RODRIGUEZ-FLORES v. State

351 S.W.3d 612, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 8652, 2011 WL 5138638
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 28, 2011
Docket03-09-00433-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 351 S.W.3d 612 (RODRIGUEZ-FLORES 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
RODRIGUEZ-FLORES v. State, 351 S.W.3d 612, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 8652, 2011 WL 5138638 (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

DIANE M. HENSON, Justice.

A jury convicted Esau Alejandro Rodriguez-Flores of aggravated kidnapping and assessed his punishment at twenty-nine years’ imprisonment and a $5,000 fine. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 20.04 (West 2011). On appeal, Rodriguez-Flores challenges (1) the trial court’s failure to allow voir dire questions about whether jurors could consider the affirmative defense of duress regardless of the age of the alleged victim, (2) the trial court’s denial of his challenge for cause of a juror, (3) the trial court’s admission of testimony from a pretrial services officer about an interview with Rodriguez-Flores, and (4) the legal sufficiency of the evidence supporting the jury’s finding that the -victim was not released in a safe place. We will affirm the judgment of conviction.

BACKGROUND

The record shows that on the morning of February 7, 2008, Lizbeth Suarez and her two children, ten-year-old Z.J. and five-year-old A.J., were preparing to drive to school when four men in a light-colored Volkswagen Passat stopped behind Suarez’s car, blocking it from leaving the driveway. 1 Two of the men ran up to Suarez’s car. One of them opened the back passenger door and grabbed A.J. by the waist. Suarez, who was in the driver’s seat, grabbed A.J.’s hand and struggled to keep him in the car. Z.J. tried to help from the front passenger seat by hitting the man with her hands. When the man pulled A.J. from the car, he took him to the Passat. Suarez and Z.J. followed, screaming and trying to open the passenger doors of the Passat. Suarez ran to the front of the car to block it from leaving, but it swerved around her and sped off.

A.J., who was seven years old by the time of trial, testified that he was taken to an apartment to which he had never been. Although he was not harmed while he was there, he testified that he was scared that the men were going to hurt him. Later in the day, while it was still light outside, the *617 kidnappers took A.J. to a house and left him with another man whom he did not know. 2 This man made soup for A.J., and he told A.J. that he would take him to his mother at 3:00 p.m., but he did not, which A.J. testified made him sad. A.J. was at this house for a long time. He watched a movie, and later, after it was dark, the man took him to another apartment building where A. J. had never been. The man told A.J. to climb up the stairs to the second floor because A.J.’s aunt’s apartment was there. A. J. did not know anyone in those apartments. After the man drove off, A.J. went back down the stairs to look for help. He testified that he felt sad and scared. He never before had been out alone in a strange place at night. He was found in the dimly lit stairwell between 7:00 and 8:00 p.m. and reunited with his parents that night.

The evidence shows that Rodriguez-Flores, who was seventeen at the time of the kidnapping, was recruited to participate in the kidnapping by his sixteen-year-old cousin, Marco Flores (“Marco”), who had been recruited by Modesto Vences Garcia (“Vences”), the live-in boyfriend of Marco’s mother. 3 Vences organized the kidnapping to collect money that he believed he was owed by A.J.’s father. 4 Rodriguez-Flores and Marco testified that Vences had threatened to harm Marco’s family (his mother, younger brother, girlfriend, and month-old daughter) if Marco would not do this for him. Both Rodriguez-Flores and Marco testified that they are like brothers to each other, and Rodriguez-Flores has always watched out for Marco and protected him when necessary. Marco testified that Vences is a drug dealer and a violent man, who once shot up Marco’s mother’s house. Both Marco and Rodriguez-Flores testified about an incident a few months before the kidnapping when Rodriguez-Flores was at Marco’s mother’s house, and Vences and two of his friends jumped Rodriguez-Flores and started hitting him.

Marco also testified that Vences told him he would pay him $10,000 for the kidnapping, but that he did not do it for the money, he did it to protect his baby. Rodriguez-Flores testified that Vences had mentioned the $10,000 to him, but that he also did the kidnapping to protect his family and Marco’s family, not for the money. At trial, Rodriguez-Flores testified that the night before the kidnapping he told Vences he did not want to do it, and Vences hit him with a gun and pointed it in his face and told him that he had to do it because he knew too much already and Vences knew where his family lived. 5

Rodriguez-Flores also recruited two of his friends, at Vences’s request, to help with the kidnapping. He told them that Vences would pay them “good money,” and he told them on the morning of the kidnapping that it would be $10,000. On the morning of the kidnapping, Vences gave Marco keys to the Passat, which Marco drove during the kidnapping. Marco acted *618 as a lookout, while the other three got out. Rodriguez-Flores grabbed A.J., and they took him back to Marco’s mother’s apartment.

During the two weeks before the kidnapping, Vences drove Marco and Rodriguez-Flores to A.J.’s neighborhood several times in Marco’s mother’s blue Oldsmobile Alero to observe the children’s routine. They once followed Z.J. and A.J. home from school, which frightened the children enough that they reported it to their parents and to the school principal, who reported it to the police and recommended that Z.J. and A.J.’s parents drop them off and pick them up each day, which they began doing. Suarez testified that sometime after this incident, she noticed a navy blue car parked in front of her house one morning when she was leaving to take the children to school. There were two men in the car watching the house. Suarez testified that the men were wearing red hooded jackets and “kind of laying back” in the car and she only saw them from a distance. She testified that the back of the car “said Balero (sic) or something like that.” Although Vences, Marco, and Rodriguez-Flores parked a few houses away on their trips to observe the family routine, their suspicious behavior was noticed by other neighborhood residents, one of whom wrote down the Alero’s license-plate number. After the kidnapping, these neighbors reported what they had seen to the police.

The police stopped Vences in the Alero on the day of the kidnapping and brought him in for questioning. They eventually brought in Marco, who admitted his own role in the kidnapping and also implicated Vences as the planner and Rodriguez-Flores as a participant. Rodriguez-Flores initially went voluntarily to the police station to discuss the kidnapping. Although he originally denied having knowledge of the kidnapping, after calling Marco from the police station, he admitted to participating in it. Both his interview with the police and his written statement were admitted into evidence without objection. 6 The jury saw a substantial portion of the police-interview video.

Rodriguez-Flores was charged by indictment with aggravated kidnapping.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
351 S.W.3d 612, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 8652, 2011 WL 5138638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodriguez-flores-v-state-texapp-2011.