faces of Cantu and his accomplice, and that he knew Cantu because he had seen him in the neighborhood before.

2 On December 16, detectives again visited Juan Moreno at

Wilford Hall and showed him a photo array, which this time included

a photo of Cantu. Moreno did not identify Cantu and did not look

at his photograph. The detectives later testified that Moreno

avoided looking at petitioner's picture, adding that it was their

opinion that he knew more than he was saying. According to one of

the detectives, when asked if he was afraid to identify the

assailant, Moreno replied, "Yeah." Both detectives who visited

Moreno at Wilford Hall on that day testified that he appeared to be

frightened as he looked through the photo spread.2 Detective Garza

2 One of the officers, Detective Garza, conversed with Moreno in Spanish. Garza testified that when he asked Moreno, "Are you afraid to identify the guy who did this?" Moreno replied, "Yeah." Garza said he was prompted to ask the question because Moreno "completely avoided the photograph, and you could see it in his face that he was scared." The second officer, Detective Herring, testified that when Moreno "reached Mr. Cantu's picture, he completely didn't look at it. He just passed it up twice." Herring added that out of the five photographs he viewed, Cantu's was the only picture that Moreno avoided. As Herring testified at trial:

Q. So [Moreno] did not treat any of the other photographs the way he treated Mr. Cantu's picture?

A. No, sir, he did not.

Q. Now, based on your experience, Detective Herring, have you had experienced before when people declined to pick out a photograph when you have reason to believe that they know who the person is?

A. Many times.

Q. And is what you saw on December 16, regarding Mr. Moreno's behavior, consistent with that pattern that you experienced before?

3 added that Moreno did recognize some of the other men in the photo

lineup, "but he advised me that these people were just from the

neighborhood and they were not any of the individuals involved in

the shooting of him or Pedro Gomez." Moreno also for the first

time offered a general description of his assailants: two Hispanic

males, one about 13 or 14 years old, the other about 19 and wearing

blue jeans.

Four months later, on March 1, 1985, petitioner was

involved in a bar shooting with an off-duty San Antonio police

officer, Joe De La Luz. At the time of the De La Luz shooting,

Cantu was already a suspect in the murder of Pedro Gomez. Because

Cantu was a suspect in both cases, San Antonio police renewed their

efforts to obtain a positive identification in the Gomez murder

investigation. Accordingly, the day after the De La Luz shooting,

an officer was assigned to interview Juan Moreno at his home. The

officer, Detective Ballesa, showed Moreno five photographs

different from those which he had viewed on December 16, except for

the photo of Cantu, which appeared in both arrays. Once again,

Moreno did not identify anyone in the photographs. Detective

Ballesa then engaged Moreno in a discussion, advising him that he

had to identify the assailants if he knew their identity. Moreno

A. Yes, sir, it is.

4 then provided the name of Ruben Cantu when viewing his picture but

did not identify him as Gomez's murderer.3

The next day, on March 3, 1985, a different officer,

Detective Quintanilla, went to the home of Eusebio Moreno for the

specific purpose of taking Juan Moreno to the police station to

3 As Detective Ballesa testified at trial:

Q. Had you mentioned Ruben Cantu's name to [Moreno]?
A. No, sir.
Q. But he told you that Ruben Cantu had shot him?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. What did he say when he got to Ruben Cantu's photograph?

A. Well, he didn't say anything. He mentioned the name after -- after the array had been shown to him, you know, and after there was some discussion on the matter is when he came up with the name.

Q. And what was this discussion?

A. Well, the discussion centered around I was trying to make the man comfortable; he was scared and visibly shaken; he didn't want to identify the photograph, and it became rather obvious that that was the problem. So, you know, he was trying to -- to get me to say that we'd be able to protect him, things of this nature, if he identified the picture.

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