Opinion
No. 07-08-0452-CR
September 3, 2009. DO NOT PUBLISH.
Appealed from the 222nd District Court of Deaf Smith County; No. CR-2008A-010; Honorable Roland Saul, Judge.
Before QUINN, C.J., and HANCOCK and PIRTLE, JJ.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Appellant, Martin Mendoza Reynoza, was convicted by a jury of burglary of a habitation with the intent to commit a felony offense, sexual assault, and was sentenced to ninety-nine years confinement and fined $5,000. In a single issue, Appellant contends the State's evidence at trial was factually insufficient to support his conviction. We affirm.
Background
On January 16, 2008, Appellant was indicted by a Deaf Smith County Grand Jury for committing the offense of burglary of a habitation with the intent to commit a sexual assault on or about November 24, 2007. The following evidence was adduced during a jury trial held September 30 through October 2, 2008. In the early morning hours of November 24, 2007, Germaine Garza received a 911 call reporting a break-in and dispatched Officers Tony Martinez and Gabriel Guerrero, Hereford Police Department, to a residence located on Avenue K. When Officer Martinez made contact with the victim, L.O., she was crying, scared, and hysterical. She reported that a Hispanic male in his twenties wearing a hooded sweatshirt had broken into her house and sexually assaulted her. She indicated she could not see his face because the room was dark. L.O. was then transported by her daughter to the police station where she gave a statement to Officer Martinez and described her assailant as a male in his twenties who was wearing a hood. She also told Officer Martinez that she got a good look at the male, had never seen him before, and would be able to recognize him if she saw him again. She also believed her assailant might have been one of her son's friends who committed the crime for revenge. She was next transported to an Amarillo hospital to undergo a sexual assault examination. Virginia Young, a registered nurse and certified adult sexual assault examiner, conducted the examination. Young testified that the victim was crying and upset. She had suffered abrasions to her knees as well as multiple areas of trauma that were very common when someone had been sexually assaulted. Young collected swabs of secretions located in the areas of her vagina, anus, and leg. In her opinion, the victim's vagina had been penetrated. Elva Reynoza, Appellant's wife and the victim's sister, testified that, at approximately 7:00 a.m. on November 24, 2007, she and Appellant left to pick up her father in Mexico. While they were en route, Elva received a telephone call from a family member informing her that their sister, L.O., had been sexually assaulted. When she informed Appellant of the call, he responded: "It's true. I went out of the house to look for drugs. I could not find any, and I went over there." They continued to Mexico and picked up her father. When they returned around midnight, Elva testified she asked Appellant what he was going to do. He responded that he was going to turn himself in to the police. Garza testified Appellant and Elva entered the police station and Appellant indicated he was turning himself in for what happened on Avenue K. Garza called Officer Martinez who asked Detective Jimmy Stevens to conduct the interview. After Appellant was advised of his Miranda rights and signed a written waiver of his rights, he gave a videotaped statement. In his statement, Appellant indicated he drove home from work at 9:00 p.m. on the night of November 23. He began drinking beer and using cocaine. At home, he finished drinking a twelve pack of beer. Afterwards, he called L.O. and asked if her husband was at home. After she indicated her husband was not at home, he hung up. Appellant then attempted to locate more cocaine but was unsuccessful. He next drove to L.O.'s house because, "in the past, they had flirted." He parked in the alley behind the house and, when he could not open the back door, broke a rear window into the house. As he entered the house, L.O. was coming from the bedroom yelling and praying. He pushed her into bedroom and grabbed her from behind. His statement continued as follows:I already knew what I wanted to do with [L.O.]. [They] fell on the bed [and he] began to kiss [her] all over her body including her buttocks. I knew I couldn't have an erection when I am on drugs. I had on a brown sweater and when I was kissing [her] I was wearing a hood on my head. We got up and left out the same window I had broken earlier. I came to the PD while I am sober to make things right. I know what I did to [L.O.] was wrong.Following the interview, Detective Stevens testified Appellant permitted the officers to obtain samples of his DNA. After the statement was typed and signed, Appellant was placed under arrest. After the arrest, Officer Richard Jimenez accompanied Appellant's wife to her home where he retrieved a brown, hooded jacket. At trial, Elva identified it as the jacket worn by her husband the night of November 23, when he left the house to buy some beer and drugs. She also testified that contact between Appellant and the victim was very limited during the past five to six years. Officer Guerrero testified that, at approximately 12:30 a.m. on November 24, 2007, he had observed a red pickup similar to Appellant's pickup in L.O.'s driveway. He also testified that the pickup appeared similar to a pickup he observed in the driveway the night before. L.O. testified that, on November 23, 2007, she went to bed after reading and fell asleep about 11:00 p.m. She left a small light on in the bathroom situated outside her bedroom and cracked open her bedroom door. She later received a call from someone asking for her husband. After she informed the caller he was not at home and asked if it wasn't a little late to be calling, the caller hung up. While trying to go to sleep, she heard a loud bang like something had been broken. She arose from bed, but could not move. Although the room was dark, she could tell her assailant was wearing a hood and blue jeans. He began undressing her and told her to remain still or he would kill her. He also jabbed what she thought was a gun in her side. Despite her attempts to fend off her assailant and free herself, he sexually assaulted her and left through the broken window in the rear of the house. L.O. further testified that, over the past six years, she had never had a relationship with Appellant, her brother-in-law. At most, she testified there were several chance meetings in the street while driving but no communication. Steven Brent Hester, a serologist for the DPS crime laboratory in Lubbock, testified that the sperm fraction of L.O.'s labial swabs was consistent with Appellant's DNA profile. He also testified, to a reasonable degree of certainty, Appellant's DNA was a match for the samples taken in, and on, L.O. After both parties rested, the trial court instructed the jury, without objection, that they were the "exclusive judges of the facts proved, the weight of the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses." Thereafter, the jury returned a verdict of guilty and Appellant filed this appeal.