David Lorenzo Ochoa v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 5, 2002
Docket13-01-00522-CR
StatusPublished

This text of David Lorenzo Ochoa v. State (David Lorenzo Ochoa 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
David Lorenzo Ochoa v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

                    NUMBERS 13-01-522-CR AND 13-01-520-CR

                             COURT OF APPEALS

                   THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                      CORPUS CHRISTI B EDINBURG

DAVID LORENZO CASTILLO OCHOA,                                     Appellant,

                                                   v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS ,                                                         Appellee.

                        On appeal from the 206th District Court

                                  of Hidalgo County, Texas.

                                   O P I N I O N

          Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Yañez and Castillo 

                        Opinion by Chief Justice Rogelio Valdez


Appellant, David Ochoa, was convicted of assault and sentenced to one year of confinement in the county jail.  Appellant argues through three issues: the evidence is factually insufficient to support his conviction; the trial court erred in admitting inadmissible evidence; and his Sixth Amendment rights were violated because he received ineffective assistance of counsel.  Appellant further challenges the subsequent revocation of probation resulting from this conviction for assault.  We affirm both the conviction for assault and the revocation of probation.

Factual and Procedural History

Appellant was at A.K=s, a local bar, in the early morning hours of January 30, 2000.  He was accompanied by his brother, Gerald Ochoa, and a friend, Manuel Marco Garcia.  When the three men exited the bar at closing time, a fight ensued.  Gerald Ochoa was stabbed in his right side by Leroy Garcia.  He was taken to McAllen Medical Center Hospital. 

Arnold Acosta, Jr., the victim in this case, took Leroy Garcia, who was also injured, to Rio Grande Regional Hospital.  While Acosta was parking his vehicle, a group of men attacked and beat him until he became unconscious.  At trial, Acosta testified that he could not identify his assailant because he was drunk, and later unconscious. 

Karen Lee Poor, a registered nurse, was working in the Rio Grande Regional Hospital emergency room that night.  Poor walked outside and saw a young man lying on the ground, immobile; he was being kicked in the face by another man.  The attack took place at the ambulance bay entrance, a well-lit area.  Poor stepped into the fight and told the assailant to leave.  As he walked away, the attacker said something like, AYou are dead, bitch.@  Poor testified that she remembered his face because she felt threatened by his comment.  Poor made an in-court identification of appellant as the man she saw kicking the victim.


Poor described the attacker to police as a Hispanic male, between 30 and 35, six-foot-two in height, with a ponytail.  When shown a photo array about two weeks later, Poor immediately identified appellant as the man she saw kicking the victim.  In a separate array, she also identified the second person who stood over the victim during the attack.  This man was identified as Christopher Lara, the brother-in-law of appellant and Gerald Ochoa.

Ricardo Davila was working as a security guard at the hospital that night.  He took down the license plate number of the vehicle the assailants left in, a green four-door Ford.

Police traced the license plate to a car registered to Diana Lara, sister of Christopher Lara.  The registration showed an address where Gerald Ochoa also lived.  Police recovered a cell phone at the scene that belonged to a Yolanda Villegas at an address in McAllen.  Yolanda Villegas lives with Gene Ochoa.  Police discovered that Gerald Ochoa also lived at that address.  There was no concrete evidence placing Gene Ochoa at the scene of the assault, therefore, he was never a suspect.         

When Gerald Ochoa went to the police station to make a statement about his stabbing, he was driving a green Ford Taurus with the same license plates as the car seen by Davila.  

Theresa Brown, appellant=s fiancee and the mother of his young daughter, testified that appellant=s hair was short on January 30, 2000.  The defense introduced two photographs of appellant with short hair and no ponytail.  Brown also testified that appellant and his brother Gene resemble one another and are a year or two apart in age.


Appellant was charged by indictment with one count of aggravated assault.  After pleading not guilty, appellant was found guilty by a jury of the lesser included offense of assault.  On May 16, 2001, appellant was sentenced by the trial court to one year of confinement in the county jail.

Factual Insufficiency

In determining factual sufficiency of the elements of the offense, the reviewing court must view the evidence in a neutral light, and may set aside the verdict only if: (1) it is so contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence as to be clearly wrong and unjust, or (2) the adverse finding is against the great weight and preponderance of the available evidence.  Johnson v. State

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