OPINION
Opinion by
John Adams Cardenas appeals the judgment convicting him of capital murder and sentencing him to life imprisonment. We affirm.
Factual and Procedural Background
During the evening of March 12, 1999, Carolina Castillo visited in her apartment with neighbors from her complex, Carlos and Carless. While Carolina and Carless baked a birthday cake, Carlos stood out on the apartment’s balcony. While there, he saw another neighbor in the complex, “Gizmo,” pass by. After Gizmo said hello, Carlos introduced him to Carolina. Gizmo stayed at Carolina’s apartment for approximately forty-five minutes.
Later that night, Gizmo had a party in his apartment — A306. Approximately ten people stayed up late drinking; and some, including Gizmo, also did cocaine. During the party, Gizmo passed around a gun. All of the male guests held the gun; and one of the partygoers, Joe Flores, put the gun in his waistband. When Gizmo asked for it back, Flores returned the gun; and Gizmo practiced loading and unloading it. Eventually everyone left the party except Flores and another guest, Celso Montañez, who were unable to leave because their vehicle had a flat tire. At approximately 4:00 a.m., Flores and Montañez passed out in A306. At about the same time, Gizmo and a neighbor who had been at the party, Brandon Mediros, went to Mediros’ apartment to watch television and drink beer. Gizmo told Mediros that he missed his girlfriend and that he wanted to “bone a chick.” According to Flores, Gizmo returned to A306 at approximately 7:00 a.m., put on a flannel shirt, and left again. At approximately 8:00 a.m., Gizmo returned to A306, went into the bedroom, and then left again, carrying some boots.
The morning after the party, at approximately 7:45 a.m., Carolina went downstairs to Carlos and Carless’ apartment and knocked on the door. Carolina, who had not attended Gizmo’s party, was up early to give Carless a ride to pick up her paycheck. Carolina’s knock awakened Carless, who answered the door and said she would take a shower, get dressed, and come up to Carolina’s apartment in a few minutes. Carolina told Carless and Carlos that Gizmo was upstairs in her apartment and making her uncomfortable. Carlos told Carolina that Gizmo was harmless and to just tell him to leave.
Approximately ten minutes later, when Carless went to Carolina’s apartment, she saw thick black smoke through the windows and found the doorknob hot to the touch. Carless yelled for help; and a neighbor called the fire department. Car-less and the neighbor yelled for Carolina but got no response. Carlos, who had joined Carless, also tried to enter Carolina’s apartment but the smoke was too thick. At 8:10 a.m., the Balcones Heights Fire and Police Departments arrived. When the firemen entered Carolina’s apartment, they discovered a mattress on fire in her bedroom. They removed the mattress and found Carolina, unconscious on the bedroom floor and dressed in only a tee shirt. Alive but nonresponsive, Carolina was carried out by the emergency *58 medical technicians, who discovered she had suffered a gunshot wound to the left side of her head. Carolina died in the hospital later that day.
Carlos and Carless informed Balcones Heights Police Officer Danny Tumlinson that Gizmo had been in Carolina’s apartment immediately before the fire. Carlos also told Tumlinson that he did not believe Carolina had a gun in her apartment but there had been one at the party at Gizmo’s apartment the night before. The couple then directed Tumlinson to Gizmo’s apartment. Tumlinson and two other officers knocked loudly on the door to Gizmo’s apartment but received no answer and returned to the crime scene.
When Balcones Heights Police Chief Menn arrived on the scene, he was approached by the apartment complex security guard, Billy Reyes. Reyes informed Menn that a black truck with a flat tire in the parking lot belonged to someone inside the apartment identified by Carless and Carlos as Gizmo’s; and “the guys they were looking for earlier” were still there, peeping out of the blinds of a window at the front of Gizmo’s apartment from which there was a clear line of sight to Carolina’s apartment. At approximately 11:00 a.m., Chief Menn and Officers Tumlinson and Menchaca returned to Gizmo’s apartment and knocked loudly. Someone peeped out of the blinds again. Eventually, Montañez opened the door; Flores was still asleep on the couch. When the officers asked Mon-tañez if either he or the man on the couch were Gizmo, Montañez responded “no” and stated that neither of them lived in the apartment. The officers asked for identification; and Montañez turned around to retrieve his wallet. Chief Menn, sensing danger in the situation, told him to stop and asked if they could look in the apartment for Gizmo. Montañez said yes, so Chief Menn and Officer Menchaca walked to the rear of the small apartment, checked the closet, and determined there was no one in the apartment other than the men who identified themselves as Mon-tañez and Flores. The officers then returned to the front of the apartment and asked Montañez and Flores if they would accompany them to the police station and give statements. Montañez and Flores agreed and began to dress.
According to Chief Menn, he ordered Officer Menchaca to follow Montañez around the apartment as he dressed for “officer safety.” Montañez sat down on the floor near the vanity area and started to put on some nearby boots. He then held up the boots and said “[t]hese aren’t my boots, Gizmo took my boots.” When Montañez held up the boots, Officer Men-chaca saw what he believed to be a blood stain on the sole of one of the boots. Montañez then walked into the bathroom. Officer Menchaca followed and saw a spent shell casing standing upright in the toilet bowl. At that point Officer Menchaca informed Chief Menn that “there was evidence in the apartment.” Chief Menn then ordered everyone out and assigned Officer Menchaca to guard the apartment until a search warrant was obtained. It took the remainder of the afternoon to determine that “Gizmo” was in fact John Adams Cardenas and to obtain a search warrant for Cardenas’ apartment.
The warrant was executed at 5:00 p.m. that afternoon. The search of Cardenas’ apartment yielded a revolver, ammunition, and a spent shell casing fired from the revolver. Also recovered were the boots; the tissue and blood on the sole of one of the boots is consistent with Carolina’s DNA profile. Material was also taken from inside the boots; tests of this material established only that Cardenas could not be excluded as the donor. In Carolina’s apartment, the police found blood stains on *59 the carpet and walls in the living, kitchen, bathroom, and vanity areas. Also found on Carolina’s bedroom floor were a pair of bloody pants, panties, and a tennis shoe. The pants were inside out with the panties in the position they would be in if both were taken off at the same time. The tennis shoe was stuck inside the right pant leg. Footprints in the blood on the floor showed someone with one shoe and one sock walking in circles. Carolina had scratches on the front of her right thigh and right knee consistent with fingernail scratches. A bullet fragment removed from her head matched the gun found in Cardenas’ apartment. Expert medical testimony established that, judging from the wound, the gun was fired from a point more than two, and possibly as far as eight to ten feet away. A palm print on the inside of the door frame matched Cardenas’.
Legal and Factual Sufficiency of the Evidence
In his fifth and sixth points of error, Cardenas argues the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction. We disagree.
Standard of Review
“A legal sufficiency review calls upon the reviewing court to view the relevant evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict and determine whether any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Johnson v. State,
Discussion
Cardenas argues the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the jury’s verdict because the physical evidence seized from his apartment and Car-less’ and Carlos’ testimony regarding Carolina’s statements were inadmissible. However, in reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, “a reviewing court must consider all the evidence, rightly or wrongly admitted, that the trier of fact was permitted to consider.”
Johnson v. State,
Motion to Suppress
In Cardenas’ first point of error, he argues the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress the physical evidence seized from his apartment because the police officers’ warrantless entry into his apartment violated his rights under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. 1 We disagree.
*60 Standard of Review
We review a trial court’s suppression ruling under the abuse of discretion standard.
See Guzman v. State,
Discussion
The Fourth Amendment permits the warrantless seizure of evidence that is in “plain view.”
See Walter,
“A warrantless intrusion into an individual’s home is presumptively unreasonable unless the person consents or probable cause and exigent circumstances justify the encroachment.”
United States v. Jones,
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“Exigent circumstances generally exist where there is a risk that the officers or innocent bystanders will be endangered, or that evidence will be destroyed.”
United States v. Blount,
Here, the officers had been informed that a violent crime had been committed^ — Carolina had been shot in the head and her apartment set on fire; “Gizmo,” who lived in apartment A306 in the same apartment complex as Carolina, had not only been in Carolina’s apartment shortly before she was shot but had made her “uncomfortable”; and “Gizmo” had kept the gun that was passed around at the party in his apartment the night before Carolina was shot. The officers also knew the location of apartment A306 and thus could see that the front window of apartment A306 had a clear line of sight to Carolina’s apartment; and they had been informed that someone in apartment A306 had peeked out of the blinds as the officers approached. Significantly, however, at this point in their investigation, none of the officers knew the real name of “Gizmo.” Thus, as Chief Menn testified, their purpose in knocking on Cardenas’ door was to make contact with “Gizmo” and determine whether he had any information concerning Carolina’s injuries — a classic “knock and talk” strategy, which the “[federal courts have recognized ... as a reasonable investigative tool when officers seek to gain an occupant’s consent to search or when officers reasonably suspect criminal activity.”
Jones,
We begin our analysis by presuming, as we must, that the warrantless entry into Cardenas’ apartment was unreasonable. But that is indeed merely the beginning, not the end, of our analysis because the touchstone of the Fourth Amendment is reasonableness, and the reasonableness of a search is determined “by assessing, on the one hand, the degree to which it intrudes upon an individual’s privacy and, on the other, the degree to which it is needed for the promotion of legitimate governmental interests.”
Wyoming v. Houghton,
Here, the intrusion, albeit into a private home, was minimal — the officers merely walked through the apartment, opened the closet door to ensure that an armed Gizmo was not lying in wait, and followed Monta-ñez while he dressed to go to the station. 3 And this level of intrusion was necessary to promote a legitimate government interest — the officers’ safety while Montañez and Flores retrieved their identification and dressed to go to the station to give their statements. In short, we cannot fault the officers for their warrantless entry into Cardenas’ apartment because- — in light of the violent crimes committed in Carolina’s apartment, the officers’ knowledge that Gizmo was in possession of a firearm the previous night, and the absence of information regarding the actual identity of “Gizmo”, — it was objectively reasonable for Chief Menn to believe, as he testified, that “officer safety” required him to follow Montañez when he turned back into the apartment for his identification and to order Officer Menchaca to follow Montañez as he dressed. We therefore hold that, in light of the surrounding facts and circumstances, the officers’ war-rantless entry into Cardenas’ apartment was reasonable and not violative of the Fourth Amendment. Cardenas’ first point of error is overruled.
Hearsay
In his second point of error, Cardenas argues the trial court erred in admitting Carless and Carlos’ testimony that Carolina told them Gizmo was upstairs in her apartment and making her “uncomfortable” because Carolina’s out-of-court statements were inadmissible hearsay. In response, the State argues the statements were admissible under exceptions to the hearsay rule. We agree.
Standard of Review
Whether to admit an out-of-court statement under an exception to the general hearsay rule is committed to the trial court’s discretion.
See Lawton v. State,
Discussion
Carolina made two statements to Carless and Carlos: (1) Gizmo is in my apartment; and (2) Gizmo is making me uncomfortable. Like the State, we analyze each separately. Carolina’s first statement described an ongoing condition- — Gizmo being in her apartment. Rule 803(1) of the Texas Rules of Evidence provides that “[a] statement describing or explaining ... [a] condition made while the declarant was perceiving the event or condition, or immediately thereafter” is not excluded by the hearsay rule. Tex.R. Evid. 803(1). The record does not reflect how long it took to walk from Carolina’s apartment to Carless’ and Carlos’ apartment, but it does reflect the two apartments were in close proximity and suggests the walk from one to the other was at best one minute. Given the close proximity between the two apartments, it is apparent Carolina’s first statement was made immediately after the con
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dition was perceived. We therefore hold Carolina’s first statement that Gizmo was upstairs in her apartment qualifies as a present sense impression because it was a statement describing a condition — Gizmo being in Carolina’s apartment — made by Carolina immediately after she perceived it.
See Rabbani v. State,
Carolina’s second statement described her emotional response to the condition she described. Rule 803(3) provides that “[a] statement of the declarant’s then existing state of ... emotion” is not excluded by the hearsay rule. Tex.R. Evid. 803(3). Thus, a victim’s statement regarding her emotional response to a particular person qualifies as a statement of then existing state of emotion under Rule 803(3).
See, e.g., Martinez v. State,
In his third point of error, Cardenas argues the trial court erred in admitting Brandon Mediros’ testimony that Cardenas told Mediros that he wanted to “bone a chick.” However, Cardenas’ statement is an admission by a party-opponent and thus not hearsay under Rule 801(e)(2). Moreover, Cardenas failed to object to the testimony at trial and thus did not preserve the issue for appeal. See Tex.R.App. P. 33.1.
The Jury Charge — Lesser Included Offenses
In his fourth point of error, Cardenas argues the trial court erred in refusing to instruct the jury on the lesser included offenses of manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide. We disagree.
“To determine whether a charge on a lesser-included offense should be given, [the Court of Criminal Appeals] has implemented a two-step test.”
Feldman v. State,
The jury was instructed on the law of capital murder, aggravated sexual assault, and murder. Both manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide are lesser included offenses of murder.
Cardenas v. State,
Notes
. Cardenas also argues the warrantless search violated article I, section 9 of the Texas Constitution; and, in his brief, Cardenas states, "Texas affords greater constitutional protections on [sic] its citizens than the minimum standards required by the federal constitution.” However, he does not distinguish the federal and state constitutional protections, nor does he provide substantive analysis of the separate grounds. Because he fails to
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distinguish and make an argument under the Texas Constitution, we will only analyze whether his federal constitutional rights were violated.
See Heitman v. State,
. At the pretrial suppression hearing the State argued that Montañez consented to the entry and that the officers' knowledge and the circumstances justified an entry for officer safely. We consider this argument to have raised exigent circumstances; but in any event, "[i]t is well settled that a Court of Appeals can affirm a trial court's decision on a legal theory not presented to the trial court without violating 'ordinary notions of procedural default.' "
Hailey v. State,
.
See United States v. Wilson,
