Miguel Gonzales v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 31, 2018
Docket04-17-00263-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Miguel Gonzales v. State (Miguel Gonzales 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
Miguel Gonzales v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Fourth Court of Appeals San Antonio, Texas MEMORANDUM OPINION

No. 04-17-00263-CR

Miguel GONZALES, Appellant

v.

The STATE of Texas, Appellee

From the 175th Judicial District Court, Bexar County, Texas Trial Court No. 2016CR0046 Honorable Catherine Torres-Stahl, Judge Presiding

Opinion by: Rebeca C. Martinez, Justice

Sitting: Rebeca C. Martinez, Justice Patricia O. Alvarez, Justice Luz Elena D. Chapa, Justice

Delivered and Filed: October 31, 2018

AFFIRMED

Miguel Gonzales appeals his convictions for aggravated robbery and aggravated

kidnapping, arguing the evidence is insufficient to support the convictions, the trial court erred in

admitting his photograph from the photo lineup, and the State failed to disclose exculpatory

evidence. We overrule Gonzales’s issues and affirm the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

David Escobedo testified that he had been working in San Antonio and Austin during the

three months before the aggravated robbery and kidnapping, and he had saved $3,600 which he 04-17-00263-CR

planned to send to his family in Mexico. When his job at the Travel Inn in San Antonio ended,

Escobedo needed a place to stay while he looked for a new job and an apartment. An acquaintance,

Gonzales, offered to let Escobedo sleep on the couch at his two-bedroom apartment where he lived

with his wife and two children. During the one to two-week period he stayed with Gonzales,

Escobedo stated he twice gave Gonzales money to help with the rent and also bought food.

Escobedo testified he took the money out of his wallet in front of Gonzales, and gave him $100

both times.

Escobedo testified that, at about 7:00 a.m. on June 3, 2015, he was lying on the couch in

the living room when he saw Gonzales go to the front door and let a man into the apartment.

Escobedo testified that Gonzales and the unknown man began attacking him, hitting him in the

head and face with a gun and with their fists. They moved Escobedo off the couch and made him

kneel down next to it. Escobedo stated that Gonzales handcuffed his hands behind his back “while

they were hitting me.” Escobedo stated that his face was bleeding and they covered him “with a

cloth over [his] head” when they placed him on his knees with his “head in the sofa face down.”

On cross-examination, Escobedo clarified the cloth was over his head, not over his eyes or face.

The men searched the pockets of Escobedo’s clothing and the two garbage bags containing his

clothes. Escobedo believed they were “looking for money.” Escobedo stated that he had $400 in

his wallet on his person and the rest of the money was hidden inside his clothing and the bags.

Escobedo testified that Gonzales and the other man found his money, but they wanted

more. Gonzales used his cell phone to call “Simon,” a person that both Escobedo and Gonzales

knew. Gonzales took the rag off Escobedo’s head and instructed him to ask Simon for “$2,000 as

a loan.” Escobedo testified, “I had to do it . . . because they were pointing the gun at me.” On

cross-examination, Escobedo specified that it was Gonzales who was holding the gun on him at

that time, but he and the other man would pass the gun back and forth. Escobedo explained that

-2- 04-17-00263-CR

he could see the bullets and hear them chambering the gun, stating, “they would chamber it around.

They would look at the bullets and they would reload it again.” Simon replied that he did not have

the money. Escobedo testified that Gonzales told him “they were going to kill me and they were

going to throw me away.” Escobedo stated he begged them to let him go and promised he would

return to Mexico. Escobedo testified that Gonzales’s wife Leslie and the children were in the

bedrooms and he called out for help, but no one came to help him.

Escobedo testified that he was then taken out of the apartment, along with his bags of

clothing. Escobedo stated he did not want to go with them and just wanted them to let him go.

One of the men hung an orange construction vest over his shoulders to cover the handcuffs while

the other man went to get the truck; Escobedo could not recall which task Gonzales performed.

Before taking Escobedo outside the apartment, they used the cloth to clean up Escobedo’s face

“[b]ecause my nose was busted and the eyebrow and my lips, the mouth.” As Escobedo walked

out of the apartment, the man with him pressed the gun against his back underneath the vest and

told him not to shout or try to run. Escobedo stated there were people around outside the apartment

and he made some gestures “that something was going on” but no one did anything. Gonzales

drove the truck and Escobedo sat in the front seat, while the other man was “placing the gun in my

stomach in the back part” from the back. Escobedo testified they told him “we were going to go

look for Simon.” Escobedo recalled that they placed the cloth over his head again while they were

driving in the truck. Escobedo testified he could tell they stopped at the Travel Inn because he

saw the sign. He stayed inside the truck in the parking lot. His handcuffs were removed there, but

the other man kept the gun pointed to his back. Gonzales then drove to Simon’s apartment and

Gonzales told Escobedo they were going to rob Simon. Escobedo testified that when he got out

of the truck at Simon’s apartment, “they were still pointing the gun at me. And I didn’t want to -

- I didn’t want to keep on walking because I felt they were going to shoot at me at any moment.”

-3- 04-17-00263-CR

Escobedo walked toward the apartment complex as Gonzales and the other man remained inside

the truck and watched him. Escobedo stated he ran into a downstairs apartment where the door

was open and maintenance was being performed. He ran through and jumped out a back window.

Escobedo then ran upstairs to Simon’s apartment, where he knocked, and asked Simon to come

outside. Escobedo told Simon to get out of the apartment because he was in danger of being

robbed. Simon had four or five friends visiting at his apartment. When Gonzales saw all the

people there at Simon’s apartment, he drove away with the other man in the truck.

Escobedo asked Simon to take him to the doctor, which he did but the doctor was not in at

that time. Because he was still afraid, Escobedo asked Simon to drive him to Austin. Escobedo

testified that while he and Simon were driving to Austin, Gonzales called Escobedo and warned

him not to say anything to the police or “he was going to look for me.” Simon dropped Escobedo

off at a pharmacy in Austin and gave him $20 so he could buy bandages and medical supplies.

Escobedo then walked to his friend Jose’s house nearby. When he learned what had happened to

Escobedo, Jose called the Austin Police Department, but they referred the call to the San Antonio

Police Department. Escobedo was informed he would have to return to San Antonio to make a

report. The police instructed Escobedo to take photos of his injuries at that time, and informed

him they would take additional photos when he came in to the police station. Escobedo returned

to San Antonio and made a police report naming Gonzales and providing his address; he did not

know the other man and could only provide a general description. Escobedo later identified

Gonzales from a photo lineup at the San Antonio Police Department. Gonzales was subsequently

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