David S. Hernandez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 5, 2019
Docket05-18-00172-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
David S. Hernandez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

MODIFY and AFFIRM; and Opinion Filed August 5, 2019.

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-18-00172-CR

DAVID S. HERNANDEZ, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 195th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F-1800047-N

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Bridges, Brown, and Nowell Opinion by Justice Brown Following a jury trial, David Hernandez appeals his conviction for aggravated robbery with

a deadly weapon. In six issues, appellant contends the evidence is insufficient to support the

conviction, the jury charge was erroneous, and the judgment needs to be reformed. We agree that

the judgment needs to be modified to delete recitations involving a second enhancement paragraph.

As modified, we affirm.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The indictment in this case alleged:

That [appellant] . . . on or about the 18th day of March, 2017, in the County of Dallas, State of Texas, did while in the course of committing theft of property and with intent to obtain or maintain control of the property, intentionally, knowingly, and recklessly cause bodily injury to [L.J.] . . . by striking complainant with an air pistol, and the defendant did then and there use or exhibit a deadly weapon, to-wit: an air pistol. It also contained one enhancement paragraph which alleged appellant had a 2012 conviction for

burglary of a habitation out of Dallas County.

At trial, Dallas Police Officer Gregory Chappell testified that early on the morning of

March 18, 2017, he was dispatched to Parkland Hospital because a patient had come in who

appeared to be the victim of a robbery. Chappell met with L.J. in the emergency room. She had

a bandage over her right eye. Based on what L.J. told him, the officer put together a report with a

description of her assailant and his vehicle.

The police had information the car, a gray Mercury Mountaineer, might contain the type

of large water jug that “you tip upside down and stick on the stand.” Two days after the offense,

police located a possible match. The vehicle contained a large water jug and was parked at the

Super 7 Motel, not far from the offense location. While officers were looking at the vehicle, its

owner, appellant, approached them and asked what they were doing. Appellant was arrested for

“traffic tickets.”

L.J., who has since moved to Florida, testified that she used to work as a prostitute in Dallas

in the Harry Hines area. On March 18, 2017, she had a room at the Walnut Inn. She left the hotel

to walk down Harry Hines. At about 1:00 a.m., she was approached by a man, whom she identified

in court as appellant, in a “silver Mercury Jeep” in front of an auto parts store. They agreed on a

fee for L.J.’s services. Appellant agreed to go to L.J.’s room. Before L.J. got in appellant’s car,

she looked inside as a precaution. She saw construction materials and a water jug in the second

row of the car. She did not see a person in the second row. She did not look in the third row/hatch.

Instead of driving in the direction of L.J.’s hotel, appellant pulled into a dark part of the

store parking lot. He put his hand down on the driver’s side. L.J. asked him what he was doing.

When appellant raised his hand, he “had a gun to [L.J.’s] head.” Appellant said and repeated,

“You tookie me money.” A second person came out from the hatch and put L.J. in a chokehold.

–2– L.J. begged appellant not to kill her and told him he had the wrong person. She could not get out

of the car. Appellant hit her several times on her face with the gun, and his friend beat her over

the head from the back seat. L.J. believed appellant had a real gun, a .38. She later found out it

was an air pistol. Appellant said something to his friend in Spanish. It was the first time she heard

appellant speak Spanish. The friend got out of the car, opened the passenger door, dragged L.J.

out by her hair, punched her in the face, and threw her by the trash can. L.J. testified, “They took

my purse, took my phone. He took my money.” Later, when asked how much money “he” took,

L.J. said $200 cash from her bra, plus about $20 from her purse. L.J. went to the hospital, where

her face was stitched up and she was diagnosed with a subarachnoid hemorrhage. Two days later,

L.J. picked appellant out of a photo lineup as the man who drove the vehicle and struck her with

the gun. She was not able to identify the second man.

A police crime scene analyst processed appellant’s Mercury Mountaineer at the pound. He

found a BB gun in the car in a pocket on the driver’s side door. The gun looked like a normal gun,

but was made out of plastic. There were no BBs in it. The analyst was not able to lift any

fingerprints from the vehicle, gun, or water jug. There were spots in the car that looked like blood,

but a presumptive test for blood was negative. He also swabbed the barrel and trigger areas of the

gun and sent the swabs to the lab.

A serologist at the Southwestern Institute of Forensic Sciences tested a swab taken from

the barrel of the gun. She did not have enough of a sample to do a confirmatory test, but a

presumptive test was positive for blood. A DNA analyst with SWIFS testified that the swab taken

from the trigger contained a mixture of three contributors and appellant was a possible contributor.

Appellant’s inclusion was not a “strong inclusion,” as one out of every 29 people would be

included. The swab from the barrel contained a two-person mixture. The primary contributor was

an unknown male.

–3– Detective Meagan Mulvihill investigates robberies for the DPD. Mulvihill testified that a

BB gun is otherwise known as an air pistol and can be used as a deadly weapon. She identified

the BB gun recovered from appellant’s car. She read the warning on the gun, which included

“Misuse or careless use may cause serious injury or death.” She further testified that a BB gun

could be used as a deadly weapon by hitting someone on the head.

After his arrest, appellant agreed to speak to police. Mulvihill and a detective who spoke

Spanish interviewed him. According to Mulvihill, appellant initially stated he was not in the Harry

Hines area at the time of the offense. He eventually admitted he was the driver of the car, but

“tried to place anything involving the gun or assaulting the complainant on the second suspect” in

the car. According to appellant, the man in the back of his car had been looking for a certain

prostitute for two weeks. The second suspect claimed the prostitute had previously robbed him,

and he had “gone looking for her in retribution.” Appellant and the second man planned to find

the robber on Harry Hines. Mulvihill testified that L.J. denied any involvement in a robbery.

Appellant testified at trial through an interpreter. He said that before the night in question

he had seen L.J. about five times and said they had previously had sex in his truck. On March 17,

he had been drinking and doing cocaine with a friend named Jesus Rodriguez. They planned to

go to a club, but stopped on Harry Hines to buy drugs from “Cycle,” who appellant said was L.J.’s

pimp. Cycle sold drugs from a van at the auto parts store and L.J. helped deliver them. L.J. was

waiting for appellant and his friend that night. Appellant stopped next to her and lowered his car

window. L.J. asked if he had the money and he said yes. L.J. asked if she could get in appellant’s

car because police were patrolling the area.

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