Luis Torres v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 11, 2023
Docket09-22-00269-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Luis Torres v. the State of Texas (Luis Torres 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 Torres v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-22-00269-CR __________________

LUIS TORRES, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. 20-35846 __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

On August 9, 2020, at approximately 2:25 a.m. in the morning, Beaumont

Police Officer Gabriel Fells and his partner, Officer Sheena Yarbrough, were

traveling in their patrol vehicle northbound on Highway 69. Officer Fells was

driving, and Officer Yarborough was riding in the front passenger seat. The officers

were traveling back to the police station near the end of their shift, when their police

vehicle collided with a vehicle driven by Appellant Luis Torres. Torres was driving

on the wrong side of Highway 69—a divided highway—and the accident occurred

1 in an area where the highway is four-lanes with two lanes on each side of a grassy

median. The evidence at trial showed that Torres (who was eighteen at the time of

the accident) did not have a driver’s license, he had been drinking alcohol that

evening, and he had attended one or more parties where alcohol was being served.

Torres’s blood alcohol level after the accident was .209. A grand jury indicted Torres

for intoxication manslaughter of a peace officer, and the indictment as amended

alleged that Torres’s vehicle “was a deadly weapon that in the manner of its use and

intended use was capable of causing serious bodily injury and death[.]” See Tex.

Penal Code Ann. 49.09.1 Torres pleaded “not guilty,” but the jury found him guilty

as charged in the indictment. After a hearing on punishment, the jury assessed

punishment at twenty years of confinement. On appeal, Torres lists five issues

challenging his conviction, but he groups his five stated issues into two sections in

his brief, wherein he makes two complaints—the trial court erred by not allowing

his expert witness to testify, and the evidence is insufficient. As explained herein,

we affirm.

1 Section 49.09(b-2) provides that intoxication manslaughter is a first-degree felony if the evidence at trial shows that the defendant caused the death of a peace officer while that officer was “in the actual discharge of an official duty.” See Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 49.08, 49.09(b-1)(2), (b-2). 2 Evidence at Trial

H.M. 2, a private security officer, testified that he was working the night shift

at two locations near Highway 69 in Beaumont on the night of August 9, 2020. H.M.

recalled that at about 2:25 a.m., he left one location to check on another location,

had just taken the on-ramp onto Highway 69, and upon entering the northbound

traffic lane he saw a vehicle headed toward him on the wrong side of the divided

highway. H.M. explained that he took evasive action to avoid a collision by moving

to the outside lane to avoid the oncoming car. According to H.M., the oncoming car

passed him “rather quickly.” H.M. agreed that when he gave a statement to the DPS,

he stated the other car was traveling at approximately “60 to 70 miles per hour[.]”

Officer Gabriel Fells, a patrol officer with the Beaumont Police Department,

testified that on August 9, 2020, he was on patrol with Officer Sheena Yarbrough.

According to Fells, at about 2 a.m. that night, Yarbrough remembered that she had

left her handcuffs at the Jefferson County jail on Highway 69, and the officers

returned to the jail to pick them up. While at the jail, another officer said he had

found an abandoned kitten for Yarbrough, and Yarbrough was excited to take the

kitten because she had been wanting one. After leaving the jail, Fells and Yarbrough

headed back to the Beaumont police department in downtown Beaumont to drop off

2 We use initials to refer to witnesses who are not affiliated with law enforcement, EMS, the fire department, or the hospital. 3 their police vehicle and go home. Fells was driving on Highway 69, and he thought

that all the traffic he saw coming toward him was on the other side of the highway.

Fells recalled hearing his phone ring after the collision occurred, and he recalled

listening to his voice on the 911 call from that night. Fells testified that, after the

accident, he was pinned inside the police vehicle, his right arm would not work, he

was in a lot of pain, and he could not reach Yarbrough. Fells agreed that their shift

was over at 2:30 in the morning and that the kitten was on Yarbrough’s lap “for a

little bit.” He also testified that neither he nor Yarbrough were wearing seat belts and

that is because seat belts can get caught in the gear he wears and that they need to be

able to get out of the patrol vehicle quickly. The recorded 911 call and video from

the patrol vehicle and from Fells’s body camera were admitted into evidence and

played for the jury. When Officer Fells was recalled as a witness later during the

trial, he testified that when he and Yarbrough were driving on Highway 69 back to

Beaumont, they were still on duty, still on patrol, and still enforcing their duties.

Officer Bradley Martin, a patrol officer for the Beaumont Police Department

testified that he was working the “fourth watch” with Officer Tassin on August 9,

2020, and that the fourth watch shift ends at 2:30 a.m. Martin testified that he and

Tassin were at the jail that night where he saw Officers Fells and Yarbrough and that

Yarbrough had decided to take home a stray cat that was found near the jail.

According to Martin, he and Tassin left the jail shortly after Fells and Yarbrough,

4 and they received an alert about a wreck involving an officer. According to Martin,

he and Tassin arrived at the scene at about 2:33 a.m., Fells’s police vehicle was on

the left side of the road, and the defendant’s blue Mustang was on the other side of

the highway. Martin testified that, even using tools, he was unable to open the

driver’s door of the police vehicle, and he punched through the windshield to try to

gain access to Fells and Yarborough who were inside their patrol car. Martin testified

that Yarbrough was pinned between the door and the dashboard, she was motionless,

she had a lot of trauma to her head and face, and he did not detect any pulse nor signs

of life from her. Martin also testified that it is common for police officers not to wear

a seat belt so they can get out of the vehicle quickly, and in his opinion, a seat belt

would not have helped Yarbrough.

Officer Daniel Bacciocchi testified that he responded to the crash, and

Officers Martin and Tassin were at the scene when he arrived. Officer Bacciocchi

saw that Fells’s patrol vehicle had received extensive damage and a blue Mustang

was on the other side of the road “facing the wrong way[.]” Bacciocchi testified that

someone was still inside the Mustang, that person was “injured but conscious[,]” and

he told Bacciocchi his name was Luis Torres. According to Bacciocchi, the police

responding to the wreck could not open the doors to the patrol vehicle, and the

dashboard was pushed up and had pinned Yarbrough against the door. Bacciocchi

testified that firefighters used a mechanical device to cut Yarbrough out of the

5 vehicle. Bacciocchi testified that he saw the defendant’s eyes, and they were

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