Rudy Abarca v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 27, 2021
Docket08-19-00038-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Rudy Abarca v. State (Rudy Abarca 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
Rudy Abarca v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

RUDY ABARCA, § No. 08-19-00038-CR

Appellant, § Appeal from the

v. § 346th District Court

THE STATE OF TEXAS, § of El Paso County, Texas

Appellee. (TC# 20150D04057)

OPINION

Rudy Abarca brings this appeal from his conviction for aggravated robbery. Abarca alleges

multiple errors surrounding the admission of items of evidence, or testimony related thereto. The

items of evidence include: a recording made of a jail call1 by Abarca (State’s exhibit 91), an out-

of-court photo lineup, two in-court identifications of Abarca by witnesses who were previously

shown photo lineups, and the admission of out-of-court statements by a non-testifying witness.

Finding no error, we affirm.

1 The appellate record includes several audio CDs admitted into evidence containing recordings of jail calls. One of the CDs is marked State’s exhibit 91 and another is marked State’s exhibit 106. Of note, we acknowledge that the labeling of these two exhibits is transposed. On appeal, Abarca raised complaints as to State’s exhibit 91 but he raised no issues as to State’s exhibit 106. Even though the complained-of-jail-recording is contained on State’s exhibit 106, the recording is otherwise referenced throughout the trial below as State’s exhibit 91. This referencing of State’s exhibit 91 is carried forward in a like manner in the parties’ briefing. Despite the mislabeling, the State explained in its footnote 2 that, for simplicity of briefing, it would continue to refer to State’s exhibit 91 as the exhibit that contained the complained-of-call. To this practice, Abarca raised no objection by reply or otherwise. We adopt the same practice here and refer to State’s exhibit 91 as the exhibit that contains the complained-of-jail-call recording. I. BACKGROUND

A. The incident

On March 2, 2015, an employee of a salvage yard observed a man who appeared to be

leaving the premises with something hidden under his jacket. The employee, Joel Hernandez,

believed that the man was stealing something and approached him. As he did, the man displayed

a gun and said, “parate” (i.e., “stop”). At that point, Hernandez turned away and called his boss,

Jacinto Ituarte. The man continued to walk away.

Ituarte had seen the man with Hernandez out his office window. When he learned that the

man had pulled a gun, he got into his white Suburban and followed him, calling 911 as he did so.

Ituarte testified that the man fired two shots at him and Ituarte responded by firing two shots from

his own gun. Ituarte later stated that he was not sure if he heard shots or clicks. The man ran to

another business down the street, where Ituarte saw him grab some keys from another man and

rapidly drive away in a gray van with New Mexico license plates.

Jaime Cortez testified that he was working in the area when he heard shots and saw a man

running and a white truck following him. The man dropped an object that looked like a car radio

or stereo that he had had in his jacket. Cortez also saw that the man had a black gun. Cortez heard

two “failed shots” and watched as the man tried to enter the business yard where Cortez was

working but then went on to the next business yard. Cortez then saw a van speed away from the

scene. Cortez later clarified that he heard one shot and two clicks, and that he did not hear any

shots from the white truck.

The victim, Martin Moran Molina (“Moran”), testified that he was taking photographs of

a tow truck that he was preparing to import to Mexico when he heard a man yelling at him and

2 asking if he had a phone. Moran responded that he did but that it was a Mexican phone and would

not work. The man then displayed a gun and told Moran to give him his Dodge Caravan. Moran

asked the man not to take the vehicle because he needed it for work, but the man became angry

and Moran feared he would shoot him. The man grabbed Moran’s phone from his hand and got in

the van. Moran testified that he had left the keys in the van and may have left it running. The man

sped away in the van, throwing Moran’s phone out the window as he went.

B. The contemporaneous descriptions

Joel Hernandez gave a statement approximately two hours after the incident. He described

the man he encountered as a Hispanic male, 5’9” tall, weighing approximately 230 pounds, with

thick facial hair, and wearing a black hat. Hernandez testified that he saw the man for three to five

minutes, but only saw him face to face for about one minute because he approached the man from

behind.

Jacinto Ituarte testified variously that the man faced him for eight to ten seconds, and that

they looked at each other for four to five seconds. He described the man as 240 pounds, a little

bald, having a little facial hair and a medium complexion, and being in his thirties or forties.

Jaime Cortez testified that he saw the man’s face for about ten seconds from forty to fifty

feet away. He described him as a Hispanic male, six feet tall, and weighing 190 pounds. He did

not notice any facial hair and stated that the hair on his head was short but not too short. He did

not see the man wearing a hat.

Moran described the man as Hispanic, in his thirties or forties, and taller than Moran, who

is 5’6” tall. He did not remember whether the man had any facial hair.

Based on these descriptions, the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office issued a news release

3 describing the suspect as “a Hispanic male between 35 to 45 years old, medium complexion,

approximately 240 pounds, and 5’9” tall.”

Evidence accompanying a September 2016 mug shot of Abarca shows that Abarca was

born in 1987 (and thus would have been in his late twenties at the time of the robbery), is 5’11”

tall and, the time of the mug shot, weighed 200 pounds.

C. The investigation

A variety of personnel from the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office were dispatched to the

scene. They obtained statements from the witnesses, including the physical descriptions noted

above. They also learned that Moran’s van was a silver Dodge Caravan with New Mexico license

plates bearing the number MLN428. The officers canvassed the scene and found a car radio and

amp on the ground, and a single shell casing in Ituarte’s car. The officers also took possession of

Ituarte’s gun.

On March 24, 2015, a sheriff’s deputy working the area of Anthony, New Mexico, heard a

radio call about a suspicious vehicle. Along with other officers, he eventually found a silver Dodge

Caravan with a Texas license plate bearing the number DP3B374.2 A check of the vehicle’s VIN

showed that the plate did not match the vehicle, and that the vehicle had been stolen from El Paso

County. Another officer who was dispatched to the location where the van was found was familiar

with Abarca and knew that he lived about a tenth of a mile from that location. That officer

contacted the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office to provide Abarca’s name as a possible suspect in

the theft of the van.

2 The officer testified that the plate number was DP3B379 but photographs of the recovered van show the plate number to be DP3B374.

4 El Paso law enforcement later learned that the Texas license plate found on the van matched

a license plate on a Mitsubishi Eclipse that had been pulled over on March 20, 2015. The car was

occupied by Marisela Gallegos and Michael Bannister, who claimed to own the car. A few days

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