Reyes v. Quarterman

195 F. App'x 272
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 29, 2006
Docket05-70024
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 195 F. App'x 272 (Reyes v. Quarterman) 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
Reyes v. Quarterman, 195 F. App'x 272 (5th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Petitioner Gilberto Reyes was convicted in Texas of capital murder and sentenced to death. Reyes now seeks a certificate of appealability (“COA”) from this Court to appeal the district court’s denial of his petition for habeas corpus relief. He contends that reasonable jurists could debate that his Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights to the effective assistance of counsel were not violated by his trial counsel’s failure to investigate and to present significant mitigating evidence, including, but not limited to, evidence that he sustained substantial abuse as a child. Because the district court’s conclusion that Reyes cannot make a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right is not debatable among reasonable jurists, we DENY his application for a COA. We also find that the district court did not abuse its discretion by not holding an evidentiary hearing on Reyes’s ineffective assistance of counsel (“LAC”) claim.

I. BACKGROUND

A summary of the facts as recounted by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals and adopted by the district court will suffice:

Reyes dated Yvette Barraz for approximately eight months before their relationship ended in January 1998. At around 6:00 p.m. on March 11, 1998, Barraz left her parents’ house for her job as a waitress at Leal’s Restaurant (“Leal’s”) in Muleshoe, Texas. At trial, Yolanda Jaramillo, Barraz’s co-worker, testified that Barraz left Leal’s before she did, and that Barraz’s silver/gray, 1996 Mitsubishi Eclipse was not in the parking lot when she left the restaurant.

Reyes arrived at his cousin’s home in Pecos, Texas at approximately 11:45 p.m. on March 11, 1998. He asked Natividad Ovalle, Jr., his cousin’s husband, how to *274 get to Ojinaga, Mexico. Ovalle testified that when Reyes left the home, he observed Reyes drive away in a small gray car.

Between 3:30 a.m. and 4:00 a.m. on March 12, officers at the border check point in Presidio, Texas observed Reyes walking on the highway heading towards Mexico. The officers stopped Reyes and asked him to empty his pockets. Among Reyes’s possessions were a couple of sets of keys, a large amount of currency in one-dollar bills and five-dollar bills, and a couple of handfuls of change. Reyes explained to the officers that one of the keys was the key to his girlfriend’s car. Once a records check revealed that Reyes was not involved in a string of burglaries in Presidio that had the officers on heightened alert, Reyes was permitted to cross the bridge into Mexico.

On March 12, because Barraz failed to return home, her parents called the police. Upon receiving the call, police officers went to the parking lot at Leal’s where they discovered blood and loose change on the ground.

On March 13, 1998, the Presidio County Sheriffs Office received a teletype informing them that Reyes was connected to a missing person and that it was possible that he used a gray 1996 Mitsubishi to get to Presidio. Presidio Sheriffs Officers found Barraz’s car parked behind a store in Presidio located about a half of a mile from the border. They found Barraz’s body in the hatchback area of the vehicle under some articles of clothing. Her pants and underwear were pulled down to her knees, and she had multiple head wounds and a laceration on one of the fingers of her left hand. Officers found a knife on the back floorboard of the car and a claw hammer on the passenger side between the seat and the edge of the door rail. Sergeant Dusty McCord, a Sergeant with the Texas Ranger Division of the Department of Public Safety, testified that he saw bloodstains on the passenger-side seat belt and blood pooling in the hatchback area and on the floorboard behind the passenger seat.

Reyes was arrested in Portales, New Mexico, on June 7, 1998. Among his possessions were keys that matched the locks to Barraz’s residence and vehicle.

Javier Flores, a forensic serologist for the Texas Department of Public Safety Laboratory, performed DNA testing on the evidence collected from Barraz’s car and the parking lot at Leal’s. Flores testified that Barraz’s DNA matched the bloodstains in the parking lot at Leal’s, inside the vehicle, and on the claw hammer. Flores also testified that Reyes’s DNA matched a semen stain on Barraz’s underwear with an accuracy level of one in less than 5.7 billion.

Glen Groben, the deputy medical examiner who performed an autopsy on Barraz, testified that Barraz had six separate blunt force injury wounds to her head that were consistent with being struck by a claw hammer. Although Groben found that Barraz’s death was caused by blunt force trauma to the head, he also noted that there was evidence of strangulation. Groben determined that Barraz was alive when she was strangled and beaten, and that she had been sexually assaulted at or near the time of death. Based on a crime scene photograph of Leal’s, Groben testified that while it appeared that Barraz was initially injured in the restaurant’s parking lot, there was not enough blood in the parking lot to suggest that she died there.

The court appointed counsel to represent Reyes at trial and during the punishment proceeding. On January 31, 2000, a jury found Reyes guilty of murdering Bar *275 raz while in the course of kidnaping her, in violation of Tex. Penal Code § 19.03(a)(2).

During the punishment stage, the prosecution called eight witnesses. Evidence from these witnesses demonstrated that Reyes was charged with driving while intoxicated and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon on February 9, 1998, after an individual who observed someone shoot at a car with a rifle called the Muleshoe police. Reyes was also observed chasing Barraz and her sister into their parents’ home. The investigating officer found Reyes with a rifle in his truck and bullets in his pocket.

Evidence also demonstrated that Reyes was a member of the 8th Street Posse, a “social club” that sometimes engaged in fights with another “social club.” Reyes was charged with aggravated assault and placed on deferred adjudication supervision for driving a truck over a curb and into Robert Rodriguez, a member of a “social club” in Muleshoe. Because he was subsequently charged with driving while intoxicated, Reyes’s deferred adjudication was revoked, and he was sent to a state, military-style boot camp program.

Finally, Dr. Gripon, a psychiatrist, testified that he believed Reyes to be a continuing threat to society because Reyes’s behavior had increased in its progression towards violence, he had been involved in gang-related activity, and he had abused substances.

During the punishment phase, Reyes’s trial counsel presented nine witnesses: Hector Arzola, Margie Lopez, Don Carter, Nicky Chavez, Maria Reyes, Nora Gonzales, Chris Ramos, Jesse Reyes, and Dr. Walter Quijano. Arzola, Lopez, and Carter were called to rebut evidence against Petitioner regarding an aggravated assault charge. Maria Reyes and Jesse Reyes testified that Petitioner supported his family after his father died, Barraz abused Petitioner, and Petitioner often took care of Barraz’s daughter. Nicky Chavez, Chris Ramos, and Nora Gonzales testified that Petitioner was a hard worker and a good employee. Lastly, Dr.

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Related

Thompson v. Quarterman
292 F. App'x 277 (Fifth Circuit, 2008)

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195 F. App'x 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reyes-v-quarterman-ca5-2006.