Sebastian Willie Mejia v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 16, 2012
Docket13-10-00090-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Sebastian Willie Mejia v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-10-00090-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

SEBASTIAN WILLIE MEJIA, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 377th District Court of Victoria County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Garza and Vela Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Valdez Appellant, Sebastian Willie Mejia, was convicted of engaging in organized

criminal activity, a first-degree felony. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. §§ 19.02, 71.02

(West 2011). Mejia was sentenced to life imprisonment.1 By five issues, in his pro se

brief, Mejia contends that: (1) the evidence is legally and factually insufficient; (2) the

1 The jury found that appellant was a repeat felony offender. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 12.42 (West Supp. 2011). State engaged in prosecutorial misconduct for a variety of reasons; (3) the trial court

abused its discretion by “not allowing [him] to object to trial counsel and forcing [him] to

trial with an attorney with whom he ha[d] become embroiled in irreconcilable conflict”;

(4) the trial court improperly admitted certain evidence at trial; and (5) defense counsel

was ineffective.2 We affirm.

I. THE EVIDENCE

The State presented the testimony from, among others, Rosie Ann Arce, Janet

Sertuche (“Janet”), Kelly Flood, Harminda Narula, M.D., Holly Jedlicka, Chris Garcia,

Walter Henson, Charles Ray Goble, Mistie De Los Santos (“Mistie”), John McNeill,

M.D., Paul Garcia, Calvin S. Story Jr., Justin De Los Santos (“Justin”), Amanda

Clemons, and Pedro Reyes Jr. The trial court also admitted numerous State’s exhibits

at trial, including, among other things, an audio recording of Sertuche’s call to 911, and

a video recording of the crime scene. Mejia testified on his own behalf. He also

presented the testimony of Detective Clemons among others.

A. Arce

Arce testified that on Tuesday, October 30, 2007, her son Derrick Quintanilla

died as a result of a gunshot wound to the head. At the time of his death, Quintanilla

had been dating Mistie for approximately four months. Quintanilla’s body was found at

Mistie’s residence in Victoria, Texas.

B. Janet Sertuche

Janet testified that Mistie is her daughter and Justin is her son. On October 30,

2007, Janet lived on Guadalupe Street in Victoria. Quintanilla occasionally spent the

2 We have renumbered and reorganized Mejia’s six issues.

2 night at Janet’s home. Justin and Quintanilla’s relationship was frayed when Quintanilla

began dating Mistie; however, the conflict had been resolved before Quintanilla’s death.

According to Janet, Quintanilla and Mistie had been dating for almost two years. Mistie

was fifteen at the time of Quintanilla’s death and Quintanilla was seventeen.

Mejia was dating Janet’s sister, Natalie Sertuche. On October 28, 2007,

Quintanilla and Mistie babysat Natalie’s children at her apartment. Janet assumed that

Mejia also resided at the apartment because “[h]e was there.” On that day, Janet had to

go to Natalie’s apartment to check on Natalie’s son and her other sister Paula’s two

sons because there was an automobile accident. The accident involved Paula, Natalie,

and Mejia. Paula and Natalie went to the hospital. Mejia was injured; however, he did

not go to the hospital.

When Janet arrived at Natalie’s apartment, she saw Mejia and Quintanilla arrive

also. This occurred in the morning hours of October 28. When the police arrived at the

apartment complex, Mejia told Janet he did not want to be there, so she took him to her

residence. When Janet later took Mejia back to Natalie’s apartment, Mejia complained

that his wallet and money were missing. Mejia believed that he had forgotten his wallet

in his brother, Paul’s car. The wallet was found in Natalie’s apartment on the kitchen

table the next morning.

Janet stated that subsequently, she called Natalie3 and that Mejia took the phone

away from Natalie and said, “‘That was fucked up, what they did, screwing me over like

that, when I was all messed up. But they’re going to pay. There’s nothing you can do

to protect them. I’ve already called my boys and they are coming down [and they’re on

3 It is unclear from Janet’s testimony when she called her.

3 their way] and they don’t play.’” According to Janet, Mejia stated that Quintanilla, Mistie,

and Justin should be concerned about his threat.

Quintanilla spent the night at Janet’s residence on October 29, 2007. Janet had

the overnight shift at work and returned home at “around” 7:45 a.m. Mistie needed to

go to school, and Quintanilla had an appointment at the attorney general’s office. Janet

took Mistie to school some time after 8:00 a.m. Justin and Quintanilla remained at

home. When Janet left, Justin was asleep and Quintanilla was attempting to go back to

sleep.

After dropping Mistie off at school, Janet went to her other daughter’s residence.

While there, Janet received a phone call from an unknown person. The caller told Janet

that “there would be police officers up in [her] house. They wanted to know if [her] son

was at home and, if not, he has a key—There was going to be a lot of law at [her]

house.” Janet immediately returned home and discovered that the screen door was

torn and the “plexiglass on [her] front door was pushed in.” Janet then went to her

bedroom and discovered Quintanilla’s lifeless body.

Janet stated that Justin and Quintanilla both had friends that were in different

gangs. Janet did not know whether Justin was associated with any gangs. According

to Janet, Justin and Quintanilla had been involved in altercations with members of

gangs. Janet once witnessed Justin and Quintanilla fighting with some boys at Natalie’s

apartment complex.

4 C. Flood

Officer Flood, a Victoria Police Department Officer, responded to Janet’s call to

911. While at Janet’s residence, Janet told Officer Flood that she knew who had killed

Quintanilla but would not reveal the person’s identity out of fear. Officer Flood said:

She began talking about a car accident that [Quintanilla] and her daughter had called her about. There was another guy with them at the time and she was supposed to go—[t]hey were supposed to—[s]omebody was supposed to go pick this guy up, along with [Quintanilla].

....

And she believed that that was the guy who had killed him.

A nine-millimeter casing was found at the crime scene. Quintanilla had been

shot in the face and was bleeding from his nose. Flood found that Quintanilla had a

“very faint and very weak” pulse.4

On re-direct examination, Flood testified that Janet told her that “her daughter

and [Quintanilla] had received a phone call from the guy they had given a ride to and he

believed that Mistie and [Quintanilla] had taken his wallet and he wanted the money

back or he was going to come back after them.” Janet was “concerned for herself and

her family. After that, her main concern was getting in touch with her daughter, who

was at school, and making sure no one would harm her daughter.”

D. Dr. Narula

Dr. Narula is a forensic pathologist who works for the Nueces County Medical

Examiner’s Office as a contract medical examiner. The autopsy showed that Quintanilla

had been shot in the right cheek. There was “tiny gunpowder stippling” around the

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