Jaime Zamora Corral v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 7, 2004
Docket08-03-00102-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jaime Zamora Corral v. State (Jaime Zamora Corral 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
Jaime Zamora Corral v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS


)

JAIME ZAMORA CORRAL,                             )                  No. 08-03-00102-CR

                                    Appellant,                        )                             Appeal from

v.                                                                          )                  384th District Court

THE STATE OF TEXAS,                                   )                  of El Paso County, Texas

                                    Appellee.                          )                  (TC# 20020D04275)


MEMORANDUM OPINION


            Jaime Zamora Corral appeals his conviction for aggravated robbery. A jury found Appellant guilty and sentenced him to fifty years’ confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice together with an $5,000 fine. We affirm.


FACTUAL SUMMARY


            On December 28, 2001, Alma Gonzalez and her nephew, Andy Gonzalez were working at Gaspar’s Bakery & Grocery, a family business in Socorro. The store was not busy and a few minutes before 11 p.m., a customer walked out just as two men came in. The first man, later identified as Jody Stark, was Anglo and had his shirt pulled up over his mouth and nose. Both Alma and Andy identified Appellant, whom they recognized as one of their regular customers, as the second. Appellant held a gun in his hand and told Alma and Andy in Spanish that this was a hold-up. After putting his arm around Andy’s upper chest, Appellant pointed the barrel of the gun at Andy’s neck and demanded money. Andy recalled that the gun was a revolver with a brown handle. Appellant then told Andy that he would blow his brains out if he did not give him money. Alma was afraid that Appellant would kill Andy, so she opened the register. It contained less than $100 and Appellant complained that the money was not enough. Stark was standing in the back of the store, but when Alma took the money out of the register, he came up to the front and told her to give him the money. Alma complied but Appellant then pointed the gun at her head and asked her for expensive beer. Alma gave him a case of Smirnoff. Alma and Andy thought that the men were leaving, but Appellant returned and told them if they called the police he would come back and kill them both. Andy called the police anyway and officers arrived within three minutes.

THE IDENTIFICATION PROCESS

            Alma never gave police the names of the robbers, a clothing description, or whether they were Anglo or Hispanic. She did notice that Stark had a mole. Appellant had tattoos, but Alma did not notice them. Andy did not tell police that he recognized Appellant and he did not give a facial description. He did provide a clothing description--one man was wearing a black jacket and blue jeans and that the other was wearing an undershirt beneath a flannel shirt and dark pants.

            Socorro police officer Juan Carlos Gutierrez was dispatched as the backup unit to the aggravated robbery that evening. He drove to the store, received a brief description of the perpetrators, and then attempted to locate them. Within two hours, he found two suspects matching the description he had been given. Stark was carrying a firearm with one remaining bullet. Cash was also discovered on both suspects.

            Around 1 a.m., police took Alma to identify the two suspects. She was told they fit the description, one of them had a gun, one matched the clothing description, and they had money on them. Alma had no difficulty in recognizing the robbers because the officers had their spotlights trained on them so that lighting in the area was good. The police gave her back the money taken in the robbery, which was around $74-$76, about the same amount in the register at the time of the robbery. No twenty dollar bills were in the register that evening and no twenties were found on the suspects.

            DPS firearms examiner Joseph Corella testified that he test-fired the recovered weapon three times and found the gun to be in working order. El Paso County Sheriff’s Department detention officer Steven Elliot described the clothing worn by each suspect that evening at booking. Appellant was wearing beige pants, black shoes, boots, and a black sweater. Stark was wearing black pants, a blue shirt, white shoes, and a black jacket.

FAILURE TO PROVIDE BRADY MATERIAL

            In Point of Error No. One, Appellant complains that the State failed to provide him with exculpatory evidence. During the punishment phase of trial, Appellant became aware of the testimony of Pedro Mendez. Mendez, a regular customer, was the individual who had left the store immediately before the robbery and who had seen the robbers enter. Appellant contended that Mendez was unable to identify Appellant and that the State violated his right to a fair trial and due process by failing to disclose this information pursuant to the court’s order.

            The trial court issued a standard discovery order that required the State to produce the names and addresses of all witnesses which it reasonably anticipated it would call and any exculpatory or mitigating evidence known to the State or in its possession. Appellant also filed a motion for discovery requesting the same information. Appellant admitted that he was allowed to review the State’s file and that he hand-copied its contents.

            Mendez told Alma that he saw the robbery and consequently, he was listed as a potential witness for the State in its supplemental witness list. Appellant does not dispute he received this notice. In fact, he admitted that his investigator met with Mendez during which time Mendez indicated he was not going to testify. Defense counsel disregarded his testimony.

            Mendez was not called as a witness during the guilt-innocence portion of Appellant’s trial but he was called as a rebuttal witness by the State during the punishment phase. Mendez testified that he did not remember the faces of the men walking into the store that night, and he denied having been offered money to testify that he did. Mendez admitted that he knew Appellant’s father but he had not discussed the case with him. The defense elicited testimony from Appellant’s father that Mendez had told him that Alma was paying him to testify that Appellant robbed the store. Alma denied having offered Mendez money.

            Appellant contends that he didn’t realize that Mendez was the customer leaving the store when the robbers were entering until the punishment phase when Mendez was called to testify. Appellant complained that had his counsel had this information prior to trial, the reliability of the identifications by Alma and Andy could have been called into question because Mendez had known Appellant’s family for years, had directly crossed paths with the robbers, and yet he could not identify Appellant as one of the robbers.

            Under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, a prosecutor has an affirmative duty to turn over material, exculpatory evidence. Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 83 S.Ct. 1194, 10 L.Ed.2d 215 (1963); Ex parte Kimes, 872 S.W.2d 700, 702 (Tex.Crim.App. 1993).

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