Nelson Gongora v. Rick Thaler, Director

710 F.3d 267, 2013 WL 708167, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 4236
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 27, 2013
Docket07-70031
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 710 F.3d 267 (Nelson Gongora v. Rick Thaler, Director) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nelson Gongora v. Rick Thaler, Director, 710 F.3d 267, 2013 WL 708167, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 4236 (5th Cir. 2013).

Opinions

PER CURIAM:

Nelson Gongora was convicted in Texas state court for capital murder and sentenced to death. After the state court denied habeas relief, Gongora petitioned the district court for relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, requesting that his conviction and sentence be set aside and a new trial ordered. The district court denied relief. We granted a certificate of appealability (COA) on two issues: (1) whether Gongora is entitled to habeas relief because the prosecutor commented during his closing argument on Gongora’s failure to testify; and (2) whether, in light of the Supreme Court’s holding in Tison v. Arizona,1 Gongora could be sentenced to death based on a jury finding that he anticipated murder would result from his participation in robbery of the victim.2 We find that the extraordinarily extensive comments on Gongora’s failure to testify resulted in actual prejudice, and we GRANT Gongora’s habeas petition and vacate his conviction.

I.

Texas charged Nelson Gongora with capital murder for the killing of Delfino Sierra during the course of a robbery. Although the indictment charged that Gon-gora shot Sierra, at trial, the State sought to convict Gongora either as the shooter or under the alternate theory that Gongora was a participant in a robbery in the course of which Sierra was murdered by one of Gongora’s co-defendants, Albert Or-osco. The jury heard sharply conflicting evidence regarding Gongora’s role in the offense, including evidence that the shooter may have been someone other than either Gongora or Orosco.

The State’s first witness, Sonia Ramos, told the jury that she was driving on the night of April 7, 2001 when she noticed three Hispanic men walking on the side of the road; the man in the middle (Sierra) had on a cowboy hat. As she turned to look toward a friend’s house, she saw the man on the left shoot Sierra. She then looked back, and saw a van parked in a driveway with its reverse lights on. The man who had been on the right side of Sierra ran “like he was running towards the van,” and the man who shot Sierra “kind of backed up” and “kind of looking to what he had done ... then turned around like to go towards the van.” Ramos could not see the mens’ faces.

Juan Vargas was the State’s next witness. Vargas also had been indicted for [271]*271Sierra’s murder. Vargas admitted that he was the driver of the van. Arrested about three weeks after Sierra’s shooting, he gave a sworn, written statement to police identifying James Luedtke and Carlos Al-manza as the two who had emerged from the van to rob Sierra and identifying Al-manza as Sierra’s shooter. Police interviewed him again a few weeks later. This time, Vargas identified Gongora as the shooter. He said that it was in fact Gon-gora and Orosco, and not Almanza and Luedtke, who had approached Sierra. At trial, Vargas testified that he had initially lied to the police when he identified Al-manza and Luedtke because he feared retaliation from Gongora. But that fear was apparently soothed by his plea agreement. Under that agreement, in exchange for pleading guilty and testifying against Gon-gora, Vargas would receive a twenty-three year sentence for Sierra’s murder and not be prosecuted at all for a second shooting.

With plea agreement in hand, Vargas testified that on the night of April 7, 2001, he was driving his van accompanied by Gongora, Almanza, Albert Orosco, Steven Gongora (“Steven”), and Luedtke (“Guero”) when they saw Sierra walking down the street and decided to rob him. Gongo-ra, Almanza, and Vargas had all taken heroin earlier in the evening. Vargas told the jury that when he pulled over, Gongora and Orosco jumped out of the van, ran toward Sierra, and demanded his money. When Sierra began to run, Gongora shot him in the head with a .38 caliber handgun that belonged to Vargas. Vargas said he had given the gun to Gongora earlier in the night for protection. Gongora and Orosco then returned to the van. Vargas asked what Gongora did, and Gongora said “I had to do what I had to do” and told everyone to remain silent. The group then returned to Gongora’s house for a cookout.

Vargas and Gongora were leaders in the criminal street gang Puro Li’l Mafia (PLM). Vargas testified that about two and a half hours after Sierra’s shooting, Almanza became a member of PLM by doing a drive-by shooting. Vargas was the driver for that shooting, and Gongora was in the van as well. Vargas testified that the shooting by Almanza was in retaliation for drive-by shootings at Gongora’s house. During the shooting, Gongora stood outside the van armed with a nine-millimeter handgun. The victim of this shooting survived. Vargas admitted that he was high on heroin and intoxicated with beer at the time of both shootings and that this impaired his ability to recall how things happened.

Several months after Vargas revised his account of Sierra’s shooting, police interviewed Dylan Griffith, who met with the group in Vargas’s van after Sierra’s shooting. At trial, Griffith, a defense witness, testified that when Vargas’s van pulled up Vargas was yelling at somebody, apparently Orosco, “because they were having a conflict over something.” When Orosco emerged from the van, he had a .38 in his waistband and was bragging about killing someone, saying, “I shot some wet back.” Griffith asked why Orosco did that and Orosco said they had tried to rob the person. Griffith then asked what they got from the robbery and Orosco said, “Nothing. I done took his soul and his dreams. That’s all I want.”

After Griffith was first interviewed by the police, he got in touch with James Luedtke (“Güero”) and told him the police were trying to locate “Güero.” Luedtke asked what the police wanted and Griffith said they just wanted a statement of what happened. Griffith testified that Luedtke then said, “So all I got to do is write down Albert shot him?” Griffith said, yes, if that was what happened, and Luedtke [272]*272said: “I ain’t — I ain’t going down for it. I’ll put it on whoever I got to, as long as I don’t go down for it.” Luedtke seemed frightened of being arrested.

At trial, Luedtke was called as a witness for the prosecution. Police officers did not talk to Luedtke until six months before trial. He was scared when he first talked to the investigator, fearing a charge of capital murder. Luedtke told police and later testified that Orosco had said “Let’s get this guy,” and that Gongora and Oros-co then approached the man and Gongora “told him pretty much ‘casa la febio,’” which, according to Luedtke, meant “Give me your money.” Luedtke stated that he was in the back — in the third row — of the van when this happened, but that he was able to hear because the side windows of the van were down. Luedtke testified that he saw Gongora pull a gun, and that when Orosco and Gongora returned to the car, Gongora said “I took his dreams,” apparently bragging. Gongora also said: “Nobody say nothing. Nobody seen nothing. Nobody heard nothing.” Luedtke said that Gongora and Orosco were behind the victim and Gongora was on the right and Orosco on the left. The day of Sierra’s shooting, Luedtke had been doing drugs (heroin and pot) and drinking.

Ramiro Enriquez, a defense witness who had been in prison with Vargas and Al-manza, testified that Almanza told him that Almanza and two others had gotten out of Vargas’s van and approached Sierra, and that Almanza had done the shooting.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
710 F.3d 267, 2013 WL 708167, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 4236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-gongora-v-rick-thaler-director-ca5-2013.