Ricardo Lorenzo MacIas, Jr. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 28, 2019
Docket08-17-00144-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Ricardo Lorenzo MacIas, Jr. v. State (Ricardo Lorenzo MacIas, Jr. 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 Lorenzo MacIas, Jr. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

§ RICARDO LORENZO MACIAS, JR., No. 08-17-00144-CR § Appellant, Appeal from § v. 120th District Court § THE STATE OF TEXAS, of El Paso County, Texas § Appellee. (TC # 20130D03635) §

OPINION

A jury found Appellant Ricardo Lorenzo Macias guilty of one count each of manslaughter

and aggravated robbery with the use of a deadly weapon. The jury sentenced him to 10 years of

community supervision on the manslaughter conviction and 22 years in prison on the aggravated

robbery conviction. On appeal, Appellant challenges only his aggravated robbery conviction,

raising three issues relating to the jury charge. In his first two interrelated issues, Appellant argues

that the trial court erred by failing to instruct the jury that his theories of self-defense and the

defense of others could be applied to the aggravated robbery charge, and that this failure

constituted egregious error requiring reversal of his conviction despite his failure to request such

an instruction at trial. In his third issue, Appellant argues that the trial court erred by instructing

the jury that his “arm” could be considered a deadly weapon for purposes of finding him guilty of aggravated robbery with the use of a deadly weapon.

Finding no error in the jury charge, we affirm.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The body of Jose Andres Castanon, a known drug dealer, was found in his home by one of

his customers at approximately 2:00 p.m. on May 17, 2013, after she became concerned when

Castanon did not answer her phone calls. The customer found Castanon’s body on the floor of

his home with a pair of jeans wrapped around his neck; she further observed that Castanon had

bruises on his body and a large cut on his head, and observed the remnants of a broken cookie jar

on the floor nearby. She thereafter called 911 for assistance.

Appellant’s Recorded Interview with Police

Based on a lead they received, the police interviewed Appellant at the police station on

May 18, 2013 at 2:20 a.m. After being read his Miranda rights and agreeing to waive those rights,

Appellant provided a videotaped interview, which was admitted into evidence at his trial. ) In his

interview, Appellant admitted that after an evening of drinking at a local club, he and two friends,

Brianna Garay and Sonia Bautista, all three of whom were acquainted with Castanon, agreed to

contact Castanon in the early morning hours of May 17, 2013 to purchase ecstasy pills from him.

Garay used Appellant’s cell phone to Castanon, who was initially reluctant to sell them pills at that

hour, but Castanon eventually agreed to sell them eight pills for $80.00, but only if Garay came to

his house alone.1

Garay initially went into Castanon’s house alone, but at Garay’s request, Appellant waited

by the door to ensure her safety. Appellant recalled that Bautista waited outside in the car, in part

1 The text messages, which were received into evidence at Appellant’s trial, confirmed Appellant’s description of Garay’s communications with Castanon. 2 because Castanon and Bautista had previously expressed animosity toward each other due to a

prior drug deal gone awry.

According to Appellant, after Garay went inside the house, she became involved in a fight

with Castanon because she was ten dollars short on the purchase price for the pills. Garay then

called out to Appellant for help, and when Appellant went inside, he observed Castanon

“grabbing” Garay and calling her names. Appellant claimed that he came to Garay’s defense, and

that he and Castanon began fighting and wrestling with each other. Appellant recalled that while

he was wrestling with Castanon, Garay called out for help to Bautista, who later entered the house

and joined in the fray.

Appellant acknowledged that during their fight, he hit Castanon two or three times, and

stated that when Castanon began biting his finger, he placed Castanon in a chokehold, indicating

through the use of gestures that he had used his arms to do so. Appellant initially told police that

Castanon had stopped moving while Appellant had him in the chokehold. However, later in the

interview, Appellant stated that Castanon was still struggling when Bautista entered the house, and

that Bautista began punching Castanon and stomping on his head, while Appellant continued to

hold him down. Appellant claimed that he tried to stop Bautista from continuing her assault on

Castanon, but Bautista tried to stab Castanon with a kitchen knife, and later hit him over the head

with a cookie jar. According to Appellant’s second version of the events, this is when Castanon

finally stopped moving. When asked by police how the jeans became wrapped around Castanon’s

neck, Appellant responded that Bautista had placed them over Castanon’s head because she did

not want Castanon looking at her while she was hitting him.

Appellant claimed that while Bautista was still on top of Castanon, he and Garay searched

3 Castanon’s home for money and drugs, and found 40 to 50 ecstasy pills, which they took with

them.2 According to Appellant, all three of them left the house without knowing that Castanon

had died, and they did not find out until the next day that he had passed away.

The Autopsy

A subsequent autopsy on Castanon’s body revealed that he died from asphyxia resulting

from a lack of oxygen due to the compression of his neck, and that the manner of his death was

homicide. Although the medical examiner could not determine what object was used to compress

Castanon’s neck, he believed that either a chokehold or having the jeans wrapped around his neck

could have caused the asphyxia. The medical examiner also reported that Castanon had

significant internal injuries to his neck, including a fracture, and that the perpetrator had used

considerable force to cause those injuries.

The Indictment

Appellant was indicted on one count each of murder and aggravated robbery with the use

of a deadly weapon. In the indictment, the State alleged that Appellant had caused Castanon’s

death by compressing his neck, by using either his arm or the jeans. Similarly, the indictment

alleged that Appellant had committed aggravated robbery by causing serious bodily injury to

Castanon in the course of committing a theft, again by either using his arm or the jeans to compress

Castanon’s neck. In addition, the indictment alleged that Appellant exhibited or used a “deadly

weapon” during the commission of the aggravated robbery, to-wit, either his “arm or jeans.”

Appellant’s Claims of Self-Defense and the Defense of Others

At trial, the State argued that Appellant, Garay and Bautista had entered Castanon’s house

2 A witness testified that Appellant sold her two ecstasy pills at approximately 11:30 pm on the same day of Castanon’s death, and that she saw Appellant holding a baggie with several pills in it at that time. 4 with the intent to rob him, contending that Garay had lied in her texts to Castanon about having

the money to purchase the ecstasy pills, and that Castanon was murdered during the course of the

robbery. Appellant, however, claimed that the three of them went to Castanon’s house after a

night of drinking and dancing solely to purchase the ecstasy pills, with no pre-existing intent to

rob Castanon. Appellant further claimed that Castanon was the aggressor in the situation,

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