Lead Opinion
OPINION
delivered the opinion of the unanimous Court.
Appellant was convicted in December 2006 of capital murder for raping and strangling Vanessa Villa.
Factual Background
This “cold case” prosecution involved the 1986 rape and murder of eleven-year-old Vanessa Villa. Appellant was not a suspect until 2005 when, during a routine CODIS
Vanessa lived with her mother, Rosa Clark, her one-year-old brother, Enrique, her aunt, Alicia Avila, and her aunt’s three children in a small house in northwest Fort Worth. On August 2, 1986, Vanessa came home at about 5-6 p.m. after working at a flea market. She fell asleep, fully clothed, in the bedroom that she shared with her mother and baby brother. At about 10 p.m., her mother and aunt left to run some errands. When they returned an hour later, Rosa went into her bedroom, and she “hollered” to Alicia. When Alicia came into the bedroom, she saw a comatose Vanessa lying on the bed. Her blouse and bra were pushed up, she was naked from the waist down, and her bare legs were slightly separated. The window fan was on a bedroom chair and the window screen was hanging loose. Alicia saw what she thought was semen on Vanessa’s legs.
They called the police. Vanessa was taken to the hospital, but she was pronounced dead shortly thereafter. According to the medical examiner, the cause of her death was manual strangulation. Vanessa also had abrasions and bruises on her face consistent with a hand pushing down on her mouth and nose. There was muddy debris on her thighs, consistent with a hand grabbing her thigh, abrasions on her left breast, and a bruise on her right arm. She had a “huge tear” on the back wall of her vagina, and there was blood around her external genitalia. The medical examiner thought that these injuries were “perimortem” — caused right around the time she died. Sperm was found on the bedspread, the fitted sheet she was lying on, and in Vanessa’s vagina. The medical examiner agreed that sperm can remain in the vaginal vault for anywhere from 48-72 hours.
Although the Fort Worth police investigated several possible suspects, three of them were eliminated when their DNA profiles did not match the DNA from the crime scene semen samples, and the investigation of other suspects led nowhere. Vanessa’s rape and murder eventually became an unsolved “cold case.”
In 2000, a DNA blood sample was taken from appellant.
Although appellant had never been a suspect in Vanessa’s rape and murder, he did know her family. Vanessa’s mother and aunt worked with appellant’s wife at a nursing home. Appellant would sometimes drive his wife over to Rosa’s home. Alicia remembered that he had attended Vanessa’s wake and had signed the guest book.
During the guilt phase, the State offered evidence of a second rape-murder appellant committed in 1995. During the punishment phase, the State offered evidence of a third rape-murder appellant committed in 1994. In both of these cases, the women were strangled, and semen containing appellant’s DNA profile was found in the victims’ vagina or mouth.
Other evidence at the punishment stage showed that, in 1987, appellant burglarized the home of Irene Perez by entering her bedroom through an open window one night. He grabbed her, hit her face, choked her, and covered her mouth. She thought she was going to die, but she fought him off, turned on the light, and recognized him as someone she used to work with. He did not have his pants on. He escaped and fled in a small black car.
Three years later, appellant burglarized Sandra Holleman’s apartment, coming in through a living-room window, as she and her two small children were asleep on a mattress in the living room. Ms. Holle-man woke up to see appellant lying naked beside her, trying to pull her pants down. As she screamed, he tried to choke her. He escaped by climbing back out the living-room window. She thought that she recognized him as someone who had once lived in the same apartment complex.
The State also offered evidence that appellant repeatedly molested his girlfriend’s five-year-old daughter in the late 1980’s. When he babysat her, he would buy her candy and then make her give him oral sex. Afterwards, appellant said that if she ever told her mother he would kill her and her mother. She was too afraid to tell her mother what appellant had done until she was sixteen years old.
Other evidence showed that appellant was arrested in 1993 when an officer saw him and another man pointing guns at each other on a Fort Worth street at 2:00 a.m. Appellant’s gun, a Larcin semi-automatic, was loaded with one round in the chamber and six more in the magazine. While appellant was in prison in 1998, guards found four metal rods, in the process of being sharpened into “shanks,” in the cell occupied by appellant and another man.
During the defense punishment case, appellant’s brother, Val Meza, testified that appellant and his two brothers grew up in “a ghetto area” of El Paso. They moved from California with their mother because appellant’s father physically abused their mother. They were very poor and had to scavenge for food when their mother disappeared for days at a time. Appellant fell down some stairs when he was about one, but he did not receive medical attention for that injury. Appellant seemed “slow” and “always in a daze” after that.
Mr. Meza testified that appellant called him in 2000 from a halfway house and asked if he could stay with him. When Mr. Meza went to pick appellant up, he didn’t recognize his brother, he “looked so broken down and so pitiful.” Mr. Meza took him in on certain conditions, including attending church and getting a job. Appellant got a job, got married, and reestablished a relationship with his son, Joe Segundo, whom he had not seen since 1982.
A clinical neurologist, Dr. Hopewell, testified that appellant’s “extensive history of inhalant abuse” and his failure to have “a stimulating background upbringing” may have caused significant brain dysfunction. Appellant’s IQ tested at 75, and his memory is impaired, but he is not mentally retarded. Dr. Hopewell stated that appellant had “very poor” insight, “poor” judgment, and “significant difficulty” with executive functioning.
The jury found appellant guilty of capital murder, and, in accordance with their answers to the special issues at the punishment stage, the trial court sentenced him to death.
A. Admission of the Extraneous Murder at the Guilt Stage.
In his first point of error, appellant claims that the trial judge erred in admitting evidence of Maria Navarro’s rape and murder in 1995 because it “was not committed in a manner sufficiently similar so as to be a ‘signature’ offense,” and the charged offense was too remote in time from that crime. Appellant also argues that this evidence should not have been admitted because appellant’s identity as the person who both sexually assaulted and strangled Vanessa Villa was not undermined by his cross-examination of the State’s DNA experts. Based solely on the cold record, we do not think that appellant’s identity was seriously contested.
How strongly must identity be disputed before uncharged misconduct may be admissible? The trial judge has considerable latitude in determining that identity is, in fact, disputed.
That the impeachment was not particularly damaging or effective in light of all of the evidence presented is not the question. The question is whether impeachment occurred that raised the issue of identity. If so, Rule 404(b) permits the introduction of extraneous offenses that are relevant to the issue of identity.10
Although it is a close call, we conclude that the trial judge did not abuse her discretion in finding that appellant raised the issue of identity through his cross-examination.
After the prosecutors presented their case-in-chief witnesses, they asked the judge to allow evidence of two extraneous rape-murders, one committed in 1994 and the other in 1995, in which appellant’s DNA profile matched that found in semen in those victims. The prosecutor relied upon “the doctrine of chances” and Rex v. Smith,
*87 Both of these individuals were found naked; both of them, there are no witnesses to their homicide; both of them occurred in Fort Worth. These are adult females.
And in both of them, there was a unique feature that makes this a signature-type offense, and that is that each of them at each of these scenes from the orifices of those individuals, a genetic profile was obtained. And that genetic profile is identical to the genetic profile of this Defendant.
The prosecutor noted that the State was required to prove both that appellant killed Vanessa Villa and that he did so in the course of committing sexual assault. This was the very issue that appellant disputed through his cross-examination. Thus, evidence that appellant’s DNA profile was found in two other women who were victims of rape-murder was highly probative of connecting the sexual assault of Vanessa temporally with her murder. According to the prosecutor, “[t]he unlikelihood of Defendant’s semen appearing in three different homicide scenes ... the improbability of that is, on its face, obvious, and in itself probative of a fact that the State is obligated to prove.”
The trial judge, exercising her discretion under Rule 408,
The State then offered evidence that the body of a woman, later identified as thirty-two-year-old Maria Navarro, was found in Buck Sansom Park on the north side of Fort Worth in June 1995. The woman was naked from the waist down, and her legs were spread apart. She had been manually strangled. Semen was found in her vagina. In 2005, DNA tests were performed on that semen, and that DNA profile matched appellant’s.
The general rule is that the defendant is to be tried only for the offense charged, not for any other crimes or for being a criminal generally.
One of the main rationales for admitting extraneous-offense evidence is to prove the identity of the offender.
Appellant argues that the rape-murder of Maria Navarro was too dissimilar and too remote in time from that of Vanessa to constitute appellant’s “signature” or modus operandi.
That singularity also ensures that the probative value of the evidence was not substantially outweighed by any unfair prejudice under Rule 403. Appellant argues that the evidence concerning Maria Navarro’s murder “had obviously great potential to impress the jury ‘in some irrational but nevertheless indelible way.’”
In sum, we cannot say that the trial judge abused her discretion in admitting the evidence of Maria Navarro’s rape and murder to prove that appellant murdered Vanessa at the same time that he raped her.
B. The Trial Court’s Failure to Charge the Jury on Lesser-included Offenses
In points of error two and three, appellant claims that the trial court erred in denying his requested jury charge on the lesser-included offenses of murder and of aggravated sexual assault. He claims that he was entitled to a charge on aggravated sexual assault because the State’s witness testified that it is possible for sperm to remain in the vaginal vault for up to 72 hours after intercourse. “Thus, according to this undisputed expert testimony, and according to a rational interpretation of the physical evidence, the murder and the aggravated sexual assault could not be said to have occurred in the same event.”
In determining if the jury should be charged on a lesser offense, this Court applies a two-step analysis.
In this case, the only evidence that appellant points to as raising an issue of the lesser-included offenses of murder or aggravated sexual assault is the medical examiner’s testimony that it is possible for sperm to remain in a person’s vaginal vault for up to 72 hours. But this evidence raises only a theoretical possibility that the rape and murder could be disconnected in time and space. There was no evidence in this record that Vanessa’s rape and murder were, in fact, disconnected. Quite the reverse.
The medical examiner testified that, in this particular case, Vanessa’s rape and murder occurred at the same time because the vaginal trauma was inflicted contemporaneously with her death. He stated that the tear on the back wall of her vagina had to be a perimortem injury, as her blood supply was cut off before that wound could swell. There is no evidence that could support a rational finding that some third person, either known or unknown, snuck into Vanessa’s bedroom and strangled her immediately after appellant had raped her or that someone else raped her and then appellant immediately snuck in and strangled her (and, in the process, deposited his sperm on the bedspread and in her vagina). Neither of these hypothetical scenarios is a rational alternative to the commission of a rape-murder by a single individual who deposited semen laden with appellant’s DNA at the scene.
C. Jury Selection Issues
In his fourth point of error, appellant claims that the trial judge improperly prevented him from fully questioning a prospective juror, Ms. Betty Martin, regarding her views on the death penalty before granting the State’s challenge for cause.
Appellant argues that the trial court deprived him of “meaningful participation by refusing him the opportunity to determine for himself whether the prospective juror understood the court’s instructions and the oath to answer the special issues.” But Ms. Martin had made herself clear; she understood the law and the oath, but she was not going to answer those questions in a way so as to impose the death penalty. The trial judge has considerable discretion concerning how long a prospective juror may be questioned on a particular topic and how many times the juror must repeat herself.
In his fifth and sixth points of error, appellant claims that the trial judge erred by granting the State’s challenges for cause against two prospective jurors in violation of Witherspoon v. Illinois,
Appellant argues that prospective juror Joseph Maldonado, although he was opposed to the death penalty, never said that his personal views would “substantially impair” his ability to follow the law in answering the special issues. He did not use that specific phrase, but he was clear that he could not follow the law in answering the special issues if it would lead to a death sentence.
In his sixth point of error, appellant claims that the trial court erred in excusing Ms. Carla Rodenkirk despite her strong feelings against the death penalty. She repeatedly said that she did not think that she could sentence someone to death and that her views would affect her ability to serve in this case.
We conclude that Ms. Rodenkirk was a vacillating juror like the veniremember in Granados v. State
C. Evidentiary Issues
In his seventh point of error, appellant claims that the trial court violated his Sixth Amendment right to confrontation by admitting, over his objection, testimonial statements in Exhibits 171,172, and 173, which, he asserts, are parole revocation documents.
In his eighth point of error, appellant claims that the trial court erred in refusing
In his ninth and tenth points of error, appellant claims that the warrant-less seizure of his blood sample, taken pursuant to Texas statute while he was in prison, violated both the Fourth Amendment and Article I, section 9, of the Texas Constitution.
Chapter 411, Subchapter G of the Texas Government Code deals with this state’s DNA database system. The legislature’s stated primary purpose of that database system is to assist law-enforcement agencies “in the investigation or prosecution of sex-related offenses or other offenses in which biological evidence is recovered.”
Because of the importance of DNA as an identification method, all 50 states and the federal government have adopted DNA collection and databank storage statutes that, although not identical, are similar to the ones in Texas.
Although the taking of a blood sample for DNA analysis purposes is clearly a search, the Fourth Amendment does not proscribe all searches, only those that are unreasonable.
The courts deciding this issue have split in their rationale. Some have stated that DNA collection statutes permit a warrant-less, suspicionless search under the Supreme Court’s “special needs” test.
Appellant acknowledges these cases, but urges us to adopt the position expressed by the dissent in United States v. Kin-cade,
In his eleventh point of error, appellant claims that the DNA statute was unconstitutionally applied to him because the DNA profile obtained from a blood sample taken while he was in prison was retained in the CODIS databank even after his parole expired in July 2000. He quotes from United States v. Weikert,
In his twelfth point of error, appellant claims that (1) the State did not produce any evidence that Deborah Taylor, the person who drew appellant’s blood sample at the Clements prison unit in 2000, met the statutory qualification to take that sample, and (2) when he told Ms. Taylor that he did not want to give her a blood sample, she told him, “If you don’t do this, then you’ll get a case for refusal, and you’ll be here longer.”
As to his first argument, we note that appellant testified that the person who took his blood sample was a woman who worked in the Clements infirmary and that she “[l]ooked like, I guess, a nurse.” She signed the CODIS blood sample card as “Deborah Taylor” and identified her “agency name” as TTUHSC, presumably the Texas Tech University Health Science Center.
As to his second argument, appellant relies upon the former version of § 411.148 of the Government Code which stated, “An inmate may not be held past a statutory release date if the inmate fails or refuses to provide a blood sample or other specimen under this section. A penal institution may take other lawful administrative action against the inmate.”
In his thirteenth point of error, appellant contends that the trial judge deprived him of his Sixth (and Fourteenth) Amendment rights to present a defense by excluding “alternative perpetrator” evidence. During his cross-examination of Detective Reyes, appellant wanted to question Det. Reyes about the fact that Rosa Clark, Vanessa’s mother, gave him the name of Dolores Balderas as a possible suspect. She suspected him because he had been previously arrested for sexually assaulting his sister. She also gave Det. Reyes the name of Martin Martinez, a “doper” who occasionally lived in her home. The trial court declined to allow Det. Reyes to testify to these hearsay and double hearsay statements by Vanessa’s mother. However, Det. Reyes did testify that Martinez voluntarily gave a DNA sample and that he was eliminated as a suspect. Det. Reyes also testified that Dolores Balderas, Bartolo Salazar, Van Johnson, and James McKelroy were other possible suspects who were investigated and/or interviewed. Those investigations did not lead anywhere. Thus, the only items of evidence that the trial court disallowed were the hearsay statements by Rosa Clark about her suspicions. Appellant has failed to show that Ms. Clark’s suspicions were relevant or that her hearsay statements were reliable. He was not prevented from questioning Det. Reyes about the existence, development and investigation of other possible suspects in Vanessa’s murder. He could present his defense without resort to unreliable hearsay.
D. Constitutionality of Article 37.071
In his fourteenth point of error, appellant claims that the Texas death-penalty statute is unconstitutional because it fails to require the State to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that there are no mitigating circumstances that would warrant a life sentence. Appellant relies upon Ring v. Arizona,’
E. Jury Charge Issues
In four points of error, appellant claims that the trial court committed error in her punishment jury charge.
In point of error fifteen, appellant claims that she erred by overruling his objections to the charge on the ground that the indictment did not contain grand jury findings of probable cause on the three special issues. According to appellant, these special issues should have been contained in the indictment. We rejected this contention in Russeau v. State,
In point of error sixteen, appellant claims that the trial judge erred in charging the jury that it had to find whether there was a probability beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant would commit criminal acts of violence that would constitute a threat to society. Appellant argues that this instruction dilutes the reasonable-doubt standard. We rejected this contention in Rayford v. State,
In points of error seventeen and eighteen, appellant claims that the trial judge erred in failing to instruct the jurors that they need not agree on what particular evidence is mitigating. He argues that this failure violated his rights under the Fifth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments.
In this case, the jurors were explicitly instructed that they “shall consider mitigating evidence that a juror might regard as reducing the defendant’s moral blameworthiness.”
F. The Lethal Injection Protocol
In his nineteenth point of error, appellant claims that the Texas-lethal injection protocol violates the federal constitution, the state constitution, and international law. Because appellant’s execution is not imminent, his claim is not ripe for review.
Having found no reversible error, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Notes
. Tex. Penal Code § 19.03(a).
. Tex Code Crim. Proc. art. 37.071 § 2(b), (e), and (g).
. CODIS is the acronym for Combined DNA Index System.
. The jury was not informed that appellant’s blood sample was taken in prison pursuant to statute.
. In rebuttal, the State called Joe Segundo's mother, appellant's first wife, who testified that, in 1981, appellant used to hit her with a boot, belt, or his fists, and he kicked her when he was angry. At least twice he put his hands around her neck and threatened to kill her. Once he cut her with a kitchen knife. But when she saw him again after 2000, he was a completely different person.
. The State argues that appellant, during cross-examination, tried to undermine the evidence that he had both raped and killed Vanessa by suggesting the possibility that (1) the blood card sample sent to CODIS might not have come from appellant; (2) there was something suspicious about the State's failure to conduct DNA tests on material found under Vanessa's fingernails; (3) it was possible that the vaginal, anal, and mouth swabs had been packaged together thus allowing for cross-contamination; (4) Vanessa’s bed sheet had not been examined properly; (5) it was possible that some unknown sperm, as well as appellant’s, was on the bed sheet; (6) the DNA material might not have been stored properly; (7) other possible suspects had been considered before appellant’s DNA was matched from the crime scene; and (8) sperm could remain in the vagina for up to 72 hours.
. Appellant argued that the jury should be instructed on the lesser-included offenses, in part because “not through one but two separate witnesses, there has been testimony elicited that seminal fluid or semen in a vaginal area could have been present as little as one minute prior to death or all the way up to 72 hours or three days.” The defense position was that it was within the realm of possibility that appellant could have sexually assaulted Vanessa at some point up to 72 hours before her murder, and therefore it was possible that someone else later murdered her.
. Page v. State,
. See, e.g., Powell v. State,
. Page,
. The issue of identity was the primary focus of the defense closing arguments. Counsel noted that there had been six other suspects in this murder investigation, but that the State had not adequately explained why they became suspects or why they were eliminated. "You deserve this before someone can ask you to go back and make a decision about this.” The defense also argued that ”[a]t least based on DNA, there was another person's semen on the bedspread in that Villa bed and on the fitted sheet." The defense repeatedly stressed that
even if you assume the DNA is solid, a done deal, what says and tells us that it has to be done at the time this young lady was strangled? ...
... It has to be an intentional killing and sexual assault. So even if you believe the DNA without any reservation, without any reasonable doubt, that’s half the equation.
... You've got to find that they were both done together before you can find him guilty of capital murder.
And you’re not asked to determine whether Juan Segundo is guilty of aggravated sexual assault of a child. If you believe the DNA wholeheartedly, 100 percent without question, that's not an issue before you. You are to decide these two parts here.
. 11 Crim.App. 229 (1915) (Eng.).
. Tex.R. Evid. 403.
. The judge explained that she had "considered factors, including both involved female victims; both involved victims who were found naked in a sexual position; both cases involved no eyewitnesses; both cases occurred in the north to northwest Fort Worth area; and both involved evidence of sexual assault, as well as manual strangulation.”
. The defense argued that there were insufficient similarities between the two offenses: Ms. Navarro was an adult, Vanessa Villa was a child; Vanessa was killed in her home, Ms. Navarro was killed in a park; appellant knew Vanessa, there was no evidence that he knew Ms. Navarro; Ms. Navarro had been hit on the head as well as strangled, Vanessa had only been strangled; Vanessa was murdered in 1986, Ms. Navarro was killed nine years later.
. There was also an unknown, third person's DNA profile discovered as a "minor contributor” to sperm found in the victim’s vagina.
. Crank v. State,
. Id. at 342; see also Williams v. State,
. Tex.R. Evid. 404(b) (“Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show action in conformity therewith see Rankin v. State,
. See Castillo v. State,
. Beets v. State,
. See Taylor v. State,
. See, e.g., Ford v. State,
. See, e.g., United States v. York,
.See Plante v. State,
"Without formulating any accurate test, and without attempting by numerous instances to secure absolute certainty of inference, the mind applies this rough and instinctive process of reasoning, namely, that an unusual and abnormal element might perhaps be present in one instance, but that the oftener similar instances occur with similar results, the less likely is the abnormal element likely to be the true explanation of them.”
Id. at 491-92 (quoting 2 John Wigmore, WIG-MORE ON EVIDENCE § 302 (Chadboum rev. ed.1979)); see Morgan v. State,
. See Ford v. State,
. See note 14 supra.
. Appellant’s Brief at 56.
. See Santellan v. State,
. Montgomery v. State,
. Appellant’s Brief at 62-63.
. Feldman v. State,
. Hall v. State,
. Feldman,
. Id. In Arevalo v. State,
The second prong of the test preserves the integrity of the jury as the factfinder by ensuring that the jury is instructed as to a lesser included offense only when that offense constitutes a valid, rational alternative to the charged offense. If a jury were instructed on a lesser included offense even though the evidence did not raise it, then the instruction “would constitute an invitation to the jury to return a compromise or otherwise unwarranted verdict.”
Id. at 889.
. Feldman,
.Appellant objected at trial that the trial court did not permit him to specifically ask the prospective juror: (1) if she could honestly answer the mitigation issue; (2) if she would generally answer the questions untruthfully to get a particular punishment outcome; and (3) if she would consciously distort facts and evidence to answer the questions in a particular way.
.For example, the prosecutor asked Ms. Martin:
Q: And do you believe that it's wrong to have a death penalty?
A: No. I don't think it’s wrong. I just don’t think I can give it to somebody.
Q: Okay. That’s fine, so your view is that— and obviously there’s some people that feel that way, that their makeup, the way that they’re constituted is they cannot sentence another human being to death. They just can’t do it.
A: Right.
Q: Is that the category you fall in?
A: Yes.
Later, the prosecutor explained the mitigation
question, and then asked Ms. Martin:
Q: ... Other people say, I’ve got a profound belief about the death penalty. I cannot participate in the process. I could not answer those questions knowing that the death penalty was going to result, so I need to opt out. I need to tell the judge that that's just not something I could do. If this was a burglary or kidnapping, I’d be fine, but this is just not a system that I can be part of.
So nobody would expect that if you served on the jury that you would lie about any of your answers, but someone who can’t participate and can’t serve, this is the time they need to tell us that. So what is your view?
A: Based on those questions, it makes it look a little easier, but when it comes down to it, I just don't think I can do it.
[[Image here]]
Q: So when you got to that situation on the last question, you would just have to answer that one yes; is that right?
A: Correct.
Q: In every instance?
A: Yes.
Q: To avoid the death penalty?
A: Probably, yes.
. When appellant’s counsel questioned Ms. Martin, she continued to insist that she would always answer the mitigation question in a way to avoid the death penalty.
Q: And when we say honest, Ms. Martin, as you look down on this fourth line, it asks you to see if there is a sufficient mitigating circumstance or circumstances to warrant that a sentence of life imprisonment rather than death be imposed. And that’s again where you have to be honest. I take it you would do that in answering that question? A: When I’m sitting here looking at it, I don’t think I could. No.
[[Image here]]
Q: And the main thing is you would be honest yourself on the third question. And by the way, it gives the jurors a wide latitude. It’s what they think it is as long as they answer it honestly. You see what I’m saying?
A: I see what you’re saying, but it still says that the sentence of life imprisonment rather than the death sentence be imposed. Q: Yes, ma’am.
A: I can’t. I just couldn't do that to anybody.
. See Barajas v. State,
. See Dinkins v. State,
.
.
. Witherspoon,
. Russeau v. State,
. Colburn v. State,
.The prosecutor asked him, in various ways, what effect his views would have upon his ability to answer the special issues:
Q: ... on question 39 we asked are your views about the death penalty so strong that they would prevent or interfere with your ability to perform your duties as a fair, objective and impartial juror where the death penalty is a possible sentence, you circled yes.
A: Well, yeah, I was — that—that was a true answer. I — I—
Q: Okay.
A: It would probably affect my views, yes.
[[Image here]]
A: Well, I — I can tell you today probably that I would — that—that I am against the death penalty.
Q: Okay. Now — you know, and bear in mind there are people who are opposed to the death penalty, but they can serve because they can apply — they can say, well I’ll answer the questions and I’ll do what I have to do even though I’m against the death penalty. But there are some people that— that really have a deep moral belief about it and they can't, so—
A: That’s me.
Q: That’s you?
A: Yes.
Q: You absolutely can’t?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: Are you pretty sure about that?
*94 A: Yes, sir.
[[Image here]]
Q: Okay. And — like I say, I know that — that if you were called on to serve you’d do the very best you could, but the bottom line is you could never answer these questions yes, yes and no, knowing there's going to be a death penalty, is that right?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: Absolutely?
A: Absolutely.
. See Feldman v. State,
. The prosecutor questioned Ms. Rodenkirk:
Q: Is there — can you tell me how you feel about the death penalty, though?
A: I just think that — I don't think I could sentence someone to death. That is just too strong a statement, I think. I — I personally I couldn't do that.
Q: Okay.
A: That’s — I mean, I just — I feel like — it is, it’s just — not being fair, but I can’t think of a better term to think of — to describe it to you right now, but I just don’t think it’s the right thing to do.
[[Image here]]
Q: All right. And I think with regard to the question specifically you were asked, and you answered, I'm opposed to the death penalty, and you would have a difficult time voting it to impose it regardless of the facts and the law in the case and that you're — is that true?
A: Yes, yes, yes, yes.
Q: And you also answered that your views about the death penalty were so strong that they would prevent or interfere with your ability to perform your duties as a fair, objective and impartial juror in a case where the death penalty is a possible sentence.
So you said your views were so strong that they would affect your ability to serve in this case?
A: Yes.
.
. Id. at 232.
. Id.
. Id. at 232-33.
. According to appellant, the State offered three Board of Pardons and Paroles certificates showing that his parole was revoked in a prior burglary case. These certificates purportedly include language that, after appellant had been paroled on administrative release, he "subsequently failed to fulfill the terms and conditions of said release, and is therefore not worthy of the trust and confidence placed therein ...” and that he had “violated the conditions of administrative release” and was an “administrative release violator.” Appellant argued that he should be entitled to cross-examine a witness "as to the reason for revocation.” In his Brief, appellant states that the record shows that appellant’s counsel wtis arguing about language contained on the third page of the parole documents, but, in the appellate record, Exhibits 171-173 contain only one page each.
.See Rowell v. State,
. The trial judge did include appellant’s requested instruction in the written jury charge.
.
. Jackson,
. Because appellant argues these two claims as if the federal and constitutional provisions were identical in scope and content, we will do the same. See Muniz v. State,
. Tex. Gov’t Code § 411.143(a). All references to the Government Code statutes cited in appellant's ninth through twelfth points of error refer to the version in existence at the time of the blood draw in 2000.
. Id., § 411.1471. If the person is acquitted of that felony or the prosecution is dismissed, the DNA specimen and record must be immediately destroyed. Id., § 411.1471(e).
. Id., § 411.1472(a).
. Id., § 411.148(a).
. See, e.g., Tex.Code Crim. Proc. art. 38.33, § 1 ("The court shall order that a defendant who is convicted of a felony or a misdemean- or offense that is punishable by confinement in jail have a thumbprint of the defendant's right thumb rolled legibly on the judgment or the docket sheet in the case.”); TexCode Crim. Proc. art. 42.09, § 8(d) (TDCJ institutional division shall supply parole officer with parolee’s fingerprints and photograph, as well as a summary of his criminal records). Fingerprint records, like DNA records, are statutorily required to be kept in a statewide computer database. TexCode Crim. Proc. art. 60.12(a).
. Id., § 411.153.
. See Michelle Hibbert, DNA Databanks: Law Enforcement's Greatest Surveillance Tool?, 34 Wake Forest L.Rev. 767, 771 n. 12 (1999); Robyn C. Miller, Annotation, Validity, Construction, and Operation of State DNA Database Statutes,
. Id.
. See Pennsylvania v. Mimms,
. See United States v. Amerson,
. See id. at 78; United States v. Hook,
In Amerson, the court first decided that a DNA-indexing statute serves a law enforcement special need in helping to solve crimes. Id. at 81-83. Next, the court balanced that "special need” against the offender’s privacy interests. The court concluded that probationers have diminished privacy expectations, the methods used for obtaining DNA samples are minimally invasive, and "the government has a compelling interest in rapidly and accurately solving crimes and that having DNA-based records of the identity of as many people as possible, and especially past offenders, effectuates this interest.” Id. at 84-87. The court concluded that the government’s interests greatly outweighed the probationers' reduced privacy expectations and therefore held that the DNA Act did not violate the Fourth Amendment. Id. at 89.
.See Wilson v. Collins,
.
. Id. at 856,
. See, e.g., United States v. Kincade,
.
. Appellant’s Brief at 98.
. CODIS is the national DNA identification index system with which the Texas database must be compatible. Tex. Gov’t Code § 411.142(f).
. Tex. Gov't Code§ 411.153.
. Id.
. Tex. Gov’t Code § 411.143(e).
. See Amerson,
.
. Id. at 15-17. The First Circuit noted:
The distinction in status between a current and a former offender clearly translates to a change in the privacy interests at stake. A former conditional releasee’s increased expectation of privacy warrants a separate balancing of that privacy interest against the government’s interest in retaining his profile in CODIS.
There are other considerations as well that support this separate balancing. The ongoing evolution in our understanding of DNA warrants particular caution in determining what is constitutionally permissible. DNA profiles possess unique properties that distinguish them from other records.... As we have explained, the technology surrounding DNA analysis is changing rapidly, and we think it more prudent to decide whether the DNA profile may be retained in CODIS following a term of conditional release in light of the state of technology when that issue is brought before us.
Id. at 16.
.
. Id. at 498.
. Id.
. Id. at 499. Similarly, in Amerson, the Second Circuit indicated that retention of the DNA profile in CODIS does not “change[ ] the ultimate analysis” because "we have upheld, in the past, the retention and use of information properly collected under the Fourth Amendment, if there was a strong enough public interest in retaining it, when there no longer was a diminished expectation of privacy.”
. The trial judge entered written findings of fact and conclusions of law concerning appellant’s motion to suppress his DNA profile. Those findings included the following:
4.On February 28, 2000, Deborah Taylor requested a blood sample from the Defendant. According to the Defendant’s testimony, he did not want to give the sample, but the person who took the blood told him that if he did not cooperate, he would be subjected to disciplinary action that would lengthen his term of incarceration. The Defendant then complied with the process. (Neither Deborah Taylor nor anyone present for the blood draw, other than the Defendant, testified at the hearing).
5. Pre-Trial Exhibit # 4 was admitted at the hearing. The left-hand side of that document was completed by Ms. Taylor at the time the sample was obtained from the Defendant. The document states that her "agency name” is TTUHSC, which the Court assumes to be the Texas Tech University Health Science Center. The statute specifically allows the institutional division to contract with an institution of higher education for services to collect samples.
6. During the pre-trial hearing, the Defendant admitted that the blood sample was taken at the infirmary in the Clements Unit.
. Tex. Gov’t Code § 411.146(a)(1) & (2) (Vernon 1999).
. Tex. Gov't Code § 411.148(h) (Vernon 1999).
. Tex Gov’t Code § 411.148(d) (Vernon 1999).
. The trial court's factual findings state, “According to the Defendant's testimony, he did not want to give the sample, but the person who took the blood told him that if he did not cooperate, he would be subjected to disciplinary action which would lengthen his term of incarceration.”
. See Potier v. State,
. Montgomery v. State,
.
.
. See Crutsinger v. State,
.
.
. Appellant complains that the jury instructions as set out in Article 37.0711 violated his right to equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment because they are not precisely the same as those set out in Article 37.071 and do not include the explicit "non-unanimity” instruction that article 37.071 contains. Appellant argues that those who committed capital murders after the 1993 amendments to article 37.071 received additional protections via an explicit "non-unanimity” instruction that he did not and the enactment of those extra protections therefore violated his right to equal protection of the law. But appellant’s constitutional rights are not violated simply because someone else, at a later point in time, receives even greater procedural protections than he did. See State v. Howren,
. TexCode Crim. Proc. art. 37.0711, § 1 ("This article applies to the sentencing procedure in a capital case for an offense that is committed before September 1, 1991....”).
. TexCode Crim Proc. art. 37.071, § 2(f)(3) (jury "need not agree on what particular evidence supports an affirmative finding on the [mitigation] issue”).
.
. Id. at 384,
. Penry v. State,
. See TexCode Crim. Proc. art. 37.0711, § 3(f)(3) (emphasis added).
. See Boyde v. California,
there is a reasonable likelihood that the jury has applied the challenged instruction in a way that prevents the consideration of constitutionally relevant evidence. Although a defendant need not establish that the jury was more likely than not to have been im-permissibly inhibited by the instruction, a capital sentencing proceeding is not inconsistent with the Eighth Amendment if there is only a possibility of such an inhibition. This "reasonable likelihood” standard, we think, better accommodates the concerns of finality and accuracy than does a standard which makes the inquiry dependent on how a single hypothetical "reasonable” juror could or might have interpreted the instruc-tion_ Jurors do not sit in solitary isolation booths parsing instructions for subtle shades of meaning in the same way that lawyers might. Differences among them in interpretation of instructions may be thrashed out in the deliberative process, with commonsense understanding of the instructions in the light of all that has taken place at the trial likely to prevail over technical hairsplitting.
Id.
. Gallo v. State,
. See Bible v. State,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in which MEYERS and HOLCOMB, JJ., joined.
I agree that it is a close question whether the extraneous offense should have been admitted in this case. The close question is not, in my view, whether the extraneous offense is relevant (apart from inferences of character-conformity) to an issue in the case. To me, the much closer question is whether the evidence was substantially more prejudicial than probative. On the particular facts of this case, however, the trial court was justified in concluding that the extraneous offense evidence was not substantially more prejudicial than probative, and therefore acted within its discretion to admit it under Rule 403 of the Texas Rules of Evidence.
The appellant argues that there are insufficient similarities between the charged offense and the extraneous offense to establish modus operandi, which is typically thought to be required before an extraneous offense may be admitted to show identity under Rule 404(b) of the Rules of Evidence.
Evidence that on other occasions the appellant has sexually assaulted and murdered other victims tends to show that the appellant did not just sexually assault the instant victim, but that he murdered her, too. And the more victims the appellant has sexually assaulted who have also turned up dead, the greater the probability (utilizing inferences having nothing to do
Also on the peculiar facts of this case, it seems that the State’s need for the extraneous offense evidence is not that pressing.
. See Tex.R. Evid. 403 ("Although relevant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.... ”).
. See TexR. Evid. 404(b) ("Evidence of other crimes ... is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show action in conformity therewith. It may, however, be admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident[.]”).
. See Montgomery v. State,
. Indeed, the Court finds that, under the State's evidence, it would not have been rational for the jury to find that the same perpetrator did not both rape and kill the victim and holds that the appellant was therefore not entitled to any of his requested lesser-included-offense jury instructions. Majority opinion at 91.
. Id. ("Another obvious factor is the potential the ‘other crimes, wrongs, or acts' have to impress the jury in some irrational but nevertheless indelible way. This is often a function of the nature of the misconduct.”).
. Mat391.
Lead Opinion
OPINION ON REHEARING
delivered the opinion of the unanimous Court on Appellant’s Motion for Rehearing.
In December 2006, a jury convicted appellant of capital murder, and the trial court sentenced him to death. On October 29, 2008, this Court rejected appellant’s nineteen points of error on direct appeal and affirmed his conviction and sentence. In his seventh point of error, appellant claimed that the trial court erred in admit
Appellant filed a Motion for Reconsideration asserting that this Court erred in concluding that he had forfeited his seventh point of error because he had filed a supplemental record which contained complete copies of these exhibits after he had filed his brief. In his original brief, appellant referenced only the trial record containing the partial exhibits; he did not file a supplemental brief pointing out the existence of a supplemental record that contained the complete exhibits. It is not the appellate court’s responsibility to wade through voluminous records in search of material that is missing from its referenced location.
Because appellant has now directed the Court to the portion of the appellate record in which the complete parole-revocation documents are located, we shall address his seventh point of error.
Appellant argues that his constitutional right to confrontation was violated when the State introduced these Board of Pardons and Paroles certificates that contained what he asserts are testimonial statements. The specific statements to which he objected at trial are that appellant “subsequently failed to fulfill the terms and conditions of said release, and is therefore not worthy of the trust and confidence placed therein,” that he “has violated the conditions of administrative release,” and that he was an “administrative release violator.” He claims that these statements were “testimonial” in nature and that he was deprived an opportunity “to cross-examine the State witnesses who determined to revoke his parole.”
We conclude that these statements were not testimonial. The language to which appellant refers is standard “boilerplate,” pre-printed language in a form entitled Board of Pardons and Paroles Proclamation of Revocation and Warrant of Arrest. These “boilerplate statements” are nontestimonial under Crawford v. Washington,
Appellant relies upon our decision in Russeau v. State.
The “boilerplate” parole-revocation certificates admitted in this case did not contain any such testimonial statements, narratives of specific events, or written observations. Texas courts have recognized this distinction between official records that set out a sterile and routine recitation of an official finding or unambiguous factual matter such as a judgment of conviction or a bare-bones disciplinary finding and a factual description of specific observations or events that is akin to testimony.
Accordingly, we grant the motion for rehearing, conclude that appellant’s seventh point of error is without merit, and once again affirm the trial court’s judgment.
. See Tex R.App. P. 71.3 & 38.1(i) ("The brief must contain a clear and concise argument for the contentions made, with appropriate citations to authorities and to the record.”); see Roberts v. State,
.
. Tex.R. Evid. 803(8).
. Tex.R. Evid. 803(6).
. See, e.g., United States v. Weiland,
.
. Id. at 880.
. Id. at 881 (emphasis added).
. See Campos v. State,
