Jose Ventura Alonzo v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 3, 2008
Docket01-07-00506-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jose Ventura Alonzo v. State (Jose Ventura 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 Ventura Alonzo v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion



In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

____________



NO. 01-07-00506-CR



JOSE VENTURA ALONZO, Appellant



V.



THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee



On Appeal from the 180th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1056922



MEMORANDUM OPINION


A jury found appellant, Jose Ventura Alonzo, guilty of murder and assessed his punishment at 40 years in prison. Appellant's two points of error challenge the effectiveness of his trial counsel and the factual sufficiency of the evidence to support his murder conviction. We affirm.



Factual Background

Appellant was a friend of Juan Guzman, the murder victim, a 26-year old Honduran national who was working in the United States as a bricklayer. Guzman was shot and killed in his Houston apartment on February 7, 2006. Appellant's sister, Blanca Alonzo, learned of the homicide from appellant and was the first person to notify police of the homicide.

On the night of the murder, appellant telephoned Blanca at her home and told her that friends of Guzman's ex-girlfriend had broken into Guzman's apartment and killed him. Blanca told appellant to come to her apartment, and he drove there in Guzman's truck, arriving shortly after midnight. Appellant was visibly upset. He was displaying a black pistol that he kept placing against his head while saying that he, too, wanted to die. The pistol was jammed, however, and appellant wanted Blanca to help him "get it unstuck." Blanca had seen her brother and Guzman in possession of a rifle previously, but had never seen the pistol. Appellant eventually told Blanca to call the police and left her apartment in Guzman's vehicle. He also told Blanca that people were following him and that he was on his way to a club where he claimed the murderers had gathered.

On arriving at Blanca's apartment in response to her police summons, Houston Police Officer R. Hernandez asked Blanca to telephone appellant at his cellular telephone number, and then Hernandez spoke with appellant by telephone. Appellant told Hernandez that he was traveling south on Interstate 45. Hernandez perceived that appellant was upset and possibly weeping, and appellant told Hernandez that Guzman had killed himself. Hernandez kept trying to convince appellant to return to Blanca's apartment to speak with police there, and appellant repeatedly agreed to stop driving, but would then continue driving. Appellant eventually told Officer Hernandez that he had parked in a restaurant parking lot near Blanca's apartment, where he was waiting for police, but when officers proceeded to that location to meet appellant, they did not find him there. Hernandez attempted to reach appellant again at his cellular telephone number, but got no response.

Officer Hernandez then went with Blanca to Guzman's apartment complex, where Harris County Deputy Sheriff H. Palacios interviewed her. At trial, Blanca denied telling Palacios "at any time" that her brother admitted killing Guzman. (1) During his investigation, Deputy Palacios heard many conflicting versions of the events on the night of the murder, including that Guzman committed suicide, that he died after a break-in at his apartment, and that he died at the hands of friends of his former girlfriend, who had moved out of Guzman's apartment earlier in the evening of his death. Deputy Palacios learned another version during his first interview of Blanca on the night of the murder, when she told him that appellant admitted to her that he had killed Guzman. (2)

While Detective Palacios was interviewing Blanca, the Harris County Sheriff's Department received notice that appellant had been arrested 60-70 miles away, in El Campo. He had been driving southbound on Interstate 59 when he was stopped for reckless driving and arrested for driving without a license. While appellant was being arrested, the officers detected an odor of alcohol on his breath. They also noticed white foam coming from his mouth, and appellant admitted that he had recently ingested cocaine. Appellant had no identification, but told officers that his name was Jose Menchura, and that he had a gun, which was determined to be a .380 pistol. Police recovered a bag of cocaine and an unfired .380 caliber cartridge from appellant's pocket. Police inventory also revealed two wallets, one of which contained $260 and multiple forms of identification for Guzman and was identified at trial as belonging to Guzman. During processing, police overheard a telephone conversation in which appellant told his girlfriend that he wanted to leave the country, and that she should join him in Mexico.

Police investigation at Guzman's apartment on the night of the murder revealed that his front door was unlocked and showed no evidence of damage consistent with a forced entry. Despite contentions that Guzman committed suicide, police found no weapon at the scene and noted that Guzman's body appeared to have been moved after he was shot. Police canvassed the apartment complex, but they found no witnesses to the crime, though some neighbors heard what sounded like a gunshot. While cleaning the apartment approximately a week after the murder, Guzman's brother found a .22 caliber rifle beneath a bed.

Forensic evidence at trial showed that Guzman suffered four gunshot wounds, three of which were fatal. Two gunshot wounds were to Guzman's head. Forensic evidence established that one wound resulted from the muzzle of the gun being pressed against Guzman's skin, and that this wound would have been immediately fatal. The bullet from that wound passed through Guzman's skull and lodged in a wall, leaving spatters of blood and hair residue on the wall. Bullets recovered from that wall were matched to the .380 pistol in appellant's possession. The second head wound indicated that the gun was fired from six inches to three feet away from the victim and, at a minimum, would have rendered Guzman immediately unconscious. Guzman also suffered a fatal chest wound and a groin injury--a wound that is inconsistent with suicide according to the medical examiner, who had never known of a suicide committed in that manner. Fragments of three bullets were recovered from the body. The fragments recovered from the head were consistent in weight with, but determined not to be from, a .22 caliber bullet. The two other fragments, recovered from the chest and hip, were also consistent with .22 caliber bullets and were excluded as being .380 caliber bullets. No bullet fragments recovered from the body were linked to a specific gun, and no gunshot residue was found on appellant's hands.

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