Greg Bohac A/K/A Greg Allen Bohac v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 10, 2023
Docket13-22-00495-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Greg Bohac A/K/A Greg Allen Bohac v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-22-00495-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

GREG BOHAC A/K/A GREG ALLEN BOHAC, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 156th District Court of Bee County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Tijerina, Silva, and Peña Memorandum Opinion by Justice Tijerina

A jury convicted appellant Greg Bohac a/k/a Greg Allen Bohac of murder and

assessed punishment at twenty years’ imprisonment. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 19.02.

By two issues, appellant argues the State failed to prove that he “intended to kill the victim” and that the evidence is insufficient to support the jury’s finding that he “was not acting

under sudden passion when he caused the victim’s death.” We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Appellant was charged with murdering Austin Salinas. A jury trial commenced on

September 22, 2022. At the hearing, it was established that on July 31, 2018, appellant

was having a BBQ at his residence. Regan Jaso, Logan Harvey, Caleb Abel, Cameron

Lerma, and Quinton Alsobrook were in attendance.1

A. Eryne Garcia’s Testimony

Eryne Garcia testified that he was with his best friend Austin on July 31, 2018,

when they received a message from Regan asking for marijuana and cocaine. Eryne and

Austin communicated to Regan via Snapchat they would sell him marijuana for $300;

however, Eryne and Austin “made up [their] mind[s]” they would “just take the money”

from Regan because Regan was with Logan, and Austin and Logan had gotten into a

fight a few days prior to the drug deal.

They proceeded to appellant’s residence in Austin’s white Challenger. When they

arrived, Caleb and Regan approached the Challenger and handed Eryne $300 through

the passenger window. Eryne stated someone said, “[H]ey Logan, is that the dude that

you had [] a fight [with?]” Eryne immediately drove away after hearing that in accordance

with their plan.

1 We refer to the individuals by their first name for ease of reference. Regan and Quinton were

minors when these events unfolded. Austin was nineteen years old.

2 Austin told Eryne that he had a “bad feeling” about the events that had just unfolded

and wanted to return the money, but Eryne “shut it down” because “it already happened[,

and] it would just be more problems” if the money were to be returned. The two parted

ways, and Austin made his way back to his house.

Eryne did not hear from Austin until around 3:00 a.m. when Austin called Eryne

screaming, “Logan and them got me.” According to Eryne, he heard Austin, “choking on

his blood.” When Eryne arrived at Austin’s house, the police were already at the scene.

B. Regan’s Testimony

Regan testified that he was with Caleb, Quinton, Logan, Cameron, and appellant

at appellant’s residence. Regan remembers Logan wanting cocaine and appellant

wanting marijuana. Caleb informed the party that he had a connection to obtain the drugs.

According to Regan, Logan and appellant gave Caleb money for the cocaine and

marijuana.

Once Austin and Eryne arrived at appellant’s residence, Regan and Caleb

approached Austin’s Challenger. Regan stood back like five yards while Caleb stood by

the lowered window of the Challenger and conversed with Eryne. The Challenger then

fled the scene. According to Regan, Caleb turned around and stated, “[T]hey took my

money” while Caleb ran back to appellant’s residence and announced the theft.

The next thing Regan remembers is appellant retrieving firearms from his home, “I

remember two pistols and one like crazy gun like some machine gun type.” Regan, Caleb,

Quinton, Logan, Cameron, and appellant entered appellant’s truck. They drove around

3 for a couple of hours—even appearing at Austin’s grandmother’s house first only to find

out that was not Austin’s residence. Next, they met up with other individuals at a

Whataburger—in an attempt to get directions to and locate Eryne and Austin.

Once they arrived at Austin’s house after 1:00 a.m., everyone exited appellant’s

truck. He remembered appellant brandished “that crazy looking” gun, Cameron also had

a firearm, and Regan could not remember if Quinton or Logan had the third gun. Regan

stated that they all approached the Challenger because they remembered it being

Austin’s vehicle, and he “just hear[d] a bunch of air” coming out of the Challenger’s tires.

Regan then saw Austin open the front door and state, “[W]hat the fuck.” Regan testified

that “[appellant] was right in front of” Austin, and then “[appellant] shot Austin.”

Regan stated they all scrambled inside appellant’s truck. Appellant drove off

without turning on the truck’s headlights. Cameron then asked appellant, “[D]id you hit

him,” and appellant responded, “yes.” Regan testified that some of the occupants in the

vehicle suggested throwing the guns out of the window, stating, “throw them out, throw

them out” immediately before they were pulled over by police.

C. Quinton’s Testimony

Quinton testified that he was also indicted for murder. As part of a plea agreement

with the State and his testimony in appellant’s case, he would be placed on deferred

adjudication for manslaughter. See id. § 19.04.

Quinton testified that he was a back passenger in appellant’s truck on the night of

Austin’s death. When they arrived at Austin’s house, appellant instructed them to exit the

4 vehicle. Quinton testified that Cameron asked him for his pocketknife because Cameron

wanted to slash Austin’s tires, but Quinton informed Cameron that his “knife wasn’t going

to slice that tire” because “it was dull and rusty.” Quinton stated, “He then grabs the knife

out of my hand,” and “let’s [sic] air out of the tire through the valve with my knife.”

Quinton remembered appellant walked up to the front door, and Austin then

stepped out. Quinton testified that Austin took a few steps forward, Austin asked what

they were doing there, and no one responded. He then observed appellant pull “a gun

from his waistline and starts shooting at Austin.” He stated the porch light was on, so he

was able to see the encounter and appellant’s face. According to Quinton, appellant fired

“five to seven shots . . . in a row.”

Quinton stated that Austin held “his chest, torso area” and stumbled back.

Immediately, everyone ran toward the truck. As appellant drove the truck to flee the

scene, Quinton witnessed appellant and Cameron throw two guns out of the window

before they were apprehended by police. Quinton started asking, “[W]hat the F just

happened.”

B. Appellant’s Testimony

Appellant testified that Regan, Caleb, Quinton, and Logan were conversing at his

residence when appellant agreed to purchase marijuana and put “a little over $100” “into

the pot” to get “[a] quarter ounce of hydroponic.” He left the vicinity to take a shower to

get ready to head out and make the transaction. When he returned, he overheard Caleb

say something about “stealing his money or taking his money.” Appellant then gathered

5 his keys, wallet, “just out of safety . . . a couple of guns,” and “a handful of bullets” before

they all walked out and entered his company truck. According to appellant, the two guns,

a Tec 9 and 357 Revolver, were brandished on the center console of the truck. While in

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Greg Bohac A/K/A Greg Allen Bohac v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greg-bohac-aka-greg-allen-bohac-v-the-state-of-texas-texapp-2023.