Opinion
NO. WR-51,197-03
09-29-2021
Christopher Self, for Applicant.
Christopher Self, for Applicant.
For majority opinion, please see 2021 WL 4451203.
CONCURRING OPINION
Richardson, J., filed a concurring opinion, in which Hervey and Newell, JJ., joined.
I concur in the Court's decision to grant relief. Today we decide the State presented false evidence to secure Applicant's conviction 23 years ago. We do so based on the recommendation of the trial court and the district attorney's office that now agrees they presented false evidence in order to obtain the conviction.
Applicant was convicted of the first degree felony offense of engaging in organized criminal activity for shooting and wounding Joe Cruz. Absent the organized criminal activity allegation, such an offense would be a second degree aggravated assault with a maximum punishment of 20 years. Applicant never denied shooting Cruz but always denied the shooting had anything to do with organized criminal gang activity. Instead, he was upset Cruz had murdered his best friend. At trial, the State relied heavily on the testimony of Robert Aguirre to establish Applicant was a member of a street gang, in order to show the shooting was part of an organized criminal activity. Apparently it worked, and Applicant received a 50-year sentence rather than a 20-year maximum sentence.
At trial, on appeal, and in all of his writs, Applicant always maintained that he shot Cruz because Cruz had killed his best friend and that it had nothing to do with any gang membership. In his -03 writ application, Applicant claimed he had discovered an uncommunicated 15-year plea deal, and more importantly, after Aguirre had been out of the country for 20 years, he recanted his testimony about Applicant shooting Cruz for reasons based on Applicant's gang affiliation. Initially we dismissed this application as a subsequent writ; however, in an unusual move, pursuant to TRAP 79.2(d), the State, not the Applicant, asked this Court to reconsider the case on its own initiative. We did.
This Court remanded this case to the trial court to determine if Applicant would have been convicted of engaging in organized criminal activity, but for Aguirre's misleading trial testimony. We can assume that this Court's order was not meant as an effort in futility and that some deference would be given to the time and effort made to conduct such a hearing, since it was this Court that decided to reconsider the case on its own initiative. Again, this suggestion was made by the State, not Applicant. During the hearing, the habeas court considered the credibility of Aguirre's recantation and whether, but for the false evidence of Applicant's gang affiliation, the result would have been different. At the conclusion, the parties prepared agreed proposed findings and conclusions and presented those to the habeas court. The habeas court agreed with those findings of fact and conclusions of law and recommended that relief be granted. Once again, the State agreed with this recommendation and joined the habeas court in recommending the sentence be reformed to an aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, and remanded for a new sentencing hearing. As ordered, those findings were forwarded to this Court.
The dissent would now have us disregard the extensive credibility findings and conclusions by the habeas court that we ordered to take place and with which the State agrees. Although the Court has raised laches in the past, we do not raise it here because 1) the State has never raised laches; 2) the State would not be materially prejudiced as a result of the delay, because the State agrees Applicant is entitled to relief, a material witness lied, and the lesser included conviction of aggravated assault will still remain; 3) Applicant's delay was not unreasonable because it was due to a justifiable excuse – Aguirre did not admit until years later that he lied; 4) and Applicant is entitled to equitable relief. Ex Parte White , 2020 WL 1873863, at *3 (Tex. Crim. App. April 15, 2020) (not designated for publication) (Newell, J., concurring); Ex Parte Perez , 398 S.W.3d 206, 218 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013).
Article 2.01 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure provides, "[i]t shall be the primary duty of all prosecuting attorneys, including any special prosecutors, not to convict, but to see that justice is done. They shall not suppress facts or secrete witnesses capable of establishing the innocence of the accused." TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN . art. 2.01. That is precisely what the State has done in this case. They have conceded a material witness provided false testimony; years later the witness admitted his trial testimony was false, and the habeas judge agreed. The State also agreed with the habeas court's findings that that the testimony by the gang officer classifying Applicant as a gang member "had no substantive basis" and was false or misleading. When the State concedes they used material testimony that is false to obtain a conviction and a habeas court agrees, applicants should be afforded relief from the highest court in the State. To hold otherwise would call into question the principles of fairness and impartiality on which our legal system is based.
With these thoughts, I concur in the Court's order.
DISSENTING OPINION
Yeary, J., filed a dissenting opinion in which Keller, P.J., and Slaughter, J. joined.
Today the Court decides that 23 years ago, the State presented false evidence to secure Applicant's conviction. I respectfully dissent.
Applicant was convicted in 1998 of the offense of engaging in organized criminal activity and sentenced to fifty years’ confinement in the penitentiary. Although the jury was presented with an option to convict Applicant of the lesser included offense of aggravated assault, it rejected that option, and found instead that he committed that offense and that he did so "as a member of a criminal street gang." TEX. PENAL CODE § 71.02(a)(1). Thus, his punishment range was established at the level of a first-degree felony rather than at the level of a second-degree felony. Compare TEX. PENAL CODE § 71.02(b) (engaging in organized criminal activity is "one category higher" than the most serious predicate felony), and TEX. PENAL CODE § 22.02(b) (aggravated assault "is a felony of the second degree"). At trial, Applicant did not contest the fact that he had committed an aggravated assault, but he vigorously disputed that he was a member of a gang.
Testimony supporting Applicant's gang membership came from two sources: Applicant's friend, Robert Aguirre, who was present when Applicant committed the aggravated assault, and Tim Gilpin, formerly an officer with the North Richland Hills Police Department and member of a unit specializing in organized crime and gangs. Aguirre testified that Applicant dressed like a gang member, threw gang signs, and "claimed" to be a member of a gang called the Raza Trece, or "R-13." Gilpin simply testified, without elaboration, that his investigation had revealed that Applicant was a member of this gang. Applicant's conviction was upheld on direct appeal. Dyson v. State , No. 02-98-096-CR (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Sept. 16, 1999) (not designated for publication). Thereafter, Applicant pursued an initial post-conviction application for writ of habeas corpus, which this Court denied in 2002, and later a first subsequent post-conviction application for writ of habeas corpus, which this Court dismissed as abusive in 2006.
In 2019, Applicant filed this, his second subsequent post-conviction application for writ of habeas corpus. In it, he specifically claimed that Aguirre's testimony of his gang membership was false, and that he may raise this contention for the first time in 2019 based on new law, relying on this Court's opinion in Ex parte Chabot , 300 S.W.3d 768 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009), which was decided after his first subsequent writ application was dismissed. Notably, Applicant did not challenge Officer Gilpin's trial testimony—only Aguirre's. At first, this Court dismissed Applicant's second subsequent writ application as abusive, but on motion by the State, we reconsidered, and entered an order directing the convicting court to determine, among other things, "whether, but for Aguirre's [allegedly] misleading testimony, Applicant would not have been convicted of engaging in organized crime." Ex parte Dyson , No. WR-51,197-03, 2021 WL 359461, at *1 (Tex. Crim. App. Feb. 3, 2021) (not designated for publication). Our order made no mention of Gilpin.
At the beginning of the evidentiary hearing in the convicting court, on March 11, 2021, Applicant indicated that he intended to file a motion requesting that he be allowed to amend his writ application, and such a motion is indeed in the habeas record with a file stamp of March 12, 2021. But no mention was made of the motion when the hearing reconvened on March 12th, and I can find no place in the record where it was granted. Nor does the record contain an amended writ application. I can find nothing to indicate that Applicant has raised an issue as to the accuracy of Gilpin's trial testimony. And nothing in our remand order suggests that the subsequent writ proceedings authorized therein included the evidentiary development of such a claim. The claim is simply not before us. Cf. Ex parte Carty , 543 S.W.3d 149, 151 (Tex. Crim. App. 2018) (plurality opinion) (holding in a post-conviction capital habeas corpus context that an issue not raised in the writ application did not invoke the jurisdiction of the Court).
What is more, it is not clear to me that either this Court or the convicting court is authorized to grant a motion to amend or supplement a second subsequent writ application to add a new claim in any event, consistent with Section 4 of Article 11.07. TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 11.07, § 4. It is true that the Court has held that an applicant may amend or supplement an initial writ application without implicating abuse-of-the-writ principles—at least anytime up until the writ application is disposed of, or this Court files and sets it for determination. Ex parte Saenz , 491 S.W.3d 819, 824–25 (Tex. Crim. App. 2016) ; Ex parte Speckman , 537 S.W.3d 49, 56 & n.9 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017). But the Court has never held that an applicant may likewise amend or supplement a subsequent application at will, especially once this Court has already culled the issues and remanded the case for development of a very specific issue to the exclusion of all other issues, which failed the Section 4 hurdles.
At the writ hearing, there was indeed substantial evidence that Aguirre's trial testimony was misleading to the extent that it suggested that Applicant was a member of the R-13 gang. Notably, however, at no point has Aguirre explicitly retracted his trial testimony that Applicant at least claimed to be a member, however jokingly, and Gilpin's testimony constitutes at least some evidence to bear out the accuracy of that claim. For at least that reason, I cannot say that, had the jury been aware of the misleading aspects of Aguirre's trial testimony, it would likely have made any difference to its verdict finding Applicant guilty of organized criminal activity. Given the pleading, the scope of our remand order, and the evidence presented at the hearing on remand, I likewise cannot conclude that Applicant is entitled to relief on his false evidence claim, as he framed it.
Finally, even if I thought the convicting court and this Court were within their statutory authority to incorporate an issue regarding the accuracy of Gilpin's trial testimony within the scope of Applicant's false evidence claim as it was pled, I would not vote to grant Applicant relief. Gilpin has never recanted his trial testimony, conclusory though it may have been. While the evidence presented at the writ hearing strongly suggests he may have been mistaken, it stands in my mind as impeachment evidence only; though compelling, it does not definitively show that Gilpin's testimony was false or misleading.
As for the concurring opinion, I would only repeat what we have said on other occasions: "While the State's confession of error in a criminal case is important and carries great weight, we are not bound by it. Saldano v. State , 70 S.W.3d 873, 884 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002). This Court must still independently examine the error confessed because ‘our judgments are precedents, and the proper administration of the criminal law cannot be left merely to the stipulation of parties.’ See id. " Estrada v. State , 313 S.W.3d 274, 286 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).
On these bases, I dissent to the Court's order granting Applicant relief on his conviction for engaging in organized criminal activity.