Daniel DeSantiago-Caraza v. State
01-14-00506-CR
Tex. App.Jan 20, 2015Background
- Appellant Daniel DeSantiago-Carraza pleaded guilty to aggravated robbery and reserved punishment to the trial court after a presentence investigation; the court later sentenced him to 60 years’ imprisonment.
- Facts at punishment hearing: a passenger in an F-150 pointed a gun and fired at several victims; Appellant was the driver and was alleged to have encouraged the passenger.
- Appellant and witnesses testified he was impaired by Xanax, alcohol, and marijuana that night, did not remember events, and acted as a party rather than the shooter.
- Mitigation evidence presented: history of childhood abuse, mental-health diagnoses (antisocial personality disorder, bipolar disorder, intermittent explosive disorder), prior suicide attempt, recent death of a close friend, remorse, support from family, and plans for employment and care of two young daughters.
- At the hearing the trial judge expressed unwillingness to hear extended testimony and indicated he believed the plea papers were sufficient; after hearing mitigating testimony the court imposed the maximum sentence.
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument | Defendant's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whether the trial court violated due process by refusing to consider the full range of punishment and mitigating evidence before imposing sentence | DeSantiago-Carraza: the court indicated it would not hear full testimony, pre-determined punishment, and ignored mitigating evidence (mental illness, intoxication, abusive childhood, recent bereavement, lack of felony record, remorse, family ties) | State: urged development of record to show appellant was more than a mere party and sought up to 50 years; prosecutor argued burden remained on State to prove relevant aggravating participation | Appellant argues the court’s statements and conduct show a predetermined sentence and refusal to consider mitigation, requiring reversal and new punishment hearing (appellate briefing seeks relief) |
Key Cases Cited
- Gagnon v. Scarpelli, 411 U.S. 778 (1973) (due process requires a neutral, detached hearing body)
- McClenan v. State, 661 S.W.2d 108 (Tex. Crim. App. 1983) (denial of due process when court refuses to consider full punishment range or evidence and imposes predetermined punishment)
- Jefferson v. State, 803 S.W.2d 470 (Tex. App.--Dallas 1991) (same principle regarding consideration of evidence at punishment)
- Howard v. State, 830 S.W.2d 785 (Tex. App.--San Antonio 1992) (trial court must consider mitigating evidence; refusal can violate due process)
- Cole v. State, 757 S.W.2d 864 (Tex. App.--Texarkana 1988) (court’s arbitrary refusal to consider punishment range can constitute due-process violation)
