Gamaliel Hernandez Gonzalez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 9, 2010
Docket01-07-00853-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Gamaliel Hernandez Gonzalez v. State (Gamaliel Hernandez Gonzalez 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
Gamaliel Hernandez Gonzalez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion issued December 9, 2010

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-07-00853-CR

———————————

Gamaliel H. Gonzalez, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 230th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 1103637

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, Gamaliel H. Gonzalez, was charged by indictment with murder.[1]  Appellant pleaded not guilty.  A jury found appellant guilty as charged and assessed punishment at 45 years’ confinement.  In two points of error, appellant challenges the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress his custodial statement during the guilt-innocence phase and the trial court’s admission of an extraneous offense during the punishment phase.

We affirm.

                                                                                                                                                                 Background

On February 7, 2007, Erica Garcia, complainant, met two of her friends at a nightclub in downtown Houston.  Appellant and some of his friends arrived at the club later that night.  One of appellant’s friends did not like Garcia.

When the club closed, both groups left.  Appellant and his friends discovered that someone had spit on their vehicle.  Appellant retrieved a gun from the vehicle and stated he was going to shoot Garcia.  One of appellant’s friends told him to get in the car, and he did.

Garcia and her friends left the club.  Garcia was alone in her car.  Her two friends followed her in another car.  They came to a stop at a red stop light with Garcia’s friends behind her in the same lane.  The vehicle appellant was in came to a stop behind these two cars, and appellant and another person exited the vehicle.  Appellant approached the passenger’s side of Garcia’s car, began hitting the passenger-side window with his gun, and shot into the car, hitting Garcia in the head and killing her.

Appellant then approached Garcia’s friend’s car, hit the passenger-side window of that car with his gun, shouted expletives at Garcia’s friends, and then returned to his vehicle.  Appellant and his friends drove off.  Garcia’s friends called the police.  Within fifteen minutes, a police officer pulled over the vehicle in which appellant was riding, and appellant was taken into police custody.

Appellant arrived at the police station around 5:00 A.M. on the morning of February 8, 2007.  Around 12:30 P.M., appellant gave a recorded statement in which he was read his Miranda and statutory rights and waived his right to an attorney.  In the statement, he described the events surrounding the shooting and also described an incident a few weeks earlier involving a confrontation with Garcia in which appellant had fired a shot into the air.

Over two months before trial, appellant served on the State a request for notice of intent to offer extraneous conduct. In its discovery order, the trial court set a deadline, requiring the State to provide notice of extraneous offenses ten days before trial.  Twenty days before trial, the State filed a notice of intent to use evidence of a prior conviction.  The portion of the form identifying the State’s intent to offer extraneous offenses was left blank.  Four days before trial, the State filed another notice, this time stating, “The State intends to introduce evidence that a few weeks before the fatal shooting of Erica Garcia, the Defendant shot in the direction of the complainant with a deadly weapon, namely, a firearm,” and indicating the offense took place in Harris County.  The State had in its files a statement by one of Garcia’s friends describing the event.

Three days before the trial, appellant filed a motion to suppress his custodial statement arguing, among other things, that appellant had made multiple requests to speak to an attorney before he gave his statement.  The trial court considered appellant’s motion at trial.  During the hearing on the motion, appellant testified that he was kept in one room for several hours.  Various people came in to question appellant.  He was moved to another room and questioned for about another hour.  Appellant testified that—prior to his recorded statement in which he waived his right to an attorney—he asked at least four times for an attorney but was never provided one and the questioning continued after each of these requests.  Appellant testified that, early in the time he was at the police station:

I asked them what -- if I was arrested and they said: You’ll know.  And then I said: Well, if I am, I need to talk to an attorney, I need to make a phone call if I am arrested.  And one of the officers said: We’ll let you know.  I assume it was an officer, but I don’t know if it was or not.

Appellant testified that later someone was asking him questions.  “And I said: Don’t I need an attorney? Am I under arrest? What’s going on? And they didn’t say anything.  They just walked out of -- walked outside the room.”  Later still, appellant asked a person he believed to be an officer, “Should I have an attorney in here?  And he -- once again, he said: We will get to it.  And he asked me a couple of other questions.”  He testified that, in the hour before he gave his statement, he again asked for an attorney.

Sergeant J. Brooks, one of the detectives present at appellant’s recorded confession, testified that he first spoke to appellant around 10:50 in the morning.  Sergeant Brooks testified that he was not aware of any request by appellant for an attorney and never heard appellant ask for one. 

The trial court denied appellant’s motion to suppress but also ordered certain portions of the confession to be redacted. 

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