Dennis Steele v. State

490 S.W.3d 117, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 2125
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 1, 2016
DocketNO. 01-14-00618-CR, NO. 01-14-00619-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 490 S.W.3d 117 (Dennis Steele 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
Dennis Steele v. State, 490 S.W.3d 117, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 2125 (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

Evelyn V. Keyes, Justice

A jury convicted appellant, Dennis Steele, of two counts of the third-degree felony offense of assault on a public servant for his assault on two officers at the Texas City Jail. After finding the allegations in two enhancement paragraphs true, the jury assessed punishment at fifty years’ confinement for each offense, to run concurrently. 1 In three issues, appellant contends that (1) the trial court abused its discretion by denying his request for a jury instruction on the lesser-included offense of resisting arrest; (2) the trial court abused its discretion by denying his request for a jury instruction on self-defense; and (3) the State failed to present sufficient evidence that he assaulted Officer E. Cisneros.

We affirm.

Background

Shortly after 5:00 p.m. on November 6, 2013, appellant drove his car through a construction barricade and onto freshly-poured concrete at a construction site in Texas City before crashing into a dirt berm. After he crashed, appellant continued to try to drive forward until the engine of his car caught on fire. Oscar Gonzales, the project superintendent of the construction site, and one of his inspectors helped appellant from the car. Gonzales testified that appellant could not stand on his own, that he kept trying to return to his car even though the engine was on fire, and that he smelled of alcohol. Firefighters and police officers arrived at the scene right after Gonzales helped appellant from his car.

*121 Texas City Police Department Officer B. Berg arrived at the scene of the accident, arrested appellant based on suspicion of driving while intoxicated (“DWI”), and transported appellant to the Texas City Jail. After arriving at the jail, Officer Berg escorted appellant to the DWI interview room to complete his DWI investigation, which included conducting sobriety tests and obtaining breath specimens from appellant. Appellant provided two breath specimens which demonstrated a blood alcohol concentration of .223 and .208, or nearly three times the legal limit of .08. Appellant was calm and not combative during the interview process.

After Officer Berg completed the DWI interview, appellant was placed in one of two small holding cells located near the booking area of the Texas City Jail. This holding cell had no fixtures, such as a bed or a toilet, and was intended to hold -suspects temporarily while they were going through the initial booking process or were awaiting transfer to the Galveston County Jail. 2 This holding cell was monitored by video surveillance, and the trial court admitted into evidence a copy of the video recording of appellant in this holding cell.

Officer S. Jackson, a jailer at the Texas City Jail on the day appellant was arrested, described appellant’s demeanor at the time Officer Berg placed him in the holding cell as “quiet and still intoxicated.” Approximately thirty minutes after appellant was placed in a holding cell, Officer Jackson needed to use the cell to hold inmates who were being transferred to the Galveston County Jail. She waited for another officer to arrive to assist with the inmate transfer before attempting to move appellant from the holding cell to a detoxification cell. When asked which officer arrived to help move appellant, Officer Jackson responded, “Officer Eric Cisne-ros.”

The video recording of the holding cell reflected that, at this time, appellant was lying curled up in the fetal position on the floor of the cell, apparently asleep, with his shirt over his head and his hands inside his shirt. When Officer Cisneros arrived, Officer Jackson opened the holding cell, tapped appellant on the foot, and asked him to stand so he could be moved to a detoxification cell. Appellant did not verbally respond to Officer Jackson, so she asked Officer Cisneros for assistance. When Officer Cisneros asked him to stand up, appellant responded with profanity and an obscene gesture. Officer Jackson testified that Officer Cisneros stayed calm, did not raise his voice, and did not curse at appellant. When appellant still failed to respond to Officer Cisneros’s requests, Cisneros asked Officer Jackson if she could find the other jailer working that night, Detention Officer P. Owens.

Appellant still did not physically respond to either Officer Cisneros’s or Officer Owens’s requests, so both officers took hold of appellant’s arms to try to lift him into a standing position. Neither officer “move[d] fast [or] jerk[ed]” appellant up from the floor. Officer Jackson testified that, at that point, appellant quickly stuck a hand out of his shirt and grabbed hold of Officer Cisneros’s arm. After appellant began physically struggling with Officers Cisneros and Owens, Officer Jackson left the holding cell and called dispatch to ask for assistance. She arrived back at the holding cell with Corporal Moreno, who “dry stunned” appellant with a Taser in an attempt to subdue him. The officers’ struggle with appellant lasted several minutes, and Officer Jackson testified, that she *122 observed that both Officer Cisneros and Officer Owens had cuts on their arms. Appellant was later moved to another holding cell without further incident.

Officer Owens testified that he first had contact with appellant when Officers Cisneros and Jackson informed him that appellant would not move from the holding cell. Officer Owens spoke to appellant with a calm voice and asked him to get up so he could move to another cell where he could sleep. Appellant responded to him with profanity and stated, “I’m not moving anywhere.” As Officer Owens and Officer Cisneros lifted appellant to his feet, appellant grabbed at Cisneros “in an aggressive manner” and started biting and scratching Cisneros. Appellant also scratched Officer Owens with his fingernails. Officer Owens identified photographs of injuries to his arm and hand that he sustained in the altercation with appellant. Officer Owens observed that Officer Cisneros also had injuries from the incident, and he described Cisernos’s injuries as significantly worse than his own.

Officer Owens acknowledged that the officers and appellant ended up on the floor during the struggle, and he had his entire body weight on appellant pinning him to the floor because appellant was still fighting them. At one point during the incident, Officer Cisemos was able to put one handcuff on appellant’s wrist, but they were not able to gain control over appellant until Corporal Moreno arrived.

On the second day of trial, the State called “Officer Eric Cisneros” as a witness. Officer Cisneros identified himself as “Officer Cisneros with the Texas City Police department.” Officer Cisneros identified appellant in court as the inmate he was called to help move from one booking cell to another within the Texas City Jail on November 6, 2013. He testified that when he first encountered appellant, appellant was lying on the ground in the fetal position with his hands under his shirt. Officer Cisneros asked appellant to get up and explained that they needed to move him.to another cell. Appellant ignored him at first but then made an obscene gesture and used profanity. After Officer Owens arrived to assist, Officer Cisneros tried to get hold of appellant’s arms underneath his shirt to lift him to his feet.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
490 S.W.3d 117, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 2125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dennis-steele-v-state-texapp-2016.