Gregorio Ramirez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 9, 2018
Docket13-17-00173-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Gregorio Ramirez v. State (Gregorio 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
Gregorio Ramirez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-17-00173-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

GREGORIO RAMIREZ, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 357th District Court of Cameron County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Contreras, Longoria, and Hinojosa Memorandum Opinion by Justice Longoria

Appellant Gregorio Ramirez was convicted of murder, a first-degree felony, and

arson, a second-degree felony. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. §§ 19.02(c), 28.02(f) (West,

Westlaw through 2017 1st C.S). The jury returned a guilty verdict and assessed

punishment at forty years’ imprisonment for the murder conviction and twenty years’ imprisonment for the arson conviction. The sentences were ordered to run concurrently.

Ramirez argues on appeal that (1) the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress

and (2) the evidence was legally insufficient to negate his self-defense theory. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Ramirez was charged by indictment with one count of capital murder, one count of

murder, one count of arson, and one count of engaging in organized criminal activity. See

id. §§ 19.02(c), 19.03(a)(2), 28.02(f), 71.02(a) (West, Westlaw through 2017 1st C.S).

Prior to trial, Ramirez filed a motion to suppress (1) his statements given to police while

in custody and (2) all evidence seized from searches executed without a valid search

warrant. The trial court denied his motion to suppress in part and granted it in part,

ultimately allowing all statements and evidence to be used in trial. Also prior to trial, the

State dropped count four, engaging in organized criminal activity, and proceeded to trial

on counts one through three. At the close of the State’s evidence, the trial court granted

a directed verdict in favor of Ramirez on count one, capital murder, and only counts two

and three proceeded to the jury.

A. Motion to Suppress Hearing

During the hearing on the motion to suppress, the State presented three witnesses

from the Harlingen Police Department: Officer Manuel Tovar, Investigator Anthony

Bonilla, and Detective Joel Yanes. The three witnesses testified to their involvement in

the issuance and execution of the two contested search warrants and to their role in the

detainment, interview, and arrest of Ramirez.

Officer Tovar testified in support of the search warrants, the first of which was

issued on February 20, 2016. Tovar explained that at the time he drafted the affidavit, he

2 used a former affidavit from another case as a sort of “template” for his own. In doing so,

Tovar testified that he neglected to change some of the prior case information before

submitting his affidavit to the court. Though the affidavit contained his signature, he

explained that the affidavit also contained the prior affiant’s name, instead of his own, and

the suspected offense as possession of marijuana. Tovar also testified that the author of

the second search warrant affidavit, used his affidavit as a template. The second search

warrant issued on February 22, 2016, was supported by an affidavit containing three

different officers names and the same possession of marijuana allegation, not arson or

murder.

As to the detainment, interview, and arrest of Ramirez, the State presented

Investigator Bonilla and Detective Yanes. Bonilla testified that his unit traveled to

Brownsville, where they believed Ramirez to be. Bonilla, along with other Harlingen

Police Department investigators, Brownsville Police Department officers, and Department

of Homeland Security investigators, went to the apartment of Ramirez’s girlfriend to

conduct a wellness check. Bonilla testified that at that point, they had information

regarding a male “possibly shooting a female” in the truck that they had found on fire,

which belonged to Ramirez. Bonilla stated that Ramirez and his girlfriend were found in

the apartment and they were both asked to go with the officers to the Harlingen Police

Department for questioning; both cooperated and agreed to go with the officers. Ramirez

was handcuffed and taken by police car to the Harlingen Police Department. Bonilla

testified that they did not have an arrest warrant at that time.

Detective Yanes testified that Ramirez was brought in on suspicion of a shooting

and arson of a vehicle, but at that point, officers were not sure if there was an injury or

3 murder as the victim had not yet been discovered. Ramirez and his girlfriend were being

interviewed simultaneously, though in separate interview rooms. Information from the

girlfriend, coupled with the information regarding the shooting, the arson of the vehicle

belonging to Ramirez, and the gun belonging to Ramirez found in the burned vehicle, led

the officers to arrest Ramirez.

After the State’s witnesses, the trial court reviewed the complained of search

warrants and granted Ramirez’s motion in part, ruling the evidence obtained via the

second search warrant inadmissible. The trial court denied the remainder of the motion

and overruled Ramirez’s later objections that the physical evidence and videotaped

statements of Ramirez were fruits of an illegal arrest.

B. Trial

At trial, the State presented their theory that Ramirez murdered the victim in the

early morning hours of February 20, 2016 and disposed of the victim’s body in a canal

later that day. Marcelino Silva, a night auditor for the Best Western in Harlingen, testified

that he was working the evening of February 19, 2016, overnight into February 20, 2016.

He testified that he saw a blue Ford pickup truck parked underneath the canopy awning

in front of the hotel entrance at approximately 4:00 a.m. on February 20, 2016. At that

time, he saw the two front seat occupants, which he believed to be a male and female,

arguing before seeing the driver shoot the passenger. When he saw and heard the shot,

Silva moved to the side and the truck “fled away.”

The State also presented Elvira Pollock. Pollock explained that she saw a blue

pickup truck enter a dirt road next to a canal in Harlingen, and shortly thereafter, she

observed the same truck on fire. She called 9-1-1 immediately and when law enforcement

4 arrived, the pickup truck was engulfed in flames. She also testified that she had seen a

“black passenger vehicle” enter the dirt road at the same time as the truck and that the

black vehicle exited the road before she noticed the flames.

Pedro Ibarra, a detective with the Harlingen Police Department, testified that

investigators were able to use the vehicle identification number on the burnt pickup truck

to determine the vehicle was registered to Ramirez. Ibarra testified that officers had

already received the information relating to a shooting that took place in a Ford pickup

truck and they believed the burnt truck to be the same one involved in the shooting. With

this information, officers were sent to make contact with Ramirez to question him and to

perform a wellness check on his “girlfriend or his wife or somebody related to him”

because of Silva’s statement that a woman had been shot in Ramirez’s vehicle.

Subsequently, both Ramirez and his girlfriend were brought into the station. Ibarra

testified that he conducted the interview of Ramirez’s girlfriend with Detective Scott Vega,

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