Fabian Makell Miranda v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 5, 2025
Docket09-23-00211-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Fabian Makell Miranda v. the State of Texas (Fabian Makell Miranda v. the State of Texas) 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.

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Fabian Makell Miranda v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

________________ NO. 09-23-00211-CR ________________

FABIAN MAKELL MIRANDA, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee ________________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 253rd District Court Liberty County, Texas Trial Cause No. CR34904 ________________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted Fabian Makell Miranda of murder and sentenced him to forty

years’ incarceration in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. See Tex. Penal

Code Ann. § 19.02(c). In six issues on appeal, Miranda challenges the sufficiency of

the evidence to support his conviction, asserts multiple jury charge errors, and

contends that he received ineffective assistance of counsel at trial. We affirm.

1 Background It is undisputed by both parties that Miranda shot and killed his stepfather Jose

in the late evening hours on November 4, 2019. At trial Miranda claimed self-

defense and defense of another, his mother, Clarissa.

Vicki Gardiner

Vicki Gardiner is a law enforcement officer for Liberty County Constable

Precinct 5 and was on patrol the night of November 4, 2019. Around midnight,

Gardiner received a call from dispatch instructing her to go to a Liberty County

residence, “clear the scene, [and] make sure it was safe.” When she arrived, she

observed evidence of a shooting, and a man was lying on the kitchen floor. After

searching to make sure no one else was in the house, she took photographs of the

scene but was not asked to take pictures of Miranda or any injuries he may have had.

Gardiner confirmed there were multiple law enforcement investigators at the home

that night. Copies of the photographs she took at the scene were admitted at trial

without objection. Gardiner made an in-court identification of Miranda.

Bruce Sims

Bruce Sims has been employed as a deputy with the Liberty County Sheriff’s

Office for sixteen years. In the early morning hours of November 5, 2019, Sims was

dispatched to a residence in Liberty County regarding a shooting. Sims and another

officer arrived at the home and met with a female and two males, including Miranda.

2 Sims identified Miranda in court. According to Sims, the female was Miranda’s

mother, Clarissa Hernandez, and the male was Juan Morales, a family friend who

lived on the same property. Sims observed that both Miranda and his mother had

blood on their bodies, and he described them as “emotional.” Sims then went into

the residence and met with other investigators. Sims was informed that Miranda had

“shot his stepdad[,]” so he placed Miranda in handcuffs, and “bagged his hands.”

Sims then read Miranda his Miranda rights and questioned him while recording the

interview via his car’s video system and a pocket audio recorder. A copy of the

recording was admitted at trial and a portion of the video was played for the jury.

Sims testified that Miranda appeared intoxicated, that he could smell alcohol

on Miranda’s breath, and that Miranda was slurring his speech. During his

conversation, Miranda appeared calm and collected, did not appear upset or shaken,

and Miranda did not appear to have been in a life-or-death struggle. Miranda told

him that he and the victim were hanging out, drinking beer, and having a good time

before the shooting. Miranda stated that his mother and stepfather were fighting but

Jose had not hit his mother “yet.” Miranda told Sims multiple times during the

conversation that Jose threatened to kill Miranda or his mother. Miranda told Sims

that before shooting Jose, he had Jose in a headlock. Miranda never told Sims that

Jose had a weapon. In Sims’s opinion, Miranda “had control of the threat.” Sims

3 opined that a person is not authorized to use deadly force against someone who

threatens you but does nothing else.

Clarissa Hernandez

Clarissa testified she was married to Jose for seven years and is Miranda’s

mother. Jose was Miranda’s stepfather. At the time of the shooting, Miranda lived

next door to Jose and Clarissa. Clarissa described her husband’s relationship with

Miranda as “the best of friends.” She testified that on the night of the shooting, Jose

threatened her, Miranda and Jose got into a fight, Jose continued to threaten them

both, and Miranda shot Jose in the head.

On the day of the shooting, Jose, Clarissa, and Miranda were celebrating

Miranda’s winning a 50/50 custody arrangement of his child. The group went to two

bars and later ended up back at their home that night, after drinking all day. When

they arrived back home, Clarissa went to bed and Jose, Miranda and a family friend,

Juan Morales, continued to party outside. Eventually, Morales went home as well.

Clarissa recalled that she went to bed when they returned home because she got into

a fight with Jose over a lawn mower Clarissa had purchased. According to Clarissa,

when Jose would become intoxicated, he would get into a fight that would turn

physical, and Miranda had witnessed these fights previously. She described other

incidents in which Jose physically attacked her in the past, including a time Jose

pulled a gun on her during an altercation.

4 That night after Clarissa when to bed, Jose and Miranda stayed outside

listening to music and drinking. Eventually, Clarissa fell asleep. Later Jose came

into the house and woke Clarissa up telling her, “I’m leaving this bitch; and before

I do, I’m going to kill you.” Clarissa testified that Jose did not have a weapon, but

there were weapons in the house and in his truck. After Jose woke her up, she tried

to take his duffle bag that he was packing and told him “[y]ou’re f-ing drunk. Take

your ass to bed.” Clarissa and Jose immediately began fighting and Jose threw

Clarissa over the bed. According to Clarissa, Jose then got on top of her, and they

started hitting each other. She stated that she believed Jose was going to kill her, and

she feared for her life. When Miranda walked in, Jose did not hit Clarissa in front of

Miranda, but she believed Miranda “did hear all the commotion as he was walking

through the front door[.]” Miranda told Jose, “You don’t want to tell my mother

that.” Jose then “shrugged into [Miranda’s] shoulder…like he was starting crap with

him[,]” and Jose and Miranda began to fight. Clarissa described the fight as an “[a]ll-

out brawl.” Clarissa never saw Jose pull or grab a weapon during the fight. They

locked the guns in their home because Jose had “already pulled a gun on [Miranda]

just a year prior.” Clarissa later told the police that their rifles were at Miranda’s

house, and other guns were locked in a safe and Jose did not have the code. But she

also testified that she had multiple unsecured guns around the house for her own

protection.

5 Clarissa testified that Jose threatened to kill Miranda, and Miranda pulled a

gun out of his pocket. According to Clarissa, Jose then tried to take the gun out of

Miranda’s hand. Clarissa stated that they both continued to fight and Miranda

“tr[ied] to calm Jose down” by telling him “Jose, I’m not playing with you. Just go

to bed.” She believed initially that Jose fired the gun. After Miranda shot Jose he

told Clarissa, “Mom, I’m sorry, and I know I’m going to go away for a long time.”

Ann Marie Mitchell

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