Daniel Villegas v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 16, 2013
Docket05-12-01631-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Daniel Villegas v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

AFFIRM; and Opinion Filed December 16, 2013.

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas

No. 05-12-01631-CR

DANIEL VILLEGAS, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court No. 6 Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F10-51680-X

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Francis, Lang-Miers, and Fillmore Opinion by Justice Lang-Miers The State charged Daniel Villegas with possession with intent to deliver cocaine in an

amount of 400 grams or more. The range of punishment for the offense was 15 to 99 years’ or

life imprisonment and a fine not to exceed $250,000. TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE ANN.

§ 481.112(f) (West 2010). Appellant pleaded guilty and asked the jury to assess the minimum

punishment. After hearing evidence, the jury sentenced appellant to 30 years in prison.

In two issues on appeal, appellant argues that he was deprived of his right to counsel

when the trial court sustained the State’s objection to a portion of defense counsel’s closing

argument, and the trial court reversibly erred by failing to include an instruction on extraneous

offenses in the jury charge. We issue this memorandum opinion pursuant to Texas Rule of

Appellate Procedure 47.4 because the issues are settled. We affirm the trial court’s judgment. BACKGROUND

Dallas police officers conducted a knock-and-talk at a house in southwest Dallas in

response to a complaint that drugs were being sold out of the house. The house belonged to the

girlfriend of appellant’s uncle. The officers received permission from the girlfriend to search the

house and garage and found close to three kilograms of cocaine, over a pound of marijuana,

materials for packaging the drugs, scales for weighing the drugs, and a handgun.

The officers arrested appellant, who gave a voluntary statement admitting that he was a

“drug runner” for “the cartel” and had driven the cocaine from Laredo to Dallas in his van. He

said he gets a call from someone and then meets that person somewhere in Dallas and that the

place was different each time, implying that this was not the first time he delivered cocaine to

Dallas. He said “when [he] first saw them in person they were like we’re gonna need pictures of

your wife and kids cause you’ve seen us . . . .” He said he could go out to eat, and he would get

a call asking “was the food good at such place. I’ll go to Hooters. They’ll be like was the food

good at Hooters.” He said, “I’m telling you man they (inaudible) to most people. I’ve seen them

kill. I’ve seen them kill a pregnant woman in Mexico. To make . . . to make a point to us. . . .

Yeah! I’m telling you they, they, they . . . . to make a point they were like . . . cause . . . she

failed to, uh, to call something in when she saw some (inaudible) or something and so they . . .

they stabbed her in her stomach.” When the officer told appellant that it was “risky” to do what

he was doing for $1500, appellant said, “Yeah, but I mean there ain’t no other job that pays this,

so . . . .” Appellant said the cartel gave him the marijuana to smoke because they knew he liked

smoking it. Appellant asked the officer for a receipt for the cocaine.

At the punishment trial, the State presented the testimony of a specially trained narcotics

officer who testified that he searched the garage of the house and saw “narcotics-style

packaging” that was commonly used to “bring in bales of marijuana” before it was ripped “apart

–2– to separate for sale.” He pointed out to the jury the marijuana stems still stuck to the packaging.

He also saw a “large-style scale used to weigh narcotics . . . [t]hat . . . you find in houses that

deal with more weight than your regular guy selling dime bags of weed on the street.” He found

the pound of marijuana inside a charcoal bag. He testified that based on the amount of

packaging, he believed “[a]t one time there was a lot more in the garage.”

The State also presented expert testimony from a narcotics detective in the Irving Police

Department. He testified that the distribution of drugs into the United States is “a multi-

multibillion-dollar enterprise” and is run “like anybody would run your own business.” He

compared a kilo of cocaine to a restaurant-sized box of Sweet ‘N Low with one-gram packages

inside. He said if the cocaine is “cut” with another product, “[i]nstead of one box of Sweet ‘N

Low, imagine six boxes. And all of that, that can be distributed out from one package of

cocaine.” He described “[o]ne Sweet ‘N Low packet” as worth $100 in street value and one kilo

as worth $100,000. And he estimated that one kilo of cocaine when cut would be about 32,000

individual quarter-gram packets on the street.

The expert looked at the pictures from the house in this case and described it as “a large

stash house.” He looked at the lab report showing the purity levels (73% and 78%) of the cocaine

seized from the house and described it as “very good.”

Appellant testified at the punishment trial that he ran away from home when he was 15

and moved to Laredo where he lived with his uncles. His cousin got him involved in the drug

business when appellant was about 20 years old. He said the job opportunities in Laredo were

either working on an oil rig or running drugs. He said he was too young and inexperienced to

work on an oil rig and liked “very much” the money he could make running drugs. At first, he

ran errands that did not involve anything illegal. When he was about 24, he began taking the

cocaine to Dallas. He said he picked up the cocaine in Laredo from a different person each time,

–3– put the cocaine in his van, and drove it to Dallas. He said he used his uncle’s girlfriend’s house

in Dallas because “[i]t would be easier for me. She had a garage. You know. She was really

never there at the house. She would always be working or something. I had more – I want to say

opportunities to do what I had to do before she got home or anything like that.”

Appellant testified that he would get a call about where to take the cocaine and the person

he delivered it to paid him $500 per kilo. He said “every time I come up here, I get a call from a

different person,” indicating he had delivered cocaine to Dallas more than once. He testified that

he knew about cartels, “what cartels do, what they’re about, what’s going on south of the

border[.]” He said when he made the decision to start working his way up in the cartel, he

already had a wife and a child. He said he “very much” liked the money he could make. He

testified that he saw the “cars, money” and was motivated by “I guess, you know, just the

money.” He said it was not “odd” for students in Laredo to be drug runners. He said he did not

really think about the consequences at the time.

DEPRIVATION OF RIGHT TO COUNSEL

In issue one, appellant argues that he was deprived of his right to counsel when the trial

court sustained the State’s objection to a portion of his closing argument:

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Is he evil? Is Daniel Villegas evil? Should he do more time than murderers and rapists and assaulters do?

[THE STATE]: Judge, I object. Legally, that’s incorrect.

THE COURT: Sustained.

[THE STATE]: Your Honor, ask the jury to disregard.

THE COURT: The jury is so instructed.

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Well, the range of punishment for certain cases is five to life.

[THE STATE]: Judge, again, I think –

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: It’s the law, Judge.

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Daniel Villegas v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-villegas-v-state-texapp-2013.