Esparza v. State

282 S.W.3d 913, 2009 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 597, 2009 WL 1346403
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 13, 2009
DocketPD-1616-07
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 282 S.W.3d 913 (Esparza v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Esparza v. State, 282 S.W.3d 913, 2009 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 597, 2009 WL 1346403 (Tex. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

KEASLER, J.,

delivered the unanimous opinion of the Court.

The court of appeals upheld the trial judge’s refusal to grant Edward Esparza’s motion for DNA testing. The court held that testing showing the presence of DNA not belonging to Esparza would not prove his innocence because (1) the victim reported having sex two days before the attack, and (2) there was overwhelming eye-witness testimony establishing Espar-za’s guilt. 1 We reverse the court of appeals’s judgment and remand this case for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

Background

The victim, Guadalupe Rios, and her aunt, Hermina Cantu Lucero, drove from Bryan, Texas, their hometown, to Houston, Texas on the evening of January 1, 1994. The two met Rios’s sister, Mary Cantu, and Cantu’s boyfriend at Zaz Tijuana Club. Rios and Lucero arrived at the club between 9:30 and 10:00 p.m., and Esparza asked Lucero to dance about a half hour later. Lucero and Esparza spent the night talking and dancing. Esparza told Lucero that he had just turned forty and worked for the “Shell Company.” He also gave Lucero his business card. Lucero intro *915 duced Esparza to Rios, but Rios only glanced at him because she was looking through the crowd for a Mend who was supposed to meet her. Rios’s friend never showed up, and Rios was upset when she and Lucero left the club between 1:30 and 2:00 a.m.

Esparza walked Rios and Lucero to Rios’s car. Rios’s car, however, was gone; it had been towed away. The three returned to the club, and Rios found Cantu and told her what happened. Cantu and her boyfriend offered to drive Rios and Lucero to the impound lot. Esparza extended the same offer, and Lucero accepted Esparza’s offer. Rios joined them so that Lucero would not be alone with Es-parza. Esparza followed Cantu and her boyfriend to the impound lot. Rios and Lucero did not have enough money to get Rios’s car from the lot, and because Rios had to be at work at 6:00 a.m., both Espar-za and Cantu’s boyfriend offered to drive Rios and Lucero back to Bryan. Lucero thought that Esparza was nice and noted that he behaved like a perfect gentleman all evening, so she accepted Esparza’s offer. Rios did not pay much attention to Esparza because she was irritated and upset that her Mend did not meet her.

Lucero sat in the front passenger’s seat of Esparza’s light blue, four-door car. Rios got in the backseat behind Lucero, put her head down, and went to sleep. They headed to Bryan on Highway 290. Esparza stopped at a gas station and bought a Coke. After this, while driving again on Highway 290, Esparza became “indecisive” about the direction that he was going; he cut across the road several times, changing directions. Lucero became “scared” and “very nervous.” Es-parza pulled off the road to go to the bathroom. When he got out of the car, Lucero woke up Rios and told her that she was scared. Lucero explained that Espar-za was “acting weird” and had been “going around in circles.” Rios, who had been in a deep sleep, became scared and tried to discern where they were.

When Esparza got back in the car, he directed Lucero to “come closer.” Lucero said, “no.” Esparza grabbed her neck, forced her toward him, and tried to kiss her. She told him, “no,” and Esparza responded by calling her a “bitch.” Es-parza started driving, cut across the road again, pulled off to the side of the road in a dark area in the “middle of nowhere,” and stopped. He ordered Rios and Lucero to get out of the car. When they refused, Esparza got out of the car, grabbed Luce-ro and dragged her to the front of the car. He said, “stay here, bitch, or else” and threatened to kill her. He then pulled Rios out of the car by her hair and dragged her to the front of the car. He instructed the women to get on their knees and said, “I’m going to teach you what I do with bitches.” He grabbed both of them by the hair and slammed their heads together. He continued to do this while saying “fuck you, fuck you” over and over. After threatening to kill them, he walked back to the car and opened the trunk. Lucero told Rios that they needed to run or they would die. Rios froze. Esparza overheard Lucero and threatened to kill them again as he walked to the front of the car. He grabbed Rios and Lucero and ordered them into the backseat of the car. Lucero entered first, then opened the door on the other side of the car and took off running. Esparza grabbed Rios by the hair and told her not to move. Lucero continued to run and look for help, but no one traveling on the highway stopped to help.

Esparza got back into the driver’s seat and ordered Rios to climb into the front passenger’s seat. After Rios placed her head on the arm rest at Esparza’s insis *916 tence, Esparza placed his arm over Rios’s head. Esparza drove back onto Highway 290, heading toward Houston. While her head was down, Rios noticed a zipped gun case and fireworks on the floorboard in front of her. The sight of the gun case frightened Rios. Esparza exited Highway 290. He told Rios that he was not going to hurt her and that he was taking her back to town so that he could drop her off somewhere. Instead, Esparza pulled over, reclined his seat, unzipped his pants, withdrew his penis, and told Rios that “he knew that [she] did this with her husband.” He then pushed her head toward his penis and forced it into her mouth. Rios gagged, and Esparza threatened to hurt her if she threw up on him. He told her to roll over on her stomach and pull her pants down. When Rios complied, Esparza climbed on top of her from behind and inserted his penis into her vagina. When Esparza finished, “he pulled out” and asked Rios if she had “come when he came.” Esparza then soaked a bandana with Coke and told Rios to clean herself “well.” Rios cleaned herself but did not do it well, as Esparza had directed. Esparza then gave her change so that she could call somebody when he dropped her off. He told her she could call anyone but the police. He took her driver’s license, studied her address, and warned her that he knew where to find her if she called the police.

Esparza dropped Rios off on a corner in Houston and drove away. Rios walked about a block and a half until she found a convenience store. She called 911. When the police arrived, she reported what happened and went to the hospital. Around this time, Lucero finally found someone to call the police. Shortly after the police arrived, she learned that Rios was in the hospital. She told police that their attacker was named “Ed,” a name that she remembered because one of her brother’s has the same name. She also gave the police the business card that Esparza gave her at the club.

At the hospital, a nurse compiled a rape kit, which included biological specimens collected from Rios’s vagina and nails.

Rios could not identify Esparza before or at trial. She testified, however, that, based on what Lucero and Cantu told her, she believed that Esparza was her attacker.

Lucero identified Esparza in a photo line up about a month after the offense and again at trial. At the photo line up, Luce-ro hesitated when identifying Esparza because when she met him, he had facial hair, which he did not have in the photograph. At trial, Lucero testified that she had no doubts that Esparza was the man who she met at the club.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
282 S.W.3d 913, 2009 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 597, 2009 WL 1346403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/esparza-v-state-texcrimapp-2009.