Jose Esparza v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 23, 2010
Docket08-08-00304-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jose Esparza v. State (Jose Esparza 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 Esparza v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

JOSE ESPARZA, § No. 08-08-00304-CR Appellant, § Appeal from the v. § 384th District Court THE STATE OF TEXAS, § of El Paso County, Texas Appellee. § (TC# 20060D05258) §

OPINION

Jose Esparza, Appellant, appeals his conviction for capital murder and attempted murder,

asserting that he was denied his Fifth Amendment and Sixth Amendment right to counsel and that

his confession was involuntarily made due to coercion. For these reasons, Appellant complains that

the trial court improperly admitted his custodial statement into evidence at trial. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

In a two-count indictment, Appellant was charged with capital murder (Count I) and

attempted capital murder (Count II). After pleading not guilty, a jury found Appellant guilty of

capital murder (Count I) and attempted murder (Count II), a lesser-included offense. The trial court

sentenced Appellant to an automatic life sentence for his capital murder conviction as the State did

not seek the death penalty. TEX . PENAL CODE ANN . § 12.31(a)(2) (Vernon Supp. 2009). For his

attempted-murder conviction, the trial court sentenced Appellant to twenty years’ confinement. TEX .

PENAL CODE ANN . § 12.32(a) (Vernon Supp. 2009).

Before the commencement of trial, Appellant filed a motion to suppress evidence, including

his video-recorded oral statement to police, and asserted that the statement was obtained as the result of an illegal detention, arrest, and search of Appellant in violation of his constitutional rights and

articles 1.06 and 38.23 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure.

The trial court heard and considered the following evidence in two pretrial hearings, a final

oral argument, and at trial as Appellant sought to suppress the video recording in which Appellant

made his custodial confession.

On Friday evening, August 25, 2006, Ruben Munoz and Maria Porras went to an El Paso

nightclub to celebrate a friend’s birthday, and they later left the nightclub at approximately 2 a.m.

on Saturday, August 26, 2006, in a white van. Munoz stopped at a convenience store to use the

restroom but it was not in working order. As his residence was nearby, Munoz pulled into the

alleyway behind his home and exited the vehicle while Porras waited in the front passenger seat of

the van. The last thing Munoz remembered of that evening was using the restroom in the alleyway.

At about 8:20 a.m. that same morning, Munoz was found badly beaten, but alive. However,

Maria Porras and the white van were missing. Detective Jesus Pantoja, Jr. and other El Paso Police

Department officers began interviewing Munoz’s family members and his nightclub companions.

The van was later found in a nearby alleyway and was processed for blood and fingerprints. Several

of the fingerprints from the van and another found on a lug wrench discovered inside the van

matched Appellant’s known prints, and Detective Pantoja was notified of the fingerprint match at

approximately 11 p.m. that evening.

Several hours later, at approximately 2 a.m. on Sunday, August 27, 2006, El Paso Police

officers approached Appellant’s residence to execute a warrant for his arrest for the aggravated

robbery of Munoz. While other officers were approaching the front door of the residence, another

officer observed the mostly nude and deceased body of Maria Porras in Appellant’s backyard.

Appellant was arrested and, except for the two youngest children, everyone in the home, including Appellant’s wife, Patricia, and members of her family, were transported to the police station in police

vehicles while officers secured the residence for further investigation.

At approximately 2:35 a.m., Detectives Pantoja and Yvette Nevarez, took Appellant to an

interview room at the police station and asked Appellant to read aloud a Miranda warning card.

Appellant complied and when asked by Detective Pantoja if he understood his rights, Appellant

stated that he did, and then signed the card, marking it with the date and time. According to both

Detective Pantoja and Detective Nevarez, Appellant did not invoke any of his rights, never asked

for an attorney, and spoke with the detectives for approximately one and one-half hours, until close

to 4 a.m. During this first interview, Appellant denied being involved in the crimes.

At the end of the first interview, the detectives left Appellant in the interview room but cuffed

Appellant’s left hand to the chair while they proceeded to do follow-up work and awaited the results

of an ongoing interview between another detective and Appellant’s wife, Patricia. At some point,

Detective Pantoja informed Appellant that officers were speaking with Patricia. Detective Pantoja

periodically checked on Appellant during this time and during one of those checks, at approximately

4:40 a.m., Appellant asked to speak with Patricia and stated he would thereafter tell Detective

Pantoja what had happened. Detective Pantoja informed Patricia that Appellant wished to speak

with her, and she agreed to meet with him. Detective Pantoja stated that he moved Appellant to

another interview room and then escorted Patricia to the room but never gave her any instructions.

Police monitored and made a video recording of the 23 minute discussion between Appellant and

Patricia, but never told either of them that a recording would be made. The recording is devoid of

any statement or indication by Patricia that she was ever asked by any law enforcement officer to

have Appellant give a statement explaining what happened or how Appellant may have been

involved in the offenses. At the conclusion of Appellant’s conversation with Patricia, and while the video recording

was continuing, Detectives Pantoja and Nevarez escorted Patricia from the room, and a few minutes

later, at approximately 8:13 a.m., commenced a second interview with Appellant. Appellant again

read his rights aloud from the Miranda warning card he had signed earlier and informed Detective

Pantoja that he understood his rights. Over the course of the next 40 minutes, Appellant answered

the detectives’ questions and described the manner in which he had encountered and attacked Munoz

and Porras. Appellant never asked for an attorney and never asked that the interview cease. At 8:53

a.m., as the second interview concluded, Appellant asked to see Patricia and the detectives brought

her in to see Appellant.

Along with that of other witnesses, the trial court also heard and considered testimony from

Patricia, her brother, and Appellant. During the first suppression hearing, Patricia testified that

Detective Pantoja told her that Appellant did not want to tell them what had happened and had asked

her “to see if [Appellant] would be able to give [her] any information since [she is] his wife.” She

testified that she spoke with Appellant because she understood that she was not otherwise going to

“get [her] home back,” where her parents, younger sister and brother, and brother-in-law lived. On

cross-examination, Patricia stated that she was left with the impression that she would not get the

home back because Appellant had not cooperated in providing any information about what had

happened and, since her family had been removed from the home, it seemed that they would not be

able to return home if Appellant did not say anything. Patricia testified that she knew that a body

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