Tracy Lynn Escobedo v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2011
Docket02-10-00069-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Tracy Lynn Escobedo v. State (Tracy Lynn Escobedo 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
Tracy Lynn Escobedo v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

02-10-069-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO.  02-10-00069-CR

Tracy Lynn Escobedo

APPELLANT

V.

The State of Texas

STATE

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FROM THE 235th District Court OF Cooke COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

I.  Introduction

          Appellant Tracy Lynn Escobedo appeals his conviction for aggravated injury to a child with a deadly weapon.  See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.04(a), (e) (West 2011).  Appellant pleaded not guilty.  The jury found him guilty and assessed his punishment at life imprisonment with a $10,000 fine, and the trial court sentenced Appellant accordingly.  In two issues, Appellant contends that the trial court improperly denied his challenges for cause and that the trial court erred by admitting evidence of extraneous acts or offenses.  We affirm.

II.  Background[2]

          On January 19, 2009, Appellant had an argument with Cynthia Stout at her home.  Stout lived at the home with her children and husband, and Appellant had been staying at the Stout residence “on and off” for three or four months.[3]  After the argument, Appellant gathered some clothes, a bottle of Rooto, and a bottle of crystal Drano and put them into a garbage bag.  Appellant took the garbage bag and began walking toward Gainesville.[4]  Stout, with four of her children inside the truck, followed Appellant and offered him a ride, and she drove the truck, with the windows down, slowly along the road as she asked Appellant to get in the truck. According to Appellant, he decided to get in the truck when he realized Stout was not going to leave.  Appellant testified that he tossed the garbage bag—containing the clothes, Rooto, and crystal Drano—toward the bed of the truck because he did not want Stout to know that he had the Rooto and crystal Drano and because he did not want them inside the truck with the children.  However, the garbage bag went inside the cab of the truck instead of the bed, and sulfuric acid from the bottles inside the garbage bag severely burned each of the four children.  Stout drove the children and Appellant to Gainesville, and paramedics arrived to treat the children.  Appellant testified that while the paramedics treated the three oldest children (the youngest child was the least severely injured), he left the area with the youngest child in Stout’s truck because Stout told him to, returned to the Stout residence, left the youngest child at the residence with Stout’s eleven-year-old daughter (who was not in the truck and had remained at the residence), and asked the neighbors for a ride back to Gainesville.  Appellant testified that he wanted to go back to Gainesville to borrow a friend’s car and drive to the hospital. 

All four children were taken by helicopter to Parkland Hospital for additional treatment.  The oldest child—the one for which Appellant was charged with injuring in this case—was hospitalized for two months and has permanent scarring.

III.  Challenges for Cause

          Appellant contends in his first issue that the trial court erred by denying his challenges for cause to six venire members because those venire members could not differentiate between the clear and convincing and beyond a reasonable doubt standards of proof and might have convicted him on the lesser burden.  The State responds that Appellant failed to preserve his first issue for appellate review because he did not exercise peremptory strikes on the six venire members he challenges on appeal.

          To preserve error regarding a trial court’s denial of a challenge for cause, a defendant must: (1) exercise a peremptory challenge on a venire member whom the trial court should have excused for cause; (2) exhaust all of his peremptory challenges; (3) request and be denied an additional peremptory challenge; (4) identify the objectionable venire member who actually sat on the jury whom he would have struck otherwise; and (5) make the trial court aware of his complaint at a time and in a manner in which it could be corrected.  Loredo v. State, 159 S.W.3d 920, 923 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004); see Davis v. State, 329 S.W.3d 798, 807 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010); Johnson v. State, 43 S.W.3d 1, 5–6 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001); see also Tex. R. App. P. 33.1.  Further, an appellant challenging denials of challenges for cause is entitled to appellate review of denials only with respect to jurors he used statutory peremptory strikes to exclude.  Busby v. State, 253 S.W.3d 661, 671 (Tex. Crim. App.), cert. denied, 129 S. Ct. 625 (2008).  If the issue has been preserved, the appropriate standard of review for the denial of a challenge for cause is an abuse of discretion standard.  Curry v. State, 910 S.W.2d 490, 493 (Tex. Crim. App. 1995).

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Tracy Lynn Escobedo v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tracy-lynn-escobedo-v-state-texapp-2011.