Jose Alonzo v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 4, 2012
Docket13-09-00395-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jose Alonzo v. State (Jose Alonzo 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
Jose Alonzo v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-09-00395-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

JOSE ALONZO, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the Criminal District Court of Jefferson County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION ON REMAND

Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Rodriguez and Garza Memorandum Opinion on Remand by Chief Justice Valdez

A jury convicted appellant, Jose Alonzo, of manslaughter. On original

submission, we affirmed the conviction, concluding that self-defense does not apply to

the offense of manslaughter. Alonzo v. State, 328 S.W.3d 19, 27 (Tex. App.—Corpus

Christi 2010, pet. granted), rev’d 353 S.W.3d 778, 783 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011). The

court of criminal appeals disagreed and remanded the case to us for a harm analysis.

Alonzo, 353 S.W.3d at 782. We reverse and remand. I. BACKGROUND

After the jury began its deliberations, it sent a note to the trial court asking

whether self-defense applied to the offense of manslaughter. The trial court responded

that self-defense only applied to the offense of murder. This Court agreed with the trial

court and held that when a person’s acts are reckless, he is not entitled to an instruction

on self-defense. Alonzo, 328 S.W.3d at 27. The court of criminal appeals disagreed

and found the trial court’s instruction erroneous. Alonzo, 353 S.W.3d at 782. We will

now determine whether Alonzo suffered harm from the trial court’s erroneous

instruction.

II. THE EVIDENCE

In our original opinion, we described the evidence as follows:

On June 30, 2006, an altercation arose between Alonzo and Victor Rocha, two “close custody” inmates imprisoned in Building 8, K-pod, Section 2 of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Institutional Division’s Stiles Unit located in Jefferson County, Texas. During the incident, Rocha sustained injuries and died of a stab wound to the chest.

....

Officer Roger Whittley, the only correctional officer on duty in Section 2 at the time of the incident, testified that he released Alonzo from his cell and led him to a nearby inmate shower stall sometime around 10:00 p.m. on the night of the altercation. Officer Whittley did not perform a pat-down or a full-body search of Alonzo before releasing him from his cell, which was located on the second floor of Section 2. Without being handcuffed, Alonzo was led to and locked in an individual shower stall located on the second floor near his cell.

Officer Whittley stated that Rocha, who had been released from his cell to move to another cell, “roamed” around the three floors of Section 2 while Alonzo showered. Shortly before Alonzo was released from the shower, Rocha was seen standing in the stairwell of the second floor. After a short time, Officer Whittley released Alonzo from the shower stall. Alonzo emerged from the shower stall wearing only a pair of boxers and a towel around his neck; a full body search was not performed. Rocha moved from the stairwell and met Alonzo shortly before Alonzo reached his cell. Officer Whittley heard Alonzo and Rocha shouting in Spanish. 2 Officer Whittley then saw the two men “collide” and “wrestle each other.” On cross-examination, after viewing a surveillance video, Officer Whittley stated that Rocha appeared to have extended his arm and initiated the contact with Alonzo. As Alonzo and Rocha fought, Officer Whittley saw a “shank” made of a piece of brown metal in Alonzo’s hand. Officer Whittley did not see a “shank” in Rocha’s hand; however, he testified that at the beginning of the fight, Rocha possessed “some type of cord.”

Officer Whittley testified that the fight ended when Alonzo thrust the brown metallic “shank” towards Rocha. Alonzo and Rocha separated, and Rocha ran past Officer Whittley holding his chest and saying that he had “been hit.” Rocha then fell to the ground bleeding. Meanwhile, Alonzo returned to his cell and “demanded” that he be allowed to enter it. Officer Whittley stated that Alonzo then passed the “shank” through a cell door. Soon after, Alonzo was handcuffed and led away from the cell area. While being led away, Alonzo shouted “obscenities” in English and Spanish to Rocha. Officer Christopher Moore recalled that Alonzo yelled something to Rocha “[a]long the lines of, I hope you die, motherfucker. You get what you deserve . . . .” No brown metallic object or any type of “shank” was recovered after the altercation.

Forensic pathologist Dr. Tommy Brown, testified that he performed an autopsy examination on Rocha. Dr. Brown stated that a stab wound inflicted by a deadly weapon caused Rocha’s death. On cross- examination, Dr. Brown testified that he found no defensive wounds on Rocha’s body.

Alonzo’s cellmate, James Woolridge, testified that he heard a conversation between Alonzo and Rocha approximately a week and a half before the altercation. Woolridge stated that during the conversation, Alonzo told Rocha that Rocha was “disrespecting [Alonzo] and his gang” and “needed to pack [Rocha’s] property and move off the wing and show [Alonzo] some respect.” According to Woolridge, Alonzo indicated that he would kill Rocha if Rocha did not move to a different prison wing.

When questioned about Alonzo’s gang affiliation, Woolridge testified that Alonzo told him that he was in a “Mexico gang.” Woolridge also stated that Alonzo “often” carried a “shank.” When asked how Alonzo would carry the “shank,” Woolridge replied, “He would lift up his big-old fat belly, stick the weapon up under his belly and let his belly go and his belly would hold the weapon down.”

Woolridge stated that on the night in question, he was inside the cell that he shared with Alonzo. Woolridge did not witness the altercation; however, he stated that after the fight ended, Alonzo came to the cell door and attempted to pass him a “knife.” Woolridge testified that Alonzo requested that he “tear it up, destroy it, and flush it down the toilet.” Woolridge testified that he refused to comply with Alonzo’s request. 3 Woolridge stated that the “shank” that he had “often” seen Alonzo carry could have caused Rocha’s fatal wound.

Rocha’s cellmate, Michael Martinez, also testified. Martinez testified that he and Rocha were members of the “Mexican Mafia” gang. Martinez stated that Alonzo was a member of a gang known as the “Partidos Revolucionarios de Mexicles” (“PRM”). According to Martinez, Rocha was involved in an altercation with a PRM member a “couple of days” before Rocha’s fight with Alonzo. Martinez claimed that Alonzo and Alonzo’s friend and fellow PRM member, Armando Alvarado, indicated that they planned to kill Rocha. Martinez testified that after learning this information, he feared for Rocha and gave Rocha a “shank” made of a sharpened eight-to-ten-inch piece of chainlink fence. After viewing a photograph of Rocha’s fatal stab wound, Martinez stated that the size and shape of the “shank” that he gave to Rocha was not consistent with the wound.

Ricky Davis, an inmate housed in the same building as Alonzo on the night in question, testified that he witnessed the altercation between Alonzo and Rocha after being awakened by the commotion outside of his cell. Davis stated that he did not see the beginning or the end of the fight. However, after he woke up, Davis looked out of his cell’s window and saw Alonzo and Rocha “fighting” and “wrestling.” Davis saw Alonzo try to wrest a “shank” out of Rocha’s hand and saw Rocha “whoop” Alonzo with a cable.

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