Luis Alejandro Valencia v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 25, 2025
Docket01-24-00260-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Luis Alejandro Valencia v. the State of Texas (Luis Alejandro Valencia v. the State of Texas) 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
Luis Alejandro Valencia v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Opinion issued September 25, 2025

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-24-00260-CR ——————————— LUIS ALEJANDRO VALENCIA, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 182nd District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 1773149

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Rejecting his claim of self-defense, a jury found Luis Alejandro Valencia

guilty of murder and assessed punishment of fifty-five years in prison and a ten-

thousand-dollar fine. The trial court entered judgment in accordance with the jury’s verdict. Appellant appeals, claiming the trial court erred by excluding evidence of

the victim’s prior crimes and gang membership. We affirm.

Background

A. Events leading up to the altercation and shooting

In February 2022, Erik Villeda and his wife, Johanna Vega, got into an

argument. Villeda left their home and went to a club. Vega later went to the club to

find Villeda, without success. Vega met Appellant at the club and asked if he had

seen Villeda. Appellant responded that he did not know Villeda but would help find

him. Appellant gave Vega his social media contact information, and Vega returned

home.

The following morning, Appellant contacted Vega and told her Villeda was

at another club called Los Corrales. At some point, Vega and Appellant

communicated via social media, and Vega told him she was at Los Corrales. The

two arranged to meet there, with Vega sending Appellant a “pin” of her location.

Appellant drove to Los Corrales, parked his car across from and facing the

club’s entrance, and waited. Appellant sent Vega a message to let her know he had

arrived. He also flashed his headlights, which attracted the attention of Los

Corrales’s security guard, Brian Flutsch.

Flutsch approached Appellant’s car, and Appellant said he was looking for his

“girlfriend.” Appellant showed Flutsch a picture of Vega and asked if he would go

2 into Los Corrales and get her. Flutsch recognized Vega as having been at Los

Corrales that day, so he went inside to find her but was unable to do so. Flutsch

returned to Appellant’s car and said he was unable to find Vega, but Appellant could

go inside Los Corrales and look for her. Appellant declined that invitation and

remained in his car, and Flutsch went back inside the club.

B. The altercation and shooting

Flutsch returned to Appellant’s car a short time later, where Appellant was

still seated in the driver’s seat. This time, Flutsch brought Villeda with him.

According to Vega, Villeda was “very intoxicated” that day and “did look like he

was coked up,” and toxicology reports later confirmed that Villeda had consumed

both alcohol and cocaine.

There was conflicting testimony at trial about the reason Villeda came with

Flutsch to Appellant’s car. Flutsch testified that Appellant asked him to bring

Villeda; Appellant testified Villeda came of his own accord. There was also

conflicting testimony about whether Appellant and Villeda had ever met before.

Appellant’s testimony suggests he did not recognize Villeda, but Flutsch testified it

appeared Villeda recognized Appellant and “didn’t want to speak [in front of

Flutsch] because . . . it was probably personal business.” Vega testified Villeda was

“a fighter” and would “tell you he would love to fight.”

3 Flutsch testified as follows regarding the altercation and shooting. Villeda

told Appellant to step outside his car, but Appellant remained in the driver’s seat.

Appellant did not appear to want an altercation, so Flutsch told Villeda to go back

inside Los Corrales and told Appellant to leave. But the two men continued to argue.

Villeda reached inside the car and pushed and grabbed Appellant, “[s]hoving him

back and forth” and “[b]opping his head a little bit.” Villeda never choked

Appellant, and throughout this episode, Appellant was “sitting in there patiently

smiling, telling him he doesn’t want an altercation and if there was an altercation

that he would beat him up.” When Appellant reached for what Flutsch believed was

a gun, Flutsch “lunge[d]” into Appellant’s car and began struggling with him, and

Villeda also gave Appellant “like two, three punches, blows to the head.” Appellant

jumped from the driver’s seat into the passenger seat and kicked the driver’s side

door open, but Flutsch kicked it shut again, pushing Appellant back into the car. As

the struggle continued, Flutsch heard a “click sound” that he understood to mean

Appellant had a gun “ready to shoot.” Flutsch gave Appellant a shove and turned to

run back toward Los Corrales. As he began to run, Flutsch saw Villeda running “in

front of the hood of the vehicle.” Flutsch then heard between ten and fifteen shots.

After the shooting, Appellant shouted, “You thought I wasn’t going to kill you,” and

drove away.

4 Appellant described a much more aggressive altercation, as follows. Villeda

asked Appellant why he was trying to “pick up his baby mama.” Villeda was angry

and stated he was “facing 25 years to life” and had “nothing to lose.” According to

Appellant, Villeda “lunged through my window,” “hit me on my left side of my

cheek[,] went straight for my neck,” and “started choking my neck” with both hands.

Villeda was “squeezing pretty hard,” such that Appellant was “having a hard time

breathing” and “getting really dizzy.” Appellant struggled with Villeda during the

choking and was able to push him back at times, and Flutsch started pulling

Appellant’s left arm out of the car window. Appellant also noticed a third person

had approached his car, which led him to believe “it’s three people and just me.”

Appellant testified that he “feared for my life as soon as [Villeda] was choking me”

and believed Villeda was trying to kill him. Someone then tried to open the car door,

and Appellant held onto the door to prevent it from opening. When the door slightly

opened, Appellant put his legs out of the door, and someone slammed the door on

his shins. Villeda began “coming around the door,” and Appellant “reached in

between the seat and center console” and “drew a weapon.” Appellant “c[a]me out

the door,” cocked his gun, and, as Villeda was running in front of Appellant,

“unloaded all the magazine toward his direction.” Appellant was not trying to kill

Villeda but was “trying to get everybody away from me” and used the level of force

5 “immediately necessary to protect” himself. Appellant denied saying anything after

the shooting.

Soundless surveillance video from Los Corrales was admitted at trial. The

video does not show the altercation at Appellant’s car or Appellant firing the gun

because these happened outside the camera’s frame; the bottom part of the front

bumper of Appellant’s car is visible in the video and, at times, the shoes of people

standing near his car can be seen. The video shows: Appellant pull into a parking

spot across from the Los Corrales entrance at 1:36 p.m.; Flutsch walk to the car at

1:45 p.m.; Flutsch go back inside the club at 1:48 p.m. and then go back to the car

at 1:50 p.m.; Villeda exit Los Corrales shortly thereafter and speak with someone in

a car parked directly in front of the club; Flutsch get Villeda and bring him to

Appellant’s car at 1:51 p.m.; a man in a pink shirt exit the club at 1:53 p.m. and, after

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Luis Alejandro Valencia v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luis-alejandro-valencia-v-the-state-of-texas-texapp-2025.