Feliciano Cruz v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 9, 2020
Docket13-17-00683-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Feliciano Cruz v. State (Feliciano Cruz 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
Feliciano Cruz v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-17-00683-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

FELICIANO CRUZ, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 214th District Court of Nueces County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Chief Justice Contreras and Justices Longoria and Perkes Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Contreras

Appellant Feliciano Cruz was convicted of murder, a first degree felony, and

tampering with physical evidence, a third degree felony. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN.

§§ 19.02, 37.09. On appeal, he argues: (1) the evidence was insufficient to support the

murder conviction; (2) the indictment “failed to charge felony murder properly” and an invalid charge was submitted to the jury; (3) the punishment charge “exaggerated the

effect of good conduct time” and caused egregious harm; (4) his trial counsel provided

ineffective assistance; and (5) the trial court erred by allowing trial spectators to wear

“expressive clothing.” We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

A Nueces County grand jury returned an indictment alleging that appellant, while

“in the course of and in furtherance of the commission or attempt of” a felony, intentionally

or knowingly committed an act dangerous to human life that resulted in the death of

Monica Ramos (Count I). See id. § 19.02(b)(3). The predicate felony was specified in

the indictment as “aggravated assault or injury to a child,” and the act dangerous to human

life was specified as “striking [D.C., appellant’s daughter,] with a loaded firearm.” Based

on the same incident, the indictment also alleged manslaughter, aggravated assault, and

injury to a child (Counts II, III, and IV, respectively). See id. §§ 19.04, 22.02, 22.04.

Finally, the indictment alleged that appellant, knowing that an offense had been

committed, intentionally or knowingly concealed a firearm with intent to impair its verity or

availability as evidence in a subsequent proceeding related to the offense (Count V). See

id. § 37.09.

At trial, A.G. testified that, on her sixteenth birthday on July 7, 2016, she went to

the house of her fourteen-year-old friend, D.C. Ramos, a friend of appellant who was

thirty years old, was at the house. Appellant came to the house and then left with A.G.

and D.C. to drive them to a store. According to A.G., while driving to the store, appellant

was “swerving” and “going in both lanes.” The store was closed, but D.C. saw some of

her friends there, and they started talking outside of the car. Meanwhile, appellant fell

2 asleep in the driver’s seat and A.G. waited in the back seat.

A.G. stated that, at that point, Ramos then arrived and started talking to appellant.

Ramos made appellant get in the passenger seat and told D.C. to get back in the car.

According to A.G., Ramos wanted to drive and was “mad” because appellant was “driving,

I guess, intoxicated or something.” At some point, D.C. realized she had lost her phone,

so the group went back to the area of the store to look for it. D.C. eventually found her

phone, but appellant took the phone away, insulted her, and told her to walk home. D.C.

got out of the car and started walking on the left side of the road. Ramos followed behind,

driving slowly. From the back seat, A.G. then saw D.C. take a rock and threaten to break

the window of the car. At that point, appellant exited the car with a gun and began “hitting

[D.C.] with the gun and his hands.” A.G. clarified that appellant hit D.C. five or six times

with the “back of the gun” on the top of her head; he was also “pulling her hair and hitting

her with his hand.” A.G. explained that this assault went on for about thirty seconds.

A.G. then heard two gunshots about three seconds apart, and she heard Ramos

tell appellant, “You shot me.” Ramos, who was in the driver’s seat at the time the shots

were fired, was bleeding and gasping for air, and she slumped out of the car. Appellant

took his shirt off and wrapped it around Ramos. He then threw his gun “in the gutter” and

he told D.C. and A.G. to lie to police, though he did not specify what exactly they should

say. When police first questioned A.G., she falsely told them she did not know what

happened because she was scared of appellant. She later told police the truth at the

police station, where she “felt more safe.”

A.G. said that appellant and D.C were standing still immediately after the shots

were fired, but she confirmed that appellant was in the process of assaulting D.C. as the

3 shooting took place. She acknowledged on cross-examination that she put her head

down for a few seconds toward the end of the assault because she thought she was going

to get shot. She also conceded that she initially told police that the gunshot came from

outside the car while appellant was in the car. When A.G. later spoke to D.C. about the

incident, D.C. was crying and was worried about what would happen if appellant “gets in

trouble.”

D.C., who was fifteen years old at the time of trial, testified that after A.G. came to

her house, appellant drove the girls to a store. Because appellant was “swerving,” D.C.

believed appellant “was under the influence of something” and so she called Ramos.

Ramos came and told appellant to get in the passenger seat. After D.C. realized she lost

her phone, Ramos drove the group back to the store. At some point, D.C. got into an

argument with appellant, and appellant told her to walk home despite the fact that she

was not wearing shoes. D.C. started to walk and then “picked up a rock” and “threatened”

appellant, saying: “Leave me alone or I am going to throw this rock at your window.” At

that point, according to D.C., appellant

pointed the gun at me and then I just told him to pull the trigger. And then he got off the car from the passenger side and then he came to where I was on the driver’s side. And [Ramos] opened the door and she said, Get in before your dad gets mad. And then so I was going to get in the car and then he pulled me out . . . [b]y my hair. And then he started hitting me with his gun and then it just went off.

When asked where on her body appellant hit her with the gun, D.C. replied: “I don’t

remember; I didn’t feel nothing. It just happened too quick.” She later agreed that

appellant was hitting her “over the head” and that she was covering her head with her

arms. Photos entered into evidence showed that she had some small scratches on her

hand after the incident.

4 Like A.G., D.C. testified that she initially did not tell police the truth because she

was scared, but she later told a detective the truth about what happened. D.C. denied

that appellant verbally told her to lie to police. However, she agreed that she sent

Facebook messages to her boyfriend in November 2016 stating “My dad wants me to lie

in court about what happened” and “He wants me to say he never had the gun and

[Ramos] had the gun the whole time.” D.C. also sent a message to another friend

describing the July 8 incident in detail and consistently with her trial testimony. She

explained in the message that appellant was “all barred out” at the time and that she

initially lied to police because she was living with appellant and “didn’t want them to take

him.”1

On cross-examination, D.C. recanted her earlier testimony that appellant never

told her to lie.

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