Jimenez v. State

240 S.W.3d 384, 2007 WL 2462011
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 27, 2007
Docket03-05-00633-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 240 S.W.3d 384 (Jimenez 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
Jimenez v. State, 240 S.W.3d 384, 2007 WL 2462011 (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

BOB PEMBERTON, Justice.

The jury convicted Rosa Estella Jimenez of the offenses of felony murder and injury to a child. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.02(b)(3) (West 2003), § 22.04(a)(1) (West Supp.2006). Punishment was assessed at 75 years’ imprisonment for felony murder and 99 years’ imprisonment for injury to a child. In five points of error, Jimenez challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence supporting her convictions, complains of prosecutorial misconduct, alleges ineffective assistance of counsel, and asserts a double jeopardy violation. We affirm the judgment.

BACKGROUND

The jury heard evidence that on January 30, 2003, Jimenez, a 20-year-old woman, was babysitting B.G., the 21-month-old child of Victoria Gutierrez. Gutierrez testified that Jimenez babysat B.G. two or three times a week, at Jimenez’s apartment, during the day while Gutierrez worked. Gutierrez testified that B.G. liked to play with objects in her kitchen and “take everything out.” Gutierrez recounted how B.G. liked to “drop” the objects from the kitchen into the toilet. Gutierrez also explained that B.G. liked to play with paper and that he once placed an entire roll of toilet paper into the toilet. Gutierrez emphasized, however, that B.G. never put paper towels in his mouth.

Irene Vera was Jimenez’s neighbor. Vera testified that on the day of the incident, Jimenez came to her door crying, asking for help, and holding B.G., who looked “limp and purple.” Vera asked Jimenez to tell her what had happened. Jimenez responded that she thought B.G. had swallowed something. Vera took B.G. from Jimenez, placed him on the floor, and *388 attempted to check the inside of his mouth. However, she could not get her finger very far into B.G.’s mouth because he kept biting down on it. Vera noticed “a little bit of blood” in B.G.’s saliva “coming out the sides of his mouth.” The blood appeared to be fresh.

Vera tried to ascertain more details from Jimenez about what had happened to B.G. Jimenez, according to Vera, explained that B.G. had been walking toward Jimenez when she saw that B.G. was choking. B.G. then fell to the floor. Jimenez picked him up and “started slapping him on the back” to try to dislodge whatever was choking him. Jimenez also put her fingers in B.G.’s mouth and looked inside but could not find anything. According to Vera, Jimenez thought that B.G. might be choking on a toy. Jimenez told Vera that she immediately brought B.G. over to Vera’s apartment.

While Vera was trying to help B.G., another neighbor, Paula Salinas, called 911. The conversation between Salinas and the 911 dispatcher was transcribed and admitted into evidence. Salinas first told the dispatcher that it looked like B.G. was not breathing, that he was bleeding from the mouth, and that he was already dead. The dispatcher instructed Salinas to get closer to B.G., and once she did, Salinas reported that B.G. was still breathing and that it looked like he was trying to throw up. When a police officer arrived at the scene, the dispatcher heard the officer state, “No pulse, not breathing, CPR in progress.” The dispatcher testified that sometimes lay people mistake “agonal” respirations for breathing, and that this could explain the discrepancy between Salinas’s statement that the child was breathing and the officer’s statement that the child was not breathing. The dispatcher testified that the time between when a person stops breathing and the time a person can no longer move is four to six minutes. The dispatcher remained on the phone throughout the incident. The dispatcher recorded the following times during the call:

13:28 911 call comes in
13:31 Police officer arrives
13:32 EMS arrives
14:20 EMS closes out the call (which is when, according to the dispatcher, EMS transports the patient to the hospital).

The Austin Police Department officer who responded to the 911 call was William Torres. Officer Torres also testified at trial. When Officer Torres arrived at the apartment, he noticed B.G. lying on the floor on his back with Vera kneeling on his right side, checking his breathing. Torres immediately knelt down on B.G.’s left side, lifted and held B.G.’s head and neck, listened for a breath, and checked for signs of life. Torres could not feel a pulse. He explained:

He had a little bit of blood on his cheek, but there was no movement at all.... His eyes were wide open. They wouldn’t even move. His lips were blue and starting to get puffy. His mouth was open but not all the way.... Because I remember when I put — I tried to put my finger in there, it would only go about half way.

Torres then performed CPR on B.G. B.G. did not respond, and this indicated to Torres that “the airway [was] not going through to his chest” and that there was something stuck in B.G.’s throat.

Shortly after EMS arrived and began treating the child, Torres went outside the apartment to check on Jimenez, whom Torres initially had assumed was B.G.’s mother. Torres testified that Jimenez was crying and screaming, “How is he? How is he? Is he okay? Is he okay?” Torres *389 replied that he did not know. One of the EMS technicians came outside and asked if B.G. had swallowed anything. According to Torres, Jimenez responded that B.G. had been playing with toys, but that she did not know what he had swallowed.

Torres began asking Jimenez questions to obtain additional information about B.G. Torres soon discovered that B.G. was not Jimenez’s child. He asked Jimenez if she knew how to contact B.G.’s mother. Jimenez responded that she had written the mother’s telephone number on a magazine in her apartment. Torres then accompanied Jimenez to her apartment to search for the magazine. Torres testified that while they were looking for the magazine, Jimenez explained repeatedly that B.G. and Jimenez’s one-year-old daughter had been playing with toys while Jimenez was cooking, and that while she was cooking, she called out for B.G. to bring her a roll of paper towels. When B.G. did not respond, Jimenez went to look for him and found him lying on the floor and not breathing.

Jordan Rojo, one of the EMS paramedics, testified that when she and fellow paramedic Rob Curr arrived at the scene, they observed that B.G. was not breathing and had no pulse. His lips had already turned blue from lack of oxygen. Rojo opened B.G.’s mouth with her hand, looked down his mouth, and found no obstruction. Rojo attempted unsuccessfully to force air into B.G.’s lungs. Curr then attempted to intubate B.G. 1 With the aid of a laryngo-scope, Curr noticed an obstruction “entirely covering the trachea.” Using forceps, Curr attempted to remove the object. Curr immediately noticed that the obstruction was “falling apart,” and initially he was only able to dislodge two “dime-sized” pieces of it. Rojo, who believed that B.G. was choking on food, asked Curr if the object was brisket because “it was red and kind of looked fleshy like meat.” Curr told her that it was paper. On the third attempt to remove the obstruction, Curr pulled out the remainder of the object.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 S.W.3d 384, 2007 WL 2462011, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jimenez-v-state-texapp-2007.