Gilberto Rangel v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 18, 2017
Docket09-15-00074-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Gilberto Rangel v. State (Gilberto Rangel 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
Gilberto Rangel v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont ____________________ NO. 09-15-00074-CR NO. 09-15-00075-CR ____________________

GILBERTO RANGEL, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

_______________________________________________________ ______________

On Appeal from the 359th District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 13-12-13516 CR (Counts 1 and 2) ________________________________________________________ _____________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In seven issues, Gilberto Rangel appeals his convictions based on the jury’s

determination that he had sexually assaulted the same complaining witness twice on

the same day. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.011(a)(1)(A), (B) (West 2011). Three

of Rangel’s issues—issues three, four, and six—assert claims of ineffective

assistance of trial counsel. Two of the other issues—issues one and two—argue the

trial court abused its discretion by failing to conduct a hearing on Rangel’s motion

1 for new trial, and by denying his motion. Issue five asserts that Rangel is entitled to

another trial based on a compliment the prosecutor gave the complaining witness

about her testimony. In his last issue, issue seven, Rangel contends the evidence does

not support the jury’s determinations that on two occasions, he sexually assaulted

the complaining witness.

We conclude that issues one through four, six, and seven are without merit,

and that Rangel failed to preserve the complaints he makes in issue five for our

review on appeal. We overrule Rangel’s issues, and we affirm the trial court’s

judgments with respect to counts one and two in cause number 13-12-13516 CR.

Background

The testimony from Rangel’s trial indicates that the complaining witness,

“Olivia,”1 is Rangel’s sister-in-law. The evidence from Rangel’s trial shows that for

many years before the sexual encounters at issue, Rangel and Olivia engaged in

infrequent but consensual sexual encounters. Additionally, for several years before

the encounters at issue, Rangel, Olivia, and several other members of their respective

families lived under the same roof. According to Olivia, in the months leading up to

1 To protect the complaining witness’s identity, we use the pseudonym “Olivia” instead of using the complaining witness’s real name. See Tex. Const. art. I, § 30 (granting crime victims “the right to be treated with fairness and with respect for the victim’s dignity and privacy throughout the criminal justice process”). 2 the alleged sexual assaults, which occurred on January 30, 2013, she told Rangel

that she wanted out of their relationship. Olivia explained that despite her request,

Rangel continued to pursue her even though she told him that she no longer wanted

to be with him.

The jury also heard testimony from Olivia that in the period she told Rangel

that she no longer wanted him, she was dating “Seth,”2 a man who lived in Dallas.

Olivia testified that on January 30, 2013, she met Seth in Conroe. According to

Olivia, Rangel saw her with Seth in Seth’s truck while the truck was parked in a

parking lot of a restaurant. When Rangel saw them together, Rangel approached the

truck. As she opened the door, he pulled her out and slapped her. Next, Rangel and

Olivia got into her truck, which she had parked in the same parking lot. Olivia

explained that Rangel drove her truck from the restaurant, and while driving around,

Rangel continued to hit her. Olivia indicated that at one point, she bit Rangel on the

hand. After driving around, Rangel stopped and purchased beer. Olivia stated that

she drank some of the beer because she was “very stressed[,]” and they ultimately

pulled into the parking lot of a hotel where Rangel asked her to go inside. Olivia

testified that she refused Rangel’s request to go to a motel room; instead, she told

2 To protect the identity of the man Olivia was dating when the sexual assaults allegedly occurred, we identify him by using the name “Seth” in the place of his real name. 3 Rangel again that she “did not want to be with him.” They left the parking lot of the

hotel, and Rangel ultimately parked Olivia’s truck in a parking lot some distance

from a large department store. Olivia testified that while in the department store’s

parking lot, Rangel hit her and then demanded sex. According to Olivia, she refused.

Olivia then explained that at that point, Rangel forced her to engage in oral

intercourse and to subsequently engage in vaginal intercourse.

Several witnesses provided evidence that tends to support Olivia’s account

about the events that occurred on January 30, 2013. Olivia’s sister testified that

within two days of the incident, Olivia informed her that Rangel had sexually

assaulted her. Officer Thomas Taylor, a patrol officer employed by the City of

Conroe Police Department, testified that he spoke to Olivia on February 5, 2013.

Officer Taylor indicated that Olivia speaks Spanish, but that he communicated with

her through an interpreter. Officer Taylor testified that Olivia told him that Rangel

sexually assaulted her on January 30. Seth, the man that Rangel saw Olivia with on

January 30, testified that he and Olivia were together when Rangel came to the

parking lot of the restaurant and forcibly removed Olivia from his vehicle.

Rangel presented several witnesses in his defense during the guilt-innocence

phase of his trial. Rangel also testified during the trial. Rangel’s testimony indicates

that Olivia invited the sexual encounters that occurred on January 30 and that she

4 participated in them willingly. Rangel testified that two weeks before January 30, he

and Olivia engaged in a consensual sexual encounter. Rangel explained that on

January 30, he saw Olivia leaving a restaurant with a man that he did not know. In

his testimony, Rangel acknowledged that seeing Olivia with the man that evening

upset him. Rangel also indicated that he saw Olivia kiss the man that evening in the

restaurant’s parking lot. According to Rangel, when Olivia saw him in the parking

lot, she opened the truck’s door, he grabbed her by the arm, and he told the man

Olivia was with to leave. Rangel acknowledged that he argued with Olivia after they

left together in her truck. Rangel indicated after leaving the parking lot, he drove

around for a while, and then he stopped at a gas station where he bought a six-pack

of beer. According to Rangel, Olivia consumed five of the six beers, and he

ultimately drove Olivia’s truck to a hotel where he knew that Olivia and the man he

saw her with in the restaurant’s parking lot had been together earlier that day. Rangel

explained that he then left the hotel parking lot, drove to a gas station, filled the truck

with gas, and then he took Olivia in the truck to the parking lot near a large

department store. According to Rangel, while in the parking lot, Olivia told him that

she loved him and that the man he had seen her with that day, Seth, was just her

friend. Rangel testified that while they were together in the department store’s

parking lot, “[Olivia] unbuttoned my pants . . . and she began to give me oral sex.”

5 After engaging in oral intercourse, Rangel explained that he took Olivia and parked

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