OPINION
Appellant Ramon Penaloza was convicted on one count of aggravated robbery. Punishment was assessed at thirty-three years’ imprisonment. In a single issue, he contends the trial court erred by refusing to submit an instruction on the lesser-included offense of robbery. We affirm.
The complainant, Christina Alvarez, was sitting in her car preparing to leave her apartment when a tan SUV pulled in behind her, blocking her exit. Appellant and another man approached her as she waited inside, flanking her on either side of the vehicle. Assuming that she was a drug dealer, the men demanded money from a large drug transaction they believed had taken place earlier that day. When Alvarez denied being a drug dealer, appellant called her a liar and demanded to know her apartment number. After she answered, appellant removed the keys from her vehicle and ordered her into the waiting SUV. As she was escorted away, Alvarez caught a glimpse of the vehicle’s license plate number. She also observed a black handgun in appellant’s pocket.
Appellant’s partner, Leodegario Rueda, ransacked the apartment while Alvarez remained captive in the SUV. Rueda never uncovered the money he believed Alvarez possessed, but he did return to the vehicle with a number of her personal effects, including a television and a digital camera. After the belongings were loaded into the SUV, appellant received a phone call indicating that Alvarez was “the wrong girl.” Appellant then returned Alvarez her keys and told her she was free to go. Alvarez testified that when she was released, appellant instructed her “not to look back or to look at the vehicle or he’s going to shoot me from the back with the gun.”
Following her release, Alvarez contacted the police and reported her attackers. At the beginning of her 911 call, she mentioned that she had just been “held at gunpoint.” Later during the call, the following exchange occurred:
Dispatcher: Okay, and they did have, uh, guns?
Alvarez: I saw one gun—
Dispatcher: One?
*711 Alvarez: Yeah, I don’t know if it was a toy gun, and I probably doubt it, but I was only trying to find—
Dispatcher: One? One had a gun?
Alvarez: I only saw one. Yes, ma’am.
Alvarez also indicated that her attackers’ vehicle was a sand-colored Chevy Suburban, with license plate 49HNR8. Based on that description, police ultimately stopped a tan Chevy Tahoe, bearing a similar license plate of 48HHR9. Inside the Tahoe were appellant, Rueda, and Alvarez’s personal property. A search of the vehicle also revealed two loaded weapons hidden beneath the center console. At trial, Alvarez identified one of the weapons as the gun she had seen in appellant’s pocket. Alvarez also explained that she initially questioned the authenticity of the gun to the 911 dispatcher because she was not very familiar with firearms.
During the jury charge conference, appellant objected that the charge only contained an instruction for aggravated robbery. Appellant requested that the charge also have an instruction on the lesser-included offense of robbery. The objection was overruled. In his sole issue, appellant contends the trial court erred by denying his request for an instruction on the lesser-included offense.
We review the trial court’s decision regarding the submission of a lesser-included offense for an abuse of discretion.
Jackson v. State,
We apply a two-prong test when determining whether a defendant is entitled to an instruction on a lesser-included offense.
Rousseau v. State,
The first prong is met in this case. Robbery is a lesser-included offense of aggravated robbery.
See Little v. State,
In connection with the second prong, anything more than a scintilla of evidence is sufficient to entitle a defendant to a charge on the lesser-included offense.
Dobbins v. State,
Appellant argues that he was entitled to an instruction on robbery because there was more than a scintilla of evidence showing that he did not use or exhibit a deadly weapon. Specifically, he relies on the 911 call, in which Alvarez questioned whether the weapon she observed may have been a toy gun. Because neither side requested an instruction limiting the jury’s consideration of this evidence, it was admitted for all purposes.
See Delgado v. State,
Texas courts have examined a number of cases where a witness testified that a toy gun may have been used in the commission of an offense. Generally, this testimony arises through concessions by the complaining witness during cross-examination, or through claims of prior inconsistent statements issued by third parties.
See, e.g., Wilhoit v. State,
The evidence in this case differs from that considered in other opinions on this issue because the 911 call was published during the complainant’s direct examination and it was not admitted for purposes of impeachment. Moreover, Alvarez was questioned by both the prosecutor and defense counsel as to the reasons why she indicated that the gun may have been fake. During both examinations, she conceded that at the time of her statement, she was uncertain as to the authenticity of the weapon because she had not seen many guns and she was generally unfamiliar
*713
with firearms. This evidence merely established that Alvarez was unsure as to whether the gun was real; it was not evidence affirmatively showing that the weapon was a toy gun.
2
Cf. Massey v. State,
To be entitled to an instruction on robbery, the record must contain affirmative evidence that a deadly weapon was not used.
See Hampton v. State,
Accordingly, we overrule appellant’s sole issue and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Notes
. Though not binding on this court, we acknowledge that a number of unpublished memorandum opinions have approached this issue in similar fashion.
See Morales v. State,
No. 14-10-00261-CR,
. Thus, even if we were to consider the 911 call a prior inconsistent statement admitted for all purposes, rather than impeachment, the evidence would still be insufficient to show affirmatively that a deadly weapon was not used.
See Navarro v. State,
