Leopoldo Franco, Sr. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 10, 2000
Docket03-99-00794-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Leopoldo Franco, Sr. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-99-00794-CR
Leopoldo Franco, Sr., Appellant


v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BELL COUNTY, 264TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 50,108, HONORABLE C. W. DUNCAN, JR., JUDGE PRESIDING

A jury convicted appellant Leopoldo Franco, Sr. of the capital murder of his four-month-old son, Michael Franco. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.03(a)(8) (West 1994). The district court's jury charge included the lesser included offense of murder. See id. § 19.02(b). The State did not seek the death penalty, so the court assessed punishment at life imprisonment. Appellant brings four issues on appeal, attacking the sufficiency of the evidence, the jury's failure to find him guilty of the lesser included offense, and the court's allowance of testimony alleging extraneous bad acts during the guilt/innocence phase of the trial. We will affirm.

Facts

On March 15, 1999, Steven Spink, a firefighter and paramedic for the City of Belton, responded to an emergency call that an infant was not breathing. When he arrived at the apartment, he saw an infant, Michael Franco, lying on the floor and several people standing in the room. Appellant told Spink that Michael had been drinking juice in another room and had begun to choke and gag. Spink noticed Michael's airway was clear and saw bruises on Michael's head, forehead, and legs and a bite mark on his leg. At one point, appellant said, "You know, I didn't do this." Spink testified the statement was made "out of the clear blue," and not in response to a question.

Officer Bremer assisted the initial investigation. Bremer stated appellant's demeanor on the night Michael died was "quite calm, pretty cool about everything, very calm, cool and collected." Bremer stated appellant did not appear to be grief stricken or in shock. Bremer recalled seeing appellant seated on a couch with his legs propped up, conversing with family members. Appellant's demeanor struck Bremer as odd compared to behavior usually exhibited by parents whose children are seriously injured. Bremer testified that appellant's demeanor was not consistent with that of someone truly grief stricken and upset. Bremer also observed Jessica Franco, Michael's mother, and he said she appeared to be somewhat in shock, "[a] little sobbing here and there, but basically just pretty calm and cool and kept to herself." Her behavior was more consistent with Bremer's experience with people in grief or traumatic situations, but he agreed that people respond differently to grief.

Katherine Hunnicutt, a registered nurse at the emergency room, said when Michael arrived he was not breathing and had no pulse. Hunnicutt saw scratches on his nose and bruises on his forehead, cheek, and ear. Upon further examination, Hunnicutt also observed puncture marks on Michael's palm, scratches on his upper lip and the underside of his chin, swelling and bruising on his left ear, bruises on his right cheek, left thigh, and kidney area, and a bite mark on his thigh. The bruises varied in color. Hunnicutt testified that Michael's eyes showed scleral hemorrhage, meaning broken blood vessels causing redness and bleeding in the whites of his eyes.

After Michael was pronounced dead, Hunnicutt arranged for the family to sit with Michael in a private room. Hunnicutt said Jessica Franco did not respond and had to be helped into a wheelchair and brought to see him. When they entered the viewing room, appellant picked up a rocking chair and threw it across the room, which scared Hunnicutt. When Hunnicutt placed Michael in Jessica's arms, Jessica started crying and appellant then also began crying loudly, dropping to his knees. Jessica thrust the baby into Hunnicutt's arms, said, "Here, take this," and knelt down to tend to appellant. Hunnicutt said the behavior of both the parents was out of the ordinary and worried her. In particular, she was surprised by appellant's throwing the chair and by Jessica's being more concerned with appellant than with Michael; in other cases, Hunnicutt usually had to almost pry the babies away from the mothers.

Mark Brown, an investigator with child protective services, was called to investigate the situation when he learned Michael had died in his parents' custody. He went to the apartment and met with appellant and Jessica, and appellant told Brown that appellant, Jessica, and Michael had been in the bedroom most of the day, with Michael in the bassinet. The other children had been outside playing most of the day. Appellant stated that early in the evening, Jessica went to the kitchen to make dinner while he watched television in the living room. Brown testified appellant said he went to the bedroom and gave Michael a bottle of juice, propping Michael up on a pillow and "propp[ing] a bottle of juice up as well." Appellant watched television in the living room for another thirty minutes, and when he returned to the bedroom, he discovered Michael face down. Brown could not recall whether appellant said Michael was not breathing or was struggling to breathe. Appellant told Brown he tried to resuscitate Michael and told his sons to call the police.

Officer Orange was the lead investigator into Michael's death. Orange arrived at the apartment and saw several patrol officers and several family members. Orange learned that when the first officers arrived on the scene, appellant was trying to revive Michael. Orange testified that the apartment was dirty and cluttered. He said there were cockroaches and uneaten food in the kitchen, clothes on the floors of the bedrooms, blankets and clothes stuffed in the two bassinets, and a bottle of spoiled milk in one bassinet.

Orange testified he took two statements from appellant. In his first statement, given the night Michael died, appellant told Orange, "Between the hours of 6:00 a.m. till 6:50 p.m. we were in the room all day with [Michael] . . . . At between 5:30 and 6:45, [Michael] was put to bed and we . . . went to the living room. [Michael] was placed in the bassinet face up and bottle was removed prior [to] placing him into the bassinet. . . . At 7:25, [appellant] went to check on [Michael] and found [his] face face [sic] down, nose was smushed or closed." Appellant told Orange that Michael was limp and his face was discolored and that when appellant picked him up, Michael secreted clear liquid out of his nose and mouth.

Appellant's second statement, given three days later, differed from his first statement. In it, appellant stated that he, Jessica, Michael, and two of the other children had been in the bedroom all day until about 5:50 p.m., when Jessica went to cook dinner. Appellant stated Jessica decided to feed Michael before making dinner, but Michael would not eat. Jessica then gave him some juice and then put Michael down on his right side in the bassinet and placed a blanket behind him to keep him from rolling onto his back where he could choke. Appellant said he and Jessica then left the room and left the door open so they could hear if Michael woke up. Appellant stated he asked Jacob, one of his other sons, to get appellant's glass from the bedroom. When Jacob brought the glass to appellant, Jessica asked about Michael, and Jacob said he was fine.

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