Faraga v. State

557 So. 2d 771, 1990 Miss. LEXIS 9
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 10, 1990
DocketNo. 03-0062
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 557 So. 2d 771 (Faraga v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Faraga v. State, 557 So. 2d 771, 1990 Miss. LEXIS 9 (Mich. 1990).

Opinion

HAWKINS, Presiding Justice,

for the Court:

ON APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO FILE MOTION TO VACATE THE JUDGMENT AND DEATH SENTENCE

Lazaro Faraga has petitioned this Court to vacate his judgment of conviction and sentence in the circuit court of Rankin County, or alternatively to grant him leave to file a motion in that court to vacate the judgment and conviction.

We reject Faraga’s request for this Court to vacate his judgment of conviction and sentence, but do grant his petition for leave to file a petition for such relief in the circuit court of Rankin County on the claims of failure to furnish Faraga’s counsel an exculpatory statement, and ineffective assistance of counsel. Miss.Code Ann. § 99-39-5, -7, -27 (1984).

We find Faraga’s other assigned grounds for such relief unpersuasive and reject them.

Faraga was convicted in the circuit court of Rankin County in February, 1986, of capital murder [Miss.Code Ann. § 97 — 3—19(2)(f) (1983)] while engaged in the crime of child abuse [Miss.Code Ann. § 97-5-39(2)], and sentenced to death. The crime for which Faraga was convicted occurred in Rankin County on December 19, 1985. Sherry Royal, a woman with whom Faraga had been living in Florida, had gone to Dallas, Texas, where Faraga was in jail to get him released on bail, and return to Florida. Faraga’s stepfather in Florida had got the funds to make his bail bond.

Faraga and Royal were en route to Florida, with Faraga driving. In the car with the couple were Royal’s five-year-old daughter Cachi (Cashe), two smaller children, twins, who were the couple’s children, and a two-month-old infant Lorenso Nathaniel Faraga. Whether this infant was Faraga’s child or not is not clear. According to Royal the baby was his child, but Faraga never acknowledged being the infant’s father. As set forth in the original opinion in this cause, Faraga v. State, 514 So.2d 295 (Miss.1987), Faraga, while driving on U.S. 1-20 at a high rate of speed, suddenly stopped the car, and over Royal’s protests and resistance took the infant out of the car, slammed it onto the hood of another car and then threw it onto the pavement, killing it.

Faraga was subdued and arrested. That same day law enforcement officers took a recorded statement from Royal, pertinent portions of which read as follows:

Q. Listen, Sherry, why did he do this?
A. Why? I don’t know, because he left Texas jail, and they put him, and he was in this center with the crazy people and they put him in, they thought he was crazy, but you know, crazy, but then they gave him some kind of pill and the pill that they gave him kinda like, you know, I guess [unintelligible] and since then he just started acting weird since he got out, out of jail ’cause for a long period of time he was in there he couldn’t take it from staying in there. And they put him in this room where the crazy people are at and I don’t know ...
⅜ * sfc * * *
Is this his child? •©*
Yes. <4
And what’s the child’s name? <3*
Lorenzo. But you see we don’t sign papers for the child’s name going to go in his last name, Faraga. <d
[[Image here]]
Why did he stop the car? &
’Cause he was thinking all this stuff about he was going back to Cuba and all that about Castro, what Castro did to them when they was in Cuba and all of this. And then he, what he was saying, I couldn’t hardly understand it, but he was saying some of it in Spanish and I don’t hardly understand Spanish, when he talks fast, I don’t understand it. i> [773]*773When he goes a little slow, I understand. So I couldn’t hardly understand, I couldn’t hardly understand him. And then he took my two twins and put them out [unintelligible] in the street. And then he go take my baby Lorenzo, put my baby out. And then he, he, he banged my baby, he throw my baby down.
Q. He picked your baby up in his hands?
A. Yeh. He banged my baby down.
Q. On the road?
A. Yes, [unintelligible] he grabbed my baby [crying, unintelligible] help me, help me and my baby [unintelligible].
* * * * * *
Q. Okay. Did he assault any of your other children?
A. No. No, only my baby.
Q. Was there some discussion about the child before he did this?
A. No. He was talking in Spanish and I didn’t understand him in Spanish.
Q. Was he mad at the baby?
A. No. I don’t know.
Q. Was he mad at you?
A. No.
Q. Was he mad at the other children?
A. No. His mind just [snapped or clicked], it just [cracked or clicked] and I don’t know ...
Q. Was he drinking?
A. No, he wasn’t drinking, or nothing.
Q. Was he using any drugs?
A. No.
Q. You had been with him for how long?
A. For how many years?
Q. No. How many hours prior to this?
A. But he didn’t drink or nothing.
Q. No drugs or alcohol?
A. No.
Q. You all come in — when you picked him up in Texas coming this way, no drugs or alcohol?
A. No. No, he didn’t — he didn’t do no drugs or nothing.
Q. Okay. So he wasn’t under the influence of anything that you knew of.
A. No.
Q. What you are saying is, that he picked your baby up and threw it on the ground and you don’t know why or what caused it?
A. He was saying something like, Castro, Cuba and then he said something like, Castro, Cuba, that he going to get time for what he went to jail for in Texas and that he was going to get time for that. And all kinds of stuff in Spanish and then he went on and on.
* * * sk * *
Q. You all lived together since 1980? He’s the father of all your children?
A. Uh, huh.
Q. All right. Where else has he been in jail beside Texas that you know of?
A. Oh, he was in jail in Miami, Florida for a license, suspending a license.
Q. What about in Cuba?
A. No — but he was in jail in Cuba.

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Bluebook (online)
557 So. 2d 771, 1990 Miss. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faraga-v-state-miss-1990.