Roger Lerma v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 15, 2001
Docket03-99-00827-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Roger Lerma v. State (Roger Lerma 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
Roger Lerma v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN


NO. 03-99-00827-CR

Roger Lerma, Appellant


v.


The State of Texas, Appellee


FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF CALDWELL COUNTY, 274TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 98-202, HONORABLE CHARLES R. RAMSAY, JUDGE PRESIDING

Appellant Roger Lerma appeals three convictions--for murder and two counts of aggravated assault. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 19.02(b)(1), (2), 22.02 (West 1994). After finding appellant guilty of the three offenses, the jury assessed punishment for murder at twenty-five years' imprisonment and at twenty years' imprisonment for each of the aggravated assault offenses.

Points of Error

Appellant advances five points of error. In the first three points, appellant asserts that the evidence was "legally insufficient" to support the three convictions. In the fourth point of error, appellant claims that the implied jury's finding at the penalty stage of the trial that the murder was not committed under the immediate influence of sudden passion arising from an adequate cause was "against the preponderance of the evidence." In his fifth point, appellant urges that he was denied his federal and state constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel. We will affirm.

Facts

Three of the five points of error relate to the sufficiency of the evidence; therefore, the facts are important. The single indictment in separate counts charged appellant with the murder of Henry Silva and aggravated assaults upon Ronnie Valdez and Chris Baltierra. The offenses grew out of a confrontation between the LRN and KMM gangs or groups(1) on China Street in Lockhart about 10:30 p.m. on February 20, 1998.

Richard Lozano, a deputy sheriff, was off-duty at his home on the night in question, when he heard five continuous gunshots. Lozano drove to the scene about a block from his home. He found Henry Silva lying in the street in obvious pain calling for his mother. Lozano observed an indentation in Silva's back.

James Beck, a Lockhart City Police Officer, was the first on-duty peace officer on the scene. He found the wounded Silva lying in the street. Silva told Beck that he (Silva) did not know who shot him. An ambulance was called, but Silva died on the way to an Austin hospital. Beck did not see appellant at the scene. Beck did observe the aggravated assault complainants, Ronnie Valdez and Chris Baltierra. In Officer Beck's opinion, they both were intoxicated.

Dr. Elizabeth Peacock, deputy medical examiner for Travis County, performed the autopsy on the twenty-year-old Henry Silva, who weighed 222 pounds and was five feet and seven inches tall. Dr. Peacock found that the cause of death was a gunshot wound to the left lower abdomen, which caused extensive hemorrhaging. A large caliber bullet that was severely flattened on one side was removed from Silva's body. Dr. Peacock explained that the bullet had gotten its shape from an outside source before entering Silva's body. No bones were involved in the injury. There was no gunshot residue around the wound. Silva's blood alcohol was shown to be 0.06 percent.

Russell Johnson, a Texas Department of Public Safety firearms examiner, identified the bullet removed from Silva's body as a .45 caliber bullet. He testified that if the bullet did not hit Silva's bones, it could have ricocheted or bounced off a street, a brick, an object, "or something" before it entered Silva's body.

Turning to the other circumstances surrounding the shooting, we observe that the witnesses for the prosecution include members or associates from both the LRN and KMM groups. Nine witnesses placed appellant at the scene of the shooting. Other evidence showed that the .45 caliber pistol which fired the fatal shot was appellant's, and was in his possession that night. Appellant claimed alibi and offered evidence that he was in San Marcos on the night of February 20.

On the night in question, the KMM group drove by Carlos Cantu's apartment on China Street several times. There was an exchange of words and possible bottle throwing between the KMM group and the LRN group at Cantu's apartment. On the third drive-by, at least three vehicles of the KMM group or associates stopped near the Cantu apartment. Henry Silva, the deceased, Ronnie Valdez, and Chris Baltierra got out of the vehicles and approached the LRN group standing outside the Cantu apartment.

Cantu testified for the prosecution.(2)

He stated that "after work" on February 20, 1998, appellant, Frank Tello, Roy Cortez, Angel Gomez, and others were at his apartment. Later, Cantu left to visit a friend in an Austin hospital. Within a matter of minutes after his return home, a number of cars stopped. There were people in the street yelling, and throwing rocks and bottles. Cantu armed himself with a .38 caliber "special derringer." Tello pulled a .38 caliber weapon from his pants. Cantu reported that appellant displayed appellant's .45 caliber pistol with a gold trigger. He identified that pistol as State's exhibit no. 5A, as did Mary Rivera, Tello's girlfriend, and Gomez, who were present at the time. Gomez testified that appellant stated that he wanted "to go down the block and start stuff." According to Gomez, Cantu cautioned against the move, but when appellant left the house the others followed.

Cantu stated that he and Tello exited the house and ran to the left to a position behind a tree. Appellant, dressed in black clothing with a hood, ran across the street where a church was located. Gomez ran out in the street towards the other group. Cantu ducked when a bottle was thrown. He then heard a shot. He did not know where it came from. Cantu then fired his weapon twice in the air, as did Tello. Cantu claimed his acts were in self-defense. About this time Cantu heard five or more shots fired from the church-side of the street where appellant had been standing. It was dark. Cantu saw a dark figure there, but he could not see the figure's face.

Cantu's gun was empty so he ran into his apartment. Cantu then observed appellant, Rivera, and Gomez get into Santos Gonzales's car and leave the scene. Cantu left his apartment via the back door, threw his gun away, and went to the backyard of his girlfriend's house where he spent the night.

Rivera testified that she was at the front door of the Cantu apartment when Cantu and Tello fired shots. She heard other shots, but in the darkness could not see the face of the person across the street where the other shots originated. Rivera had earlier placed appellant in that location. After the shooting ended, Rivera revealed that she, Tello, appellant, and Mateo Pastrano "took off" in Gonzales's car; the car turned onto Blanco Street; and that she and Tello got out of the car after it had traveled several blocks.

Gomez admitted that he, appellant, Cantu, and Tello were all members of the La Rosa Negra gang. Gomez testified that when the KMM gang arrived on the scene in several vehicles, he left the Cantu apartment when appellant did. Although he was unarmed, Gomez ran out into the street "in front of Ronnie Valdez and all of them" and told "them to get the heck out of there." The KMM group threw bottles at him, but Gomez did not see any guns or hear any shots fired by the KMM group, including the deceased Silva.(3)

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