Manuel Renteria v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 20, 2006
Docket01-05-00590-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Manuel Renteria v. State (Manuel Renteria 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
Manuel Renteria v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion to: SJR TGT SN TJ EVK ERA GCH LCH JB

Opinion Issued July 20, 2006




In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


NO. 01-05-00590-CR


MANUEL RENTERIA, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee


On Appeal from the 184th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1020383



O P I N I O N

          The State charged Manuel Renteria with the felony offense of engaging in organized criminal activity, for which the jury found him guilty.  After finding an enhancement paragraph true that Renteria previously had been convicted of a felony offense, the trial court sentenced Renteria to forty-five years’ imprisonment.  In two issues on appeal, Renteria contends (1) the evidence is legally insufficient to demonstrate either the individual or group mens rea required to support his conviction, and (2) the trial court erred in not requiring the State to elect one paragraph from the indictment on which to proceed.  We affirm.

Background

          In June 2002, police officers recovered an abandoned salvage vehicle from a body shop in Fort Bend County, with its Vehicle Identification Number (“VIN”) and other identifying information removed.  Sergeant Cantu, an investigator for the Motor Vehicle Theft Division of the Texas Department of Public Safety, examined the vehicle, determined its VIN, and discovered that the VIN had recently been re-registered, indicating the VIN probably had been placed on a stolen vehicle that had been sold and registered under the salvage VIN.  Cantu and his partner, Sergeant Kucifer, subsequently began investigating a series of similar vehicles, most of them late-’90s Ford or Chevrolet extended-cab step-side trucks.  Cantu and Kucifer determined that the vehicles had been purchased at salvage, whereupon their VINs and mylar federal safety stickers were removed and placed on stolen vehicles.  The altered, stolen vehicles were then sold at local flea markets.  Cantu and Kucifer visited salvage dealers and compiled lists of the individuals purchasing salvage vehicles.  Based on the recurring names on those lists, the investigators created a list of suspects and a list of “target vehicles” that had been purchased at salvage auctions by those suspects.  The VIN numbers from those target vehicles later appeared on stolen vehicles.  The officers linked the stolen vehicles sold at the flea market to the suspected auto theft ring because the vehicles bore paper license plates with the name “ZM Auto Sales.”  In addition, many of the vehicles had been registered at AAA Title Services.  The investigators ultimately determined that 137 vehicles had been stolen, altered, and sold by Renteria, Jose Nieto, Pius Opondo, Ezequil Ponce, Jose Adame (“Jose”), Angel Adame (“Angel”), Francisco Barrera, and Hugo Rodriguez, who the State tried at the same time as Renteria. 

At trial, Bernardo Zuniga testified that he purchased a 1997 Ford step-side pickup truck from Ponce at the flea market in May 2002.  The truck was stolen.  Zuniga later identified Ponce from a photo line-up and in court.  Armando Garcia testified that he purchased a 1997 extended-cab Ford truck, later determined to be stolen, from Rodriguez at the flea market.  Rene Sanchez testified that Rodriguez sold him a stolen black Ford truck at a flea market in April 2002, and that Renteria later traded a stolen Chevrolet truck for a Ford truck with Sanchez’s brother, Cerillo.  Cerillo Sanchez testified that Renteria sold him a stolen red step-side truck at the flea market in April 2002.  Police officers observed Aldo Perez at the flea market attempting to sell one of the vehicles associated with the investigation.  Alfredo Saucedo testified that he purchased an extended-cab step-side Ford truck, later determined to be stolen, that he had seen at the flea market from Renteria in March 2002.  He later traded the truck back to Renteria for another stolen truck. 

Another witness informed investigators that Nieto had sold him a stolen vehicle.  Investigators discovered a “ZM Auto Sales” tag on that vehicle.  When investigators went to Nieto’s address, they discovered another stolen vehicle for sale in the driveway.  The investigators arrested Nieto and obtained consent to search his house.  In his house, they discovered a Ford ignition switch and a registration receipt for yet another stolen vehicle.  They also discovered a driver’s license and credit card belonging to Yolanda Brignac, whose vehicle had been stolen and linked to this particular auto theft ring.  Brignac testified that her extended-cab side-step Ford truck was stolen in July 2002, and that her purse was in the truck when it was stolen.

          The State charged Filomeno Adame (“Filomeno”) with stealing four of the vehicles associated with the ring.  Filomeno had a relationship with Renteria’s daughter, and he helped Renteria sell stolen trucks.  Renteria gave him the trucks to take to the flea market, and would pay him $300 to sell the trucks.  Renteria instructed Filomeno to refer purchasers to AAA Title Services.  Filomeno also helped Renteria clean the trucks to prepare them for sale at a house on Heatherbrook.  Filomeno testified that his brother Angel lived in the house, but Angel decided to move, and Renteria offered to continue to pay the rent so Renteria could work on the trucks there.  In all, Filomeno helped Renteria sell ten trucks.  Filomeno saw Renteria remove VINs from the vehicles and replace them with different VINs.  Filomeno pled guilty to theft in April 2003. 

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