Humberto Rodriguez, Jr. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 14, 2003
Docket13-00-00771-CR
StatusPublished

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Humberto Rodriguez, Jr. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion



NUMBER 13-00-771-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG



HUMBERTO RODRIGUEZ, JR., Appellant,

v.



THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 92nd District Court of Hidalgo County, Texas.



O P I N I O N



Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Yañez and Rodriguez

Opinion by Justice Yañez


By seven points of error, appellant Humberto Rodriguez, Jr. challenges his conviction for the aggravated kidnapping and capital murder of Hector Salinas after a jury found him guilty of both offenses. The jury assessed punishment for the aggravated kidnapping to be twenty-eight years confinement. As for the capital murder, the State did not seek the death penalty and the judge sentenced appellant to life in prison. The trial court has certified that this case is not a plea bargain case and the defendant has the right of appeal. See Tex. R. App. P. 25.2(a)(2). We affirm in part, and reverse and render in part.

I. Facts

Briefly, the State alleges appellant was part of a conspiracy to kidnap Hector Salinas in McAllen, Texas, then torture and murder him in Mexico. The following testimony outlines the evidence.

A. Non-accomplice Testimony

1. Background Regarding the Victim


DEA agent Tony Dominguez testified: Hector Salinas was arrested when drugs were found at his second-hand clothing store in McAllen on May 1, 1997; he made a deal to implicate the individuals for whom he was storing the drugs and was released the next day; and he was scheduled to testify in a federal trial on July 21, 1997.

Guadalupe Salinas, Hector's wife, testified that she saw appellant come to Hector's store the day before the kidnapping to ask him about a car in front of the store that was for sale.

2. Background Regarding Appellant

Juanita Mendoza, the wife of appellant's cousin, Victor Hugo Rojas, testified that appellant visited their home in McAllen two or three times in a green Suburban shortly before July 17, 1997, the date of the kidnapping.

Juan Garcia, an acquaintance of the appellant, testified that appellant often stayed at a mobile home in the same area as his own and he had seen a dark Suburban parked near that mobile home.

Texas Ranger Israel Pacheco testified that, during his interview with appellant, appellant gave his address as the mobile home Garcia indicated.

3. The Crime

Eyewitnesses Pedro Magana and Jose Antonio Salinas, Hector's brother, testified: a green Suburban with dark windows arrived at Hector's store during the evening of July 17, 1997; a man got out and asked about a car that was for sale in front of the store; the man asked for Hector; after Hector identified himself, the man grabbed Hector and put a gun to his head; then, several men jumped out of the Suburban; and they pushed Hector into the Suburban. Jose Antonio further testified that the vehicle had Mexican license plates.

4. The Aftermath

Police officer Guadalupe Cavazos testified that a burned Suburban was found about a mile away from the store just hours after the kidnapping. Cavazos also testified that a can of charcoal lighter fluid, a pair of handcuffs and a beer can were found with the burned Suburban.

Lead detective Ralph Ramirez testified that he was notified of a body discovered wrapped in a blanket in Reynosa, Mexico on July 22, 1997. He further testified that the license plate found with the burned Suburban was traced by Mexican police and was found to be registered to a green Chevy Suburban.

Hector's wife testified that she was able to confirm the identity of the body found in Reynosa as her husband.

Fulgencio Salinas testified that he performs autopsies and reviewed the autopsy report done by Dr. Ruben Santos, who is now deceased. He testified that the autopsy report indicated: the body was badly decomposed; the man had been dead for four to five days; the most likely cause of death was asphyxiation; and there was evidence that a plastic bag had been placed over the head and held in place with duct tape.

Evidence technician Miguel Alcantar and latent print examiner Heriberto Vigil testified that they were able to identify the thumbprint from the body as belonging to Hector.

B. Accomplice Testimony

Jose Angel Wyant and Freddy Camacho, two of the many accomplices to the crime, testified at trial that appellant was involved. Each has been imprisoned for his part in this crime.

Wyant offered the following relevant testimony: one of the other accomplices called Hector shortly before the kidnapping to tell him to be outside so they could look at the car for sale in front of the store; later on, appellant was at the house in Mexico; appellant was one of three in the room with Hector and hit him; Hector was hit several times with fists and a handgun; as a result, Hector was bleeding; Hector's eyes were not visible; Hector couldn't move; appellant left; and another accomplice strangled Hector.

Accomplice Freddy Camacho testified: he was approached by Rojas, who was accompanied by appellant, about the kidnapping and they spoke for thirty minutes; he overheard a twenty-minute phone call a few hours before the kidnapping from Rojas to appellant in which arrangements were made; Rojas then called Hector and made plans to look at the car for sale in front of the store; appellant drove the green Suburban to the meeting place-Rojas's home, to Hector's store, and to the burn site in the hours before the kidnapping; after the kidnapping, appellant switched vehicles and got in a brown van with other accomplices to take Hector across the border; at the checkpoint, appellant told Hector not to scream or do anything out of the ordinary or else he would face the consequences; once at a house in Mexico, appellant and two others took Hector to the bedroom and tied him face down to the bed with an extension cord and bed sheets; all three were on top of Hector and hitting him; and during the beating appellant threatened Hector's son.

C. Epilogue

The search for other accomplices continues. Meanwhile, the federal trial, in which Hector was supposed to testify, ended in an acquittal for all seven defendants.

II. Elements of the Offenses

A person commits aggravated kidnapping by intentionally or knowingly abducting another with the intent to inflict bodily injury on that person. Tex. Pen. Code Ann. § 20.04(a)(4) (Vernon 2003). Abduction is a continuous and ongoing event, for which there is no time limit. Weaver v. State, 657 S.W.2d 148, 150 (Tex. Crim. App. 1983) (citingSanders v. State

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