Medina, Hector Rolando

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 12, 2011
DocketAP-76,036
StatusPublished

This text of Medina, Hector Rolando (Medina, Hector Rolando) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Medina, Hector Rolando, (Tex. 2011).

Opinion

Death Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS

OF TEXAS



AP-76,036
Hector Rolando Medina, Appellant


v.



The State of Texas



Direct Appeal from Case F07-32923-S of the

282nd Judicial District Court of

Dallas County

Womack, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Keller, P.J., and Meyers, Price, Keasler, Hervey and Cochran, JJ., joined. Johnson, J., filed a dissenting opinion.

After hearing uncontested evidence that Hector Medina killed his two children and then shot himself in the neck, a jury convicted him of capital murder in September 2008. The trial court sentenced the appellant to death pursuant to the jury's answers to future-dangerousness and mitigation special issues. (1) The appellant now raises fifty-three points of error on direct appeal to this Court. (2) Finding no reversible error, we shall affirm the judgment and sentence of the trial court.

I. Batson Complaints

In his first eight points of error, the appellant argues that the prosecution struck seven venire members because of their race, in violation of the equal protection guarantees in the 14th Amendment to the Federal Constitution. (3)

A. Standard of Review

The three steps of a Batson hearing are well-known. First, the opponent of a peremptory strike must make out a prima facie case of racial discrimination. Second, the burden of production shifts to the proponent of the strike to come forward with a race-neutral explanation. Third, the trial court determines whether the opponent of the strike has proved purposeful racial discrimination. The burden of persuasion rests with, and never shifts from, the opponent of the strike. (4)

The determination of whether the proponent's explanation is a pretext "is solely a question of fact; there is no issue of law." (5) Because the trial court's fact finding will be based on factors not evident in the record, such as the lawyers' courtroom demeanor and credibility, a reviewing court will give great deference to the fact finding and reverse only if the finding was clearly erroneous. (6)

B. Appellant's Claims

The appellant objected to the prosecution's use of its peremptory challenges on seven venire members. The trial court held a single Batson hearing for all seven claims. For six venire members, the trial court found a prima facie case of discrimination, but then found the State's race-neutral reasons believable. For the one remaining venire member, who the State and trial court did not believe was a member of a racial or ethnic minority, the trial court overruled the defense objection without requiring the prosecutor to give a race-neutral reason.

For the strikes of venire members Jordon, Munoz, Syed, Youngblood, and Santos, the appellant presents no rebuttal to the prosecution's race-neutral reasons. Jordan was 24 years old, and the state did not believe she had sufficient life experience to be a good juror on a death penalty case. (7) Venire member Munoz stated on his questionnaire that he would never return a verdict that assessed the death penalty. (8)

Venire member Syed expressed hostility to the death penalty in his questionnaire and during voir dire, and had attended anti-death-penalty concerts. Venire member Youngblood was uncertain whether killing a child under age six should be a capital offense. Venire member Santos gave questionnaire answers expressing negative views of the death penalty and said that her religious beliefs taught her that the death penalty was wrong.

We have identified a number of factors that may be relevant in determining whether purposeful racial discrimination has been proved. (9) The appellant has not shown us any factors to consider other than the races of the struck venire members. The appellant's observation that these five venire members were qualified to be jurors is irrelevant for the purpose of proving racial discrimination. We do not believe that the trial judge's decision on these five venire members was clearly erroneous.

A sixth venire member, Johnson, gave questionnaire answers similar to the answers of white venire members whom the State did not strike. Johnson rated his support for the death penalty as 5 out of 10 on the juror questionnaire. The State explained that it struck all panelists who gave an answer of less than 6, except for two white venire members, Jones and Riley, who answered 5. The State's race-neutral reason for differentiating among the three was that Jones and Riley seemed particularly offended by the murder of children under the age of six. In such a situation, we may look at how the State conducted its voir dire examination of the relevant panelists to see if the prosecution's stated reasons reflect the actual voir dire questioning. (10)

The State asked each of these three how he felt about the murder of a child under the age of six relative to the other types of capital murders. Johnson stated that on a 1 to 10 scale, he was a 5 in terms of general support for the death penalty, and that he would "still sit in the middle" on the particular matter of "a child killer." In contrast, Jones, who had listed himself as "a 5 or a 6" on the death penalty, declared that murdering a child was the worst type of capital murder: "I would probably have a bias around 9 or so, because I just couldn't believe it." Riley also ranked murder of a child under the age of six as the worst of the capital offenses. He went so far as to declare that he would consider the murder of a child to be worse than if he himself were murdered, because he "would be in a better position than a child" to defend himself. After examining the record, we cannot find that the trial judge's ruling on this challenge was clearly erroneous.

The seventh venire member was Greenhauf, (11) an American with dual Brazilian citizenship who was born to American missionaries in Brazil and described himself as white on the juror questionnaire. In two points of error, the appellant complains about the strike itself, and that "the trial court erred in denying appellant a hearing on his 'Batson' challenge."

The appellant says that there was not a Batson hearing regarding the Greenhauf strike. But during the hearing for all of the appellant's Batson complaints, the appellant argued that Greenhauf was struck for racial reasons. The appellant explained that Greenhauf was "a Latino" who had spent "half his life" in Brazil. When the prosecutor pointed out that Greenhauf was "a white male," the trial court responded, "Well, I think that's sufficient," and did not require the State to present a race-neutral reason for the strike.

"[A] defendant satisfies the requirements of Batson's first step by producing evidence sufficient to permit the trial judge to draw an inference that discrimination has occurred." (12)

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