Gutierrez, Ruben ( 2011 )


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  •            IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    OF TEXAS
    NO. AP-76,406
    EX PARTE RUBEN GUTIERREZ, Appellant
    ON DIRECT APPEAL
    FROM THE 107TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
    CAMERON COUNTY
    C OCHRAN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which M EYERS, W OMACK,
    J OHNSON, K EASLER and H ERVEY, JJ., joined. K ELLER, P.J. and P RICE, J.,
    concurred.
    OPINION
    Appellant appeals from two trial court orders–the first denying his request for
    appointed counsel to assist him in filing a motion for post-conviction DNA testing, and the
    second denying his motion for the testing itself. We will affirm.
    I.
    Background
    Appellant was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death for his participation
    in the robbery and murder of eighty-five-year-old Escolastica Harrison. Mrs. Harrison lived
    Gutierrez   Page 2
    with her nephew, Avel Cuellar, in a mobile-home park in Brownsville. She owned the
    mobile-home park, and her home doubled as the park’s office. Mrs. Harrison did not trust
    banks, and, at the time of her murder, she had about $600,000 in cash hidden in her home.
    Appellant was one of the few people who knew about Mrs. Harrison’s money. Mrs. Harrison
    had befriended appellant because he was friends with her nephew, Avel.               Appellant
    sometimes ran errands for Mrs. Harrison, and he borrowed money from her. Appellant,
    Avel, and others routinely gathered behind Mrs. Harrison’s home to drink and visit.
    Appellant, then 21 years old, orchestrated a plan to steal her money. On September
    5, 1998, he and an accomplice, Rene Garcia–whom Mrs. Harrison did not know–entered
    Mrs. Harrison’s home to carry out this plan. A third accomplice, Pedro Gracia, was the
    driver. When appellant and Rene Garcia left with Mrs. Harrison’s money, she was dead.
    Avel Cuellar found her body late that night–face down in a pool of blood. She had been
    severely beaten and stabbed numerous times. Mrs. Harrison’s bedroom was in disarray, and
    her money was missing.
    The next day, detectives canvassed the area for information. Detective Garcia, the lead
    investigator, already knew that appellant’s drinking buddies–Avel Cuellar, Ramiro Martinez,
    and Crispin Villarreal–had all said that appellant was in the trailer park the evening of the
    murder. Another witness, Julio Lopez, also said appellant was there.1
    1
    Mr. Lopez did not know appellant. The police showed him some “loose photos,” and he
    picked out appellant in “a few seconds” and was “absolutely positive” about that identification.
    But by the time of trial, Mr. Lopez was not able to identify appellant in person.
    Gutierrez   Page 3
    On September 8, 1998, detectives went to appellant’s home. He was not there, but
    his mother said she would bring him to the police station. The next day, appellant voluntarily
    came to the police station to make a statement. He gave an alibi. He said he had seen Avel
    Cuellar and another friend, Ramiro Martinez, at the trailer park on the Friday before the
    murder, but on the Saturday of the murder, he drove around with Joey Maldonaldo in
    Maldonaldo’s Corvette all day long. They were nowhere near Mrs. Harrison’s mobile-home
    park. When police asked him if he had his days mixed up, appellant cut off questioning. The
    alibi did not pan out. Joey Maldonaldo’s statement did not mesh with appellant’s.
    Four days later, as a result of statements given by appellant’s two accomplices, Rene
    Garcia and Pedro Gracia, and their own investigation, the police obtained an arrest warrant
    for appellant. He made a second statement. This time, he admitted that he had planned the
    “rip off,” but said that he had waited at a park while Rene Garcia and Pedro Gracia did it.
    He said that when his two cohorts came to pick him up, Rene Garcia was holding a
    screwdriver covered in blood and said that he had killed Mrs. Harrison. Rene Garcia and
    Pedro Gracia had taken a blue suitcase and a tackle/tool box full of money. Appellant said,
    “There was no doubt about the fact that I planned the whole rip off but I never wanted for
    either one of them to kill Mrs. Harrison. When I saw that Pedro was grabbing the money
    from the tackle/tool box and heard some crumbling plastic I decided that I did not want any
    money that they had just ripped off.” Appellant told the police that his accomplices had told
    him where they had thrown the blue suitcase away. Appellant led the detectives to a remote
    Gutierrez   Page 4
    area, but when the officers could not find the blue suitcase, appellant was allowed out of the
    car, and he walked straight to it.
    The next day appellant made a third statement, admitting that he had lied in his
    previous one “about being dropped off in the park, about not being with Rene.” He said
    Pedro Gracia drove the truck and dropped him and Rene Garcia off at Mrs. Harrison’s home.
    The initial plan was for Rene Garcia to lure Mrs. Harrison out of her home by asking to see
    a trailer lot. Then appellant would come around from the back of her home, run in, and take
    the money without her seeing him. But when appellant ran around to the front, Rene Garcia
    and Mrs. Harrison were still inside the house. Appellant said Rene Garcia knocked out Mrs.
    Harrison by hitting her, and then he repeatedly stabbed her with a screwdriver. The
    screwdriver “had a clear handle with red, it was a standard screwdriver. We had got the
    screwdriver from the back of the truck in a tool box along with another screwdriver, a star
    type.” Appellant gathered the money. “When he started stabbing her, I pulled out the blue
    suitcase from the closet and the black tool box fell. It opened when it fell and I saw the
    money.” Appellant tossed the tool box to Rene Garcia, and headed out the door with the blue
    suitcase. Rene Garcia followed, and Pedro Gracia pulled the truck around to pick them up.
    Pedro Gracia dropped them off down a caliche road and appellant filled “up the little tool box
    with the money that was in the suitcase,” while Rene Garcia filled up his shirt. They
    abandoned the suitcase, and Pedro Gracia picked them up and drove appellant home.
    Much of the money was recovered. Appellant’s wife’s cousin, Juan Pablo Campos,
    Gutierrez    Page 5
    led police to $50,000 that appellant had given him to keep safe. The prosecution’s theory at
    trial was that appellant, either as a principal or as a party, intentionally murdered Mrs.
    Harrison during a robbery.       The prosecution emphasized (1) the medical examiner’s
    testimony that two different instruments caused the stab wounds,2 (2) appellant’s admission
    that he and Rene Garcia went inside Mrs. Harrison’s home office with two different
    screwdrivers, and (3) the fact that four different people–Avel Cuellar, Ramiro Martinez, and
    Crispin Villarreal from “the drinking group” and another passerby, Mr. Lopez, who did not
    know appellant–all saw him at the mobile-home park the day that Mrs. Harrison was killed.
    The jury was instructed that it could convict appellant of capital murder if it found that
    appellant “acting alone or as a party” with the accomplice intentionally caused the victim’s
    death. The jury returned a general verdict of guilt, and, based on the jury’s findings at the
    punishment phase, the trial judge sentenced appellant to death.
    We affirmed appellant’s conviction and sentence on direct appeal in 2002 3 and denied
    his application for a writ of habeas corpus in 2008. Appellant filed a petition for writ of
    habeas corpus in federal district court, but that court stayed and abated the federal
    proceedings to allow the appellant to pursue unexhausted state claims.
    2
    The medical examiner testified that Mrs. Harrison suffered defensive wounds that
    indicated she had struggled for her life and tried to “ward off blows or attacks of some sort.” He
    said that she was stabbed approximately thirteen times by two different instruments. One
    “almost certainly” was a flat-head screwdriver and the other was possibly a Phillips-head
    screwdriver.
    3
    Gutierrez v. State, No. AP-73,462 (Tex. Crim. App. Jan. 16, 2002) (not designated for
    publication).
    Gutierrez   Page 6
    Appellant then filed a request for appointment of counsel under Article 64.01(c) in
    the original trial court. In support of his motion for counsel appellant noted he was seeking
    DNA testing of the following evidence:
    !         a blood sample taken from the victim, Escolastica Harrison;
    !         a shirt belonging to the victim’s nephew and housemate, Avel Cuellar,
    containing apparent blood stains;
    !         nail scrapings taken from victim during an autopsy;
    !         blood samples collected from Avel Cuellar’s bathroom, from a raincoat located
    in or just outside his bedroom, and from the sofa in the front room of the
    victim’s house; and
    !         a single loose hair found around the third digit of the victim’s left hand that
    was found during the autopsy.
    Appellant accompanied his request with a copy of the autopsy report and lab reports,
    his assertion that the identity of Mrs. Harrison’s killer is and was an issue at trial, and his
    statement that exculpatory results would support his position that he neither murdered Mrs.
    Harrison nor anticipated her murder. The trial judge denied the request, finding that there
    were no “reasonable grounds” for filing a motion for post-conviction DNA testing.4
    Appellant filed an interlocutory appeal that this Court dismissed as premature. We
    held that an order denying appointed counsel under Article 64.01(c) is not an immediately
    appealable order under Rule 25.2(a)(2),5 and that “[t]he better course is for a convicted
    4
    See TEX .CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 64.01(c).
    5
    TEX . R. APP . P. 25.2(a).
    Gutierrez    Page 7
    person to file a motion for DNA testing and, if and when the motion is denied, appeal any
    alleged error made by the trial judge in refusing to appoint counsel.” 6
    Appellant then filed a motion for post-conviction DNA testing.                    In it, he
    acknowledged that the three men involved in the robbery of Mrs. Harrison were himself,
    Rene Garcia, and Pedro Gracia. But he relies on the evidence that only two people entered
    the home to argue that exculpatory DNA test results (results that established that he was not
    one of those two) would show, by a preponderance of the evidence, that he would not have
    been convicted of capital murder or sentenced to death. The trial judge denied the request
    for testing because appellant (1) failed to meet the “no fault” provision of Chapter 64, and,
    alternatively, (2) failed to establish either that “identity was or is an issue in the case” or that
    it was more probable than not that he would not have been convicted if exculpatory results
    had been obtained through DNA testing.7
    II.
    Chapter 64 and the Standard of Review
    There is no free-standing due-process right to DNA testing, and the task of fashioning
    rules to “harness DNA’s power to prove innocence without unnecessarily overthrowing the
    established system of criminal justice” belongs “primarily to the legislature.” 8 In Texas,
    6
    Gutierrez v. State, 
    307 S.W.3d 318
    , 323 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).
    7
    See Articles 64.01(b)(1)(B), 64.03(a)(1)(B) & (a)(2)(A).
    8
    District Attorney's Office v. Osborne, 
    129 S. Ct. 2308
    , 2316 (2009). See also Ex parte
    Mines, 
    26 S.W.3d 910
    , 914 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000) (there is no constitutional right to
    Gutierrez      Page 8
    Chapter 64 of the Code of Criminal Procedure requires the judge of the convicting court to
    order DNA testing when requested by a convicted person if it finds all of the following:
    (1)    evidence exists that by its nature permits DNA testing;
    (2)    the evidence was either:
    (a)    justifiably not previously subjected to DNA testing [because DNA
    testing i) was not available, or ii) was incapable of providing probative
    results, or iii) did not occur “through no fault of the convicted person,
    for reasons that are of such a nature that the interests of justice require
    DNA testing”]; or
    (b)    subjected to previous DNA testing by techniques now
    superseded by more accurate techniques;
    (3)    that evidence is in a condition making DNA testing possible;
    (4)    the chain of custody of the evidence is sufficient to establish that it has
    not been substituted, tampered with, replaced, or altered in any material
    respect;
    (5)    identity was or is an issue in the underlying criminal case;
    (6)    the convicted person has established by a preponderance of the
    evidence that the person would not have been convicted if exculpatory
    results had been obtained through DNA testing; and
    (7)    the convicted person has established by a preponderance of the
    evidence that the request for DNA testing is not made to unreasonably
    delay the execution of sentence or administration of justice.9
    An indigent convicted person intending to file a motion for post-conviction DNA
    post-conviction DNA testing).
    9
    See 43B George E. Dix & Robert O. Dawson, 43B TEXAS PRACTICE : CRIMINAL
    PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE § 45.188 (2d ed. 2001 & 2008-09 Supp.) (setting out a summary of
    Articles 64.01(a)-(b) & 64.03(a)-(b)).
    Gutierrez   Page 9
    testing now has a limited right to appointed counsel. That entitlement used to be absolute,10
    but it is now conditioned on the trial judge’s finding “that reasonable grounds exist for the
    filing of a motion.”11 If all of the prerequisites set out above are met, the convicting court
    must order testing. Then, after “examining the results of testing under Article 64.03, the
    convicting court must hold a hearing and make a finding as to whether, had the results been
    available during the trial of the offense, it is reasonably probable that the person would not
    have been convicted.”12 Exculpatory DNA testing results do not, by themselves, result in
    relief from a conviction or sentence. Chapter 64 is simply a procedural vehicle for obtaining
    certain evidence “which might then be used in a state or federal habeas proceeding.” 13
    In reviewing the trial judge’s Chapter 64 rulings, this Court usually gives “almost total
    deference” to the trial judge’s findings of historical fact and application-of-law-to-fact issues
    that turn on witness credibility and demeanor, but we consider de novo all other
    10
    Winters v. Presiding Judge of the Criminal Dist. Court No. Three of Tarrant County,
    
    118 S.W.3d 773
    , 775 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003) (former version of Article 64.01(c) required
    appointment of counsel even if the appointment would be a “useless act” because no evidence
    containing biological material was available for testing).
    11
    Gutierrez v. State, 
    307 S.W.3d 318
    , 321 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010) (explaining that
    appointment of counsel in a post-conviction DNA proceeding is determined by three criteria: (1)
    defendant must inform the convicting court that he wishes to submit a motion for DNA testing;
    (2) the convicting court must find that “reasonable grounds” exist for filing a DNA motion; and
    (3) the convicting court must find that the movant is indigent); Blake v. State, 
    208 S.W.3d 693
    ,
    695 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2006, no pet.) (trial courts must now also find reasonable grounds
    for the motion to be filed).
    12
    Article 64.04.
    13
    Thacker v. State, 
    177 S.W.3d 926
    , 927 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005).
    Gutierrez    Page 10
    application-of-law-to-fact questions.14
    III.
    Appellant raises five issues on appeal. The first relates to the denial of his motion for
    counsel; the rest relate to the denial of the motion for DNA testing. We will address each
    issue in turn, although they are interrelated.
    A.     Appellant is not entitled to appointed counsel because “reasonable grounds” do
    not exist for the filing of a motion for post-conviction DNA testing.
    1.     Appellant’s request for counsel.
    Appellant asserted that reasonable grounds exist for filing a motion for DNA testing
    because exculpatory results would tend to support his assertion that “he was not present
    during, did not participate in, and did not know or anticipate the victim’s murder and is thus
    not guilty of capital murder.”15 The State responded that appellant’s request for appointment
    of counsel was deficient because exculpatory test results would only “muddy the waters” 16
    and would not provide any basis for habeas corpus relief. The State pointed to the following
    evidence in arguing that there were no reasonable grounds to file a motion: (1) appellant’s
    14
    Routier v. State, 
    273 S.W.3d 241
    , 246 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008).
    15
    Appellant’s Request For Appointment of Counsel at 4.
    16
    The State, citing Kutzner v. State, 
    75 S.W.3d 427
    , 439 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002), also
    faulted appellant for not presenting an argument that, if DNA testing is performed, the possible
    exculpatory results would prove him to be actually innocent. As appellant points out–this is the
    wrong standard because 1) Kutzner involved a motion for forensic DNA testing instead of a
    request for the assistance of counsel in the preparation of such a motion, and 2) that reading of
    Kutzner has been superseded by statute, as this Court recognized Smith v. State, 
    165 S.W.3d 361
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2005) (convicted person must prove that, had the results of the DNA test been
    available at trial, there is a 51% chance that he would not have been convicted).
    Gutierrez    Page 11
    statement–admitted at trial–that he was present in Mrs. Harrison’s home when the murder
    took place and that he assisted in taking the money; (2) other trial evidence that appellant and
    an accomplice entered the home with two types of screwdrivers, that Mrs. Harrison’s stab
    wounds were caused by two different instruments, and that Mrs. Harrison knew and could
    identify appellant; and (3) the statements of Pedro Gracia and Rene Garcia–referred to but
    not admitted at trial–that appellant was present in the home and participated in the robbery
    and murder of the victim.
    The trial judge denied the request for counsel finding that appellant “has failed to
    allege and prove that reasonable grounds exist for a motion to be filed under Chapter 64[.]”
    2.     A finding of reasonable grounds requires more than an inarticulate hunch or intuition
    to suggest that exculpatory results would have changed the verdict.
    The statute does not define “reasonable grounds,” but courts of appeals have
    developed some guiding principles. Though a convicted person need not prove entitlement
    (or a prima facie case of it) to DNA testing as a precondition for obtaining appointed
    counsel,17 whether “reasonable grounds” exist for testing necessarily turns on what is
    required for testing. Basic requirements are that biological evidence exists, that evidence is
    in a condition that it can be tested, that the identity of the perpetrator is or was an issue, and
    17
    Lewis v. State, 
    191 S.W.3d 225
    , 227-28 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2005, pet. ref’d) (the
    statute requires only a showing of “reasonable grounds” for a motion to be filed, not the
    establishment of a “prima facie” case). See In re Franklin, No. 03-07-00563-CR, 
    2008 WL 2468712
    at *2 (Tex. App.—Austin June 19, 2008, no pet.) (not designated for publication) (“an
    indigent inmate need not prove his entitlement to testing as a precondition for obtaining
    appointed counsel to assist him in filing a testing motion.”).
    Gutierrez    Page 12
    that this is the type of case in which exculpatory DNA results would make a difference.18
    Courts have found that reasonable grounds for testing are not present if no biological
    evidence exists or if it has been destroyed,19 or if identity was not or is not an issue.20
    Reasonable grounds are present when the facts stated in the request for counsel or otherwise
    known to the convicting court reasonably suggest that a “valid” or “viable” argument for
    testing can be made.21
    18
    Article 64.03(a)(1)(A)(i), (a)(1)(B).
    19
    Atkins v. State, 
    262 S.W.3d 413
    , 416-17 (Tex.App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2008, pet.
    ref’d) (skirting question of what “reasonable grounds” means “because appellant has failed to
    allege even that DNA was taken and exists”), abrogated on other grounds by Gutierrez v. State,
    
    307 S.W.3d 318
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2010); James v. State, 
    196 S.W.3d 847
    , 850 (Tex.
    App.—Texarkana 2006, pet. ref’d) (“A motion for post-conviction DNA testing may request
    testing only of evidence containing biological material ‘that was secured in relation to the offense
    that is the basis of the challenged conviction[.]’ . . . James’ motion does not make this statutorily
    required request, nor does it allege facts which would form the basis of a finding that the motion
    was reasonable. Accordingly, the trial court properly denied James’ request for court-appointed
    counsel because his application fails to show there is any reasonable ground for the
    application.”); Blake v. State, 
    208 S.W.3d 693
    , 695 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2006, no pet.) (“the
    trial court had evidence that no biological material still existed that could be submitted for DNA
    testing. We believe that this evidence provided a sufficient justification for the trial court to
    determine there were no reasonable grounds for the Chapter 64 motion to be filed.”).
    20
    
    Lewis, 191 S.W.3d at 229
    (“Because Lewis’ motion for post conviction DNA testing
    fails to meet two of the preconditions to obtaining DNA testing under Chapter 64, specifically
    that the evidence still exists and that identity is or was an issue in the case, it also fails to
    demonstrate ‘reasonable grounds for a motion to be filed.’”).
    21
    House Research Organization, Bill Analysis, Tex. H.B. 1011, 78th Leg., R.S. (2003)
    (Supporters Say) (“By requiring reasonable grounds before appointing an attorney for an indigent
    person seeking post-conviction DNA testing, HB 1011 would weed out frivolous claims while
    still ensuring a person with a valid claim access to testing. . . . When in doubt, a judge would err
    on the side of caution and appoint a lawyer in case the convicted person had a valid claim.”). See
    In re Franklin, 
    2008 WL 2468712
    at *2 (“reasonable grounds for a testing motion are present
    when the facts stated in the request for counsel or otherwise known to the trial court reasonably
    suggest that a plausible argument for testing can be made. Conversely, reasonable grounds for a
    Gutierrez    Page 13
    An analogy to the Fourth Amendment distinction between “reasonable suspicion” and
    “probable cause” construct may be helpful: Before appointing an attorney, the trial judge
    needs “reasonable grounds” to believe that (1) a favorable forensic test is a viable, fair and
    rational possibility, and (2) such a test could plausibly show that the inmate would not have
    been convicted. Before ordering testing, the inmate must establish, by a preponderance of
    the evidence, “probable cause” that he would not have been convicted if exculpatory DNA
    results are obtained.
    Alternatively, one could approach the “reasonable grounds” questions in the opposite
    direction. The trial judge could simply assume that the result of any proposed DNA testing
    is “exculpatory” in the sense that the test will prove that the inmate is not the source of that
    DNA.        That is a “favorable” or “exculpatory” test result. But if that “favorable” or
    “exculpatory” finding would not change the probability that the inmate would still have been
    convicted, then there are no reasonable grounds to appoint an attorney and no justification
    for ordering any testing. A “favorable” DNA test result must be the sort of evidence that
    would affirmatively cast doubt upon the validity of the inmate’s conviction; otherwise, DNA
    testing would simply “muddy the waters.” 22
    3.     Appellant does not have reasonable grounds to file a motion for DNA testing.
    testing motion are not present if the record before the trial court shows that DNA testing is
    impossible or that no viable argument for testing can be made.”).
    22
    See Rivera v. State, 
    89 S.W.3d 55
    , 59 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002) (citing 
    Kutzner, 75 S.W.3d at 439
    ).
    Gutierrez    Page 14
    Appellant argues that the trial judge’s decision to deny his request for appointed
    counsel was outside the zone of reasonable disagreement because the identity of the murderer
    was at issue for purposes of Article 64.01. In making this argument, appellant asserts that
    the trial judge was not entitled to consider either appellant’s third statement to
    police–because it was purportedly taken in violation of his right to remain silent23 –or his
    accomplices’ statements–because they were neither admissible nor admitted at trial and
    appellant has never had a chance to confront and cross-examine those accomplices.24
    Appellant further argues that, even if these statements can be considered, they are irrelevant
    to whether the murderer’s identity is an issue for purposes of DNA testing.
    First, because a person’s effort to secure testing under Chapter 64 does not involve
    any constitutional considerations, the trial judge could properly consider the accomplices’
    statements. Although evidence offered against a defendant at a criminal trial and challenged
    on constitutional grounds must be admissible to give adequate protection to the values that
    exclusionary rules are designed to serve, a Chapter 64 proceeding is not a “criminal trial.” 25
    23
    Appellant filed a pretrial motion to suppress his statements, which the trial judge
    denied. This Court upheld the trial judge’s ruling admitting appellant’s third statement on direct
    appeal and denied the same claim in his state writ.
    24
    Appellant argues that, because he had no opportunity to cross-examine his accomplices,
    their testimonial statements should not be considered by any court in determining whether the
    murderer’s identity is at issue for purposes of Article 64.01.
    25
    See, e.g., Lego v. Twomey, 
    404 U.S. 477
    , 488-89 (1972) (exclusionary rules aim to
    deter lawless conduct by police and prosecution and often operate at the expense of placing
    probative evidence before juries for the purpose of arriving at truthful decisions about guilt or
    innocence); Thompson v. State, 
    123 S.W.3d 781
    , 784-85 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2003,
    pet. ref’d) (unlike a criminal trial, a Chapter 64 proceeding is an independent, collateral inquiry
    Gutierrez    Page 15
    Rather, it is an independent, collateral inquiry into the validity of the conviction, in which
    exclusionary rules have no place, and there are no constitutional considerations.26 Article
    64.03 does not require any evidentiary hearing before the trial judge decides whether a
    convicted person is entitled to DNA testing.27 And, if a hearing is held, the convicted person
    has no right to be present, no right to confront or cross-examine witnesses, and no right to
    have hearsay excluded or an affidavit considered.28 The legislature has placed no barriers
    to the type of relevant and reliable information that the trial judge may consider when
    determining if identity was or is an issue in the case. The information must be reliable, but
    into the validity of the conviction).
    26
    Prible v. State, 
    245 S.W.3d 466
    , 469 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008). See, e.g., Ex parte
    Mines, 
    26 S.W.3d 910
    , 914 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000) (criminal defendant enjoys a presumption of
    innocence and a constitutional right to be present at a pretrial or trial hearing; applicant for
    post-conviction writ of habeas corpus enjoys neither); DIX & DAWSON , supra, note 9, § 45.181
    (recognizing that this Court, in Prible, made it clear “that a convicted person’s effort to secure
    testing to show that another person was involved in the offense involved no constitutional
    considerations”).
    27
    Rivera v. State, 
    89 S.W.3d 55
    , 58-59 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002) (art. 64.03 does not
    require a hearing of any sort concerning the convicting court’s determination of whether a
    convicted person is entitled to DNA testing, but art. 64.04 requires a hearing after a convicted
    person has obtained DNA testing under art. 64.03). See 
    id. at 61
    (Hervey, J., concurring) (noting
    that Chapter 64 does not prohibit a convicting court from exercising its discretion to conduct an
    evidentiary hearing with live witnesses for the purpose of resolving issues under art. 64.03).
    28
    See 
    Thompson, 123 S.W.3d at 784-85
    (“Unlike a criminal trial, a chapter 64 proceeding
    such as this one does not implicate an appellant's confrontation-clause rights because this type of
    proceeding does not necessarily involve any witnesses or accusations against the appellant.
    Rather, as set forth in chapter 64, the proceeding involves a motion made by the applicant
    followed by the State’s non-accusatory response required under the statute. This type of
    proceeding is analogous to a habeas corpus proceeding in that it is an independent, collateral
    inquiry into the validity of the conviction. Therefore, as in a post-conviction writ of habeas
    corpus proceeding, an applicant for a post-conviction DNA analysis enjoys neither a presumption
    of innocence nor a constitutional right to be present at a hearing.”) (citations omitted).
    Gutierrez    Page 16
    it need not be admissible or previously admitted at trial.29 In short, in a Chapter 64
    proceeding, the constitution does not bar a judge from considering statements that were (or
    should have been) inadmissible at trial. The written statements made by appellant and his
    two accomplices, which were attached to the State’s brief submitted to the trial judge, are as
    much a part of this record as the documents in appellant’s appendix.30
    Second, these statements are highly probative of whether the murderer’s identity is
    an issue for purposes of DNA testing. Appellant properly notes that confessions and witness
    statements do not necessarily preclude a finding of reasonable grounds for granting a DNA
    motion. Article 64.03(b) provides that “A convicted person who . . . made a confession or
    similar admission in the case may submit a motion under this chapter, and the convicting
    court is prohibited from finding that identity was not an issue in the case solely on the basis
    of [that] . . . confession, or admission[.]”31 And we have held that, at least under some
    29
    See Hall v. State, 
    297 S.W.3d 294
    , 298 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) (“The court of appeals
    erred to hold that a Rule 702 Kelly gatekeeping hearing is required to show the reliability of
    LIDAR technology to measure speed at a hearing on a motion to suppress. Nevertheless, the
    court of appeals correctly held that the trial judge abused his discretion when denying Hall’s
    suppression motion because there was no evidence that LIDAR technology, as used in this case,
    supplied probable cause for the stop.”). See also 
    id. at 300-01(Price,
    J., concurring) (setting out
    the “blue cube” theory, in which an officer testified that a person was speeding simply because a
    “blue cube” on his dashboard so indicated).
    30
    See, e.g., Ex parte Campbell, 
    226 S.W.3d 418
    , 423-24 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007) (habeas
    court could properly consider exhibits attached to State’s Motion to Dismiss; “His Chapter 64
    request, the trial court’s retesting order, the DPS results, and the trial court’s findings are all
    attached as exhibits to the State’s motion and are as much a part of this habeas record as are
    applicant’s attachments.”).
    31
    TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 64.03(b).
    Gutierrez    Page 17
    circumstances, a witness’s statement may be “irrelevant” to whether a motion for DNA
    testing makes identity an issue.32 But appellant’s confession is not the sole basis for finding
    that identity was not an issue. The State also points to Julio Lopez’s testimony that appellant
    was outside of the victim’s home on the evening of the murder and that he ran around to the
    back of the victim’s home while another person went to the front door. Mr. Lopez’s
    testimony independently corroborates appellant’s own statement concerning his actions.
    Furthermore, this is not a case in which testing of biological evidence left by a lone
    assailant is sought.33 This case was tried under the law of parties, and the identity of the
    parties–appellant, Rene Garcia, and Pedro Gracia–was not an issue at trial, and it is not an
    issue now. This combination, of (1) appellant’s third statement, placing him inside Mrs.
    Harrison’s home with a screwdriver in his hand, (2) Rene Garcia’s statement that places him
    inside Mrs. Harrison’s home and stabbing her, and (3) Pedro Gracia’s statement that places
    him inside Mrs. Harrison’s home at the time of the murder, is highly probative of`whether
    identity was or is an issue. The trial judge is the sole judge of the credibility of these three
    consistent statements, all of which clearly and unequivocally place appellant inside Mrs.
    32
    Blacklock v. State, 
    235 S.W.3d 231
    , 233 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007) (“That the victim
    testified that she knew appellant and identified him as her attacker is irrelevant to whether
    appellant's motion for DNA testing makes his identity an issue”).
    33
    Esparza v. State, 
    282 S.W.3d 913
    , 922 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009); Smith v. State, 
    165 S.W.3d 361
    , 364-65 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005).
    Gutierrez     Page 18
    Harrison’s home at the time of her murder. Therefore, we adopt this factual finding.34
    Together with all the circumstantial evidence admitted at trial,35 this information supports the
    trial judge’s ultimate legal ruling that there are no “reasonable grounds” for a motion to be
    filed under Chapter 64.36
    B.     Appellant’s second issue is without merit because appellant was “at fault” in not
    seeking DNA testing at trial.
    In his order denying DNA testing, the trial judge found that appellant failed to comply
    with Article 64.01(b)(1)(B) because it was his fault that the biological material was not
    previously tested during his trial.37
    34
    See Rivera v. State, 
    89 S.W.3d 55
    , 59 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002) (in reviewing trial
    judge’s ruling on request for DNA testing, we give almost complete deference to the trial judge’s
    determination of historical facts and application-of-law-to-fact issues that turn on credibility and
    demeanor).
    35
    The trial judge reasonably could have concluded that appellant, the self-admitted
    mastermind of the robbery and the only one of the three robbers who knew where Mrs. Harrison
    kept her cash, was most unlikely to tell his two cohorts the location of that money and then send
    them off into her house unsupervised to find the cache and bring it back as he waited patiently in
    the park. Furthermore, the trial judge could have reasonably concluded that only appellant had
    the motive to kill the 83-year-old woman during the robbery because he was the only one of the
    three whom she would have immediately recognized.
    36
    See 
    Rivera, 89 S.W.3d at 59
    (“[T]he ultimate question of whether a reasonable
    probability exists that exculpatory DNA tests would prove innocence is an application-of-law-to-
    fact question that does not turn on credibility and demeanor and is therefore reviewed de novo.”).
    37
    Specifically, the court noted that:
    Defendant did have the opportunity to inspect all physical evidence in the State’s
    possession before trial began including those specific items listed in his motion.
    There has been no complaint raised regarding ineffective assistance of trial
    counsel for any alleged failure to have an independent expert appointed, to have
    testing performed on any evidence, or to request a continuance prior to trial so
    these matters could be done. Trial counsel advised this Court, prior to trial, that
    after reviewing the evidence it would make any such requests if it deemed
    Gutierrez    Page 19
    1.     Defendants must, in the usual case, avail themselves of DNA technology available at
    the time of trial.
    If DNA testing was not done at the time of trial, the convicted person must show that
    (a) DNA testing was not available; (b) DNA testing was available “but not technologically
    capable of providing probative results”; or (c) no DNA testing occurred “through no fault of
    the convicted person, for reasons that are of such a nature that the interests of justice require
    DNA testing.”38 Because the biological materials a convicted person seeks to subject to
    post-conviction testing under Chapter 64 are, by definition, in the State’s possession at the
    time of trial, convicted persons cannot simply rely on the State’s possession at the time of
    trial to invoke the no-fault provision of Subsection (b)(1)(B).39 Rather, the person must make
    a more particularized showing of the absence of fault under Article 64.01(b)(1)(B) because
    Chapter 64 requires “defendants to avail themselves of whatever DNA technology may be
    available at the time of trial.”40 If trial counsel declines to seek testing as a matter of
    reasonable trial strategy, then post-trial testing is not usually required in the interest of
    justice. “To hold otherwise would allow defendants to ‘lie behind the log’ by failing to seek
    necessary. No such requests were made and no objections were lodged. Thus,
    fault is attributable to the “convicted person” as to why the biological material
    was not previously subjected to DNA testing.
    38
    TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 64.01(b).
    39
    Routier v. State, 
    273 S.W.3d 241
    , 247 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008).
    40
    
    Id. at 248.
    As long as it would have been apparent to the movant at the time of trial
    that the evidence containing biological material would “have discrete and independent probative
    value, the overall import of the statute mandates that she seek such testing at that time, or forego
    testing later.” 
    Id. Gutierrez Page
    20
    testing because of a reasonable fear that the results would be incriminating at trial but then
    seeking testing after conviction when there is no longer anything to lose.” 41
    2.       Appellant made a considered decision to forgo DNA testing at trial.
    Appellant points out that, although the physical evidence was made available to the
    defense team for inspection, it was not made available until the Friday before the Monday
    trial. Appellant argues that this was too late because “a motion for a relatively lengthy
    continuance would have been pointless.”42 That is, he argues, the motion would have been
    denied, and that denial would have been affirmed on appeal.43 But this is sheer speculation,
    unsupported by the record.          The record reflects that appellant filed a pre-trial motion to
    inspect physical evidence on February 5, 1999, and the judge granted it on March 18, 1999.44
    41
    Skinner v. State, 
    293 S.W.3d 196
    , 202 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) (Conversely, “evidence
    that counsel provided constitutionally ineffective assistance in failing to seek DNA testing of
    certain items could be sufficient to show that the failure to test was not appellant’s fault ‘for
    reasons that are of a nature such that the interests of justice require DNA testing.’ The reasoning
    behind permitting challenges to the effectiveness of a trial attorney's representation is that ‘[a]n
    accused is entitled to be assisted by an attorney . . . who plays the role necessary to ensure that
    the trial is fair.’”).
    42
    Appellant’s Brief at 27.
    43
    
    Id. 44 The
    following colloquy occurred during the hearing.
    State:             Okay. Motion to inspect, examine and test physical evidence, Judge, that’s their–
    I'm not–I don't know if they want to do independent testing. That's not been
    brought to my attention. I’m not sure what the status of that is today.
    Once again, they can look at it. If they want to do independent testing, I
    need to know because the lab in Austin–I mean, in McAllen will have to
    assist us in getting the evidence ready to ship somewhere.
    Defense:            Judge, with this motion, we’re asking for any type of physical evidence. For
    example, there was blood samples that were taken, fingerprints that might have
    Gutierrez     Page 21
    After that inspection, the defense never made any motion for independent testing of the
    evidence, for an appointment of an independent expert, or for a continuance. And no claim
    or showing of ineffective assistance has been made or is apparent here.
    Although there is no explicit explanation from counsel why he did not ask for testing,
    counsel’s strategy became clear at trial. Appellant used the fact that the Brownsville Police
    Department failed to test the evidence containing biological DNA evidence to argue the lack
    of investigation and the existence of reasonable doubt during the trial.                      Appellant
    cross-examined the crime-scene investigator Juan Hernandez about the fingernail scrapings
    and the fact that they were not tested. Counsel asked similar questions about other apparent
    blood samples that were collected–blood on a raincoat, in bathrooms, on the screen door to
    the garage, and on the couch. During his closing argument, defense counsel repeatedly stated
    that the Brownsville Police fell down on the job.45
    been taken, fingerprint -- I’m sorry, fingernail scrapings that were taken from the
    victim.
    We’re asking that, first of all, we be allowed to inspect them. I
    know that the Department of Public Safety still has them in their
    possession. And we’re simply asking for us to be allowed to inspect them.
    If at that time we deem it necessary to have them examined by experts,
    then we would urge -- we would require that at that time or ask for that at
    that time.
    ...
    Court:              Okay, For the record, I’ll go ahead and grant the motion for the inspection and
    examination of the physical evidence.
    45
    Defense closing arguments included the following statements:
    *        “Escolastica Harrison had some -- some scrapings on her fingertips. That -- those
    scrapings would tell you who the killer is. Those scrapings, if they were tested, they
    would tell you who is the individual that killed Escolastica Harrison.”
    Gutierrez    Page 22
    Because the record affirmatively shows that DNA testing was available to appellant
    before trial on the very items that he requests be tested now, and defense counsel apparently
    did not have testing performed on those same items because of sound trial strategy,46 the trial
    judge did not err in finding that the appellant failed to meet the unavailability requirement
    of Article 64.01(b)(1)(B). We adopt his finding.
    C.     Appellant has not shown that “the single loose hair” that he would like to have
    tested currently exists or could be delivered to the convicting court.
    *      “Besides the scrapings, she also had some hair. She had a hair on her fingernails also. Did
    they test this for you? No. That's the job of the D.A.’s Office. That's the job of the
    Brownsville Police Department. They need to go ahead and show you as much evidence
    as they have, as much evidence as they can.”
    *      “But what did the Brownsville Police Department do? They don’t do this. Why? Because
    in this type of case, probably in any other type of case, what their initial thing to do is to
    try to get a voluntary statement.”
    *      “If they do not get a statement from any of the individuals, they need to do some work.
    They need to go ahead and send the scrapings to be tested. They need to do further
    investigation.”
    *      “In this kind of case, they would probably -- what they’re doing is trying to go ahead and
    get the easy way out. The easy way out is to try to get a statement from the individuals.”
    *      “He also stated that there was a foot in the blood. Did they check into that? No. Did they
    bring you any information as to that? No. They just tell you there was something on there,
    but why check into it? They’re going to get voluntary statements. Why check into it
    further?”
    *      “That’s–as to the Brownsville Police Department, that’s what mainly everybody does.
    They give voluntary statements. Why look for the scrapings? Why look for anything else?
    Why try to go ahead and investigate further? For what? We know that everybody’s going
    to give a voluntary statement.”
    *      “He also testified that there was blood in the toilet, on Ruben’s toilet. He also testified
    that there was blood also on the doorknob and on the floor of the toilet. That’s what the
    officers testified to. Did they check into that? No.”
    *      “Nobody went to get the fingerprints. Nobody went over to try to go ahead and dust for
    fingerprints. Nobody did anything but get voluntary statements.”
    46
    Skinner v. State, 
    293 S.W.3d 196
    , 202 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) (if trial counsel declined
    to seek testing because of a reasonable fear that the results would be incriminating at trial,
    post-trial testing is not usually required by the interests of justice).
    Gutierrez       Page 23
    In his third issue, appellant claims that the trial court’s finding that “the single loose
    hair” found in Mrs. Harrison’s hand during the autopsy “does not exist because it was never
    recovered as evidence”47 is not supported by the record.         In its response to appellant’s
    motion, the State explained that all of the items for which appellant requested testing, except
    for the single loose hair, were in the custody of either the Brownsville Police Department or
    the Texas Department of Public Safety-McAllen Crime Lab. The State informed the trial
    judge that, after making inquiry and further review, it did not find that “the single loose hair”
    was ever collected as evidence. That hair was identified during the autopsy by Dr. Dahm
    who stated that he believed he gave it to the Brownsville Police Department. But there was
    no other indication in the record that it was collected or given to the police. Rather, “The
    single loose hair is not identified by the Texas Department of Public Safety in its March 17,
    1999 report as being evidence submitted to it by the Brownsville Police Department.”
    1.     The State’s duty to investigate the existence of the evidence.
    Article 64.02 requires the attorney representing the State to take one of the following
    actions in response to a motion for DNA testing: 1) deliver the evidence to the court, along
    with a description of the condition of the evidence; or 2) explain in writing to the court why
    47
    The trial judge specifically found the following:
    In reviewing State’s response pursuant to Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 64.02, the
    Court finds that DNA evidence, specifically the single loose hair described in
    Defendant’s motion, does not exist because it was never recovered as evidence in
    the investigation of the case and there is no record of a chain of custody for the
    single loose hair. The Court finds that the non-existence of this piece of evidence
    was not caused by any bad faith of the State.
    Gutierrez    Page 24
    the State cannot deliver the evidence to the court.48 If the trial judge “finds that the State has
    not exercised due diligence in attempting to locate the evidence, the court certainly has
    implied authority to order those responsible for the safekeeping and custody of the evidence
    to conduct a further search.”49 But, if the trial judge finds, as a factual matter, that the
    evidence no longer exists and its disappearance is not caused by the bad faith of the State,
    the requested item simply is not available for DNA testing.
    2.     The trial judge reasonably found that “the single loose hair” was never recovered as
    evidence.
    Appellant argues that the State’s assertion that the single loose hair “was never
    recovered” is contradicted by the autopsy report and Dr. Dahm’s testimony. Thus, he argues
    that the judge’s factfinding is not entitled to deference, especially because the trial judge
    failed to conduct further inquiry given such direct contradiction by the medical examiner.
    The State responds that the convicting court was entitled to rely on its explanation for
    why it could not deliver the single loose hair to the court. We agree. Dr. Dahm’s testimony
    was that he believed that he had submitted the hair.
    Q.        When you were conducting your autopsy, am I correct in stating that
    you found a piece of hair or loose–a single loose piece of hair around
    Escolastica Harrison’s third digit upper left hand?
    A.        I believe so, yes, sir.
    Q.        And what is it that you did with that loose piece of hair?
    A.        I believe it was submitted to the police.
    48
    TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 64.02.
    49
    In re State, 
    116 S.W.3d 376
    , 384-85 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2003, no pet.) (orig.
    proceeding).
    Gutierrez    Page 25
    But the police do not have it. And there is no record that they ever had it. The trial judge
    acted well within his discretion in crediting the State’s representation that the hair had not
    been collected, despite Dr. Dahm’s belief that he had submitted it to the police. We adopt
    the trial judge’s ruling that the hair is not available for DNA testing.
    D.     The trial judge acted within his discretion in finding that identity was not and
    is not an issue in this case.
    Appellant asserts that identity was an issue at trial because appellant argued that,
    although he planned the robbery, “he was not present at the scene of the offense, did not plan
    the victim’s murder, did not participate in the victim’s murder, did not know that his co-
    defendant’s intended to commit murder, and could not have reasonably anticipated that his
    co-defendants intended to commit murder.”50 In support of this assertion, appellant again
    argues that the trial judge could not consider the three statements by all three participants that
    appellant was inside Mrs. Harrison’s home at the time she was murdered. We resolved this
    argument against appellant in his first issue. The three statements could be considered in this
    Chapter 64 proceeding, and they are highly probative.51 The considerable circumstantial
    50
    Appellant contends that, under his theory, “the two men present at the scene of the
    offense were Rene Garcia and Pedro Gracia. DNA testing that identified Pedro Gracia (or indeed
    any other male other than Gutierrez or Rene Garcia) as the donor of the blood and/or tissue
    samples taken from the victim and/or the scene of the offense would establish that Gutierrez was
    not, in fact, the second man.” Appellant’s Motion for Forensic DNA Testing at 7.
    51
    See, e.g., In re McBride, 
    82 S.W.3d 395
    , 397 (Tex. App.–Austin 2002, no pet.)
    (identity not at issue where prior DNA test inculpated defendant, even though that test was not
    admitted into evidence).
    Gutierrez   Page 26
    evidence and inferences from that evidence bolster the reliability of the statements. The
    convicting court had sufficient information to support his finding that the identity was and
    is not an issue and that appellant was directly involved in the murder of Mrs. Harrison.
    E.     Appellant has failed to establish, by a preponderance of evidence that he would
    not have been convicted of capital murder if exculpatory results had been
    obtained through DNA testing.
    Appellant asserts that only two individuals entered Mrs. Harrison’s home, and that
    favorable DNA test results would prove that he was not one of them, which would, in turn,
    establish a 51% chance that he either would not have been convicted of capital murder or
    would not have been “death-eligible.” The State responds that appellant cannot show that
    he would not have been convicted of capital murder if exculpatory results are obtained
    because such results do not “sufficiently preponderate against the totality of the evidence
    placing the Defendant at the scene of the murder.”
    1.     The convicted person must establish, by a preponderance of the evidence, that he
    would not have been convicted if exculpatory DNA results are obtained.
    Under Article 64.03, a convicted person is not entitled to DNA testing unless he first
    shows that there is “greater than a 50% chance that he would not have been convicted if
    DNA testing provided exculpatory results[.]”52 The burden under Article 64.03(a)(2)(A) is
    met if the record shows that exculpatory DNA test results, excluding the defendant as the
    donor of the material, would establish, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the defendant
    52
    
    Prible, 245 S.W.3d at 467-68
    ; see also Wilson v. State, 
    185 S.W.3d 481
    , 484 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 2006).
    Gutierrez   Page 27
    would not have been convicted. Such was the case in Blacklock v. State,53 where we held that
    the defendant’s motion for DNA testing fairly alleged, and showed by a preponderance of
    the evidence, “that the victim’s lone attacker is the donor of the material for which appellant
    seeks DNA testing.”54 In cases involving accomplices, the burden is more difficult because
    there is not a lone offender whose DNA must have been left at the scene.55 And DNA testing
    would frequently confirm that the material belongs, as one would expect, to the victim of the
    crime. The bottom line in post-conviction DNA testing is this: Will this testing, if it shows
    that the biological material does not belong to the defendant, establish, by a preponderance
    of the evidence, that he did not commit the crime as either a principal or a party? 56
    2.    Appellant has not established, by a preponderance of the evidence, that he would not
    have been convicted if exculpatory results had been obtained through DNA testing.
    53
    
    235 S.W.3d 231
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2007).
    54
    
    Id. at 232-33.
    See also Esparza v. State, 
    282 S.W.3d 913
    , 922 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009)
    (“In sexual assault cases like this, any overwhelming eye-witness identification and strong
    circumstantial evidence . . . supporting guilt is inconsequential when assessing whether a
    convicted person has sufficiently alleged that exculpatory DNA evidence would prove his
    innocence under Article 64.03(a)(2)(A).”).
    55
    In Whitaker v. State, 
    160 S.W.3d 5
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2004), we held that testing blood
    found on the gun used as the murder weapon and finding that it did not belong to the defendant
    in a case involving three conspirators would not be exculpatory since the blood could have
    belonged to the victim or one of the other co-conspirators, or it could have been left on the rifle
    prior to the murder. 
    Id. at 9.
           56
    See, e.g., Prible v. State, 
    245 S.W.3d 466
    , 470 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) (“without more,
    the presence of another person’s DNA at the crime scene would not constitute affirmative
    evidence of the appellant's innocence” requiring relief under Chapter 64); Bell v. State, 
    90 S.W.3d 301
    , 306 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002) (holding that evidence of another person’s DNA, if
    found on hair, cigarette butt, and blood-stained bath mat collected from crime scene, does not
    constitute affirmative exculpatory evidence).
    Gutierrez   Page 28
    The available evidence that appellant wants tested and what it could show is as
    follows:
    (1)    A blood sample from Mrs. Harrison.
    The DNA from Mrs. Harrison will undoubtedly be her own, not appellant’s.
    There is no evidentiary value in testing this.
    (2)    A shirt belonging to Avel Cuellar containing apparent blood stains.
    There is no reason to think that DNA from this shirt would belong to appellant
    or to the murderers. It should belong to Mrs. Harrison from when Mr. Cuellar
    discovered her body, stepped in the pool of blood around her, and picked her
    up, getting blood on his shirt.
    (3)    Blood samples collected from Avel Cuellar’s bathroom and from the sofa in
    the front room.
    Again, there is no reason to think that DNA from these blood samples would
    belong to appellant or to the murderers.
    (4)    Fingernail scrapings taken from Mrs. Harrison.
    This is the only material that might conceivably contain DNA from the
    murderers.
    But a test showing that appellant’s DNA was not in those scrapings would not
    establish his innocence. First, there is no evidence to suggest that the 85-year-old victim was
    able to hit or scratch her murderers with her fingernails as they attacked her and stabbed her
    thirteen times in the face and neck. Second, even if some DNA were found in Mrs.
    Harrison’s fingernail scrapings, there is no way of knowing whether it came from one of her
    murderers. Third, any DNA from her murderers might just as likely have come from
    appellant’s accomplice, Rene Garcia, and that would not exculpate appellant. The only
    conceivable “exculpatory” result would be DNA from the third accomplice, Pedro Gracia,
    in the fingernail scrapings. But is this plausible? All three robbers agreed that Pedro Gracia
    Gutierrez   Page 29
    was the driver and did not go inside Mrs. Harrison’s home. Appellant, not Gracia, was seen
    running around the back of Mrs. Harrison’s home the evening of the murder. And it defies
    common sense to think that appellant, who freely admitted that “I planned the whole ripoff,”
    told his cohorts where Mrs. Harrison’s secret stash of cash was hidden and then sent them,
    without supervision, off to rob her while he waited patiently for their return at a park far
    away. That scenario is not believable. And the trial judge was not required to believe it.57
    But even if one accepted such an implausible scenario, exculpatory nail scrapings
    would not make it less probable that appellant “planned the ripoff” and was a party to Mrs.
    Harrison’s murder. Chapter 64 deals only with testing evidence that could establish, by a
    preponderance of the evidence, that the person “would not have been convicted if
    exculpatory results” were obtained.58          The statute does not authorize testing when
    exculpatory testing results might affect only the punishment or sentence that he received.59
    In this case, even supposing that a DNA test result showed Gracia’s DNA in the fingernail
    scrapings taken from Mrs. Harrison, this evidence would, at best, show only that Gracia,
    rather than appellant, was the second stabber in the house. It would not establish that
    57
    
    Rivera, 89 S.W.3d at 60
    .
    58
    TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 64.03(a)(2)(A).
    59
    See Kutzner v. State, 
    75 S.W.3d 427
    , 437-42 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002) (concluding, after
    lengthy analysis of legislative language and intent, that statute was intended to provide testing
    only for those who would not have been “prosecuted or convicted” of the offense had the
    exculpatory test results been previously available, not for those who might show a “different
    outcome unrelated to the convicted person’s guilt/innocence”); Torres v. State, 
    104 S.W.3d 638
    ,
    642 (Houston [1st Dist.] 2003, pet. ref’d) (“[W]e hold that a defendant may not seek forensic
    DNA testing for the purpose of affecting the punishment assessed.”).
    Gutierrez    Page 30
    appellant, who admittedly masterminded “the rip-off,” was not a party to Mrs. Harrison’s
    murder.60 And, even if Chapter 64 did apply to evidence that might affect the punishment
    stage as well as conviction, appellant still would not be entitled to testing. Appellant would
    still have been death-eligible because the record facts satisfy the Enmund/Tison culpability
    requirements that he played a major role in the underlying robbery and that his acts showed
    a reckless indifference to human life.61
    In sum, granting DNA testing in this case would “merely muddy the waters.”
    Appellant does not seek testing of biological evidence left by a lone assailant, and a
    third-party match to the requested biological evidence would not overcome the
    overwhelming evidence of his direct involvement in the multi-assailant murder. Having
    overruled all of appellant’s points of error, we affirm the convicting court’s orders denying
    the request for appointment of counsel and denying the motion for forensic DNA testing
    pursuant to Texas Code Criminal Procedure Chapter 64.
    Delivered: May 4, 2011
    Publish
    60
    See 
    Rivera, 89 S.W.3d at 60
    (finding that the absence of the victim’s DNA from
    underneath the defendant’s fingernails would not have supported the probability of his innocence
    in light of defendant’s confession which was corroborated by independent evidence; “Even if one
    concluded that negative test results supplied a very weak exculpatory inference, such an inference
    would not come close to outweighing [defendant’s] confession.”).
    61
    Tison v. Arizona, 
    481 U.S. 137
    (1987) (Eighth Amendment does not prohibit death
    penalty as disproportionate in case of defendant whose participation in felony that results in
    murder is major and whose mental state is one of reckless indifference); Enmund v. Florida, 
    458 U.S. 782
    (1982); Article 37.071(2)(b)(2).