Misael Gonzalez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 21, 2010
Docket13-07-00532-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Misael Gonzalez v. State (Misael Gonzalez 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
Misael Gonzalez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion



NUMBER 13-07-00532-CR



COURT OF APPEALS



THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS



CORPUS CHRISTI
- EDINBURG



MISAEL GONZALEZ, Appellant,



v.



THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 275th District Court

of Hidalgo County, Texas.



MEMORANDUM OPINION



Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Rodriguez and Vela

Memorandum Opinion by Justice Rodriguez

A jury found appellant Misael Gonzalez guilty of capital murder. (1) See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.03(a)(8) (Vernon Supp. 2010) (providing that a person commits capital murder if he murders an individual under six years of age). Because the State did not seek the death penalty, an automatic life sentence without the possibility of parole was imposed. See id. § 12.31(a) (Vernon Supp. 2010). By two issues, Gonzalez contends that the trial court erred (1) in admitting evidence not previously disclosed by the State in violation of a discovery order, and (2) in denying his request for a mistrial when a comment made by the prosecutor allegedly shifted the burden of proof to the defense. We affirm.

I. Background (2)

Gonzalez provided conflicting accounts of the events that occurred on January 1, 2006. In a statement given to investigators, Gonzalez said that he was alone with his five-month-old son, when the child began crying. (3) Gonzalez explained that, in an attempt to stop the crying, he dropped the child to the floor three times. After the third time, the child stopped breathing. According to his statement, Gonzalez shook the child to get him to start breathing. (4) At trial, however, Gonzalez testified that the child was in his swing inhaling but not exhaling. According to his testimony, Gonzalez picked the child up and shook him, but he did not respond. As reflected in Gonzalez's statement and in his trial testimony, Gonzalez was taking the child to get help when Yajayra Hernandez, the child's mother and Gonzalez's girlfriend, returned to the apartment, having been gone for approximately ten minutes. After Hernandez arrived at the apartment, Gonzalez, Hernandez, and Gonzalez's aunt took the child to a fire station and from there he was transported to a hospital by ambulance. Finally, both Gonzalez and Hernandez testified that the child had fallen a number of times: once, in October, from his car seat; a second time from or in the kitchen sink; and, a third time on Christmas Eve.

Vincent Vann, Jr., M.D., a physician specializing in ophthalmology and retina surgery, and Krishna Turlapati, M.D., a pediatric intensive care specialist, testified at trial. Both treated the child upon his admission to the hospital on January 1, 2006, and both concluded that the child's symptoms and their findings were consistent with Shaken Baby Syndrome. Pathologist Fulgencio Salinas, M.D., performed the autopsy on the child. He testified that the child's injuries were consistent with blunt force or impact trauma and that, based on subdural hemorrhaging of his brain, a hematoma on the right side of the brain, and three skull fractures, the cause of the child's death was Shaken Baby Impact Syndrome.

James Lukefahr, M.D., a pediatrician and medical school professor, testified as the State's expert. Based on his review of the child's medical records, witness statements, autopsy report, and the summary of the Child Protective Service's investigation, Dr. Lukefahr concluded that the child had been the victim of inflicted, non-accidental injuries; that the injuries consisted of head injuries, eye injuries, skeletal injuries, and fractures including bending rib fractures; and that the injuries had all occurred around the same time on January 1, 2006. (5) According to Dr. Lukefahr, the January 1st determination is consistent with the finding of fresh blood between the skull and the brain. In Dr. Lukefahr's opinion, the child had experienced "blunt force trauma and rotational trauma over a very short period of time." He testified that "[t]here was clearly impact injury to this baby, and there was clearly rotational trauma . . . [with] the head . . . moving very quickly in multiple directions to get the subdural bleeding and the retinal hemorrhages." Dr. Lukefahr also explained that the retinal hemorrhages, a significant factor supporting his conclusion that the child had suffered inflicted, non-accidental trauma, could have only come from rotational trauma involving shaking, jerking, or twisting the baby's head. During cross-examination, Dr. Lukefahr agreed that the ambulance report and hospital emergency room records did not mention any external injuries and that there were no injuries to the child's neck.

James Keith Rose, M.D., testified as a medical expert for the defense. (6) He reviewed, among other things, the child's medical records, including reports, films, and CDs, the autopsy report, and the transcript of Dr. Lukefahr's trial testimony. In Dr. Rose's opinion, the child's death resulted from anoxia caused by Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS). Among other things, Dr. Rose believed that: (1) the child's skull fractures were caused by a fall that had nothing to do with his death; (2) the hematoma occurred more than twenty-four to forty-eight hours earlier; and (3) whatever happened had already resolved externally and was resolving internally. While retinal hemorrhages can be the result of shaking a child, Dr. Rose opined that, in this case, they had been caused by aggressive resuscitation, DIC (disseminated or diffuse intravascular coagulation), and intra-cranial pressure. Dr. Rose further explained that a swollen brain can be caused by anoxia, which was the diagnosis (anoxic encephalopathy) given the child when he was admitted to Mission Hospital and when he was transferred to McAllen Medical Center. Dr. Rose did not agree with Dr. Lukefahr's opinion that the swelling of the child's brain was caused by blunt force trauma, explaining that if blunt force trauma had been the cause, there would have been "blood everywhere" and the trauma would have caused swelling that would have pushed the brain down through the bottom of the skull compressing the brain stem and causing the child to stop breathing. In Dr. Rose's opinion, this did not happen. Rather, the child had diffuse, symmetrical, consistent brain swelling caused by anoxia. Dr. Rose also explained that if the swelling was caused by trauma there would also have been neck injuries, and the child, in this case, had no neck injuries, as acknowledged by Dr. Lukefahr.

The State called Norma Farley, M.D., a forensic pathologist, as a rebuttal witness. Having reviewed the medical records and autopsy photographs and having heard Dr. Rose's testimony, Dr. Farley testified that, in her opinion, the child's brain injuries were not consistent with SIDS. Rather, in Dr.

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