Hernandez, Maria Del Carmen
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Opinion
MARIA DEL CARMEN HERNANDEZ, Appellant
On Discretionary Review of Case 04-05-00634-CR of the
Fourth Court of Appeals,
Bexar County
Womack, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.The trial court admitted into evidence a co-defendant's testimonial statement for the purpose of impeaching another out-of-court statement of that co-defendant. We hold that this did not violate the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment under Crawford v. Washington. (1)
Facts and Procedural History
The appellant was convicted in September 2005 of capital murder committed in the course of a kidnapping. (2) Punishment was fixed at life in prison. (3) The Fourth Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction. (4)
The appellant met her co-defendants, Cassandra Leffew and Dolores Rodriguez, at the Bexar County Battered Women's Shelter. After leaving the shelter, the appellant, her children, and Leffew moved in together. Leffew made the statement that is at issue in this case.
The victim of the murder was Robert Fernandez, the father of the appellant's youngest son. He also had moved into the apartment. By July 2004, Leffew, her four children, the appellant, her three children, and the victim all shared the apartment.
On July 24, 2004, the appellant and the victim took all of the children to the community swimming pool. The victim took Leffew's daughter and his son back to the apartment. Leffew believed that the victim had assaulted her daughter at the pool, claiming that she had a boot-shaped bruise on her back. She also claimed that the victim must have sexually assaulted the girl because she looked "fearful." The victim repeatedly denied injuring the child in any way. The appellant refused to believe Leffew's accusations, and she urged Leffew to take her daughter to be examined. Leffew did not take the child for medical treatment.
The same group spent the next evening together at Dolores Rodriguez's house. Leffew drugged the victim with alcohol secretly mixed with prescription drugs. She hoped that he "would confess," but he maintained his innocence. Eventually he passed out. The appellant claims that she argued with Leffew about drugging the victim further, and Leffew ordered her to stay in another room. Leffew later poured a mixture of crushed pills and water into the victim's mouth, and he remained unconscious. The victim's hands and feet were tied together, and he was placed in the trunk of Leffew's car. The appellant, Leffew, and Rodriguez left the house and drove around for awhile. Eventually, the appellant and Rodriguez dropped off Leffew at her apartment and went to Rodriguez's home, with the victim still in the trunk. According to the appellant's testimony at trial, Rodriguez told her to smother the victim with a trash bag. After the appellant refused, Rodriguez put the bag over him herself. When he fought back, the appellant claimed that she tried to help him but was pushed away. Then Rodriguez strangled him with a pair of pantyhose, put his body in the trunk, and drove away. His body was left in a ditch in a remote area and was discovered the next day.
Two days later, Leffew gave a statement to Bexar County Sheriff's Detective Alfred Damiani. She admitted that she initially drugged the victim, but she said that the appellant was responsible for strangling and killing him. Leffew was charged and put in jail.
The appellant introduced the testimony of two inmates of the jail, Veronica Molina and Maria Renteria, who said that Leffew talked to them. They said that Leffew took responsibility for the murder.
During the defense's case in chief, Molina testified that Leffew regularly talked about what she did and felt no remorse about her actions. She testified that Leffew never liked the victim, and gave him alcohol and pills because "they talk better when they're drunk." She also testified that Leffew stated the appellant tried to stop them, but Leffew threatened her if she interfered. Leffew also said that she and Rodriguez planned to purchase and collect insurance fraudulently after the victim's death. Finally, Leffew told Molina that the appellant loved the victim and didn't intervene because Leffew threatened to hurt the appellant's children if she did.
The other jail inmate, Renteria, testified that Leffew talked regularly about the murder. Specifically, Leffew explained how she drugged the victim repeatedly with Ativan and tied him up. Leffew also said that she attempted to lock the appellant in another room because the appellant kept trying to help the victim.
Leffew was unavailable to testify at trial, claiming a Fifth Amendment privilege.
During rebuttal, the State called Detective Damiani to read portions of Leffew's statement in which she denied her direct involvement in the murder. The defense objected to this testimony as a violation of the Confrontation Clause. The judge overruled the objection but gave a limiting instruction to the jury before the testimony.
The Fourth Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction, holding that the testimonial statements were properly admitted under Rule of Evidence 806 and were, therefore, not in violation of the Confrontation Clause.
Although we affirm the judgments of the courts below, we do so on a different basis.
Discussion
The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution protects an accused's right to be confronted with the witnesses against her in all criminal prosecutions. In Crawford, the Supreme Court held this to mean that the admission at trial of a testimonial, out-of-court statement is barred by the Confrontation Clause, unless the defendant has had a prior opportunity to examine the witness and the witness is unavailable to testify. (5) Hearsay - an out-of-court statement offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted - may be admissible under evidentiary rules. (6) But hearsay statements nevertheless must overcome the Confrontation Clause bar, which may be implicated if the defendant is not afforded the opportunity to confront the out-of-court declarant. (7) Crawford made clear that "[w]here testimonial statements are at issue, the only indicium of reliability sufficient to satisfy constitutional demands is the one the Constitution actually prescribes: confrontation." (8)
The Supreme Court has distinguished between testimonial hearsay and testimonial nonhearsay in designating those statements to which the confrontation right attaches. Crawford held that the confrontation right is implicated where testimonial, hearsay statements are at issue. (9) But it also cited with approval its decision in Tennessee v. Street, to note that "[t]he [Confrontation] Clause . . . does not bar the use of testimonial statements for purposes other than establishing the truth of the matter asserted."
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Hernandez, Maria Del Carmen, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hernandez-maria-del-carmen-texcrimapp-2008.