Jose Luis Bazan v. State

403 S.W.3d 8, 2012 WL 5285672, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 8896
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 25, 2012
Docket01-10-01049-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 403 S.W.3d 8 (Jose Luis Bazan 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 Luis Bazan v. State, 403 S.W.3d 8, 2012 WL 5285672, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 8896 (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

JANE BLAND, Justice.

A jury found Jose Luis Bazan guilty of the first-degree felony offense of aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon. After finding true the allegation in the enhancement paragraph — that Bazan previously had been convicted of felony robbery — the jury assessed his punishment at life imprisonment. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 29.03 (West 2011). Following his conviction, Bazan discharged his trial counsel and retained new counsel, who moved for a new trial, contending that trial counsel was ineffective because he failed to investigate and subpoena witnesses to testify on Ba-zan’s behalf during the punishment phase of the trial. After a hearing, the trial court found that Bazan did not show that he was prejudiced by any failing of trial counsel; thus, it denied Bazan’s request for a new trial.

Bazan appeals, contending that the trial court abused its discretion in denying his *10 motion for a new trial. We hold that it did not, and we therefore affirm.

Background

In February 2010, Irma Solis was walking with her daughter outside their home when she noticed that someone had broken into her husband’s truck. She walked inside the house to tell her husband about the incident. Irma returned outside with her daughter. A man, later identified as Jose Bazan, confronted them with a pointed shotgun and directed them back into their house. At Bazan’s order, the Solis family searched each room in their house for valuables and turned them over to Bazan. Bazan then ordered Antonio Solis back outside. He demanded that Solis help him load the stolen items into Solis’s truck. Bazan also loaded the truck. As Bazan loaded the truck, his attention strayed from his efforts to hold the family at gunpoint, which presented an opening for Solis. Solis grabbed the shotgun and turned it on Bazan, then hit him, tied him up, and called the police.

Punishment phase

During the punishment phase of the trial, the State introduced testimony that, while the police transported him to the central jail, Bazan had threatened that he would take the lives of Solis and his family. The State introduced evidence that Bazan previously had been convicted of aggravated robbery. Bazan also had been convicted of burglary of a building with intent to commit theft (twice), and of attempted deadly conduct.

Bazan committed a second aggravated robbery the night before he robbed the Solis family. The State elicited testimony about this extraneous offense. Lexie Turner and Justin Brewer testified that Bazan and an unidentified accomplice broke into Brewer’s business, shot each of them multiple times, and stole money from Brewer’s safe. Turner and Brewer each sustained shotgun wounds to the torso, back, and groin.

Finally, the State introduced testimony from Bazan’s ex-girlfriend, Bethany Spell. She testified that, in March 2007 when she was eight weeks pregnant, Bazan had held her at knifepoint during an altercation. He grabbed her ponytail and slammed her head against the kitchen floor. Bazan fought with her about the pregnancy, because he did not want to have anything to do with the baby.

Bazan chose to testify in his defense against counsel’s advice. Bazan informed the trial court that it was his desire to testify. Bazan confirmed on the record that his trial counsel had discussed the risks associated with Bazan’s testifying. Bazan also confirmed on the record that he did not want his mother to testify on his behalf during the punishment phase.

In his testimony, Bazan told the jury that he had approached the Solises’ house after the Brewer robbery. The night of the Brewer robbery, he had been shooting heroin, and had agreed to participate in a murder for hire in exchange for $20,000 and drugs. Bazan testified that the murder-for-hire scheme required him to go to Brewer’s business, brandish a shotgun, and create “chaos” while an accomplice killed the intended target. In furtherance of this plan, Bazan accompanied a friend to the business carrying guns, including “two AKs.” Bazan told the jury that all did not go according to the plan, because neither he nor his accomplice had killed anyone that evening.

Bazan testified that he had considered killing Antonio Solis during the robbery, but he decided he would not. Trial counsel asked Bazan if he understood that he could be sentenced anywhere from fifteen years’ confinement to life in prison for the *11 Solis robbery. Bazan replied, ‘Tes. I mean, I’ve been locked up, you know — my whole life. You can give me life. You can give me a life sentence.”

On cross-examination, Bazan testified that he had shot Lexie Turner with a shotgun during the Brewer robbery, and was paid to “make sure [the] shotgun was fired and make sure that it was secured in case they had guns, and we had other guns in case they did.” The State asked Bazan whether he knew that if Turner had died he would have faced a capital murder charge. Bazan replied, “I’m going to do what I have to do.” Bazan also conceded that he previously had been convicted of felony aggravated robbery after he broke into an apartment and held two women at knifepoint in order to steal a kilogram of cocaine from them.

Trial counsel offered Bazan’s medical records into evidence. Those records included a diagnosis that Bazan was alcohol and opiate dependent, and that doctors had ordered medical treatment for withdrawal symptoms.

Trial counsel called no further witnesses to testify on Bazan’s behalf during the punishment phase. In closing arguments, Bazan’s counsel asked for leniency, requesting that the jury consider Bazan’s drug dependency and difficult life circumstances as mitigating factors. Counsel asked the jury to assess no more than thirty years’ confinement.

Hearing on the motion for new trial

At the motion for new trial hearing, trial counsel testified that he had considered offering the testimony of Bazan’s mother— who was present throughout the trial— during the punishment phase, but abandoned that plan after Bazan specifically instructed that she not testify. Trial counsel also testified that he had retained a private investigator on Bazan’s behalf; that investigator had located Bazan’s medical records, had interviewed witnesses, and had obtained information about two possible witnesses to testify during the punishment phase — Bazan’s mother and a girlfriend. Trial counsel spoke with Bazan’s mother a few days before the trial.

Bazan produced affidavits from twelve witnesses, including his mother, who generally averred that they would have testified that Bazan is a good person, a responsible and good father to his son, and one witness noted that Bazan suffered from a broken home and “sense[d] that [he] has some kind of learning disability.”

At the motion for new trial hearing, Bazan also introduced live testimony from four witnesses: his mother, a pastor, and his son’s mother and step-father. Bazan’s mother stated that her calls to trial counsel went unreturned. But she acknowledged that when trial counsel spoke -with her a few days before trial, she told him that she was unsure of her testimony. She confirmed that she was present throughout the trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
403 S.W.3d 8, 2012 WL 5285672, 2012 Tex. App. LEXIS 8896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jose-luis-bazan-v-state-texapp-2012.