State v. Julian Andrew Luna

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 2019
Docket08-16-00273-CR
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Julian Andrew Luna (State v. Julian Andrew Luna) 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
State v. Julian Andrew Luna, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

§ THE STATE OF TEXAS, No. 08-16-00273-CR § Appellant, Appeal from § v. 83rd District Court § JULIAN ANDREW LUNA, of Pecos County, Texas § Appellee. (TC # P-3208-83-CR) §

OPINION

The State of Texas is appealing an order suppressing the recorded statements of Julian

Andrew Luna. The indictment alleges that Luna intentionally and knowingly caused the death of

Ruben Salazar, Jr. by stabbing him with a knife. The trial court granted Luna’s motion to

suppress two recorded interviews that he gave to law enforcement officers, finding that Luna did

not voluntarily waive his Miranda and Article 38.22 rights prior to either interview, and that his

confession was involuntary due to alleged threats made by the officers during the interview.

Finding that the trial court abused its discretion by suppressing the evidence, we reverse and

remand.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

The evidence admitted at the suppression hearing showed that, at approximately 2:30 a.m.

on the morning of May 30, 2015, Luna and two of his family members, including his wife, were involved in a fight outside Luna’s home in Iraan, Texas, with the victim, Ruben Salazar, Jr.

(referred to as Ruben or the victim), and his brother, Albert Salazar (referred to as Albert). After

the fight ended and the Salazar brothers had driven away, Luna called 911 to report the incident.

Pecos County Deputy Sheriff Pedro Galvan went to the hospital where the victim had been taken

and encountered Albert outside. Albert informed Deputy Galvan that his brother had been in a

fight with Luna. Although Deputy Galvan considered “everybody” to be a suspect in the stabbing

at that point in the investigation, he formed an opinion, based on Albert’s statements, that Luna

was the main suspect.1 Deputy Sheriff Wesley Evans picked up Luna at his house and took him to

the sub-station in Iraan in his patrol car. Luna rode in the back seat of the patrol car, but was not

handcuffed. Luna testified that he felt he had no choice but to go with Deputy Evans to the

sub-station in Iraan. Deputy Evans did not testify at the suppression hearing.

The First Recorded Interview

At the Iraan sub-station, Deputy Evans began interviewing Luna at 9:37 a.m. The

interview lasted about twenty minutes. At the beginning of the interview, Deputy Evans advised

Luna that he was a “suspect” in the case until his name was “cleared.” Deputy Evans then read

Luna his Miranda2 rights. Deputy Evans expressly asked Luna if he understood those rights to

which Luna replied, “Yes, sir.” Immediately thereafter, Deputy Evans asked Luna, “Can you tell

me everything that happened?” Luna responded, “Yes, sir. Glad to tell you,” and began

recounting the events of that morning.

1 Deputy Galvan also spoke with Luna’s wife, Jasmine Leal, briefly that morning but she did not provide a written or recorded statement. 2 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966).

2 According to Luna, he had been out in front of his house at approximately 2:30 a.m.,

drinking beer with his wife, Jasmine Leal, her sister and her cousin, when the Salazar brothers

drove up and exited their truck. Luna, who was previously acquainted with Ruben, stated that he

considered him to a “good guy,” but thought that there was something wrong with him when he

arrived, and observed that he appeared to be very drunk. The victim “ball[ed] up his fists,” and

Luna and his wife both asked him to leave.

Luna claimed that Ruben attacked him and a fight broke out. During the fight, Ruben held

Luna down while Albert punched him. Luna’s wife and her family members tried to help him and

were punching Albert. At some point during the fight, either the victim or Albert released Luna in

order to get a bat. Luna was afraid so he went inside his house to get his gun. He claimed,

however, that by the time he came back outside, the Salazar brothers were driving away and

appeared to be fighting with each other as they drove off.

During the interview, Luna repeatedly denied stabbing the victim, and claimed that he did

not have a knife with him during the fight. At the close of the interview, Luna gave Deputy Evans

permission to search his home stating that he didn’t have anything to hide and wanted to clear his

name. Deputy Evans thereafter transported Luna back to his house in his patrol car.

The Second Recorded Interview

After Deputy Evans completed the search of Luna’s house he left and did not return until

later that afternoon. Deputy Evans picked up Luna and transported him to the Pecos County

Sheriff’s Office in Fort Stockton. Once again, Luna rode in the back seat of the deputy sheriff’s

vehicle, but was not handcuffed. Luna testified that he felt that he did not have any choice but to

accompany Deputy Evans to the Sheriff’s Office in Fort Stockton.

3 At the Sheriff’s Office, Luna was interviewed by Deputy Galvan, along with Deputy

Evans and Deputy Perkins. This interview began at 3:09 p.m. and concluded at 4:24 p.m.

Deputy Galvan read Luna his Miranda rights, and then asked Luna if he understood his rights, to

which Luna responded: “Yes, sir, I understand them.” Deputy Galvan then asked Luna if he still

wanted to talk to them, and Luna responded: “Yes, sir. I have no problem.” Deputy Galvan

asked Luna to confirm that the deputies were not threatening him or “twisting [his] arm,” and Luna

replied that they were not, and that he was “glad” he came there because he wanted to “get the truth

out.”

In the second interview, Luna repeated many of the same elements of his story, again

claiming that the victim and Albert had come to his home and had started the confrontation with

him. Luna reported that the victim and Albert not only appeared to have been very drunk, but that

they also had been doing “coke” and “meth” before arriving at his home. Luna recalled that he

and his wife both repeatedly told the victim to leave, and that his wife told the victim that if he

didn’t leave she would “cut [his] face.” Albert initiated the fight by tackling Luna to the ground,

and Ruben began hitting Luna on his head and kicking him in the back. Luna fought back by

hitting Ruben on the head. Luna’s family members, including his wife, tried to help him, and his

wife started hitting the victim, and then “everybody” got involved. According to Luna, they were

all “rolling on top” of each other, “everybody [was] hitting Albert,” “punching,” and “going at it.”

During the initial phases of the second interview, Luna repeatedly denied that he had a

knife during the fight, and claimed that neither he nor any of his family members had stabbed the

victim. Luna insinuated that Albert may have stabbed the victim when the two of them drove

away because he had seen them fighting as they drove off.

4 The Alleged Threats

During the interview, Deputy Galvan advised Luna that they had the handle of the knife

that was used to stab the victim, and they intended to send the handle in for testing. Galvan asked

Luna what he would “say when they call back and there’s your DNA on there, and there’s your

fingerprints on there?” When Luna again denied that he had a knife with him during the fight,

Deputy Galvan pointed out that all of Luna’s family members were at the scene, and the following

dialogue occurred:

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