Saul Contreras v. State ( 2011 )


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  •                                             COURT OF APPEALS
    EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    EL PASO, TEXAS
    §
    SAUL CONTRERAS,                                                             No. 08-06-00205-CR
    §
    Appellant,                                          Appeal from
    §
    v.                                                                           346th District Court
    §
    THE STATE OF TEXAS,                                                        of El Paso County, Texas
    §
    Appellee.                                      (TC # 20060D02859)
    §
    OPINION
    Saul Contreras appeals his conviction of felony murder. A jury found Appellant not guilty
    of capital murder as alleged in Count I of the indictment but found him guilty of felony murder as
    alleged in Count II. The jury assessed his punishment at imprisonment for a term of ninety-nine
    years. On January 8, 2009, we affirmed Appellant’s conviction. Contreras v. State, No. 08-06-
    00205-CR, 
    2009 WL 50601
    (Tex.App.--El Paso January 8, 2009). The Court of Criminal Appeals
    granted Appellant’s petition for discretionary review to address several issues including whether we
    erred by finding that Appellant was not entitled to an Article 38.231 instruction on the voluntariness
    of his confession. Contreras v. State, 
    312 S.W.3d 566
    , 576-77 (Tex.Crim.App. 2010). The Court
    of Criminal Appeals reversed because it found that the evidence raised a fact issue regarding whether
    the police threatened to arrest Appellant’s wife if he did not confess and whether the threat rendered
    Appellant’s confession involuntary. 
    Id. The Court
    remanded the case for a harm analysis. 
    Id. at 585-86.
    1
    T EX .C O D E C RIM .P RO C .A N N . art. 38.23 (Vernon 2005).
    FACTUAL SUMMARY
    At the time of the incident leading to Appellant’s indictment and conviction, Appellant
    resided with his wife, Claudia, their two children, Claudia’s sister Susana Hernandez, and Susana’s
    five children, including 22-month-old, Jazmine.                Susana and her children were living with
    Appellant’s family because Susana and her husband were separated.2 On Friday, November 28,
    2003, Susana and Claudia got up early and left the children with Appellant for a few hours while
    they went to the after-Thanksgiving sales. They returned to the house around 10 a.m., but Susana
    left again around 2 that afternoon to buy cake and balloons for her son’s birthday celebration. The
    children stayed home with Appellant and Claudia. Susana returned in about an hour and they
    celebrated her son’s birthday by eating cake. Afterwards, Susana and Claudia began getting the
    children ready to go to Chuck E. Cheese. Susana bathed three of her children, including Jazmine,
    and got them dressed. Appellant did not want to go so he volunteered to stay home and watch
    Jazmine and Susana’s youngest child, Delilah. Susana, Claudia, and the children left for Chuck E.
    Cheese at around 6 p.m. When they returned at 9:30 that evening, Appellant told Susana that
    Jazmine had fallen off of the couch, but he had checked her head and did not find any bumps.
    Jazmine had eaten earlier that day and had some diarrhea, but she did not have any physical injuries
    when they left her with Appellant at 6 p.m. Susana went into the bedroom and briefly checked on
    Jazmine at around 10 p.m. but she did not attempt to awaken her. About an hour later, Susana was
    putting the other children to bed when she noticed that Jazmine was stiff, pale white, cold, and not
    breathing. Susana ran out of the room and called 9-1-1. Appellant began CPR on Jazmine while
    they waited for emergency services to arrive. The paramedics found Jazmine to be “very cold,” pale,
    not breathing, and without a pulse. They also saw bruises on Jazmine’s stomach. Jazmine was
    2
    Susana was married to Appellant’s brother, Victor Contreras.
    transported by ambulance to a hospital but she was pronounced dead. Hospital personnel told
    Susana that Jazmine had not been breathing for hours.
    Dr. Juan Contin performed an autopsy and found evidence of blunt-force trauma to Jazmine’s
    abdomen which caused massive internal injuries. Dr. Contin could not determine whether the
    injuries had been caused by a single blow or multiple blows but the force used was enough to
    transect the organs against the spine. He found a tear of the small bowel mesentery and a large
    contusion of the small and large bowel mesentery which would have incapacitated Jazmine
    immediately. These injuries would have caused tremendous pain and would have prevented her
    from walking or eating. Jazmine also suffered bruising to both sides of her diaphragm, pericardial
    sac, and lower lobes of her lungs. Like the injuries to the small and large bowel mesentery, these
    injuries would have immediately incapacitated Jazmine. Further, the injuries would have caused
    Jazmine to go into shock and she would have survived only fifteen minutes to a maximum of one
    hour after suffering them. In Dr. Contin’s opinion, Jazmine’s injuries could not have been caused
    by a fall from a couch. Based on the temperature of the body3 and rigor mortis in the jaw, it was Dr.
    Contin’s opinion that Jazmine had been dead for a few hours by the time emergency services arrived
    at the house that evening.
    During the early morning hours of November 29, 2003, Detective Jimmy Aguirre began
    investigating Jazmine’s death by taking statements from all adults who had been taking care of her
    the previous day. Appellant agreed to go with Aguirre to the police station to give his statement.
    After being advised of his Miranda rights, Appellant waived his rights and provided a lengthy
    written statement. Consistent with what he had told Susana, Appellant stated he was watching a
    basketball game while Jazmine was asleep on a couch. He heard what he described as a loud bang
    3
    The child’s body temperature was 80 degrees when the paramedics arrived at 11:15 p.m. that evening.
    or a loud thump and then Jazmine began crying. He found her on the floor by the couch and checked
    her for injuries but found none. Appellant changed her diaper and clothes and sat with her on his
    bed for a while before putting her to bed. Appellant checked on Jazmine one time before the family
    returned home and he found her sleeping. After Susana returned from Jazmine’s room and told him
    that Jazmine was not moving, Appellant attempted to perform CPR.
    After Detective Aguirre received the autopsy findings, he knew that Appellant’s statement
    was inconsistent with the child’s injuries. Aguirre called Appellant and asked if he would meet with
    him again. Appellant agreed and he returned to the police station along with Claudia, Susana, and
    Victor Contreras. Aguirre escorted Appellant to an interview room and advised him of his Miranda
    rights. Appellant waived his rights and Aguirre went over the autopsy findings with Appellant.
    Appellant provided a written statement admitting that he had punched Jazmine in the abdomen.
    Appellant had become angry because she would not stop crying and she kept kicking while he was
    trying to change her diaper. He punched her four times in the stomach with his right fist until she
    “finally calmed down”. He finished putting on her diaper and changed her clothes because they were
    all wet. Appellant said that Jazmine kept moaning and staring at him as though she were in shock.
    Appellant put Jazmine to bed and went back downstairs to watch the game. When the family
    returned, Appellant told Susana that Jazmine had fallen off the couch.
    Appellant claimed that, during his second interview, he tried to maintain his story that
    Jazmine had fallen off of the couch. The detectives, however, told him that if he did not confess,
    his wife would be arrested and Child Protective Services would take their children away. Detective
    Aguirre denied making these threats. Appellant claimed that the officers’ tactics caused him to
    confess even though he was innocent.
    Dr. Karen Greist, a pediatric forensic pathologist, testified on behalf of the defense. She
    agreed, based on her review of the evidence, that it was possible the child had died within fifteen
    minutes after being struck but she could not state this fact with certainty. Dr. Greist was aware of
    documented cases where a child lived up to three days with similar injuries. In such cases, the child
    could still be hungry and eat. According to Dr. Greist, the time of death for a child could not be
    accurately determined from body temperature or rigor. She testified that Jazmine’s injuries could
    have been inflicted as little as one hour before the paramedics arrived or up to three days before
    Jazmine’s death. On cross-examination, she admitted that she had performed only forty-eight to
    sixty autopsies since 1988. The State recalled Dr. Contin who testified that it would have been
    impossible for Jazmine to have been walking and eating after receiving the injuries she suffered
    because the injuries were “massive” and would have caused her death within fifteen minutes to one
    hour.
    HARM ANALYSIS
    Texas law allows for jury instructions on three different types of “voluntariness” issues: (1)
    a general instruction on voluntariness under Article 38.22, § 64; (2) a warnings instruction under
    Article 38.22, § 75; and (3) a specific voluntariness instruction for constitutional due process claims
    under Article 38.23.6 Contreras, 
    312 S.W.3d 566
    , 573 (Tex.Crim.App. 2010); Oursborn v. State,
    
    259 S.W.3d 159
    , 173-74 (Tex.Crim.App. 2008). The trial court’s charge included a single
    voluntariness instruction which addressed the first two types, but the court refused Appellant’s
    request for a specific Article 38.23 instruction. The issue we must address on appeal is whether the
    court’s failure to give the specific Article 38.23 instruction resulted in some harm to Appellant.
    4
    T EX .C O D E C RIM .P RO C .A N N . art. 38.22, § 6 (2005).
    5
    T EX .C O D E C RIM .P RO C .A N N . art. 38.22, § 7 (2005).
    6
    T EX .C O D E C RIM .P RO C .A N N . art. 38.23 (2005).
    When the defendant objects to an error in the charge, reversal is required only if the error was
    “calculated to injure the rights of defendant.” TEX .CODE CRIM .PROC.ANN. art. 36.19 (Vernon 2006);
    Almanza v. State, 
    686 S.W.2d 157
    , 171 (Tex.Crim.App. 1984)(op. on reh’g), superseded on other
    grounds by rule as stated in Rodriguez v. State, 
    758 S.W.2d 787
    (Tex.Crim.App. 1988). This means
    that there must be “some harm” to the defendant from the error. Sakil v. State, 
    287 S.W.3d 23
    , 25-26
    (Tex.Crim.App. 2009); 
    Almanza, 686 S.W.2d at 171
    . Under this standard, any harm, regardless of
    degree, is sufficient to require reversal. Druery v. State, 
    225 S.W.3d 491
    , 504 (Tex.Crim.App.
    2007). The actual degree of harm must be assayed in light of the entire jury charge, the state of the
    evidence, including the contested issues and the weight of probative evidence, the argument of
    counsel and any other relevant information revealed by the record of the trial as a whole. Sanchez
    v. State, --- S.W.3d ----, 
    2010 WL 3894640
    at *9 (Tex.Crim.App. 2010); 
    Almanza, 686 S.W.2d at 171
    . Under the Almanza standard, the record must show that a defendant has suffered actual, rather
    than merely theoretical, harm from jury instruction error. Warner v. State, 
    245 S.W.3d 458
    , 464
    (Tex.Crim.App. 2008); Ngo v. State, 
    175 S.W.3d 738
    , 750 (Tex.Crim.App. 2005).
    Appellant’s defense included an attack on the voluntariness of his second statement. Richard
    Ofshe, a professor at the University of California at Berkeley, testified as an expert witness on the
    subject of police interrogation tactics and influence. In particular, he testified about the significance
    of certain tactics and explained how they can be psychologically coercive. Further, Dr. Ofshe related
    to the jury that false confessions do occur and people sometimes confess to a crime they did not
    commit.
    The trial court’s charge included the following voluntariness instruction:
    The Court has admitted into evidence before you the alleged written statement of the
    Defendant, and you are instructed that before you may consider the same for any
    purpose you must first believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the
    same was freely and voluntarily made by the Defendant without compulsion or
    persuasion and signed by him; and that prior thereto the Defendant had been warned
    by the person to whom the statement was made that:
    (1) he had the right to remain silent and not make any statement at all
    and that any statement he made may be used against him at trial; and
    (2) any statement he made may be used as evidence against him in
    court; and
    (3) he had the right to have a lawyer present to advise him prior to
    and during any questioning; and
    (4) if he was unable to employ a lawyer, he had the right to have a
    lawyer appointed to advise him prior to and during any questioning;
    and
    (5) he had the right to terminate the interview at any time;
    and that the Defendant prior to and during the making of the statement, knowingly,
    intelligently and voluntarily waived these rights; but if you do not so believe, or if
    you have a reasonable doubt thereof, then the alleged statement is entirely withdrawn
    from your consideration and you shall not give the same any force of effect whatever
    or consider it as any evidence of the Defendant’s guilt in this case, and you shall not
    consider any evidence obtained as a result thereof, if any. [Emphasis added].
    Defense counsel utilized this instruction to argue at length that the jury should disregard the second
    statement because it was not voluntary and it had been coerced by the detectives’ purported threat
    to arrest Appellant’s wife if he did not confess.
    Appellant contends that he was harmed by the charge error because the voluntariness
    instruction given was limited to an inquiry into whether the Miranda warnings had been given. We
    do not read the instruction so narrowly. The instruction plainly asked the jury to determine whether
    it believed from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the statement was freely and voluntarily
    made by the Defendant without compulsion or persuasion, and if it did not so believe or it had a
    reasonable doubt, the jury was instructed to not consider it as evidence in the case. The instruction
    also addressed whether Appellant had been provided the Miranda warnings, but it did not limit the
    jury’s consideration of voluntariness to that specific issue. The parties certainly did not understand
    the jury to be limited to the warnings issue in that the prosecutors and defense counsel spent
    considerable time during closing argument addressing the voluntariness of Appellant’s second
    statement. We conclude that Appellant was not harmed by the charge error because the general
    voluntariness instruction gave the jury a mechanism by which it could disregard the second statement
    if it believed Appellant’s claim of coercion based on the alleged threats to jail his wife. By finding
    Appellant guilty, the jury either rejected Appellant’s claim of coercion and considered the second
    statement along with all of the other evidence, or it disregarded Appellant’s second statement and
    found him guilty based on the remaining evidence. Because the record does not support a finding
    of some harm, we overrule the issue on remand and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
    June 22, 2011
    ANN CRAWFORD McCLURE, Justice
    Before Chew, C.J., McClure, and Rivera, JJ.
    (Do Not Publish)