Castillo, Felipe T. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 17, 2003
Docket08-02-00199-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Castillo, Felipe T. v. State (Castillo, Felipe T. 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
Castillo, Felipe T. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

2) Caption, civil cases

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS

FELIPE T. CASTILLO,



Appellant,



v.



THE STATE OF TEXAS,



Appellee.

§

§



No. 08-02-00199-CR


Appeal from the



106th District Court



of Gaines County, Texas



(TC# 01-3112)

O P I N I O N



Felipe T. Castillo appeals from his conviction for engaging in organized criminal activity. We affirm.Facts

On February 5, 2000, four men in a green Saturn drove down Avenue J in Seminole, Texas, stopped in front of the Ensor family residence, and fired bullets into the house and a pickup truck that was parked in front. Defendant Felipe T. Castillo was in the car's backseat.

Details of the events preceding the shooting came from defense witness Anthony Jameal Savage, one of the men in the car. Savage testified that he is from Hobbs, New Mexico, and had known Castillo for five or six years by the time of trial. On February 5, 2000, Savage was at his girlfriend's apartment in Hobbs when Castillo arrived with Dante Alexander Canava and Jesse John Barrientes III in a green Saturn. They asked him to help them move furniture at Barrientes' mother's house. Savage agreed, and accompanied them to Seminole.

Canava was driving, Castillo was behind him, Savage was in the front passenger seat, and Barrientes was behind him. The four remained in these positions whenever in the car. They talked about girls and why Savage was no longer in a gang. Barrientes had not joined a gang. Nobody mentioned any drive-by shooting. When the four men were near the Wal-Mart in Seminole, Savage saw Castillo pull out a black .22 caliber, and Barrientes pulled out a silver .25 caliber automatic. When Savage asked what they were doing with the guns, "they said--said that if anybody messed with us they were going to dump on them." He explained, "Like they was going to shoot somebody, you know."

Castillo bought bullets for the two handguns. They then left and Barrientes gave directions to Canava as he drove to Barrientes' mother's house. Barrientes and Canava helped move boxes while Savage and Castillo were in the house. While they were driving to his grandmother's house, Barrientes asked if the others wanted "to go to the country to shoot the guns." When they arrived at the house, nobody was at home, so they headed back into town. As they approached the city limits, Castillo and Barrientes began loading the guns. The two in the backseat then switched guns and Castillo cocked the gun Barrientes gave him and placed it on the seat next to Canava. Barrientes then gave Canava directions. When the car arrived at the Ensor residence on Avenue J, Canava said, "Forget it," and started firing the gun out the window. Barrientes pushed Savage's seat forward and began firing over the top of the car. The windows were rolled down. Savage had rolled down the window on his side of the car because he was smoking a cigarette. Castillo did not shoot a gun, but when Savage protested he called Savage a "punk." Canava and Barrientes emptied the clips of their guns into the house and vehicle. The home and yard appeared occupied at the time of the shooting.

During all of this, Castillo was wearing red and white. Red is the color of the Bloods street gang and Castillo is a member of the East Side Bloods. Savage testified that often initiation into a gang required the candidate to do a drive-by shooting, take a beating, commit a burglary, or do some other type of criminal activity. Immediately before the shooting, Castillo tied a red bandanna around his head. This signifies that he was "ready to start some trouble with somebody else in a different gang." Barrientes tied a white bandanna around his head. One cannot wear the gang colors unless they are a member of the gang. Booking sheets at the Gaines County Sheriff's Department reveal that Castillo and Canava are members of the East Side Bloods, but Barrientes and Savage show no gang affiliations. Both Castillo and Canava had a number of gang tattoos. Although Savage was no longer a gang member, he still had a gang tattoo.

When shots were fired, the Ensor family were in their house. Ensor's youngest daughter had a friend over from across the street. After the shots, the neighbor girl's mother Janet Smith ran out to see what had happened. She heard the sound of a car "peeling out," and saw a "dark colored sporty car with a finned back" going around the corner. Marvin Ensor came out of his house and asked Ms. Smith what had happened. She said she did not know, but then she saw that the window of his pickup truck had been shot out and other bullet holes and told Ensor that it appeared that someone had shot his car. She then went back into her house and called 911.

Texas State Trooper Juan Gabriel Medrano responded to a report of a "possible description of the vehicle as a late or early model blue Camaro, dark blue Camaro, with a spoiler on the trunk." Medrano waited on Highway 385 toward Odessa. He waited around twenty minutes, then started back to Seminole. As he drove, he spotted a dark green Saturn with a spoiler on the back. He saw four men inside looking over at him. As he followed the vehicle, the right rear passenger kept turning back to look at him. He also noticed the other rear passenger was wearing a red hat with a red bandanna underneath and a red shirt, indicating to him that the passenger was a member of the Bloods. This was significant because members of gangs such as the Bloods "tend to do acts of violence such as drive-by shootings."

As Medrano followed, he noticed "movement" inside the car. This movement is partially explained in the testimony of Savage. He testified that after the officer was behind them, Castillo and Barrientes wiped the guns off. This, Savage believed, to remove fingerprints. While Medrano was following the Saturn, Castillo told Canava to run from the police. Savage told him not to run because he was going to tell the police that he did not have anything to do with the shooting. Savage testified that Castillo told him that "they was going to take me out if I did."

Medrano followed the vehicle to a residence on County Road 406, the home of Barrientes' grandparents. All four men exited the Saturn and "started making a beeline straight for the house without looking over at [Medrano]." The officer called them over. He could smell the odor of alcohol. He let Barrientes knock on the door of the house, but no one was home. The suspects were then separated from one another. When the officer looked in the windows of the Saturn, he could see a pair of black gloves, two boxes of Remington ammunition, and a knife in the driver's door bin. Medrano did not search the car.

Soon thereafter, Sergeant Pipkin of the Seminole Police Department arrived. The Ensor neighbor, Ms. Smith, came with him and identified the vehicle. Smith said the vehicle was similar to the one she had seen, but she was not positive.

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