Vincent Ray Settles v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 3, 2015
Docket05-14-00383-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Vincent Ray Settles v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Affirmed as Modified; Opinion Filed June 3, 2015.

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-14-00382-CR No. 05-14-00383-CR

VINCENT RAY SETTLES, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court No. 3 Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause Nos. F14-00085-J and F14–00086–J

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Myers, Evans, and Brown Opinion by Justice Myers Appellant Vincent Ray Settles was convicted by a jury of unlawful possession of a

firearm by a felon1 and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon.2 The trial court assessed a

punishment of ten years’ imprisonment in the unlawful possession of a firearm case. In the

aggravated assault case, the trial court accepted appellant’s plea of true to both of the

indictment’s enhancement paragraphs, found the two enhancement paragraphs true, and assessed

punishment at forty years’ imprisonment. In two issues, appellant contends the trial court erred

by denying his requested jury instruction for a lesser-included offense in the aggravated assault

1 Cause number 05-14-00382-CR (F14-00085-J). 2 Cause number 05-14-00383-CR (F14-00086-J). case, and that the trial court should not have overruled appellant’s objection to two State’s

exhibits in the unlawful possession of a firearm by a felon case. As modified, we affirm the trial

court’s judgments.

BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Lorenza Padilla testified3 that she was living in a second-floor apartment at the Venue at

Greenville apartments on July 8, 2013, in Dallas, Texas. She was in her apartment on that day

when she heard what sounded like an iron rod being thrown to the ground. She went to the

window and looked out over the parking lot, but saw nothing. She soon heard what sounded like

a thump in the area of her kitchen door and went to the window near the door to investigate. She

was opening the blinds when she heard a thud on her door, followed by another thud, at which

point a man knocked down the door and landed on the floor of Padilla’s apartment. Padilla

recalled that the man, a black male, “seemed to be very drunk.” She saw a gun in his hand.

Padilla jumped over the man’s legs while he was still lying on the floor and fled out the door of

the apartment. Padilla made it down the first set of stairs before the man caught up to her, put his

arm around her neck, and held a gun to her head. Padilla thought the man was going to kill her.

She recalled that he was saying something to her in English, but Padilla, who spoke only

Spanish, did not understand him. She asked him in Spanish if he wanted money, pointing toward

the door to her apartment and saying “dinero.” The man then let Padilla go and she ran to

another apartment where a woman she knew let her in and called the police.

The police took photographs of Padilla’s injuries. At trial she identified photographs of

her injuries that showed redness on her neck and some scratches.

Padilla testified that she first saw the gun in the man’s hand when he fell into her

apartment. She testified that the gun seemed to be black but she just glanced at it. When asked

3 Padilla did not speak English. She testified at trial through a Spanish-speaking interpreter.

–2– if she saw the gun or could feel it when it was placed against her neck, Padilla testified: “[W]hen

it was here, I could feel it, I––and then I could see it. I––I just was very afraid.” She admitted

on cross-examination that she originally told officers that these events occurred inside her

apartment rather than on the stairwell. She also testified that she had previously seen the man

who broke into her apartment smoking and drinking on the stairs of the apartment complex, and

thought he lived at the complex.

Other evidence showed that Dallas police received four 911 calls reporting an armed man

at the Venue at Greenville apartments on July 8, 2013. One of those 911 calls was made by

Alice Cabellero, who was working at the apartment complex’s leasing office on the day in

question. She testified that she made the 911 call after she saw a man running towards the

leasing office with a gun. She described him as a black male wearing a white t-shirt and blue

jeans. She told the 911 operator that the man was running towards building 15. She followed

him through the apartment complex to building 17, arriving there at around the same time as the

Dallas Police officers responding to the 911 calls.

The first Dallas officers to arrive at the scene were Officer Emily Bailey and her senior

training officer. Officer Bailey testified that at around 5:00 to 6:00 p.m. on July 8, 2013, she was

on patrol with a senior training officer––she was on the fourth or fifth week of her officer

training––when they received a high-priority call about a person with a weapon at an apartment

complex at 5759 Pineland who was “actively shooting.” The officers pulled up to the street

before the gate to the complex, where a woman flagged them down and told them “he’s in there,

he’s in there.” The officers entered the complex and drove around looking for a man matching

the description they had been given––an armed black male with a white t-shirt and blue jeans.

When Officer Bailey, who was driving, drove around the corner of one building, she saw a black

male in a white t-shirt and blue jeans kicking in a window. Officer Bailey identified this man in

–3– court as appellant. After the officers got out of the squad car, they approached appellant on foot

with their weapons drawn and ordered him to show them his hands, but appellant did not

respond. Then, suddenly, appellant fell forward to the ground, and was resting on his hands.

The officers continued ordering appellant to show them his hands; he did not comply. Appellant

got up and tried to run away, but Officer Bailey pursued appellant “and took him to the ground.”

With the assistance of other officers, she handcuffed appellant. After the officers handcuffed

appellant, they carried him and placed him in one of the patrol cars.

Officer Bailey testified that appellant “was not acting like a sober person.” She added, “I

think he was under the influence of something.” Officer Bailey also testified that appellant

continued struggling after he was handcuffed and placed in the squad car––trying to kick out the

windows. The officers removed him from the vehicle and held him down.

After the officers got appellant under control, Officer Bailey went around the complex

and started interviewing potential witnesses. She tried to interview Padilla but “it didn’t work”

because Padilla spoke only Spanish. A Spanish-speaking officer was brought in to talk to her.

Officers also interviewed Daniel Lynn, who lived in a ground-floor apartment in building

17 at the Venue at Greenville apartments. Lynn was at home that day with his father, his brother

Clifton, his brother’s girlfriend, and his brother’s friend. He went outside to smoke a cigarette

and saw appellant, whom he recognized as a person that lived “like cater-corner from us” at the

complex, “acting erratic and paranoid.” Lynn could see appellant had a gun. Appellant went up

the stairs to the floor above Lynn’s apartment. Lynn went back into his apartment, locked the

door, and told his brother to call 911.4 He told everyone to get back into their rooms and told his

father to get down on the floor. They soon heard two gunshots and loud noises that sounded like

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