Jonathan Ozuna v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 16, 2012
Docket13-11-00688-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Jonathan Ozuna v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-11-00688-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

JONATHAN OZUNA, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 130th District Court of Matagorda County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Rodriguez, Benavides, and Perkes Memorandum Opinion by Justice Perkes Appellant, Jonathan Ozuna, appeals his conviction for one count of theft from a

human corpse, a state-jail felony. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 31.03(e)(4)(B) (West

2011). Appellant stole a wedding ring from the body of a decedent stranger whose body

was lying in a casket in a chapel at a funeral home. After appellant pleaded guilty in the

presence of the jury, the trial court held a jury trial on punishment. In accordance with the jury’s verdict, the trial court sentenced appellant to eighteen months of confinement in

the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, State Jail Division, and assessed a $7,500

fine. By his sole issue, appellant argues that his counsel provided ineffective assistance

during the punishment phase of trial by not further objecting to the admission of certain

testimony. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

After appellant pleaded guilty, the State presented additional evidence concerning

appellant’s guilt. The State presented testimony from the funeral-home director and the

decedent’s son. The jury also viewed a video that showed appellant standing over the

decedent’s body for more than a minute, removing the decedent’s wedding ring, placing it

in his waistband, and concealing the decedent’s hand with fabric that was inside the

casket. The decedent was approximately eighty years old, and the theft occurred before

her funeral service.

The State further presented evidence that approximately seven days later, when

law-enforcement officers came to arrest appellant at his home, he ran to his backyard and

hid in tall grass. Appellant initially denied that he stole the ring, but after officers showed

a photograph of the decedent in her casket, he hid his face and confessed. Appellant led

officers to a store at a mall where he sold the ring for $150. The ring was recovered and

returned to the decedent’s family.

Appellant testified at length in his defense during the punishment phase of the trial.

Appellant testified that while he was physically present, he was not mentally present

when he took the wedding ring. He testified that he suffered from Crohn’s disease,

2 rheumatoid arthritis, and pancreatitis. He testified that his Crohn’s disease was so

severe and painful that he could not finish college or hold a stable job. As a result, he

essentially became a stay-at-home dad to his four children, who were ages twelve and

older. Appellant testified that he received $420 per month in disability income.

Appellant testified that over the course of several years, he became addicted to the

prescription medications that he took for his Crohn’s disease and rheumatoid arthritis,

and that his addiction compelled him to steal the ring. Appellant testified that he started

taking increased amounts of medication to get pain relief, but that he also started using

the medications to escape life’s daily problems. He testified that he was high on Lortab,

Lorcet, and Norco when he stole the ring and that he had been high for months leading up

to the theft. Appellant testified that as he became sober, he started to feel remorse for

stealing the ring, but conceded on cross-examination that he did not turn himself in or

even confess when he was initially confronted by law-enforcement officers. Appellant

testified that he was not really guilty of theft, because his addiction to medications caused

him to take the ring.

Appellant testified that he did not hide in the backyard when officers arrived at his

home. Rather, his prescription medications made him feel paranoid and afraid, so he

went outside. He did not get up because he did not feel well enough. Appellant testified

that he has been rehabilitated of his prescription-drug addiction because stealing the ring

caused him to “hit rock bottom” and to recognize the severity of his addiction.

Appellant testified that he has been arrested in the past for a marihuana offense

and for stealing a rental video. Appellant admitted that he had viewed decedent

3 strangers on other occasions. He said that he was “not normal” because of the

medications. The State further elicited testimony from appellant that he was serving

probation for an offense that arose in Brazoria County and that he violated the terms of his

Brazoria County probation during the month before trial.

The State called Deputy Bill Orton as a rebuttal witness. Deputy Orton testified

that he was a deputy constable for the trial court and that he also suffered from Crohn’s

disease. He stated that he previously battled addiction to the prescription medications

he took for the disease, but never felt that Crohn’s disease compelled him to commit a

crime. In relevant part, Deputy Orton testified as follows:

Q. Deputy Orton, do have you currently, excuse me, have you previously been diagnosed as having Crohn’s Disease?

A. Yes, sir, in [‘]95.

Q. So, you are aware that you had Crohn’s Disease for some 16 years?
A. Yes, sir.

Q. And during the time that you have been suffering from Crohn’s Disease have you been taking some pain medications?

Q. What are they?
A. Everything that the defendant had told you that he was on and more.
Q. And during that time have you been taking these same drugs for 16 years?
Q. When did you begin taking this these particular drugs?
A. During the times that I had flare ups with the Crohn’s Disease when I

4 was hospitalized, which was a period of about 9 months. I was in the hospital.

Q. And as a result of having taking these particular drugs did you develop addictions to these drugs?

A. Yes, sir, I was.

DEFENSE COUNSEL: Objection. Relevance.

TRIAL COURT: You have a response to that?

PROSECUTOR: I believe the relevance is to how his addiction is the causation for his committing this crime. Inquiring about this addiction is very relevant.

TRIAL COURT: Overruled.

Q. And are there some addictions to the pain medications?
A. Yes, sir, there is.

Q. And as a result of the addictions did they in turn cause you then to commit various crimes?

A. No, sir, they did not.

Q. Were you required—was it necessary for you to go through some rehabilitation to resolve the addictions?

A. I went through counseling with my doctor over the addiction. The addiction that I was—was primarily on IV pain medication, which was I believe somewhat stronger than some of the stuff that he was on.

Q. So, the addictions you suffered from were from the pain medications when you were actually hospitalized for the Crohn’s.

A. Both hospitalized and when I would go home I was still on them. I was bed ridden at home.

Q. And during the course of your disease and the study of your disease, are you familiar were other folks, some of the other studies that involve people with Crohn’s Disease?

5 A. Yes, sir, I am.

Q.

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