Ricardo Leal Gamino v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 24, 2012
Docket14-10-01091-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Ricardo Leal Gamino v. State (Ricardo Leal Gamino 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
Ricardo Leal Gamino v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed July 24, 2012.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals ___________________

NO. 14-10-01091-CR ___________________

RICARDO LEAL GAMINO, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 268th Judicial District Court Fort Bend County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 08-DCR-050461

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted appellant Ricardo Leal Gamino of evading detention with a vehicle and assessed appellant’s punishment at two years’ imprisonment and a $10,000 fine. Appellant urges on appeal that the evidence is insufficient to support his conviction. We affirm. BACKGROUND

On the night of September 27, 2008, four uniformed, off-duty police officers employed with the Fort Bend County Sheriff’s Office were working as private security guards, patrolling the parking lot around the Fort Bend County Fairgrounds.

Officer Sonny Colunga testified that he saw a brown Ford truck “driving at a high rate of speed and swerving from left to right” through the crowded parking lot around 11:20 p.m. Colunga testified that he shined his flashlight at the truck and “scream[ed]” for the driver to stop. The driver, whom Colunga later identified as appellant, came to a stop, and Colunga approached the truck’s open driver’s-side window. Colunga testified that he asked why appellant was driving so fast, and appellant responded, “I’m sorry[,] officer, I didn’t see you,” then “took off again, pretty fast.” Colunga radioed the make, color, license plate number, and direction of travel of the truck to the other officers who were patrolling the parking lot on all-terrain vehicles (“ATVs”). Officers Reid Rader, William Butera, and Carlos Castillo testified that Colunga also reported that appellant’s headlights were turned off. Rader and Butera further testified that Colunga said appellant was possibly intoxicated.1

Rader and Butera each testified that they soon spotted a truck matching Colunga’s description with its lights turned off, travelling at what Rader estimated to be about “45 miles an hour.” Rader testified that they began pursuit on their ATVs, and that he was able to catch up to appellant’s truck when appellant slowed to make a left turn. Rader stated that he drove into and through a ditch alongside the truck and told appellant to stop through appellant’s open driver’s-side window. Rader, who was wearing a Fort Bend Sheriff’s Department uniform, testified that appellant looked directly at him. Rader claimed he yelled a second time, “Sheriff’s office. Stop the truck.” Although he acknowledged that there were “noises out there,” Rader testified that he was “sure”

1 Colunga testified that he did not recall whether he made either of these statements. 2 appellant could hear him and that there was “no doubt he saw who I was and obviously what I wanted.”

Rader testified that appellant continued driving until a line of traffic forced him to stop “abruptly.” Butera testified that he stopped his ATV behind the truck, and Butera and Rader both testified that Rader stopped his ATV on the left side of the truck and approached appellant’s driver’s-side door on foot. Rader testified that he told appellant, “You need to stop. I need you to get out of the truck.” Butera testified that he “could hear [Rader] and see him telling [appellant] to stop the vehicle and get out of the truck.” Both officers testified that appellant looked in his driver’s-side mirror, shifted the truck into reverse, and began backing up. Rader also testified that he heard appellant say, “I’m backing up.” The officers testified that appellant’s vehicle struck Butera’s ATV, pinning Butera’s leg between the ATV and the truck. Rader testified that he told appellant to “come out.” When appellant refused, Rader reached through the window, opened the driver’s-side door, and tried to pull appellant from the truck. However, Rader testified that he could not pull appellant out by himself because appellant was resisting and holding onto the steering wheel.

Castillo testified that when he arrived on the scene, he witnessed Butera yelling in pain behind the truck as Rader was trying to remove appellant from the truck. Castillo testified that he immediately assisted Rader and that they “struggled” with appellant and had to use force to pull him out because he “did not want to come out of the vehicle.” Castillo testified that after handcuffing appellant, Castillo got in the truck and moved it forward to free Butera’s leg.

Colunga, who was driving a golf cart that was much slower than the ATVs, testified that he caught up with the other officers and saw the same brown truck that he had stopped earlier. He stated that he saw “the same driver” handcuffed on the ground with officers around him.

3 Appellant testified to a very different version of events. He stated that as he began to drive toward the exit, he heard somebody yell, “Your headlights are off.” Appellant testified that he turned his headlights on, continued driving, and responded, “Appreciate it.” He claimed that he looked back and only saw somebody “in a white T-shirt.” He testified that he did not know whether that person was a law enforcement officer and did not see a golf cart, an ATV, or anybody wearing a law enforcement uniform.

Appellant testified that he drove through the parking lot and stopped near the entrance to the fair to let pedestrians cross in front of his truck. He claimed that—without any warning or orders to exit the truck—four officers pulled him from the truck, threw him on the ground, and “started kneeing [him] in the back.” Appellant further testified that he never put his truck in reverse or backed up. His theory at trial was that Butera ran into the back of appellant’s truck and that the officers were “trying to just come up with something to mask the guy on the four-wheeler that hit [his truck].”

Appellant denied that he was ever “driving recklessly” at “45 miles an hour.” He claimed that he took a different route through the parking lot than the officers testified he took, and that Rader never drove alongside his truck. Appellant testified: “No officers never [sic] told me to stop. I didn’t see one officer until I got to the front of the fair and I seen [sic] [an officer] standing at the entrance.”

Brandi Echol, a probation officer who met with appellant, testified that appellant told her “that upon attempting to back up his vehicle, Deputy Butera falsely accused him of striking him with his vehicle,” which Echol understood to be an admission that appellant backed up his truck. She testified that appellant “indicated to [her] that he failed to activate his headlights on his vehicle” and “admitted that he was under the influence of prescription medications.” Appellant, who has two prior convictions for driving while intoxicated, also admitted at trial that he drank two margaritas at the fair. However, appellant testified that he was not drunk, and the State did not charge him with driving while intoxicated.

4 A jury convicted appellant of the felony of evading detention with a vehicle. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 38.04 (a), (b)(1) (West 2011). Appellant argues in one issue on appeal that we should reverse his conviction because (1) the record contains insufficient evidence showing that appellant knew the officers were peace officers attempting to arrest or detain him; and (2) appellant’s detention was not lawful, as the officers failed to comply with several sections of the Texas Transportation Code regarding safe ATV operation.

ANALYSIS

I. Knowledge of Attempted Detention by Peace Officers

Appellant first argues that we must reverse his conviction because the record contains insufficient evidence showing that appellant knew the officers were peace officers attempting to arrest or detain him.

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Ricardo Leal Gamino v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ricardo-leal-gamino-v-state-texapp-2012.