Chavez, Arturo Jr. ( 2015 )


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  •                          PD-0797-15
    NO. ________________
    IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    AUSTIN, TEXAS
    _______________________________________________
    ARTURO CHAVEZ
    Petitioner,
    V.
    STATE OF TEXAS
    Respondent.
    ____________________________________________________
    On Appeal from the 338th Judicial District Court for
    Harris County, Texas - Trial Court No. 1338052
    Appeal No. 01-14-00232-CR
    _________________________________________________________
    ARTURO CHAVEZ’S
    PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
    _________________________________________________________
    DEGUERIN, DICKSON, HENNESSY & WARD
    Matt Hennessy
    July 30, 2015               State Bar No. 00787677
    1018 Preston, 7th Floor
    Houston, Texas 77002
    (713) 223-5959 Telephone
    (713) 223-9231 Facsimile
    July 29, 2015                   ATTORNEY FOR PETITIONER
    ORAL ARGUMENT REQUESTED
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    Table of Contents……………………………………………………..           ii
    Table of Authorities…………………………………………………...        iii
    Statement Regarding Oral Argument………………………………….   1
    Statement of the Case………………………………………………….         1
    Statement of Procedural History………………………………………    2
    Grounds for Review……………………………………………………            2
    Argument………………………………………………………………                  3
    Conclusion……………………………………………………………..               18
    Certificate of Service…………………………………………………..       19
    Appendix A
    ii
    TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
    Cases
    Castillo v. State, 
    221 S.W.3d 689
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2007) ………………         8
    Cruz v. State, 690 S.W.2d (Tex. Crim. App. 1985)………………………               11
    Hernandez v. State, 
    939 S.W.2d 173
    , 178 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997)……...     10
    Hernandez v. State, 
    1997 WL 33641950
    at *6 (Tex. App.—Corpus
    Christi 1997, no pet.)……………………………………………………                             11
    Holladay v. State, 
    709 S.W.2d 194
    , 199–200 (Tex. Crim. App. 1986)…..    4
    McDuff v. State, 
    939 S.W.2d 607
    , 612 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997)………….        3
    Miller v. State, 
    177 S.W.3d 177
    (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2005,
    pet. ref’d)………………………………………………………………..                                  8
    Mitchell v. State, 
    650 S.W.2d 801
    , 807 (Tex. Crim. App. 1983)…………       4
    Munoz v. State, 
    853 S.W.2d 558
    , 559 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993)…………..        12
    Simmons v. State, 
    282 S.W.3d 504
    , 508 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009)………..       4
    Smith v. State, 
    332 S.W.3d 425
    , 442 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011)……………         3
    Wincott v. State, 
    59 S.W.3d 691
    (Tex. App.—Austin 2001, pet. ref’d)….   12
    Statutes
    Article 38.14 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure………………….           3
    iii
    Statement Regarding Oral Argument
    This is an accomplice-witness case. The court of appeals misapplied the
    standard of review in concluding that there was non-accomplice testimony that
    tended to connect Petitioner “with planning the commission of the offense”
    (Appendix A at 9), and it separately failed to assess the reasonableness of the jury’s
    chosen view of the non-accomplice testimony. Oral argument will assist the Court
    in addressing the grounds raised in this petition.
    Statement of the Case
    A jury convicted Petitioner of murder based on accomplice-witness testimony
    and sentenced him to life in prison. CR. 6 (Indictment); 609-10 (Judgment). The
    court of appeals held that there was sufficient non-accomplice evidence that tended
    to connect Petitioner to the commission of the offense and affirmed the conviction.
    This petition identifies the flaws in the court of appeals’ reasoning. The lower court
    was able to affirm the conviction only by using a standard that diminished the burden
    that the State must carry in an accomplice-witness case, and by failing to consider
    whether the jury’s chosen view of the evidence was reasonable.
    1
    Statement of Procedural History
    The court of appeals issued its decision on May 28, 2015. No motion for
    rehearing was filed. This Court granted an extension of time to file a petition until
    July 29, 2015.
    Grounds for Review
    1.   Whether the court of appeals correctly applied the standard of review
    in assessing the sufficiency of the non-accomplice evidence in this case.
    2.   Whether, under the correct application of the standard of review, non-
    accomplice testimony that Petitioner once borrowed a friend’s car tended to connect
    Petitioner to the commission of the crime when there was no non-accomplice
    evidence that tied the car to the offense.
    3.   Whether the court of appeals assessed the reasonableness of the jury’s
    chosen view of the non-accomplice evidence before deferring to that view.
    4.   Whether the court of appeals erred in misinterpreting the quality and
    quantum of evidence necessary to corroborate accomplice testimony in a murder
    case.
    5.   Whether it was reasonable to conclude that non-accomplice evidence
    that Petitioner assisted the perpetrators only after the murder had been committed
    sufficiently connected him to the actual commission of that offense.
    2
    Argument
    A.    Reasons for Review.
    While the court of appeals correctly identified the standard of review in an
    accomplice-witness case, it failed to rigorously adhere to that standard in its review
    of this case. Under Article 38.14 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, “A
    conviction cannot be had on the testimony of an accomplice witness unless
    corroborated by other evidence tending to connect the defendant with the offense
    committed; and the corroboration is not sufficient if it merely shows the commission
    of the offense.” The court of appeals expressly accepted that it must “eliminate from
    consideration the accomplice testimony and then examine the other inculpatory
    evidence to ascertain whether the remaining evidence tends to connect the defendant
    with the offense.” Appendix A at 3 (quoting McDuff v. State, 
    939 S.W.2d 607
    , 612
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1997)).      But the court failed to eliminate the accomplice’s
    testimony in its review of the non-accomplice evidence despite this
    acknowledgement. If the court of appeals had properly applied the standard of
    review, it would have concluded that there was no non-accomplice evidence to
    support a finding that Petitioner participated in “planning the commission of the
    offense.” See Appendix A at 9. Such a conclusion would have diminished “the
    combined force of the non-accomplice evidence,” and weakened the already shaky
    ground upon which the verdict rested. See 
    id. at 4
    (citing Smith v. State, 
    332 S.W.3d 3
    425, 442 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011); Mitchell v. State, 
    650 S.W.2d 801
    , 807 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 1983)).
    This Court has held that “when there are two permissible views of the
    evidence (one tending to connect the defendant to the offense and the other not
    tending to connect the defendant to the offense), appellate courts should defer to that
    view of the evidence chosen by the [jury].” Simmons v. State, 
    282 S.W.3d 504
    , 508
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2009). Such “[c]onfirmation as to the defendant’s connection to
    the offense, however, should be by independent evidence from which the jury may
    reasonably be satisfied.” 
    Id. (quoting Holladay
    v. State, 
    709 S.W.2d 194
    , 199–200
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1986) (emphasis added)). The court of appeals seems to have
    misread Simmons’ guidance regarding different “permissible views of the evidence”
    to mean that it should defer to the jury’s chosen view of the evidence without regard
    to whether the jury’s view was reasonable. If reasonableness of the jury’s view had
    been part of the court’s analysis, the evidentiary shortcomings identified in
    Petitioner’s opening brief and his reply brief should have led the court to conclude
    that the non-accomplice evidence regarding Petitioner’s conduct after the murder
    did not tend to connect him to the offense. See App. Brief at 15-21; Reply Brief at
    5-16. However, none of those evidentiary deficiencies is addressed in the court’s
    opinion. Proper application of the law in this case should have resulted in an
    acquittal.
    4
    B.    Background.
    The decedent, Santiago Garcia, was shot and killed on a sidewalk near a park
    in Baytown in November 2004. Appendix A at 2. The Baytown Police Department
    began their investigation immediately, but the case soon went cold. 
    Id. A break
    came in 2011 when new information led the Baytown investigators to interview
    Daniel Torres. 
    Id. Torres confessed
    to participating in Garcia’s murder in the
    interview, and he implicated Petitioner and Carlos Barrera. 
    Id. Petitioner, Barrera
    and Torres were charged with Garcia’s murder soon thereafter.
    Torres agreed to testify against Petitioner in return for the State’s
    recommendation for a fifteen-year sentence. 
    Id. Torres told
    the jury that he drove
    Barrera to the park in a borrowed, green Impala where Barrera shot Garcia. 
    Id. at 2,
    9. Torres drove from the scene with Barrera, and they later met up with Petitioner
    at his father’s home. 
    Id. at 10.
    According to Torres, he and Barrera committed the
    murder at Petitioner’s direction, but no non-accomplice evidence supported his
    claim. 
    Id. at 2,
    9.
    C.    Non-Accomplice Evidence.
    The court of appeals held that the “combined force” of the testimony of three
    non-accomplice witnesses tended to connect Petitioner to the commission of the
    offense, and therefore the non-accomplice evidence together with Torres’s testimony
    provided a sufficient basis for the conviction. See 
    id. at 3,
    5-7. Only one of these
    5
    non-accomplice witnesses, W. Navarrete, provided testimony regarding Petitioner’s
    conduct before the murder. 
    Id. at 5.
    The testimony of the other two witnesses, F.
    Velasquez and C. Benavidez, was limited to events that occurred after the
    commission of the offense. 
    Id. at 5-7.
    1.       Non-Accomplice Evidence—Before the Murder.
    Navarrete testified that Petitioner borrowed his green Impala on one occasion,
    but he did not remember the date of the loan. 
    Id. at 5.
    Chavez asked to borrow the
    car because someone owed him money, and he did not want to be seen in his own
    car. 
    Id. Navarrete did
    not offer any testimony that connected his car to Garcia’s
    murder or to Torres or Barrera—he did not know them. See 
    id. at 5,
    10. In assessing
    this testimony, the court of appeals concluded: “Although [Navarrete] could not
    remember the date, [his] description of events corroborated Torres’s testimony about
    the timing and circumstances of borrowing the green Impala.” 
    Id. at 7.
    But that is
    not the test for determining the sufficiency of non-accomplice evidence. The test is
    whether non-accomplice evidence—standing alone—tends to connect a defendant
    to the commission of the offense. See 
    id. at 4
    (citing Smith v. State, 
    332 S.W.3d 425
    ,
    442 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011); Mitchell v. State, 
    650 S.W.2d 801
    , 807 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 1983)).
    The only evidence that tied Navarrete’s green Impala to Garcia’s murder came
    from Torres who was an accomplice as a matter of law. See 
    id. at 5
    (trial court
    6
    instructed jury that he was an accomplice). Without Torres’s testimony, all that the
    record supports is that Chavez borrowed Navarrete’s car at some unidentifiable time
    in the past.        There was absolutely no non-accomplice evidence to connect
    Navarrete’s car with Garcia’s murder. The fact that Chavez once borrowed it,
    without any additional non-accomplice evidence, did not tend to connect Chavez to
    the crime. The court of appeals was wrong to conclude otherwise. This failure to
    correctly apply the law warrants this Court’s review.
    2.       Non-Accomplice Evidence—After the Murder.
    The remaining non-accomplice testimony identified by the court of appeals
    came from F. Velazquez and C. Benavidez. See Appendix A at 5-7. Both of them
    related events that occurred after the completed offense. 
    Id. a. F.
    Velasquez.
    The court summarized Velazquez’s testimony as follows:
    Velasquez, Chavez’s friend, testified that Chavez called him on
    November 14, 2004, the day before the murder. In the conversation,
    Chavez reported that Garcia had tried to break into his house. Later
    that night, early on November 15, Chavez called Velasquez again and
    said, “[T]hey had killed Garcia.” Chavez told Velasquez that Barrera
    and Torres were on their way to Velasquez’s house in Beaumont.
    Barrera and Torres arrived at Velasquez’s house about forty-five
    minutes later. Chavez, his family, and his brother also arrived at
    Velasquez’s home. Chavez, his brother, Barrera, Torres and Velasquez
    went into a tent on Velasquez’s property. Inside the tent, Chavez tried
    to burn the gun with a plumber’s torch; when it would not melt, Chavez
    took the gun apart. Chavez, Torres, and Barrera each took some of the
    parts, and Chavez threw a part of the gun in the water behind the house.
    Shortly afterward, everyone left Velasquez’s house. Chavez told
    7
    Velasquez that he planned to go to Mexico so that “everything would
    cool down.”
    
    Id. at 5-6.
    The court of appeals concluded that “Velazquez’s testimony about Chavez’s
    attempts to destroy a gun on the night of Garcia’s murder tends to connect Chavez
    to the crime,” citing Miller v. State, 
    177 S.W.3d 177
    (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.]
    2005, pet. ref’d) and Castillo v. State, 
    221 S.W.3d 689
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2007). 
    Id. at 7.
    However, neither case is on point.
    Miller is a self-defense case. See 
    Miller, 177 S.W.3d at 180
    . The defendant
    testified that he shot the complainant because he was in fear of his life. 
    Id. The accomplice-witness
    rule is never even mentioned in that case.
    Castillo is an accomplice-witness case, but the non-accomplice evidence in
    that case is vastly different than here. The court summarized the non-accomplice
    evidence as follows:
    The…non-accomplice testimony includes evidence that appellant was
    seen wearing the victim’s necklace shortly after the murder, that
    appellant was seen with a gun and with the accomplices in the hours
    before the murder, that the victim made a plan just prior to his murder
    to meet one of the accomplices, that appellant told a fellow inmate that
    he and accomplices had planned a robbery, that appellant shot the
    victim multiple times when the victim attempted to run, that Lucinda
    overheard appellant admit to Teresa that he was responsible for
    shooting someone, and that Brown overheard a similar conversation
    between appellant and Teresa. This evidence is sufficient to “tend to
    connect” appellant with the murder and robbery. Art. 38.14.
    8
    
    Castillo, 221 S.W.3d at 693
    . There was also testimony that the appellant said that
    he had hidden a gun and a bullet-proof vest in a field. 
    Id. In stark
    contrast to Castillo, there was absolutely no non-accomplice evidence
    that tended to connect Chavez to events that occurred before Garcia’s murder or to
    the murder itself.1 The court of appeals’ reference to Miller and Castillo as support
    for the conviction evinces a fundamental misinterpretation of the evidence in this
    case, and suggests that the court did not properly evaluate the reasonableness of the
    jury’s verdict.
    b.      C. Benavidez.
    The other non-accomplice witness relied upon by the court of appeals was
    Chavez’s ex-wife, C. Benavidez. The court summarized her testimony as follows:
    C. Benavidez testified that Chavez woke her up in the middle of the
    night of the murder, telling her that they were not safe in the house and
    needed to leave. Chavez, Benavidez, and their children went to a hotel
    and stayed there for a few hours. Then they drove to Velasquez’s house
    in Beaumont. Benavidez remained in the parked car outside the house,
    but she saw Barrera and Torres from the car. She saw Chavez, Barrera,
    Torres, and Velasquez go inside; she remained in the car for an hour or
    two. Chavez and Barrera then returned to the car. Chavez drove to a
    pier. On the way, Chavez and Barrera discussed Garcia’s murder,
    stating that they did him a favor because he had been doing drugs and
    he could be with his deceased father. When they arrived at the pier,
    Barrera exited the car and dropped an object into the water.
    Later that day, Chavez, Benavidez, and their children left for Mexico.
    They returned from Mexico two months later. Chavez openly talked
    1
    Navarrete’s green Impala provided no such connection.
    9
    about the murder with other people in front of Benavidez during the
    years between the murder and the trial.
    Appendix A at. 6-7.
    The court of appeals concluded:
    Benavidez’s testimony that Chavez moved their family in the middle of
    the night to a hotel, then to Beaumont and Mexico, is evidence of
    Chavez’s flight and consciousness of guilt. Velasquez similarly
    testified that Chavez planned to go to Mexico until everything calmed
    down after Garcia’s murder. Evidence of a defendant’s flight may tend
    to connect him with a crime when combined with other corroborating
    circumstances. See Hernandez v. State, 
    939 S.W.2d 173
    , 178 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 1997) (“Evidence of flight and guilty demeanor, coupled
    with other corroborating circumstances, may tend to connect a
    defendant with a crime.”) [(citation omitted)]; 
    Miller, 177 S.W.3d at 184
    (flight immediately after shooting is circumstantial evidence of
    guilt). Finally, Benavidez testified that Chavez took partial credit for
    the murder when he spoke with Barrera stating that they had done
    Garcia a favor by killing him.
    Appendix A at 7.
    As already discussed, Miller is not an accomplice-witness case. In Miller, the
    defendant confessed to the killing on the stand and sought to explain it. See 
    Miller, 177 S.W.3d at 180
    . The issue under review was whether the State had sufficiently
    disproven the claim of self-defense. The court’s analysis of the evidence in that case
    provides no guidance here. While Hernandez is an accomplice-witness case, the
    court of appeals’ reliance on it is misplaced here as well, but for different reasons.
    3.     Hernandez v. State.
    10
    Hernandez is an accomplice-witness case with an unusual procedural history.
    On initial review, the court of appeals reversed Hernandez’s conviction and ordered
    an acquittal because the non-accomplice evidence did not tend to connect the
    defendant to the crime. See 
    Hernandez, 939 S.W.2d at 176-77
    . The court of appeals
    relied heavily on Cruz v. State, 690 S.W.2d (Tex. Crim. App. 1985), in reaching this
    conclusion. See 
    Hernandez, 939 S.W.2d at 176-77
    . This Court disagreed with the
    court of appeals’ reliance on Cruz, reversed the court of appeals for failing to
    properly consider the facts before it, and remanded the case for reconsideration.
    
    Hernandez, 939 S.W.2d at 179
    . On remand, the court of appeals reversed the
    conviction a second time, holding that the accomplice’s testimony from a prior trial
    should not have been admitted at Hernandez’s trial. See Hernandez v. State, 
    1997 WL 33641950
    at *6 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1997, no pet.). Admission of that
    testimony violated the confrontation clause. 
    Id. This Court’s
    disagreement with the
    court of appeals in Hernandez was, therefore, based on an analysis of facts that never
    should have been considered by a jury in the first place. For that reason, Petitioner
    suggests that a court of appeals’ reliance on the specific factual analysis—as opposed
    to general statements of law—in Hernandez merits cautious review.
    Procedural history aside, the Hernandez court granted review because the
    lower court “failed to take into account facts which distinguish Cruz from the instant
    case and ignored caselaw which speaks directly to the significance of such facts.”
    11
    
    Hernandez, 939 S.W.2d at 177
    (citing Munoz v. State, 
    853 S.W.2d 558
    , 559 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 1993) (noting each case must be considered on its own facts and
    circumstances)). Here, review is warranted to address the court of appeals’ similar
    failure to distinguish the facts in Hernandez from the facts of this case, as well as
    the lower court’s disregard for the holdings in Cruz and Wincott v. State, 
    59 S.W.3d 691
    (Tex. App.—Austin 2001, pet. ref’d). Cruz and Wincott speak directly to the
    to the facts of this case.
    4.     Cruz v. State.
    An examination of how this Court compared the facts before it in Hernandez
    with those in Cruz is instructive. The Hernandez court summarized the facts in Cruz
    as follows:
    No connection was shown between the rifle and pistol [Cruz] had been
    seen with at some, unspecified time prior to the murder, and the
    weapons used to kill [the victim]. The State never even proved the
    caliber of the murder weapons or bullets. Similarly, the State does not
    explain the significance of the discovery of the Christmas gift in the
    truck, in connecting [Cruz] to the murder….[Cruz] was never linked to
    the truck, and the discovery of the truck and the Christmas gift was
    never connected to the murder.
    [T]he testimony only narrowed the time of death between December
    24th and December 27th. No one testified as to when they last saw
    [Cruz] on the victim’s property or with the accomplice. Since [Cruz]
    lived on the victim’s property, just 200 yards from the victim’s house,
    his presence there was of limited significance. We stated that there was
    essentially nothing tending to connect [Cruz] to the offense apart from
    the accomplice witness testimony; the fact that [Cruz] lived near the
    victim and went away following the murder did not tend to connect
    [Cruz] to the offense.
    12
    
    Hernandez, 939 S.W.2d at 177
    .
    Contrasting the evidence before it with that in Cruz, the Hernandez court held
    that “there was non-accomplice evidence that [Hernandez] was with the accomplice
    on the night of the offense about two hours before the murder….Witnesses Richard
    Cisneros and Andres Salgado also testified that they saw [Hernandez] with [the
    victim] around 8:00 that night.” 
    Id. at 178.
    “Cisneros further testified [Hernandez]
    showed him a 12–gauge sawed-off pump shotgun a few months before the murder.
    Dr. Dahm, the pathologist who performed the autopsy, testified that a 12–gauge
    shotgun was probably used to kill the victim. Officer Perez, an investigating officer
    in the case, also stated that he believed a 12–gauge shotgun was used to commit the
    murder.” 
    Id. The Court
    also noted that Hernandez “left Brownsville without
    explanation after the offense.” 
    Id. All of
    this led this Court to conclude that the
    Hernandez court of appeals mistakenly relied on Cruz. See 
    id. at 178-79.
    As in Hernandez, the court of appeals in this case relied on the wrong
    authority in reaching its conclusion. However, the court of appeals’ mistake in this
    case was the opposite of that committed in Hernandez. In Hernandez, the court of
    appeals erred by concluding that the facts were similar to those in Cruz. Here, the
    court of appeals’ error was in refusing to recognize that the facts in this case have
    more in common with Cruz than Hernandez.
    13
    Unlike Hernandez, there was no non-accomplice evidence placing Petitioner
    with Garcia near the time of the murder, and there was no evidence that Petitioner
    had any connection with any weapon prior to the offense. Petitioner did leave home
    in Baytown soon after Garcia’s murder, but his flight is not analogous to
    Hernandez’s flight from Brownsville. Hernandez left after the murder and he was
    indicted shortly thereafter. 
    Id. at 175.
    He remained a fugitive for more than four
    years, and was forcibly returned to Brownsville following his arrest. See 
    id. After Garcia’s
    murder, Petitioner went to a family home in Mexico and returned two
    months later. See Appendix A at 7. He lived in Baytown until his arrest in 2012,
    more than seven years after the offense.
    In Cruz, there was evidence that Cruz was on the victim’s property at the time
    of the murder. See 
    Cruz, 690 S.W.2d at 248
    , 250-51. But the Cruz court found that
    evidence to be only a slight connection at best because Cruz lived there. 
    Id. at 250-
    51. That connection was not substantial enough to make Cruz’s flight to Mexico
    immediately after the murder a significant fact in the Court’s analysis, despite the
    fact that Cruz was arrested when he tried to cross the border in California. 
    Id. at 248,
    250-51. Here, there was absolutely no evidence—accomplice, non-accomplice,
    direct or circumstantial—that Petitioner was at or near the scene of Garcia’s murder.
    Consequently, Petitioner’s travel to Mexico after Garcia’s murder is even less
    significant than Cruz’s immediate flight. See 
    id. at 250-51.
    14
    Cruz and Hernandez were accused of being the primary actors—they were
    accused of actually shooting the victims. In both cases, there was evidence that Cruz
    and Hernandez possessed firearms similar to those used to commit the crimes before
    the crimes were committed. See 
    Hernandez, 939 S.W.2d at 177
    -78. Petitioner was
    not accused of being the primary actor, and there was no evidence that he possessed
    a firearm of any kind prior to Garcia’s murder. These facts further distinguish
    Hernandez from this case, and they tend to distance this case from Cruz as well.
    There are fewer connections between Petitioner and the offense than were present in
    Cruz—a case that resulted in an acquittal. The court of appeals’ reliance on
    Hernandez was misplaced. The court should have been guided by Cruz.
    5.     Wincott v. State.
    The court of appeals also erred in not recognizing the import of the factual
    analysis in Wincott v. State, 
    59 S.W.3d 691
    (Tex. App.—Austin 2001, pet. ref’d).
    Drawing further on C. Benavidez’s testimony, the court of appeals noted that she
    “testified that [Petitioner] took partial credit for the murder when he spoke with
    Barrera stating that they had done Garcia a favor by killing him.” Appendix A at 8
    (emphasis added). That actual testimony regarding this point was ambiguous, and
    Petitioner’s brief and reply brief directed the court of appeals’ attention to Wincott
    to assist in determining how to deal with such testimony. See Pet. Corrected Brief
    15
    at 16-17; Pet. Reply Brief at 14-16. However, the court of appeals dismissed its
    applicability.
    Benavidez claimed to have heard a conversation between Petitioner and
    Barrera soon after they left Velazquez’s house. She testified as follows:
    [Petitioner and Barrera] were saying things like, you know, they did
    [Garcia] a favor because he was like gone already, like I guess [Garcia]
    had been doing drugs or something. And they were talking about that
    they did him a favor and nobody cared about him. They said something
    like the only person that cared about him was his dad and he was gone
    and now [Garcia] could be with his dad.
    8 RR. 116. When asked to recount any other conversations she overheard regarding
    the murder, she said “I don’t remember exactly what was said.” 8 RR. 122.
    Benavidez never testified that Petitioner claimed responsibility for Garcia’s murder.
    She never testified that Petitioner said that “I” or “we” did it.
    In Wincott, a woman testified about a conversation that she had with the
    defendant about the string of robberies he was accused of committing. 
    Wincott, 59 S.W.3d at 701
    . The woman said that Wincott told her that “he had done some bad
    things and…express[ed]…relief over being arrested.” 
    Id. The State
    admitted letters
    from Wincott to the same woman in which he similarly “express[ed] sorrow for the
    bad things he had done.” 
    Id. The State
    also admitted a letter from Wincott to a
    second woman in which he told her that “they should not talk about his arrest because
    he was ashamed of it.” 
    Id. The court
    concluded that this evidence was inconclusive
    at best. 
    Id. at 701.
    The court observed:
    16
    In their vague context—a conversation involving various subjects any
    of which could be construed as “bad things”—[Wincott’s] statements
    do not tend to connect him to the crimes with which he was charged.
    At most, they raise a mere suspicion that he is referring to his
    participation in the robberies. As noted, even a strong suspicion is
    insufficient to satisfy article 38.14.
    
    Id. at 702.
    Wincott’s statements were more clear and more direct than those attributed to
    Petitioner in this case. Wincott claimed personal responsibility and expressed
    remorse for personally committing misdeeds in a conversation about the robberies
    he was accused of at the time. In contrast, Petitioner did not say that he did anything.
    He said “they” did it.       Wincott’s statements were held to be insufficient
    corroboration, and the court acquitted him. 
    Id. Petitioner made
    these points regarding Wincott’s holding to the court of
    appeals but the court dispensed with the case, stating that Wincott “held that the non-
    accomplice testimony in that case connected the defendant to the accomplice and
    other suspects but did not connect him to the offense itself.” Appendix A at 9. The
    court did not address whether, in light of Wincott, a jury could have reasonably
    determined that Benavidez’s vague testimony amounted to Petitioner taking partial
    credit for Garcia’s murder. Nor did the court explain exactly what part of the murder
    a jury could have reasonably concluded that Petitioner supposedly took credit for.
    The court of appeals erred in failing to be guided by Cruz, and it erred by
    dismissing the guidance offered by Wincott as well.
    17
    D.    Conclusion.
    Navarrete’s testimony that Petitioner borrowed his green Impala did not tend
    to connect Petitioner to Garcia’s murder because there was no non-accomplice
    evidence connecting the car to the offense. The court of appeals was able to
    conclude otherwise only by misapplying the law. The court also failed to correctly
    identify controlling caselaw, and distinguish this case from Hernandez. Review is
    warranted to address the court of appeals’ errors.
    Respectfully submitted,
    DEGUERIN, DICKSON, HENNESSY & WARD
    /s/Matt Hennessy
    State Bar No. 00787677
    matt @deguerin.com
    1018 Preston, 7th Floor
    Houston, Texas 77002
    (713) 223-5959 Telephone
    (713) 223-9231 Facsimile
    18
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    I hereby certify that a true and correct copy of the foregoing has been delivered
    to the following parties via electronic filing on July 29, 2015:
    Kimberly Stelter
    Assistant District Attorney
    1201 Franklin, Suite 600
    Houston, Texas 77002
    Lisa McMinn
    State Prosecuting Attorney
    P O Box 13406
    Austin, Texas 78711
    /s/Matt Hennessy
    Matt Hennessy
    19
    Envelope Details
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    Envelope 6281148
    Case Information
    Location                               Court Of Criminal Appeals
    Date Filed                             07/29/2015 04:39:10 PM
    Case Number
    Case Description
    Assigned to Judge
    Attorney                               Matt Hennessy
    Firm Name                              DeGuerin Dickson Hennessy & Ward
    Filed By                               Kathy Parker
    Filer Type                             Not Applicable
    Fees
    Convenience Fee                        $0.00
    Total Court Case Fees                  $0.00
    Total Court Filing Fees                $0.00
    Total Court Service Fees               $0.00
    Total Filing & Service Fees            $0.00
    Total Service Tax Fees                 $0.00
    Total Provider Service Fees            $0.00
    Total Provider Tax Fees                $0.00
    Grand Total                            $0.00
    Payment
    Account Name                           Matt Hennessy
    Transaction Amount                     $0.00
    Transaction Response
    Transaction ID
    Order #
    Petition for Discretionary Review
    Filing Type                                            EFileAndServe
    Filing Code                                            Petition for Discretionary Review
    Filing Description
    Reference Number
    Comments
    Status                                                 Rejected
    Fees
    Court Fee                                              $0.00
    Service Fee                                            $0.00
    Rejection Information
    Rejection Time       Rejection Comment
    Reason
    The petition for discretionary review does not contain a certification of compliance
    with T.R.A.P. 9.4(i)(3). The petition for discretionary review does not contain a copy
    https://reviewer.efiletexas.gov/EnvelopeDetails.aspx?envelopeguid=e69b12ec-5709-42ab-9fef-dd56fa8b5eae[7/30/2015 3:56:46 PM]
    Envelope Details
    07/30/2015 of the court of appeals opinion [Rule 68.4(j)]. In the future please combine the
    Other   03:53:38 separate parts of your petition into one contiguous file; do not electronically file a
    PM         petition and the Court of Appeals opinion(s) or other appendices as separate
    documents. [Rule 9.4(j)(4)] You have ten days to tender a corrected petition for
    discretionary review.
    Documents
    Lead Document             PDR.pdf                                              [Original]
    Attachments               PDR-Appendix.pdf                                     [Original]
    eService Details
    Name/Email                Firm                                  Service Type               Status         Served        Date/Time Opened
    Alan Curry                                                                                                              07/30/2015
    EServe                     Sent           Yes
    Curry_Alan@dao.hctx.net                                                                                                 07:51:52 AM
    Lisa McMinn                                                                                                             07/30/2015
    EServe                     Sent           Yes
    information@spa.texas.gov                                                                                               08:41:53 AM
    https://reviewer.efiletexas.gov/EnvelopeDetails.aspx?envelopeguid=e69b12ec-5709-42ab-9fef-dd56fa8b5eae[7/30/2015 3:56:46 PM]