Mendoza, Moises Sandoval

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 5, 2008
DocketAP-75,213
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Mendoza, Moises Sandoval, (Tex. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS NO. AP-75,213

MOISES SANDOVAL MENDOZA, Appellant

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

ON DIRECT APPEAL FROM CAUSE NO. 401-80728-04 IN THE 401ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COLLIN COUNTY

K ELLER, P.J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which M EYERS, W OMACK, K EASLER, H ERVEY, H OLCOMB, and C OCHRAN, JJ., joined. P RICE and J OHNSON, JJ., concurred.

In June 2005, appellant was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death.1 Direct

appeal to this Court is automatic.2 Appellant raises eighty-one points of error. Finding no reversible

error, we affirm the conviction and sentence.

1 T EX . PENAL CODE §19.03(a); TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 37.071. Unless otherwise indicated, all references to articles refer to the Code of Criminal Procedure. 2 Art. 37.071, §2(h). MENDOZA – 2

I. BACKGROUND

Sometime after 9:00 p.m. on Wednesday, March 17, 2004, Rachelle Tolleson and her mother

Pam O’Neil went to the store to purchase formula and diapers for Tolleson’s five-month-old

daughter, Avery. Tolleson and Avery visited at the O’Neil home for a short time after returning from

the store, but Tolleson did not feel well, had taken medication for a sinus headache, and wanted to

be in her own home. Around 10:00 p.m., Tolleson phoned the O’Neils to let them know that she and

Avery had arrived home.

Around the same time that evening, Efren Gamez, appellant, and several friends were having

a party. Gamez, appellant, and two young women had purchased two thirty-packs of beer and two

forty-ounce cans of beer earlier in the evening. At some point, the women left the party and later

called to let Gamez and appellant know that they were not returning. Appellant became angry, and

as he drank more beer, he became more belligerent. Eventually, appellant said something to two

other girls at the party that scared them. Appellant told Gamez that he spoke to the girls in that

manner “because he could.” Appellant left the party and returned several times, finally leaving for

the last time between midnight and 1:00 a.m.

The following morning, O’Neil went to Tolleson’s home as she often did. Although her car

was parked in the driveway, Tolleson was not there. A note from the landlord was taped to the

screen door, but the wooden back door stood wide open. O’Neil entered the house and noticed that

a pillow had been left on the floor between the kitchen and the bedroom. The bedroom was a mess.

Papers were strewn across the floor, the night stand was pulled away from the wall, the mattress and

box spring were askew, and the headboard was broken and lying against the bed. Avery was on the

bed, cold, wet, and alone in the house. MENDOZA – 3

Alarmed, O’Neil collected Avery and called her husband, who contacted the police. Officer

Scott Collins of the Farmersville Police Department responded. Collins confirmed O’Neil’s

description of the bedroom – things were thrown everywhere and furniture was out of place. To

Collins, it looked as though there had been a fight, or a tornado, in the bedroom. The rest of the

house was orderly, and there were no signs of a forced entry.

Farmersville police began interviewing potential witnesses that day. They learned that, on

the Friday before her disappearance, Tolleson hosted a party for about fifteen people, including

appellant. During the party, Tolleson spoke with appellant a few times but told her best friend

Megan Kennedy that she wasn’t interested in appellant in “that way.”

Police also learned that, on the Saturday before Tolleson’s disappearance, Kennedy’s

boyfriend Tim Holland returned to Tolleson’s home with appellant and Cody Wiltbanks to retrieve

his musical instruments, but Tolleson wasn’t home, and the doors were locked. While Holland and

Wiltbanks went around the house looking for a way in, appellant managed to open the locked back

door. After learning this, Collins interviewed appellant, who told Collins that he had last seen

Tolleson at the party. Collins noted that appellant could not sit still and seemed very nervous.

Search parties were organized to look for Tolleson but were unsuccessful. Six days after

Tolleson disappeared, James Powell was hunting for arrowheads near Brushy Creek, east of

Farmersville. Walking along the creek, he came across a body that had been burned and was lying

face down. Through the use of dental records, the body was eventually identified as Tolleson’s.

Jerry Farmer, an FBI evidence technician who was one of the first on the scene, noted that

tall vegetation had been piled on top of Tolleson’s body in an attempt to cover it. Her body was

badly burned and had begun to decompose. Fly eggs and maggot activity around her head and neck MENDOZA – 4

indicated that she had been there for at least two days. Her skin was charred black in places and

seared yellow in others where her flesh had split apart. Most of her hair had been burned away.

Scraps of burned clothing clung to her upper torso, but no clothing was found below her waist.

An orange rope was tied around Tolleson’s right ankle, and two grommets from a tarp were

lying on the back of her left leg and head. Burnt pieces of tarp and skin were found on a path leading

to Tolleson’s body, indicating that she had been dragged or carried to that spot. A short distance

from where the body was discovered, steps led to a dugout under a tall tree where investigators found

evidence that something had been burned. Evidence technicians found ashes, firewood, a clump of

hair, pieces of tarp and skin, and orange rope like that found tied around Tolleson’s ankle.

Dr. William Rohr, the medical examiner, testified that Tolleson had sustained a five-inch

diameter bruise on her left knee, a smaller bruise on the front of her left thigh, bruises on either side

of her tongue, a large amount of hemorrhage deep in her left shoulder, and several bruises on her

scalp ranging in diameter from three quarters of an inch to three inches. A deep wound, consistent

with injury from a knife, penetrated her neck all the way to her spinal column, and her body had been

burned post-mortem. Rohr determined that Tolleson’s death was consistent with strangulation or

another form of asphyxiation.

After further interviews with potential witnesses, police obtained an arrest warrant for

appellant. Once in custody, appellant told police that, late Wednesday evening, he had driven by

Tolleson’s house and had seen a light on. He backed his truck into the driveway and let himself into

the house through the back door without knocking. According to appellant, Tolleson left with him

to get a pack of cigarettes. Appellant drove “for a little” and then “for no reason” started to choke

Tolleson. Tolleson passed out, and appellant drove to a field behind his home, where he had sexual MENDOZA – 5

intercourse with Tolleson and “choked her again.” Appellant then dragged Tolleson out of the truck

and into the field, where he choked her until he thought she was dead. To “make sure,” he “poked

her throat” with a knife. Appellant left Tolleson’s body in the field until Monday, after he was first

interviewed by police. Scared that Tolleson’s body would be found and tied to him, appellant moved

the body to a remote area and burned it, ultimately dragging it to where it was found.

II. SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE

A. Guilt - Underlying Offenses

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