Joshua Alexandro Ramon v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 19, 2007
Docket04-06-00061-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Joshua Alexandro Ramon v. State (Joshua Alexandro Ramon 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
Joshua Alexandro Ramon v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION



No. 04-06-00061-CR


Joshua RAMON,
Appellant


v.


The STATE of Texas,
Appellee


From the 399th Judicial District Court, Bexar County, Texas
Trial Court No. 2004-CR-4416B
Honorable Pat Priest, Judge Presiding (1)


Opinion by: Steven C. Hilbig, Justice



Sitting: Alma L. Lopez, Chief Justice

Phylis J. Speedlin, Justice

Steven C. Hilbig, Justice



Delivered and Filed: September 19, 2007



AFFIRMED

A jury convicted appellant Joshua Ramon of aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. The jury imposed a term of confinement for 7 years, 6 months on the robbery and 2 years on the assault. The trial judge ordered the sentences to run concurrently. In a single issue, appellant contends the evidence was factually insufficient to support a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt as to both charges. More specifically, appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support his identification as the actor. We affirm.

Factual and Procedural History



On April 9, 2004, Diana Macias drove to The Money Box to cash her paycheck. She was accompanied by her mother, Anita Guevara. Macias went inside to cash her check; her mother remained in the vehicle. After cashing her check, she placed the money in her purse and walked outside. As she placed her hand on the door of her vehicle, she was approached by a man who asked her for the time. After she told him the time he grabbed her by the neck, pulled her down, and tried to stab her three times with "a large kitchen knife." He grabbed her purse and ran. During the attack, Guevara was screaming. She eventually got out of the vehicle and tried to chase the attacker but Macias called her back. Macias ran back inside The Money Box and asked them to call the police. The police ultimately told Macias they had apprehended two men. An officer explained that two patrol cars would drive by and she was asked if she could identify her attacker. She testified she identified the man in the second patrol car (appellant) as her attacker. She could not identify the person in the back of the first patrol car. After that, she and her mother went to the police station where they gave statements and again identified appellant as the attacker. During trial, Macias identified appellant as the robber stating, "There is no doubt in my mind."

Guevara confirmed that on April 9, 2004, she went with her daughter, Macias, to The Money Box. She testified that just as Macias was about to get into the vehicle after cashing her check, a man approached her. According to Guevara, the man grabbed Macias by the neck, grabbed her purse, and began trying to stab her. The man had "a large knife" in his hand. Guevara was in the vehicle when the attack on her daughter began. Guevara got out of the truck and ran toward her daughter and the attacker, screaming at her daughter to "let go of the purse." The robber ran away after he obtained the purse. Macias and Guevara went inside The Money Box to call the police. Guevara was able to identify her daughter's attacker as one of the men in the patrol cars. At the police station later that same day, she identified appellant as the attacker. She also identified appellant in court.

Gustavo Menchaca testified he worked at the Wheel & Tire Outlet located in the same shopping center as The Money Box. The day Macias was attacked he was waiting outside in his vehicle for his manager to open the store. While he was waiting, he saw a green vehicle with a dragon on the door. Menchaca noticed someone sitting on the driver's side but no one on the passenger side. At the same time he noticed a man inside The Money Box who came out and ran toward the green vehicle. That same man then ran back towards The Money Box. Menchaca then noticed a struggle in his rearview mirror and "heard the lady screaming." The man involved in the struggle was the same man he had seen inside The Money Box and he was trying to take Macias's purse. Menchaca stepped out of his vehicle and approached the attacker who was walking away with the purse. Menchaca backed off when the attacker displayed the knife, pointed it in Menchaca's direction, and while gesturing with the knife said, "Don't even try it." Menchaca testified he thought the attacker was going to try to "stab [him] or something" and he was concerned for his safety. The attacker was no more than three or four feet away from Menchaca during the confrontation. Menchaca backed off and the attacker then ran towards and entered the green car. The attacker and the other man sped off in the green car. Menchaca and his cousin, who also worked at the Wheel & Tire Outlet, followed the green vehicle in the cousin's car, a white vehicle. They were followed by a person in a red vehicle who had also witnessed the robbery and decided to chase the suspect. Menchaca saw the green vehicle park in front of a house. They drove past the green vehicle and a few minutes later the police arrived. Menchaca pointed police to the green vehicle. As the officer approached the green vehicle, two men got out of the car and headed toward the back of the house. Menchaca and his cousin left the location and returned to The Money Box. Menchaca later provided a statement to police. At trial, he identified the knife and identified appellant as the man who threatened him with it.

Balcones Heights Police Officer Richard Bryan received a "robbery in progress" call from the dispatcher. He was told the robbery was at The Money Box. As he was driving toward the location he saw a white car run a stop sign "at a high rate of speed," followed by a red vehicle. Believing the vehicles might be fleeing the scene of the robbery, he advised the dispatcher that he might have a suspect vehicle. Officer Bryan turned on his emergency lights and joined the pursuit. After turning into a residential area, Officer Bryan observed that both the white and red vehicles had stopped. The people in the vehicles got out, approached Officer Bryan, and pointed out a green vehicle, which they claimed the robbery suspects were driving. The green vehicle was parked in front of a house at 214 Concord.

Officer Bryan slowly approached the vehicle "looking for any suspicious - anybody that was out trying to evade." In the backyard of 214 Concord he saw two people he believed to be the robbery suspects looking at him. Officer Bryan got out of his vehicle and began to run toward them yelling, "Stop police. Stop police." The officer lost sight of the two suspects when they ran. Officer Bryan began a foot pursuit. He could hear rustling of the bushes and trees between the back of 214 Concord and the house behind it, 217 Altgelt, and knew somebody was running back there. He ran toward the noise. When he ran around the bushes at the back of 217 Altgelt, he "met the defendant," who was running toward him. According to Officer Bryan, appellant looked "shocked" when they confronted each other. Appellant immediately threw up his hands and gave up. Officer Bryan placed appellant under arrest and began escorting him to the patrol car. At trial, Officer Bryan identified appellant as the person he encountered behind 217 Altgelt.

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Joshua Alexandro Ramon v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joshua-alexandro-ramon-v-state-texapp-2007.