Faustino Morales Ramirez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 1, 2007
Docket08-06-00273-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Faustino Morales Ramirez v. State (Faustino Morales Ramirez 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
Faustino Morales Ramirez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Becker v. State
COURT OF APPEALS
EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
EL PASO, TEXAS




FAUSTINO MORALES RAMIREZ,

Appellant,



v.



THE STATE OF TEXAS,



Appellee.

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No. 08-06-00273-CR


Appeal from

195th District Court



of Dallas County, Texas



(TC # F-0600756-TN)

O P I N I O N


Faustino Morales Ramirez appeals his conviction of aggravated sexual assault. A jury found Appellant guilty and assessed his punishment at imprisonment for five years. Based on an affirmative finding by the jury, the trial court entered a deadly weapon finding in the judgment. We affirm.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

Prior to September of 2005, Alicia Garza had been involved in a romantic relationship with Appellant for several years and had two sons, ages eight and nine, with him. They were living together in an apartment in east Dallas but the children were living in Monterrey, Mexico with Garza's parents. Garza referred to Appellant as her husband even though they had not been formally married and she knew that Appellant was legally married to another woman. Appellant had been out of town for ten days in late August and he had not left Garza any money for food. Consequently, she had decided to return to Monterrey and she had a bus ticket for September 1. Her suitcases were by the front door. Appellant returned home on August 31, 2005, and Garza was happy to see him. The couple engaged in consensual sex and went out to dinner.

The following day, September 1, a neighbor came to the apartment and began speaking with Appellant outside. When Appellant returned, he was angry. He kicked Garza and demanded to know what hotel she had been to while he was gone. Garza denied going to any hotel and Appellant left, saying that he was going to get the person who had accused her. Garza looked outside and saw a man chastising Appellant for leaving Garza without any money or protection. Appellant grabbed a pipe from the bed of this man's truck and the man left. Appellant came into the house with the pipe and told Garza that they were going to the man's home to confront his wife about the affair. Once they got inside the truck, Appellant struck Garza's arms and knees with the pipe and he hit her on the face and head with his fist. He also threw a jar of silicone at Garza and it broke against the truck windows, spilling the silicone on her hair. During the assault, she continued to deny having an affair with anyone. Someone apparently called the police and when they arrived, Garza did not tell them that Appellant had hit her; instead she said that she had fallen. After the police left, Appellant kicked her in the ribs and hit her while continuing to question her about the affair. Garza denied the accusation but Appellant began hitting her body and head with the pipe. He also called Garza a hog and a prostitute and threatened to cut off her breasts and genitals. Appellant tied one of Garza's hands to one of her feet "like a goat" before sexually assaulting her vaginally, anally, and orally. After the assault, she asked Appellant to take her to the hospital but Appellant refused stating that the man from the hotel could take her. Appellant then fell asleep and Garza either fell asleep or lost consciousness until the following morning.

When they awoke, Garza asked Appellant to call an ambulance but he refused. He said she needed to eat and made her go to a restaurant with him. Afterwards, he took her to the Family Dollar store for bandages and ointment. Garza then asked Appellant to take her to the bus station so that she could get a refund for her bus ticket to Monterrey. He did, and once she got inside, she asked for an ambulance. The police and an ambulance arrived shortly and Garza was transported to a hospital for treatment. Garza admitted during cross-examination that she had visited Appellant several times in jail.

Dallas Police Officer Ernesto Fierro was dispatched to the bus station in response to a 911 call. At the station, Fierro met with forty-seven-year-old Alicia Garza who was injured and hysterical. Fierro initially thought she had been hit by a car. Speaking rapidly in Spanish, Garza told Fierro that she could not believe this had happened and that she was in a lot of pain. Although Fierro speaks Spanish, he could not understand everything Garza was saying. Emergency medical personnel responded to the scene and transported Garza to a hospital. Fierro followed the ambulance in order to continue his investigation.

Garza told Fierro that she had been sexually assaulted by her husband, Appellant, at their apartment, and she gave a written statement describing the assault. Garza said that a man stopped by their apartment to speak with Appellant. After speaking with the man, Appellant kicked Garza and accused her of going to a hotel with someone named "Mr. Geno." Geno had provided Garza with money and food when Appellant went out of town for ten days. Garza denied the accusation but Appellant began hitting her body and head with a pipe. Appellant tied Garza's hands and feet and sexually assaulted her.

In addition to the statements made to the police, Garza told the medical staff that she had been held against her will and sexually assaulted by her husband. Dr. John Schorge administered a rape examination and noted that Garza had extensive bruising and abrasions on her face, arms, legs, abdomen, and back. Semen was found in the vaginal and anal smears collected during the rape examination. Following her medical treatment, Garza was admitted to the rape crisis center.

The following day, Fierro located Ramirez at the apartment complex and arrested him. Detectives obtained a search warrant for the couple's apartment. When officers executed the search warrant, they found a rope and a pipe allegedly used in the assault. Appellant gave a written statement in which he claimed that they argued because Garza was possessive and would not let him go out alone. During the argument, Garza punched his arms, pulled his hair, and attempted to block the door so he could not leave. He slapped her and tried to leave the apartment but Garza tripped over a suitcase in the kitchen and fell down. Appellant grabbed her hands and kicked her and "tried to calm her down." They then had sexual relations and slept peacefully together on the bed. Appellant added that they argued because Garza is a tramp, possessive, and unfaithful. He explained that when he returned from working in Kansas, he found men's clothing in the apartment and the apartment manager had told him that Garza had been seen kissing other men. When Appellant told Garza that they should separate she "went crazy, pulling her hair and butting her head on the door jam [sic]."

Castaneda Genovebo knows both Appellant and Garza. He provided Garza with food when Appellant was out of town. When Appellant returned, Genovebo told Appellant that he should take better care of Garza but Appellant became "a little violent" and took a pipe from Genovebo's truck.

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