Delapaz, Mark ( 2009 )


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  •            IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    OF TEXAS
    NOS. PD-0292-08 & PD-0295-08
    MARK DE LA PAZ, Appellant
    v.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS
    ON STATE’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
    FROM THE FIFTH COURT OF APPEALS
    DALLAS COUNTY
    C OCHRAN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which M EYERS, P RICE,
    W OMACK, J OHNSON, K EASLER, H ERVEY, and H OLCOMB, JJ., joined. K ELLER, P.J.,
    not participating.
    OPINION
    Appellant, a former Dallas Police Department Narcotics detective, was convicted of
    (1) tampering with physical evidence for knowingly making false statements in a police
    report, and (2) aggravated perjury for making the same false statements under oath. The
    court of appeals reversed the convictions, holding that the trial court’s admission of
    De La Paz       Page 2
    extraneous–offense evidence violated Rule of Evidence 404(b) and was harmful.1 We
    granted review to address the application of Rule 404(b) in this context.2 We find that the
    extraneous offenses were admissible to prove a fact of consequence–appellant’s knowledge
    that his statements were false when he made them.
    I.
    A.     The State’s Case: The Arrest of Jose Vega
    The events that led to appellant’s conviction arose out of the wrongful arrest of Jose
    Vega. Roberto Gonzalez, who had already been convicted for his part in Vega’s wrongful
    arrest, testified that he and appellant’s confidential informant, Daniel Alonso, manufactured
    fake drugs3 and then planted them in a Cadillac parked at the garage where Jose Vega
    worked. The next day, he and Alonso met appellant and another officer at a 7-11 to arrange
    a “buy-bust” deal. Appellant did not search either of them or their car. Gonzalez and Alonso
    then drove to the garage. Appellant, and his partner, Eddie Herrera, followed in appellant’s
    red Chevy truck to do “moving surveillance.”
    1
    Delapaz v. State, No. 05-06-00963-CR & No. 05-06-00964-CR, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS
    9928 (Tex. App.— Dallas Dec. 20, 2007) (not designated for publication). The court of appeals
    spells appellant’s name “Delapaz,” the reporter’s record and the parties spell it “De La Paz.”
    Following the reporter’s record, we will also spell it “De La Paz.”
    2
    We granted the State’s petition asking: “When a police officer charged with perjury and
    falsifying police reports testified at his trial and admits making the alleged perjured statements
    but denied their falsity and knowledge of their falsity, does the trial court act within its discretion
    in admitting nearly identical extraneous acts of perjury to prove the officer, in fact, knew the
    statements to be false?”
    3
    They manufactured twenty-two, one-kilo packages of pool chalk.
    De La Paz     Page 3
    According to Gonzalez, Alonso got out of the car alone and walked into the garage
    bay where Vega was working under a van. Shortly thereafter, Alonso walked out of the bay,
    over to the garage restroom, and then back to the car. A surveillance videotape, set up across
    from the garage, also captured the events: Alonso got out of his car, walked into the bay, and
    then turned left out of sight for about twenty seconds. He then walked out and around to an
    outside bathroom. Alonso then came back to his car and, with Gonzalez in the passenger
    seat, drove off. The tape also showed appellant and his partner driving by twice.
    Back at the 7-11, Alonso delivered two of the fake kilos to appellant. Appellant paid
    Alonso for his work, and Alonso in turn paid Gonzalez $300. Appellant called in a report
    that Alonso had just purchased two kilos of cocaine from Vega and that there was more in
    the Cadillac parked outside the garage. This report was called in to “a direct entry clerk” to
    obtain a warrant. Uniformed officers appeared and arrested Vega, and then, in a search
    pursuant to the warrant, police found the rest of the “cocaine” in the Cadillac.
    In both a supplemental police report4 and under oath at a previous trial,5 appellant
    testified that, as he and his partner drove by the garage, he observed Alonso come into
    contact with Vega inside the garage bay. No one else witnessed that contact. Vega testified
    4
    The report, made only hours after Vega’s arrest, states, “Delapaz and Herrera were also
    conducting surveillance at the location and observed the C.I. come into contact with AP Vega.”
    5
    Appellant’s former testimony was read into the record: “I saw the informant pull up to
    the location, walk to the bay of the garage. I passed Ledbetter and his camera view. I have a
    better angle to see inside the garage, and I happened to see both of them together. Right in the
    corner of the garage, I see both of them together. By that time, I’m making the loop around and I
    lost sight of them.” Appellant added that the two men were “face-to-face.”
    De La Paz      Page 4
    that he was working under a van the entire time; he never even knew Alonso was in the
    garage. Gonzalez testified that Vega was under a van the entire time. Herrera testified that,
    although he saw Alonso walk into the bay, he lost sight of him as they drove away. The
    video operator, Detective Ledbetter, testified he did not see (nor did the video show) Alonso
    come into contact with anyone. He said he could not see into the bay from his camera angle:
    “There’s just no angle that you could get there that you could see straight into that bay.”
    Herrera testified that, after Vega’s arrest came under scrutiny, appellant asked him to
    lie to Public Integrity and to stick to the story in the police report–that they actually saw the
    contact between Alonso and Vega inside the bay. After he was shown the surveillance video,
    Herrera knew “that there was no way they were going to believe that.” Nevertheless, out of
    loyalty to his partner and friend, Herrera perjured himself when he testified before the grand
    jury. By the time of trial, he was cooperating with the State and hoping that his felony
    charges would be dismissed. On cross-examination, defense counsel intimated that Herrera
    was also cooperating because he wanted his old police job back.
    B.     Appellant’s Defense
    Appellant’s defense was that his statements were true because he saw the contact
    between Alonso and Vega. Therefore, he had no intent to deceive, as is required for
    aggravated perjury, and he made no false police report, as is required for tampering with
    physical evidence.
    Appellant put on evidence of an out-of-court experiment: photographs taken from the
    De La Paz      Page 5
    street into the garage bay to show that it was possible for him to have seen Vega and Alonso
    making contact. These photographs were taken by a defense investigator, and they show the
    investigator’s father standing approximately three feet inside the garage bay. Appellant
    testified that he saw Alonso and Vega making contact as they stood about three or four feet
    inside the garage bay.
    Q.     Tell the jury–when you started looking back, tell the jury what you’re seeing going
    on.
    A.     As I’m driving, I’m making sure there’s not a car coming towards me. And then as
    I’m getting up there, I turn back around for a brief second, and then that’s when I see
    Daniel Alonso walk right inside the bay of the garage.
    Q.     Okay. And how far did you see him go inside the garage?
    A.     It was–he just made the turn and came in maybe about three or four feet. It was
    maybe real close in there. He wasn’t all the way to the back. He was right there at
    the front of the bay.
    Q.     Okay. And when you saw him at that location, did you see anything else?
    A.     Yes, I did. I saw a Hispanic male wearing a blue work shirt and he looked–dark hair
    and a mustache. That’s all I saw.
    Q.     Okay. And how long did you have this vision of Daniel Alonso and this other person?
    A.     I just had it for a brief–a brief moment. As soon as I saw him come in contact, then
    I went back around.
    Appellant said that he wrote the statement about Alonso and Vega coming into contact in his
    report for his “recollection when I go to testify in court.” He said that his purpose was to tell
    the truth, and that he “was not trying to influence anything.” He also denied telling Herrera
    to “stick with” his story.
    On cross-examination appellant said that, although it turned out that Alonso had set
    Vega up with fake “cocaine,” he did not make a false statement in the police report or testify
    falsely because he did see Alonso come into contact with Vega in the garage bay. Appellant
    De La Paz      Page 6
    said that the photos his investigator took of his father standing in the bay “show that you
    could see someone inside there.” Appellant accused Vega and Herrera of lying.
    C.     The State’s Proffer of Extraneous Offenses and the Trial Court’s Ruling and
    Limiting Instruction.
    After the defense rested, the State proffered evidence of two of appellant’s other “buy-
    bust” deals. In each, appellant’s police report stated that he witnessed either the exchange
    of drugs or the contact between the confidential informant and the suspect. The State
    contended that these police reports were false and that, in each instance, appellant did not see
    what he said he saw. The State argued that the extraneous offenses, which occurred very
    close in time to the charged offense, were admissible to rebut “the defensive theory that our
    witnesses lied in the Vega case.” Appellant objected that the extraneous offenses were not
    admissible to rebut appellant’s general denial of the offense, or to rebut any defensive theory
    that the State’s witnesses were lying, because it was the State that elicited appellant’s
    testimony that Vega and Herrera were liars. Thus, evidence of the two other “buy-bust”
    deals was inadmissible under Rules 404(b) and 403.
    The State responded that “the prosecutor didn’t elicit the evidence. The Defense put
    on their theory that Mr. Delapaz is telling the truth and everybody else is lying. He raised
    that on his direct examination. All Mr. Shook did was further explore that.” The trial court
    found “that the proffered evidence could tend to rebut a defensive theory. The probative
    value outweighs any prejudicial effect, and it will be admitted.”
    D.     Evidence of the Extraneous “Buy-Bust” Deals.
    De La Paz      Page 7
    Evidence of the extraneous offenses was then offered by six witnesses. First, a police
    officer testified about appellant’s statements in two different police reports: In the first case,
    “AO Delapaz observed AP Amador place the cooler into the informant’s vehicle”; and in the
    second, “Arresting Officers Delapaz and Herrera were conducting surveillance at the location
    and observed Arrestee Hernandez come in contact with the confidential informant.” After
    that testimony, the court orally instructed the jury:
    The evidence the State is now offering is being admitted for the limited
    purpose to rebut a defensive theory that the State’s witnesses lied. You cannot
    consider this evidence unless you first find and believe beyond a reasonable
    doubt that the defendant committed such other offenses if any were committed.
    1.     Roberto Amador
    Roberto Amador testified that he was wrongfully arrested on June 6, 2001, when he
    went to talk to someone who had called him about buying his wrecker, which was in a
    transmission shop bay getting fixed. The caller– who was appellant’s confidential informant
    (C.I.) Jose Ruiz–arrived, walked around the wrecker, and then went outside and made a
    phone call. As he was talking on the phone, police arrived and made everyone in the shop
    stand up against the wall. They arrested Amador and let everyone else go. Amador testified
    that he never made a drug deal with Ruiz; he never walked near Ruiz’ Explorer; and he never
    took an ice cooler out of his truck and put it into Ruiz’s Explorer.
    Jose Ruiz, the C.I., testified that his plan was to pretend that he was going to purchase
    Amador’s wrecker, but, in fact, to set him up with fake drugs. He and others, including
    Alonso, made the fake drugs on the morning of the arrest. They pressed pool chalk into
    De La Paz     Page 8
    squares and wrapped the squares into plastic. He put the fake drugs in a cooler in his
    Explorer and then drove the Explorer to the shop to meet Amador. He talked to him for
    about five minutes, and then he called the police to come and arrest Amador. He said that
    Amador never touched the cooler, which was always in Ruiz’s Explorer. He said that
    appellant did not check his Explorer before the “buy-bust” deal.
    2.     Jorge Hernandez
    Jorge Hernandez testified that, on September 24, 2001, his truck would not start. He
    walked to a nearby garage, looking for a mechanic. The mechanic wasn’t there, but his
    helper was, and the helper lent Hernandez his car. When Hernandez returned the borrowed
    car to the garage, he noticed that the police were there, and they “had all the mechanics out
    on the street with their hands on the wall searching them.” At the same time, a couple of men
    walked up to the garage carrying food and cokes, but the police prevented them from going
    in. Hernandez nevertheless walked over to return the car keys. A police officer came
    running towards him: “He took the keys. He took my wallet. He took my cigarettes. He
    checked them, and he put them back and then he handcuffed me.” Hernandez said was taken
    to jail, and he later learned he was being charged with selling drugs. Hernandez said that he
    never negotiated a drug deal at the garage.
    Regarding the Hernandez arrest, Ruiz testified that he and Alonso made some fake
    crystal methamphetamine to set up a specific person–not Hernandez–at the garage. They
    planted the fake drugs in the garage when no one was there. They didn’t see the man they
    De La Paz   Page 9
    meant to set up, but they did see Hernandez walking towards the garage, and they decided
    to “pick on that man.” Neither of them had ever talked to Hernandez. They called appellant
    because they “were ready and the drugs were in place and the person we were going to plant
    the drugs on was there.” When appellant did not get there right away, Ruiz and Alonso went
    to the Dairy Queen to get tacos, then they returned to the garage with their Dairy Queen bags.
    By then, the police were there, and they chased Ruiz and Alonso away. They went back to
    their car, called appellant again, and told him to arrest Hernandez.
    The jury convicted appellant and sentenced him to five years’ imprisonment.
    E.     The Appeal and Motion for Rehearing
    Appellant appealed and challenged, inter alia, the trial court’s admission of the
    extraneous offenses. The court of appeals correctly framed the issue as “whether evidence
    of appellant's extraneous misconduct was relevant to a ‘fact of consequence’ other than its
    tendency to prove character conformity.” 6 First, it held that the misconduct was not relevant
    to rebut appellant’s claim that Herrera was lying, because appellant did not accuse Herrera
    of lying until he was cross-examined by the State and specifically asked by the prosecutor
    whether Herrera was making up his story. 
    Id. And, as
    a general rule, the State cannot itself
    elicit the alleged defensive issue it then wishes to rebut with extraneous offense evidence.7
    Second, it held that appellant’s attack on Herrera (or any other State’s witness) was not a
    6
    Delapaz, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 9928, at *8.
    7
    
    Id. (citing Wheeler
    v. State, 
    67 S.W.3d 879
    , 885 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002)).
    De La Paz     Page 10
    “defensive issue” that opened the door to extraneous offense evidence, because “allowing
    extraneous offenses to rebut a challenge to the credibility of the State's witnesses ‘would
    totally eviscerate rule 404(b) and the policies underlying the prohibition against the
    admission of such evidence.’” 8
    The State filed a motion for rehearing arguing that: 1) the State did not elicit
    appellant’s claim that Herrera was lying by “prompting or maneuvering”; instead, defense
    counsel asked appellant on direct examination if he had asked Herrera to lie–as Herrera had
    testified he had–and appellant said that he had not; 2) the evidence was admissible to prove
    intent; and 3) the evidence was admissible under the Doctrine of Chances. The court of
    appeals denied rehearing, and the State petitioned for discretionary review, presenting these
    same arguments.
    II.
    A.     Admissibility of Other Crimes, Wrongs or Acts.
    Under the Texas Rules of Evidence, evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not
    admissible “to prove the character of a person in order to show action in conformity
    therewith.”     But it may “be admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive,
    opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or
    accident.” 9 The exceptions listed under Rule 404(b) are neither mutually exclusive nor
    8
    
    Id. at *9
    (quoting Webb v. State, 
    36 S.W.3d 164
    , 180-81 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th
    Dist.] 2000, pet. ref'd)).
    9
    T EX. R. E VID. 404(b).
    De La Paz      Page 11
    collectively exhaustive.10 “Rule 404(b) is a rule of inclusion rather than exclusion.” 11 The
    rule excludes only that evidence that is offered (or will be used) solely for the purpose of
    proving bad character and hence conduct in conformity with that bad character. 12 The
    proponent of uncharged misconduct evidence need not “stuff” a given set of facts into one
    of the laundry-list exceptions set out in Rule 404(b), but he must be able to explain to the trial
    court, and to the opponent, the logical and legal rationales that support its admission on a
    basis other than “bad character” or propensity purpose.
    One well-established rationale for admitting evidence of uncharged misconduct is to
    rebut a defensive issue that negates one of the elements of the offense.13 That is, a “party
    may introduce evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts if such evidence logically serves to
    make more or less probable an elemental fact, an evidentiary fact that inferentially leads to
    10
    Pondexter v. State, 
    942 S.W.2d 577
    , 583-84 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996); Montgomery v.
    State, 
    810 S.W.2d 372
    , 387 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991) (op. on reh’g); Banda v. State, 
    768 S.W.2d 294
    , 296 (Tex. Crim. App. 1989) (catalogue of “other purposes” is not exhaustive, and
    “[w]hether or not it fits neatly into one of these categories, an extraneous transaction will be
    admissible so long as it logically tends to make the existence of some fact of consequence more
    or less probable.”).
    11
    United States v. Bowie, 
    232 F.3d 923
    , 929 (D.C. Cir. 2000).
    12
    See Rankin v. State, 
    974 S.W.2d 707
    , 709 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996) (“if evidence (1) is
    introduced for a purpose other than character conformity, (2) has relevance to a ‘fact of
    consequence’ in the case and (3) remains free of any other constitutional or statutory
    prohibitions, it is admissible”).
    
    13 Mart. v
    . State, 
    173 S.W.3d 463
    , 466 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005); 
    Montgomery, 810 S.W.2d at 387
    .
    De La Paz      Page 12
    an elemental fact, or defensive evidence that undermines an elemental fact.” 14 But a mere
    denial of commission of an offense generally does not open the door to extraneous offenses
    because, as appellant properly points out, “a defendant generally denies commission of the
    offense at trial–that is the reason for having a trial.” 15
    B.     The Standard of Review
    “Whether extraneous offense evidence has relevance apart from character conformity,
    as required by Rule 404(b), is a question for the trial court.” 16 So, too, is a ruling on the
    balance between probative value and the counter factors set out in Rule 403, although that
    balance is always slanted toward admission, not exclusion, of otherwise relevant evidence.17
    Thus, a trial court’s ruling on the admissibility of extraneous offenses is reviewed under an
    abuse-of-discretion standard.18 As long as the trial court’s ruling is within the “zone of
    reasonable disagreement,” there is no abuse of discretion, and the trial court’s ruling will be
    14
    
    Martin, 173 S.W.3d at 466
    .
    15
    Brief for Appellant at 1.
    16
    Moses v. State, 
    105 S.W.3d 622
    , 627 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003).
    17
    See 
    Montgomery, 810 S.W.2d at 388
    (presumption under Rule 403 is that probative
    value outweighs prejudicial effect “unless in the posture of the particular case the trial court
    determines otherwise”); Conner v. State, 
    67 S.W.3d 192
    , 202 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001) (“Rule 403
    requires exclusion of evidence only when there exists a clear disparity between the degree of
    prejudice of the offered evidence and its probative value”); Joiner v. State, 
    825 S.W.2d 701
    , 708
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1992).
    18
    Prible v. State, 
    175 S.W.3d 724
    , 731 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005); Santellan v. State, 
    939 S.W.2d 155
    , 169 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997).
    De La Paz      Page 13
    upheld.19 A trial court’s ruling is generally within this zone if the evidence shows that 1) an
    extraneous transaction is relevant to a material, non-propensity issue, and 2) the probative
    value of that evidence is not substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice,
    confusion of the issues, or misleading of the jury.20 Furthermore, if the trial court’s
    evidentiary ruling is correct on any theory of law applicable to that ruling, it will not be
    disturbed even if the trial judge gave the wrong reason for his right ruling.21
    III.
    A.     Perjury and Tampering with Evidence
    A person commits perjury if, with intent to deceive and with knowledge of the
    statement’s meaning, he makes a false statement under oath or swears to the truth of a false
    statement previously made and the statement is required or authorized by law to be made
    under oath.22 A person commits aggravated perjury if he commits perjury as defined in
    Section 37.02, and the false statement: (1) is made during or in connection with an official
    19
    
    Montgomery, 810 S.W.2d at 391
    .
    20
    See 
    Santellan, 939 S.W.2d at 169
    .
    21
    Sewell v. State, 
    629 S.W.2d 42
    , 45 (Tex. Crim. App. 1982 ) (“when a trial court's ruling
    on the admission of evidence is correct, although giving a wrong or insufficient reason, this
    Court will not reverse if the evidence is admissible for any reason”); see also Osbourn v. State,
    
    92 S.W.3d 531
    , 538 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002); Shugart v. State, 
    32 S.W.3d 355
    , 362 (Tex.
    App.—Waco 2000, pet. ref’d) (“It is well established that when a trial court's ruling on the
    admission of evidence is correct for any reason, although a wrong or insufficient reason is given
    for its admissibility, the ruling must be sustained on appeal.”).
    22
    TEX . PENAL CODE § 37.02.
    De La Paz      Page 14
    proceeding; and (2) is material.23 A jury must find not only that the statement in question is
    false, but that the speaker believed it was false.24 If the jury concludes that a defendant
    honestly, though mistakenly, thought that his statement was true when he made it, then the
    jury could not find that he “intended to deceive.” 25
    A person commits tampering with physical evidence if, knowing that an investigation
    or official proceeding is pending or in progress, he makes, presents, or uses any record,
    document, or thing with knowledge of its falsity and with intent to affect the course or
    outcome of the investigation or official proceeding.26 Thus, knowledge that the statement
    is false is an element of both crimes–indirectly in aggravated perjury, and directly in
    tampering with physical evidence.
    B.     Admission to Rebut Appellant's Defensive Theory that the State’s Star Witness
    Fabricated His Version of the “Buy-Bust” Drug Deal.
    As we recently noted in Bass v. State,27 a defense opening statement may open the
    23
    TEX . PENAL CODE § 37.03.
    24
    Thorn v. State, 
    961 S.W.2d 12
    , 18 (Tex.—Dallas 1996, pet. ref’d).
    25
    See Covalt v. State, 
    877 S.W.2d 445
    , 449 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1994, no
    pet.); 
    Thorn, 961 S.W.2d at 18
    (“if a jury believes that a perjury defendant thought his statement
    was true, they would be unable to find that he ‘intended to deceive,’ and acquittal would be
    required”); see also Hardy v. State, 
    246 S.W.3d 290
    , 295-96 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
    2008, pet. ref’d) (“A person who willfully swears falsely to a belief in the existence of a fact
    which he knows does not exist is as guilty of perjury as if he had sworn directly to the existence
    of a fact which he knew did not exist.”) (internal quotations omitted).
    26
    TEX . PENAL CODE § 37.09.
    27
    
    270 S.W.3d 557
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2008).
    De La Paz      Page 15
    door to the admission of extraneous-offense evidence to rebut defensive theories presented
    in that opening statement.28 Bass was a pastor accused of sexually assaulting a teenager on
    church property. In his opening statement, he claimed the teenager’s allegations were “pure
    fantasy” and “pure fabrication.” He, “as a pastor and minister,” was “the real deal and the
    genuine article.” 29 After the teenager testified, the trial court permitted the State to present
    the extraneous-offense evidence during its case-in-chief, which showed that appellant had
    sexually assaulted two other girls in his church office.
    We held that it was “at least subject to reasonable disagreement whether the
    extraneous-offense evidence was admissible for the noncharacter-conformity purpose of
    rebutting appellant’s defensive theory that the complainant fabricated her allegations against
    him and of rebutting the defensive theory clearly suggesting that appellant, as a ‘real deal’
    and ‘genuine’ pastor, would not engage in the type of conduct alleged in the indictment.” 30
    In this case, appellant likewise attacked one of the State’s star witnesses in opening
    argument:
    When you look at all this and, specifically, Mr. Herrera’s testimony, we’ll
    show you he has an incentive, that he had an incentive to go to the prosecutors
    and say, hey, I’ll tell you whatever you want to hear. And his incentive is he’s
    trying to keep himself out of prison because we’ll show you when he testified
    the first time in the grand jury he was given immunity.
    28
    
    Id. at 563.
           29
    
    Id. at 558.
           30
    
    Id. at 563.
                                                                            De La Paz      Page 16
    Appellant did not have to wait his turn to show that Mr. Herrera had a motive to cooperate
    with the State: Herrera testified on direct examination for the State that he had been granted
    immunity, and that he was cooperating with the State, in part, because he was expecting some
    sort of offer–ranging from probation to dismissal–for his own pending criminal charges. On
    cross-examination, defense counsel asked Herrera about his prior lies to the grand jury and
    suggested that Herrera was cooperating now only because he wanted to “get rid of” his
    pending felony cases and get his police job back. Appellant also implied, during his cross-
    examination of Vega, that Vega also had a strong motive to lie: He was paid $480,000 by the
    City of Dallas in a civil suit stemming from his wrongful arrest and imprisonment. Appellant
    also expressed incredulousness that Vega never noticed Alonso walk into the garage. The
    defense’s basic attack was that both Herrera and Vega were lying or fabricating their present
    testimony concerning the drug deal for ulterior motives.
    But it was not until the State cross-examined appellant that he expressly accused these
    witnesses of being liars. First he attacked Vega.
    Q.     You’re telling this jury that you saw Daniel Alonso face to face with Jose Vega?
    A.     Yes, I am.
    Q.     So one of you has to be lying.
    A.     Yes, sir.
    Then Herrera.
    Q.     And–well, you’ve heard Eddie Herrera tell his story. It’s different from you, isn’t that
    right?
    A.     Yes, sir.
    Q.     You’re denying that y’all talked about coming up with a different version or getting
    your story straight on what could have been seen?
    De La Paz     Page 17
    A.     That did not happen.
    Q.     None of that happened?
    A.     No, sir.
    Q.     He’s making that up?
    A.     He’s making that up, and he’s lying.
    The parties argued, at trial and on appeal, about whether the defensive theory that
    Herrera (and Vega) were lying was raised by appellant or was elicited by “prompting or
    maneuvering” by the State. The court of appeals decided it was the latter,31 but that court
    did not have the benefit of our decision in Bass, which was decided six months after the court
    of appeals’s decision in this case. The State now relies on Bass (“Bass is directly on point,”
    because appellant raised a fabrication defense in opening statement), and appellant
    distinguishes it (“Bass is not analogous,” because appellant raised a general defense that he
    saw the contact).
    There is an element of truth in both characterizations. Appellant’s defense was that
    he could see contact between Alonso and Vega because he had a better angle. And his attack
    on Herrera–in opening, on cross-examination, and in his own testimony on direct–was not
    as strong, direct, or sustained as Bass’s was on his teenage complainant. But appellant did,
    in his opening statement, suggest that Herrera would say whatever the State wanted to hear,
    and he did, in his own direct testimony, inferentially accuse Herrera of lying because he
    denied telling Herrera to “stick with” his story.
    Thus, appellant’s position was that the contact did occur, and he saw it. Herrera and
    31
    Delapaz, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 9928, at *8-9.
    De La Paz      Page 18
    Vega’s position was that the contact did not occur, therefore no one could have seen it. One
    of these two versions cannot be true. All three of these witnesses were positive about their
    diametrically different versions; therefore someone committed perjury–knowingly made a
    false statement under oath with the intent to deceive. But no one suggested that any of these
    three witnesses is generally a liar, generally untruthful, or generally not worthy of belief.32
    These were not attacks upon the witnesses or appellant for having a bad character for
    truthfulness; these were accusations of lying about a specific type of event–the occurrence
    of a drug delivery–under a specific set of circumstances.
    In these circumstances, it is at least subject to reasonable disagreement whether the
    extraneous-offense evidence was admissible for the noncharacter-conformity purpose of
    rebutting appellant’s defensive theory that Herrera and Vega were lying about these specific
    events and had fabricated their testimony to please the prosecution.33 Evidence of two other
    nearly identical acts of purported fabrication by appellant concerning “buy-bust” deals was
    admissible to rebut the defense position that it was the State’s witnesses who were lying
    about the Vega drug deal.
    But appellant’s primary defense was that he saw “the contact” between Alonso and
    32
    The court of appeals mistakenly analogized this situation to that in Webb v. State, 
    36 S.W.3d 164
    , 180-81 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2000, pet. ref’d) (en banc), in concluding
    that “general attacks on credibility may call into question the State’s proof, but do not negate any
    element of the crime. Thus, it is not the type of defensive ‘issue’ that can be rebutted with
    extraneous offense evidence.” De La Paz, 2007 Tex. App. LEXIS 9928, at * 9-11.
    33
    See 
    Bass, 270 S.W.3d at 563
    .
    De La Paz      Page 19
    Vega even though no one else who was there saw it. Therefore, what he wrote in his offense
    report was true, and what he testified to in the former trial was true. He had no intent to
    deceive and he did not deceive. Period. And that raised a clear basis, rejected by the court
    of appeals in its denial of the State’s motion for rehearing, to admit the extraneous offense
    evidence under the “doctrine of chances.”
    C.     The Extraneous Evidence Was Admissible under Wigmore’s “Doctrine of
    Chances.”
    The “doctrine of chances” tells us that highly unusual events are unlikely to repeat
    themselves inadvertently or by happenstance. 34 That is,
    if A while hunting with B hears the bullet from B’s gun whistling past his
    head, he is willing to accept B's bad aim . . . as a conceivable explanation; but
    if shortly afterwards the same thing happens again, and if on the third occasion
    A receives B’s bullet in his body, the immediate inference (i.e., as a
    probability, perhaps not a certainty) is that B shot at A deliberately; because
    the chances of an inadvertent shooting on three successive similar occasions
    are extremely small.35
    Similarly, the chance that a man innocently collects on his murdered business
    partner’s insurance policy decreases significantly when it is learned that he collected on his
    murdered wife’s insurance policy just three years earlier.36
    34
    2 JOHN WIGMORE , EVIDENCE § 302 at 241 (Chadbourn rev. 1979).
    35
    
    Id. 36 See
    United States v. York, 
    933 F.2d 1343
    , 1350 (7th Cir. 1991):
    It is not every day that one’s wife is murdered; it is more uncommon still that the
    murder occurs after the wife says she wants a divorce; and more unusual still that
    the jilted husband collects on a life insurance policy with a double-indemnity
    provision. That the same individual should later collect on exactly the same sort of
    policy after the grisly death of a business partner who owed him money raises
    De La Paz         Page 20
    Here, the “I saw what no one else saw” defense becomes considerably less probable
    when one hears that appellant saw two other fake drug deals that no one else saw and others
    denied that they occurred. The unusual or abnormal element–that appellant saw something
    no one else present saw (not the videographer Ledbetter, not Vega himself, not appellant’s
    partner Herrera, nor Alonso’s confederate Gonzalez)–could be innocently explained once.
    Maybe appellant, as he said in his report, really did have the better view. Or maybe everyone
    else saw it, too, and they were just lying. But this unusual ability to see what no one else
    does becomes “curiouser and curiouser” the more it happens.37 And it happened twice more.
    In each case, appellant’s confidential informant planted fake drugs to frame an
    innocent person. In each case, appellant stated in his police report that he witnessed the
    contact or delivery. The extraordinary coincidence that appellant saw drug deals that no one
    eyebrows; the odds of the same individual reaping the benefits, within the space
    of three years, of two grisly murders of people he had reason to be hostile toward
    seem incredibly low, certainly low enough to support an inference that the
    windfalls were the product of design rather than the vagaries of chance. . . . This
    inference is purely objective, and has nothing to do with a subjective assessment
    of [appellant’s] character.
    The fact that York’s defense included innocent explanations for having
    insurance on [his business partner’s] life and for some of his activities after [her]
    death underscores the relevance of [his first wife’s] murder evidence to York's
    intent during the [instant] episode. When the defendant affirmatively denies
    having the requisite intent by proffering an innocent explanation for his actions,
    the government is entitled to rebut that argument. “Evidence of another crime
    which tends to undermine defendant’s innocent explanations for his act will be
    admitted.”
    
    Id. 37 See,
    e.g., Fox v. State, 
    115 S.W.3d 550
    , 559-60 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
    2002, pet. ref'd).
    De La Paz      Page 21
    else did three different times flies in the face of common sense.        Under the “doctrine of
    chances,” evidence of such a highly unlikely event being repeated three different times would
    allow jurors to conclude that it is objectively unlikely that appellant was correct in his Vega
    offense report or that he was truthful in his testimony that he saw contact between Alonso
    and Vega.38 Whether the extraneous-offense evidence was admissible under Rule 404(b) to
    rebut the assertion of innocent intent is at least subject to reasonable disagreement.39 As
    Auric Goldfinger, the infamous James Bond villain, said, “Once is happenstance. Twice is
    coincidence. The third time it’s enemy action.” 40 Under the “doctrine of chances,” no
    inference about appellant’s general character for truthfulness is required.41 The fact that
    38
    See United States v. Bowie, 
    232 F.3d 923
    , 930 (D.C. Cir. 2000) (district court properly
    admitted evidence defendant possessed and passed counterfeit notes on a prior occasion to show
    intent and knowledge; government had to prove three elements: possession of counterfeit notes,
    intent to defraud, and knowledge the notes were counterfeit; intent and knowledge were therefore
    facts of consequence to the case, and evidence that defendant had previously possessed and
    passed counterfeit notes was relevant because it decreased the likelihood that he accidentally or
    innocently possessed the counterfeit notes here).
    39
    See United States v. Barron, 
    707 F.2d 125
    , 128 (5th Cir. 1983) (in perjury trial
    stemming from testimony at a grand-jury investigation for criminal tax fraud, associate’s
    testimony that he committed other acts at defendant’s direction on behalf of the taxpayer was
    relevant to show defendant’s motive or intent behind the charged perjury); United States v.
    Watson, 
    623 F.2d 1198
    , 1203 (7th Cir. 1980) (“Evidence that Watson asked for complementary
    bids was necessary to demonstrate that he was aware of the falsity of his testimony before the
    grand jury.”); United States v. Beaver, 
    524 F.2d 963
    , 966 (5th Cir. 1975) (testimony as to
    defendant’s connections with prior transactions in counterfeit notes was admissible to show his
    knowledge that the bill he passed was counterfeit).
    40
    Edward J. Imwinkelried, An Evidentiary Paradox: Defending the Character Evidence
    Prohibition by Upholding a Non-character Theory of Logical Relevance, the Doctrine of
    Chances, 40 U. Rich. L. Rev. 419 (2006) (quoting Ian Fleming, GOLDFINGER (Berkeley Publ’g
    Group 1982) (1959)).
    41
    See 
    id. at 432-40.
                                                                             De La Paz     Page 22
    appellant reported three separate “I saw what no one else saw” drug deals decreases the
    likelihood that appellant saw any such drug deal, and therefore increases the likelihood that
    he knew that his statement about seeing one between Vega and Alonso was false.
    Finally, we also agree with the trial court’s ruling on appellant’s Rule 403 objection.
    D.     The extraneous evidence did not run afoul of Rule 403
    A Rule 403 balancing test includes the following factors:
    (1)    how compellingly the extraneous offense evidence serves to make a fact of
    consequence more or less probable–a factor which is related to the strength of the
    evidence presented by the proponent to show the defendant in fact committed the
    extraneous offense;
    (2)    the potential the other offense evidence has to impress the jury “in some irrational but
    nevertheless indelible way;”
    (3)    the time the proponent will need to develop the evidence, during which the jury will
    be distracted from consideration of the indicted offense; and
    (4)    the force of the proponent’s need for this evidence to prove a fact of consequence, i.e.,
    does the proponent have other probative evidence available to him to help establish
    this fact, and is this fact related to an issue in dispute.42
    Appellant does not dispute that the extraneous offenses were probative in assessing
    Herrera’s truthfulness about this event; rather, he asserts that this evidence was not
    admissible for that or any other reason. But, as we have noted, the extraneous offense
    evidence made facts of consequence–the falsity of appellant’s statements and his knowledge
    that those statements were false–more likely. Furthermore, the evidence that appellant
    committed the extraneous acts was strong; in each instance, both the confidential informant
    42
    Wyatt v. State, 
    23 S.W.3d 18
    , 26 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000).
    De La Paz      Page 23
    and the set-up “dealer” testified that there was no contact or delivery. And the extraneous
    offenses occurred close in time to this offense: one just before, and one just after.43 The
    accuracy of appellant’s statement and his knowledge of its accuracy were the two hotly
    contested issues at trial, and the extraneous acts had high probative value in showing that
    appellant repeatedly put false statements of what he purportedly saw during these “buy-bust”
    deals in his reports.
    On the other hand, we recognize that evidence that appellant orchestrated a series of
    fake “buy-bust” deals could potentially affect the jury in an emotional way. And, as
    recognized by appellant and the court of appeals, a significant amount of time was devoted
    to presentation of the extraneous offenses during rebuttal. Appellant argues that there was
    no need for the extraneous evidence–to prove intent or knowledge–because the State had its
    witnesses’ testimony and the videotape of the alleged deal. But this is not like the case where
    the “State’s direct evidence clearly establishes the intent element and that evidence is not
    contradicted by appellant nor undermined by appellant’s cross-examination of the State's
    witnesses.” 44 Here appellant stoutly denied any criminal intent and provided a plausible
    defense that he was in a unique position to see what no one else could or did see.45 Although
    43
    Rule 404(b) is directed toward any “other” crimes, wrongs, or acts. Therefore, the
    evidence offered under the rule might be an act that occurred either before or after the charged
    offense. See Powell v. State, 
    5 S.W.3d 369
    , 383 (Tex.App.—Texarkana 1999, pet. ref’d).
    44
    Hernandez v. State, 
    203 S.W.3d 477
    , 479 (Tex.App.—Waco 2006, pet. ref’d).
    45
    The videographer testified that his camera could not capture the inside of the bay
    because of the angle at which it had to be set up at. Thus, according to appellant, the contact
    De La Paz          Page 24
    the intent to kill is easily inferred from pointing a gun and shooting, the intent to defraud or
    to affect the course of an investigation cannot necessarily be inferred from the mere making
    of a statement or proof of its inaccuracy.46
    In light of these facts, we hold that the trial court’s ruling that the danger of unfair
    prejudice did not substantially outweigh the probative value of the extraneous offenses was
    not an abuse of discretion.47 We therefore reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and
    between Alonso and Vega wasn’t on the video because the camera was not capable of capturing
    it, not because it didn’t happen.
    46
    As we noted in Parks v. State, 
    746 S.W.2d 738
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1987),
    In cases of forgery and fraud, it is difficult to prove intent. This Court has wisely
    held that intent or guilty knowledge cannot be inferred from the mere passing of a
    forged instrument. Indeed, to hold otherwise would create the danger that the
    unknowing and accidental passing of a forged instrument could effectively
    become a strict liability offense. The issue of intent is of such overriding
    importance in a case of forgery that it effectively becomes the focus of the State’s
    case. Establishing intent in such cases is so crucial and so difficult to do that, as a
    practical matter, evidence of extraneous offenses is nearly always admissible.
    While it is hypothetically possible that a case of forgery could be established by
    direct evidence, such as eyewitness testimony, most cases of forgery rest on
    circumstantial evidence. In the vast majority of such cases, the probative value of
    evidence of extraneous offenses will inevitably outweigh its prejudicial effect.
    
    Id. at 740
    (cites omitted).
    47
    See, e.g., Springer v. State, 
    721 S.W.2d 510
    , 512-13 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
    1986, pet. ref’d) (in aggravated perjury prosecution of police officer for testifying that he never
    physically abused or mistreated prisoners, evidence of extraneous offenses that he had, in fact,
    done so on other occasions was admissible to prove (1) falsity of his statement and (2) his intent
    to deceive); see also United States v. Burke, 
    425 F.3d 400
    , 409-10 ( Cir. 2005) (in prosecution
    for perjury, evidence of defendant’s prior bad acts was admissible under Rules 404(b) and 403
    when offered to prove the falsity of defendant’s testimony to grand jury); United States v.
    Ruhbayan, 
    388 F. Supp. 2d 652
    , 660-61 (E.D. Va. 2004) (in perjury prosecution, testimony of
    government witnesses rebutting defendant’s answers to questions about specific instances of drug
    dealing or firearm use, although it reflected on defendant's credibility, also served as proof of
    defendant’s motive to lie in his prior trial and as proof that his false testimony in that trial was
    not a mistake or accident); United States v. Watt, 
    911 F. Supp. 538
    , 557-58 (D.D.C. 1995) (in
    De La Paz      Page 25
    remand this case to that court to address appellant’s remaining issues.
    Delivered: March 25, 2009
    Publish
    prosecution of former Secretary of the Interior for perjury, government could introduce evidence
    of extraneous acts of misconduct to show defendant’s intent to deceive and to show a pattern of
    conduct consistent with or similar to the conduct alleged in indictment, especially as there was a
    “clear and logical connection between the alleged earlier offenses or misconduct and the case
    being tried.”); People v. Ellsworth, 
    15 P.3d 1111
    , 1114-15 (Colo. Ct. App. 2000) (in perjury
    prosecution of police officer, trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting evidence of
    similar acts of misconduct offered to show defendant’s motive and culpable mental state in using
    a falsified receipt at a driver’s license revocation hearing).