Segundo, Juan Ramon Meza

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 29, 2008
DocketAP-75,604
StatusPublished

This text of Segundo, Juan Ramon Meza (Segundo, Juan Ramon Meza) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Segundo, Juan Ramon Meza, (Tex. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS NO.AP-75,604

JUAN RAMON MEZA SEGUNDO, Appellant

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

ON DIRECT APPEAL FROM TARRANT COUNTY

C OCHRAN, J., delivered the opinion of the unanimous Court. P RICE, J., filed a concurring opinion in which M EYERS and H OLCOMB, JJ., joined.

OPINION

Appellant was convicted in December 2006 of capital murder for raping and

strangling Vanessa Villa.1 Pursuant to the jury’s answers to the special punishment issues,

the trial judge sentenced appellant to death.2 Direct appeal to this Court is automatic. We

have reviewed appellant’s nineteen points of error, and, finding them without merit, we

1 T EX . PENAL CODE §19.03(a). 2 T EX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 37.071 §2(b), (e), and (g). Segundo Page 2

affirm the trial court’s judgment and sentence.

Factual Background

This “cold case” prosecution involved the 1986 rape and murder of eleven-year-old

Vanessa Villa. Appellant was not a suspect until 2005 when, during a routine CODIS 3

computer run, his DNA profile “matched” that from sperm found in Vanessa’s vagina.

Vanessa lived with her mother, Rosa Clark, her one-year-old brother, Enrique, her

aunt, Alicia Avila, and her aunt’s three children in a small house in northwest Fort Worth.

On August 2, 1986, Vanessa came home at about 5-6 p.m. after working at a flea market.

She fell asleep, fully clothed, in the bedroom that she shared with her mother and baby

brother. At about 10 p.m., her mother and aunt left to run some errands. When they returned

an hour later, Rosa went into her bedroom, and she “hollered” to Alicia. When Alicia came

into the bedroom, she saw a comatose Vanessa lying on the bed. Her blouse and bra were

pushed up, she was naked from the waist down, and her bare legs were slightly separated.

The window fan was on a bedroom chair and the window screen was hanging loose. Alicia

saw what she thought was semen on Vanessa’s legs.

They called the police. Vanessa was taken to the hospital, but she was pronounced

dead shortly thereafter. According to the medical examiner, the cause of her death was

manual strangulation. Vanessa also had abrasions and bruises on her face consistent with a

hand pushing down on her mouth and nose. There was muddy debris on her thighs,

3 CODIS is the acronym for Combined DNA Index System. Segundo Page 3

consistent with a hand grabbing her thigh, abrasions on her left breast, and a bruise on her

right arm. She had a “huge tear” on the back wall of her vagina, and there was blood around

her external genitalia. The medical examiner thought that these injuries were

“perimortem”–caused right around the time she died. Sperm was found on the bedspread,

the fitted sheet she was lying on, and in Vanessa’s vagina. The medical examiner agreed that

sperm can remain in the vaginal vault for anywhere from 48-72 hours.

Although the Fort Worth police investigated several possible suspects, three of them

were eliminated when their DNA profiles did not match the DNA from the crime scene

semen samples, and the investigation of other suspects led nowhere. Vanessa’s rape and

murder eventually became an unsolved “cold case.”

In 2000, a DNA blood sample was taken from appellant.4 His DNA profile was

entered in the Texas CODIS computer database. In March 2005, a DNA profile from the

semen samples taken from Vanessa was also entered into the CODIS system. Two days later,

a routine “search and match” computer test matched appellant’s DNA profile with that of the

semen. A verification test was performed the next month. Another DNA specimen was

obtained from appellant, and, once again, his DNA matched that found in Vanessa’s vagina

and on her bedspread. The odds of another random DNA match to some other person were

astronomical because appellant has a rare micro-allele in his DNA.

Although appellant had never been a suspect in Vanessa’s rape and murder, he did

4 The jury was not informed that appellant’s blood sample was taken in prison pursuant to statute. Segundo Page 4

know her family. Vanessa’s mother and aunt worked with appellant’s wife at a nursing

home. Appellant would sometimes drive his wife over to Rosa’s home. Alicia remembered

that he had attended Vanessa’s wake and had signed the guest book.

During the guilt phase, the State offered evidence of a second rape-murder appellant

committed in 1995. During the punishment phase, the State offered evidence of a third rape-

murder appellant committed in 1994. In both of these cases, the women were strangled, and

semen containing appellant’s DNA profile was found in the victims’ vagina or mouth.

Other evidence at the punishment stage showed that, in 1987, appellant burglarized

the home of Irene Perez by entering her bedroom through an open window one night. He

grabbed her, hit her face, choked her, and covered her mouth. She thought she was going to

die, but she fought him off, turned on the light, and recognized him as someone she used to

work with. He did not have his pants on. He escaped and fled in a small black car.

Three years later, appellant burglarized Sandra Holleman’s apartment, coming in

through a living-room window, as she and her two small children were asleep on a mattress

in the living room. Ms. Holleman woke up to see appellant lying naked beside her, trying

to pull her pants down. As she screamed, he tried to choke her. He escaped by climbing

back out the living-room window. She thought that she recognized him as someone who had

once lived in the same apartment complex.

The State also offered evidence that appellant repeatedly molested his girlfriend’s

five-year-old daughter in the late 1980’s. When he babysat her, he would buy her candy and Segundo Page 5

then make her give him oral sex. Afterwards, appellant said that if she ever told her mother

he would kill her and her mother. She was too afraid to tell her mother what appellant had

done until she was sixteen years old.

Other evidence showed that appellant was arrested in 1993 when an officer saw him

and another man pointing guns at each other on a Fort Worth street at 2:00 a.m. Appellant’s

gun, a Larcin semi-automatic, was loaded with one round in the chamber and six more in the

magazine. While appellant was in prison in 1998, guards found four metal rods, in the

process of being sharpened into “shanks,” in the cell occupied by appellant and another man.

During the defense punishment case, appellant’s brother, Val Meza, testified that

appellant and his two brothers grew up in “a ghetto area” of El Paso. They moved from

California with their mother because appellant’s father physically abused their mother. They

were very poor and had to scavenge for food when their mother disappeared for days at a

time. Appellant fell down some stairs when he was about one, but he did not receive medical

attention for that injury. Appellant seemed “slow” and “always in a daze” after that. Shortly

thereafter, appellant and his brothers were taken to an orphanage, but they were eventually

reunited with their mother, who remarried in 1967. Three years later, they moved to Fort

Worth with their mother and stepfather, who was a physically abusive alcoholic.

Mr. Meza testified that appellant called him in 2000 from a halfway house and asked

if he could stay with him. When Mr. Meza went to pick appellant up, he didn’t recognize his

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