Gobert, Milton Dwayne ( 2011 )


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  •            IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    OF TEXAS
    NO. AP-76,345
    MILTON DWAYNE GOBERT, Appellant
    v.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS
    ON DIRECT APPEAL FROM CAUSE NO. D-1-DC-06-904006
    THE 331ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
    TRAVIS COUNTY
    C OCHRAN, J., delivered the opinion of the unanimous Court.
    OPINION
    Appellant was convicted of the 2003 capital murder of Mel Cotton by stabbing her
    with a knife 107 times in the course of attempting to commit or committing kidnapping or
    robbery. Based upon the jury’s answers to the special punishment issues, the trial judge
    sentenced him to death. Appellant raises seven points of error. Finding no reversible error,
    we affirm the judgment and sentence.
    Gobert   Page 2
    Factual Background
    In the early hours of October 6, 2003, five-year-old Demetrius Cotton was awakened
    by the sound of his mother, Mel Cotton, screaming from her bedroom. He went into her
    room and saw a strange man there–“kind of tall, bald, and buff.” He had a mustache and was
    wearing boots and boxers. He had gloves on his hands. Demetrius saw his mom sitting on
    the edge of the bed with duct tape on her mouth; the man was standing in front of her,
    stabbing her in the arms with a sharp knife. She was trying to get away from him. She stood
    up, but then lost her balance and fell. The man kept stabbing, so Demetrius “ran over and
    tried to pull him down by his leg.” He said, “Stop,” but the man pushed him off, turned on
    the bedside light and continued stabbing at his mom. The man told Demetrius, “sit down and
    shut up,” so Demetrius sat down. He was scared.
    Then the man put duct tape on Demetrius’s ankles and mouth. He told Demetrius to
    get out of the room, so the child hopped out into the hallway. The man locked the door
    when Demetrius tried to get back inside the bedroom. He heard his mom scream, “Leave me
    alone,” but the man said, “Give me the money” and “Where is it at in your purse?”
    Demetrius hopped into his room and sat on a pallet of blankets beside his bed. He heard the
    man take his mom’s phone and “stomp on it” in the bathroom. The man also cut the
    telephone cord.
    Demetrius fell asleep, but he woke up when he heard the man come into his room.
    The man “choked” Demetrius with both hands. Demetrius tried to scream, but he couldn’t.
    Gobert    Page 3
    He blacked out. When he woke up later, he had a hole in his chest with blood coming out.
    He went to his mom’s room. She was laying on the floor on her side. Demetrius felt her
    neck. It was cold. “[S]he was gone.” He touched her hand and talked to her for a while.
    Then he went to the bathroom for a washcloth to stop his chest from bleeding. He looked
    to see if anyone else was there in the apartment. The man was gone. Demetrius ate a
    popsicle, then went back to his room, got his stuffed caterpillar, and waited for a long time
    for someone to come. He fell asleep again, but woke up early that Monday morning when
    he heard knocking on the door. He took his stool to the door to see out of the peephole, and
    when he saw his “Aunt Tweety,” he opened the door.
    Monica Salinas, who lived in the same Austin apartment complex as Mel Cotton and
    Demetrius, heard a hysterical woman crying, “My sister is dead, my sister is dead, please help
    me.” She ran up the stairs, saw Demetrius with duct tape still around his neck and Mel
    Cotton’s body in the master bedroom, so she called 911. She saw “blood everywhere and
    handprints of blood all over the room.”
    Paramedics rushed Demetrius to the hospital. He had four stab wounds in his chest.
    They were so deep that a paramedic saw Demetrius’s lung inflating and deflating. Demetrius
    said that he could hear the air coming out of the hole in his chest; it sounded like “a farting
    noise.” Demetrius lost twenty to thirty percent of his blood volume and had a pneumothorax
    (collapsed lung) and a pulmonary contusion. Doctors also determined that Demetrius had
    been strangled. Although his wounds were life-threatening, Demetrius recovered.
    Gobert     Page 4
    The medical examiner testified that Mel Cotton had a total of 107 stab wounds that
    were inflicted during a drawn-out attack. Thirty-eight of the wounds were centered around
    Ms. Cotton’s left breast, indicating “some degree of [the victim’s] incapacitation or lack of
    movement.” Another group of wounds were in her back. She had approximately thirteen
    defensive wounds to her hands and arms. Twenty of the wounds reached her internal organs.
    She, like Demetrius, had been strangled. The medical examiner said that Ms. Cotton had
    probably been conscious for about ten to twenty minutes after her jugular vein had been cut.
    Christina Pocharasang, appellant’s former girlfriend, learned of Ms. Cotton’s murder
    later that day. She immediately suspected appellant. She testified that Ms. Cotton had
    helped her move out of appellant’s apartment two weeks earlier by arranging for a man
    named Kenneth to haul her heavy furniture. Appellant had been furious and accused Ms.
    Cotton and Kenneth of stealing his things, including his vacuum cleaner.1 Christina called
    appellant to ask him about the murder. When he answered the phone, appellant was
    breathing heavily and said that he had been in a fight with Kenneth, who had stabbed him in
    the stomach, causing an injury that required sixteen stitches. Christina then called the Austin
    police to report her suspicions.
    Austin police discovered that appellant had an outstanding parole-violation warrant
    1
    Appellant left numerous threatening voicemails for Christina, saying such things as
    “Yeah, ho, you go on and do what you like. I don’t give a f__ no more . But I bet you this one
    thing. You still got my shit, you keep that. That’s yours. Since you distributed my shit to all this
    different mother f____ and shit. And gave my shit to these niggers. You gave my shit to these
    niggers. But bitch, one day you’re going to look up, and you’re going to see me. Bet that.”
    Gobert    Page 5
    and went to his apartment to arrest him. After peeking through his blinds, appellant refused
    to open the door, so the officers made a forced entry. Appellant did not have a stab wound
    in his stomach, but he did have cuts on his right hand that looked like those made when an
    attacker loses his grip on a knife shaft and cuts his own hand.
    Officers obtained a search warrant for appellant’s apartment and car. They found
    stain remover, bleach, and vinegar containers; a glove on top of the washing machine; and
    a glove, tennis shoes, and a striped shirt inside the washing machine. DNA consistent with
    that of Ms. Cotton’s DNA was found on the left tennis shoe, and DNA consistent with that
    of appellant, Ms. Cotton, and an unknown male2 was found on the glove on top of the
    washing machine. A latent fingerprint, matching appellant’s fingerprint, was found on Ms.
    Cotton’s bedroom window blind.
    While in jail, appellant bragged to his cellmate about stabbing Ms. Cotton and
    Demetrius. He recounted details of the crime, including wrapping Ms. Cotton in an
    extension cord, washing his bloody clothes, and throwing the knife that he used in a lake.3
    Appellant called a jail guard, Deputy Tasha Lass, to testify that the inmates did not
    have much privacy in their jail cells, thus suggesting that perhaps the cellmate could have
    learned details about the murder from reading appellant’s case files in his jail cell.
    Appellant also made numerous phone calls from the jail to family members,
    2
    When the DNA analysis was made, the technician did not have Demetrius’s DNA.
    3
    During his punishment-stage testimony, appellant confirmed that he threw the knife into
    the lake.
    Gobert     Page 6
    suggesting to one brother that he might remember that appellant and Mel Cotton had a sexual
    relationship. Appellant’s older brother told appellant to stop asking him, his brother, and
    their mother to lie for him. These calls were recorded and played at trial.4 In them, appellant
    told various versions of the events.
    One of appellant’s brothers testified at trial to the version of events that appellant told
    him. According to appellant, he and Mel Cotton had had sex that night, and then he went to
    sleep in her bed. She later woke him up, and they began arguing. She came at him with a
    knife, saying that she was going to shoot him with a gun. They struggled over the knife. He
    got the knife, but when he tried to get dressed and leave, she attacked him again. Demetrius
    came into the room and “fell” on the knife that his mother was holding. Appellant told his
    brother that he had stayed with the little boy, giving him pain pills, until Demetrius’s aunt
    arrived the next morning. Appellant told his family members that “wasn’t nothing wrong
    with [Demetrius], he was–he’s alive and he wasn’t seriously hurt. . . . He wasn’t hurt bad at
    all. He went to school the next day.”
    The jury found appellant guilty of capital murder.
    During the punishment phase, the State introduced appellant’s prior convictions for
    4
    In one of them, appellant told his brother that a jury would surely sentence him to death
    if they heard that he had attacked and stabbed his mother when he was nineteen, so he wanted his
    mother to lie about that event. “I can’t have her up there. That’s, that’s suicide. . . . What am I
    going to look like in these folks’ eyes? . . . I mean it’s not about telling the truth, get up there and
    tell the truth, that’s suicide, man. . . . How can you say if you love somebody that you’re gonna
    sit up there and, and, and get up there and, and help go to the death chamber? That’s suicide for
    me, man.”
    Gobert   Page 7
    burglary of a habitation, robbery, false imprisonment, assault, and dating-violence assault.
    Christina Pocharasang testified again and recounted three different violent episodes.
    One time, several months before the murder, appellant punched her in her face because she
    did not want to cut her hair the way appellant wanted it cut. He chased her into the bathroom
    and kept hitting her for about thirty minutes. Then, about two weeks before the murder,
    appellant got angry when Christina asked him to go to his brother’s church. He closed the
    bedroom door so Christina’s son couldn’t see him, and he choked Christina with both hands
    around her neck. Christina decided to move out of town, and she contacted her friend, Mel
    Cotton, who found Kenneth to help her move. But, in late September, Christina forgave
    appellant and came back to Austin. One night, appellant attacked her as she was driving. He
    punched her in the face five or six times, choked her neck, bit her on the shoulder,5 hit her
    in her lower back about fifteen times, and crushed her cell phone so she couldn’t call for
    help. He told Christina he was going to kill her. Christina finally escaped, drove to a
    hospital, and called the police. Nine days later, appellant killed Mel Cotton.
    Another woman testified that she had dated appellant in 2002, but he got jealous and
    began hitting her and grabbing her by the neck when he was angry. She told him that she
    wanted nothing more to do with him. But one day he came over, and she got into his car to
    talk to him. Appellant became angry again and, after she jumped out of his moving car, he
    came after her and started hitting her in the face. Her father called the police and she filed
    5
    Six years later, Christina still had a scar from that bite.
    Gobert    Page 8
    assault charges against him.
    A third woman testified that she had dated appellant when they were both in high
    school. He was often verbally abusive to her, but one day he got jealous and hit her in the
    nose, then threatened to kill her as he forcibly took her back to his apartment. The next
    morning she escaped by grabbing her car keys. She drove off, speeding and running red
    lights when she saw appellant driving behind her. She stopped, got out of her car and started
    calling for help, but no one paid attention to her, so she raced back to her car. Appellant was
    on the roof of her car. She nevertheless drove to a friend’s house, got out, and appellant
    drove off in her car. Several years later, appellant found her in Round Rock, burglarized her
    friend’s home, stole a TV and purse, and kidnapped her. The police eventually found her
    at appellant’s apartment, and he went to prison for burglary. She related another incident in
    which appellant choked her when he found out she was dating someone else. Even though
    appellant has been locked up in jail for years, she is still afraid that he will come back for her.
    A former cellmate testified that appellant assaulted him while he was lying in his
    bunk. Appellant said that he was a Muslim and didn’t want to be in a cell with a Catholic.
    Appellant accused the cellmate of farting while appellant was praying, and then he began
    hitting the man in the chest, saying that he would kill him. The cellmate, in fear of his life,
    asked to be moved. Appellant had numerous instances of disruptive conduct while in jail
    and, at one point, was assessed fifteen days of administrative segregation for his actions.
    A former female jailer who had given appellant special privileges resigned when her
    Gobert    Page 9
    superiors discovered that she had been “fraternizing” with appellant. Thereafter, she visited
    appellant in jail seventeen times in six months.
    Tasha Lass, the female jailer whom appellant had called to testify during the guilt
    stage, was called by the prosecution during the punishment stage. She admitted that she, too,
    had been fraternizing with appellant for several weeks. She said that she had brought
    appellant a cell phone so he could call her from the jail without their conversations being
    recorded. They talked on the phone every day, and appellant repeatedly told Deputy Lass
    that he loved her. She testified that he was still talking to her every day on the smuggled cell
    phone.
    Another jailer testified that, after Deputy Lass’s testimony, he had searched
    appellant’s jail cell and found the cell phone stuffed into a bag of Cheetos inside appellant’s
    commissary bag. A cell phone charger was also found. Deputy Lass was then arrested and
    charged with the felony of bringing a prohibited item into a correctional facility.
    Yet another officer testified that a piece of plastic had been wedged into appellant’s
    leg brace that he was required to wear as he was transported each day from the jail to the
    courtroom so that it would not lock. A different officer testified that appellant had tampered
    with his leg brace on a second occasion as well. That time appellant was walking around in
    the open courtroom with his leg brace unlocked.
    After the defense offered several mitigation witnesses and rested, the State then
    recalled Tasha Lass to testify about “an escape plan.” This time, Deputy Lass testified that
    Gobert    Page 10
    she had originally been a missionary in Romania, and then had traveled to Sri Lanka,
    Australia, and England for eight years. She then became a police officer in Chattanooga,
    Tennessee, and was named Patrol Officer of the Year in 2008. She moved to Austin, became
    a deputy in June 2009, and first met appellant around Christmastime. She listened to him talk
    about his case, his family, and his problems in jail. He made her feel “needed.” He told her
    about his escape plan and wanted her to buy a storage shed so he could hide out “with food
    and stuff” until he escaped to Dubai. He chose Dubai because it is a Muslim country and he
    could not be extradited from there. He also wanted her a buy a .45 pistol with a silencer and
    four magazines and bring it into the jail “so he could shoot people and locks to get out.”
    Appellant told Deputy Lass that he planned to call Deputy Fernandes over to his cell
    at 2:30 a.m., shoot him, drag the deputy’s body into the cell, change into his clothes, grab his
    car keys,6 shoot any other inmates who saw him, kill the control-room operator,7 take the
    keys to the fire closet, grab the bag inside that closet that contained a rope, then go to the top
    floor fire closet for another rope, go out the roof door, tie the two ropes together and attach
    one end to the building, toss the rope over the edge and climb down, run over to the parking
    garage and drive off in Deputy Fernandes’s car. Appellant would “knock out” Deputy Lass
    and put her in the fire closet, but she did not believe that he would leave her alive. She said
    that she did not want to aid in this escape plan, but appellant kept asking her every day.
    6
    Appellant told Ms. Lass that he had seen Deputy Fernandes drive in and out of the
    parking garage, so he knew which car was his and where it was parked.
    7
    Appellant wanted Ms. Lass to be in the control room so she could give him the keys.
    Gobert    Page 11
    The State also called Dr. Richard Coons who testified that, in his opinion, a
    hypothetical person with appellant’s history, conduct, and character would likely pose a
    danger of violence in the future.
    Finally, the defense called appellant to the witness stand. He admitted that he had hurt
    a lot of women. He said that he had hit his brother over the head with a statue and beaten his
    mother and the women that he loved. It was because of “anger issues and situations. . . .
    Maybe sometimes I go overboard.”
    Based on the jury’s answers to the special issues, the trial judge sentenced appellant
    to death. After hearing a victim allocution statement by Mel Cotton’s sister, appellant
    shouted, “That bitch wasn’t no angel. That was a bitch, a motherf___ bitch. F___ all y’all.
    That was a bitch a ho bitch.” When the trial judge attempted to interrupt, appellant said, “No,
    f__ you. F____ your allocution. F___ all you motherf____.”
    Thus ended the trial of Milton Dwayne Gobert.
    The Admission of Evidence at the Punishment Phase
    In two points of error, appellant complains of the admission of expert testimony
    offered at the punishment phase. In point of error one, appellant asserts that the trial court
    erred under Daubert,8 Kelly,9 Coble,10 and the Eighth Amendment in admitting testimony by
    8
    Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharm., 
    509 U.S. 579
    (1993).
    9
    Kelly v. State, 
    824 S.W.2d 568
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1992).
    10
    Coble v. State, 
    330 S.W.3d 253
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).
    Gobert     Page 12
    A.P. Merillat, an investigator from the Special Prosecution Unit of the Texas Department of
    Criminal Justice (TDCJ), concerning prison conditions and the opportunities for violence in
    TCDJ. The trial judge barred the prosecution from asking “about specific cases that he
    knows about” or other anecdotal stories, but otherwise allowed the State to develop Mr.
    Merillat’s testimony.
    We have upheld the admission of Mr. Merillat’s educator-expertise testimony in
    several previous cases as reliable and relevant to the future-dangerousness issue concerning
    the opportunities for violence in prison society.11 But in Estrada v. State,12 we found that Mr.
    Merillat’s unintentionally inaccurate testimony concerning reclassification of capital-murder
    inmates was, in that particular case, reversible error.13 Mr. Merillat did not repeat that factual
    11
    See 
    Coble, 330 S.W.3d at 287-89
    (Merillat’s testimony about the Texas prison
    classification system and violence in prison, offered to show a capital-murder defendant’s future
    dangerousness, was admissible as educator-expertise information designed to assist the jury;
    testimony was confined to specific information about operations of Texas prison system and
    inmates’ opportunities for violence or productive behavior; the testimony was intended to
    educate the jury about an area in which it lacked a thorough understanding and to cast doubt
    upon the official prison data that the forensic psychologist who testified for defendant relied
    upon); Threadgill v. State, 
    146 S.W.3d 654
    , 670 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004) (upholding admission
    of photographs of bombs and weapons made by inmates to illustrate Merillat’s testimony that
    violence was prevalent in TDCJ prisons). See also Sparks v. State, No. AP-76099, 
    2010 WL 4132769
    , *24 (Tex. Crim. App. Oct. 20, 2010) (not designated for publication) (“Merillat’s
    testimony was generalized educator-expertise information designed to ‘assist’ the jury under
    Rule 702. Therefore, the trial judge did not abuse his discretion in admitting it after determining
    that Merillat was qualified to testify as an expert regarding the prison classification system and
    opportunities for violence in prison” in punishment phase of capital-murder trial).
    12
    
    313 S.W.3d 274
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).
    13
    
    Id. at 286-87
    (when jury sent out note during its deliberations referring to Merillat’s
    inaccurate testimony “that, after 10 years of G–3 status, a sentenced-to-life-without-parole capital
    murderer could achieve a lower (and less restrictive) G classification status than a G–3 status,”
    Gobert     Page 13
    inaccuracy in the present case. We conclude that the trial judge did not abuse his discretion
    in overruling appellant’s Rule 702 objections.
    Appellant also argues that the trial court’s admission of Mr. Merillat’s testimony
    violated his Eighth Amendment right to individualized sentencing because what other
    prisoners did or did not do in prison was not relevant to appellant. It was in response to that
    argument that the trial judge barred the prosecutor from asking Mr. Merillat any questions
    concerning other inmates or their specific instances of conduct. But the judge concluded that
    generalized testimony concerning prison conditions, opportunities for violence, weapons
    used, and raw data concerning the number of violent acts in TDCJ did not violate the Eighth
    Amendment focus on individualized sentencing. Appellant asserts that Mr. Merillat’s
    testimony “is that TDCJ is so grossly incompetent and so dangerous that the safety of all who
    enter there is in jeopardy.”14 We do not read Mr. Merillat’s testimony as implying that prison
    “is a relentless death trap” that imperils “the safety of all who enter there.” His point was
    that TDCJ, like other prisons, cannot protect against all inmate violence.
    We have previously upheld the admission of Mr. Merillat’s background testimony
    there was a reasonable probability that the jury relied upon that testimony in reaching its verdict).
    14
    Appellant’s Brief at 12. Appellant goes on to assert that Mr. Merillat’s “relentless
    message is that TDCJ is a death trap, and the only way to make sure that Appellant does not add
    to it is to kill him, since TDCJ is totally ineffectual in safeguarding any of the many, many
    potential victims who work and enter there.” This may be one way of characterizing Mr.
    Merillat’s testimony, but it is certainly not a necessary one.
    Gobert     Page 14
    over an Eighth Amendment claim in an unpublished opinion.15 While the probative value
    of Mr. Merillat’s testimony pales in comparison to that concerning appellant’s specific acts
    of violence while incarcerated, its admission did not violate appellant’s Eighth Amendment
    right to an individualized sentencing procedure.           The jurors could make an Eighth
    Amendment “individualized” assessment of appellant’s likelihood to commit future acts of
    violence based upon his specific actions–some of which he testified to himself–while
    incarcerated.16
    We overrule appellant’s first point of error.
    In his second point of error, appellant claims that the trial judge erred in admitting the
    opinion of Dr. Coons on the issue of future dangerousness. After a voir dire examination
    outside the presence of the jury appellant argued, inter alia, that Dr. Coons
    does not have and has not propounded a sufficiently valid scientific technique
    or theory that has been accepted as valid by the scientific community.
    15
    Espada v. State, No. AP-75,219, 
    2008 WL 4809235
    , *9-10 (Tex. Crim. App. Nov. 5,
    2008) (not designated for publication) (upholding admission of Merillat’s testimony about
    violent acts and gangs in prison over defendant’s objection that the testimony was unfairly
    prejudicial and deprived him of the right to an individualized determination of his sentence).
    16
    Appellant testified and discussed his nine years in prison. He, like Mr. Merillat, talked
    about the opportunities for violence in prison: “So violence is a part of life in prison, not saying
    that you go inflict violence, because people that’s not part of a gang, like me, you don’t go
    looking for trouble.” Appellant testified at length about prison gangs and noted that security had
    been “beefed up” since the Texas Seven escape. He knowledgeably discussed “crash gates,”
    security guards, and the prison classification system. He talked about how he had gashed open
    the back of another inmate with a hoe when he was in minimum custody. He said that he had
    had five or six fights while in prison, and he “finished them all” but “ain’t nobody lost they life”
    in those fights. He stated that he told a female prison guard that he “would kick her bitch ass,”
    and he threatened to hit a prison guard with his hoe. Appellant also said that he had been in four
    or five fights while awaiting trial in the Travis County jail.
    Gobert    Page 15
    Psychiatry is not the study of prediction of future danger; it is, as he has
    acknowledged, the study of mental disease and mental disorders. Future
    dangerousness is not one of these. Basically his qualifications do not relate to
    making such predictions.
    He has failed to identify any scientific literature or documentation that
    supports this technique, whatever technique he plans to use. . . .
    Basically his testimony does not rely upon principles that are involved
    in the field of psychiatry.
    Appellant also filed a motion and brief outlining his reasons for excluding Dr. Coons’s
    opinion testimony under Rules 702-703, as well as the federal and Texas Constitutions. We
    conclude that the trial judge abused his discretion in admitting Dr. Coons’s opinion on future
    dangerousness17 in this case for the same reasons that we held it inadmissible in Coble v.
    State.18 Here, as in that case, Dr. Coons provided no scientific, psychiatric, or psychological
    research or studies to support his idiosyncratic methodology for predicting whether a
    hypothetical person would commit future acts of violence.19
    However, we conclude that the admission of Dr. Coons’s testimony was harmless
    error.20 Given the overwhelming evidence of appellant’s life-long penchant for violence,
    the circumstances of the capital murder, the evidence of his conspiracy to commit capital
    17
    Some of Dr. Coons’s testimony, such as that relating to “conduct disorder” as “the
    juvenile version of antisocial personality disorder,” a mental disorder described in the DSM-IV
    that can cause a person to become violent, was relevant, sufficiently reliable, and admissible.
    Only his “future dangerousness” opinion based on the lengthy hypothetical posed by the State
    was insufficiently supported by a reliable methodology.
    18
    
    330 S.W.3d 253
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).
    19
    
    Id. at 277-80.
           20
    See TEX . R. APP. P. 44.2(b)
    Gobert    Page 16
    murder to effectuate his escape from jail, his own testimony concerning his prior violence
    in prison and toward anyone–including his own mother–who angers him, we are confident
    that this error did not affect appellant’s substantial rights to a fair sentencing trial.21
    In this trial, unlike that in Coble, the jury was not considering the future
    dangerousness of a model prisoner. The evidence in this case showed that, during prior
    periods of incarceration, appellant had
    !         attacked a fellow prison inmate with a hoe, gashing him in the back;
    !         threatened to hit a prison guard with a hoe;
    !         threatened to fight other prison guards;
    !         gotten into “five or six” fights with fellow prison inmates;
    !         gotten into “four or five” fights with fellow jail inmates;
    !         developed inappropriate relationships with at least two female jail guards and
    manipulated them into providing him with contraband or special privileges;
    !         plotted to murder a jailer and steal his car keys and car to effectuate appellant’s
    escape;
    !         plotted to kill any other inmates or jailers who might witness that planned
    escape; and
    !         manipulated his leg brace so that it could not lock and impede his mobility in
    the courtroom during his capital-murder trial.
    Dr. Coons’s opinion concerning a hypothetical person in appellant’s position was, at
    most, superfluous to the specific testimonial evidence of appellant’s proven dangerousness
    21
    See 
    Coble, 330 S.W.3d at 280
    .
    Gobert    Page 17
    both in prison and in free society.
    Furthermore, the State did not emphasize or rely upon Dr. Coons’s opinion in closing
    argument. One prosecutor briefly mentioned Dr. Coons and his methodology:
    Now, remember the analysis that Dr. Coons uses when he is deciding
    whether someone is going to be a future danger. If this is helpful to you, you
    can use it. It is one he has used for many years. If there is some other analysis
    that you want to use, of course, that’s fine, too. Remember he looks at the
    facts of the capital murder, the person’s history of violence, his attitude about
    the use of violence, his personality and behavioral characteristics, his
    conscience, and the society that he’s going to be in.
    The other prosecutor did not even mention Dr. Coons during his closing argument, but the
    defense discounted Dr. Coons’s methodology and the basis for his opinion: “Dr. Coons, no
    literature or scientific study basis for what he does. I mean, anybody could come in and give
    you that opinion.” The jury did not need any expert’s opinion to determine whether appellant
    would likely commit acts of violence in the future just as he had done in the past. They heard
    it from the horse’s mouth. Because the admission of Dr. Coons’s opinion testimony was
    harmless error, we overrule appellant’s second point of error.
    Challenges to the Constitutionality of Article 37.071
    In his third point of error, appellant asserts that Article 37.071, the statute that sets out
    the Texas capital-murder sentencing procedure, is unconstitutional for myriad reasons.
    Appellant relies upon eleven different motions, memoranda, or written objections that he had
    filed before and during trial. This point of error, combining eleven different and distinct
    claims, is multifarious, and we could properly dismiss this entire point of error for that
    Gobert    Page 18
    reason.22 Nevertheless, in the interest of justice, we will address the three legal theories that
    appellant briefed on appeal.
    Appellant asserts that Article 37.071 is inadequate and unconstitutional because
    prosecutorial discretion is “too broad to guarantee that the death penalty will be fairly and
    evenly applied in all 254 counties.” We have repeatedly rejected this claim,23 and appellant
    offers no persuasive reasons why those decisions should be overruled.
    Appellant also claims that Article 37.071 is inadequate and unconstitutional because
    the future-dangerousness issue is submitted to the jury, but it is not alleged in the indictment.
    We have repeatedly rejected this claim as well,24 and appellant’s arguments do not persuade
    us that those decisions should be overruled.
    Finally, appellant claims that the types of evidence currently used by prosecutors to
    prove death-worthiness are unreliable and therefore the statute is unconstitutional. He asserts
    that, because prosecutors offer testimony by such witnesses as Mr. Merillat and Dr. Coons,
    “Article 37.071 invites nothing but unfairness in determining who gets the death penalty,
    how that issue is determined, and the type of evidence typically [relied] on to make that
    22
    Aldrich v. State, 
    928 S.W.2d 558
    , 559 n.1 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996); Sterling v. State,
    
    800 S.W.2d 513
    , 518 (Tex. Crim. App. 1990).
    23
    See, e.g., Busby v. State, 
    253 S.W.3d 661
    , 667 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008); Threadgill v.
    State, 
    146 S.W.3d 654
    , 671-72 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004).
    24
    See 
    Threadgill, 146 S.W.3d at 672
    (“‘A defendant indicted for capital murder is
    effectively put on notice that the special issues under Article 37.071 will be raised, so such
    procedural provisions need not be alleged in the indictment.’”) (quoting Moore v. State, 
    969 S.W.2d 4
    , 13 (1998)).
    Gobert    Page 19
    determination.”25 But the fact that some prosecutors, in some cases, have offered some
    evidence that might be improper does not render the statute unconstitutional in all of its
    applications.26 And appellant has failed to show that Article 37.071 was unconstitutional as
    applied to him as we have already held that (1) the trial judge did not abuse his discretion in
    admitting Mr. Merillat’s testimony, and (2) the erroneous admission of Dr. Coons’s opinion
    testimony in this case was harmless.27 Appellant’s third point of error is overruled.
    The Mid-Trial Continuance to Investigate Tasha Lass
    In point of error four, appellant asserts that the trial judge erred in failing to grant a
    longer mid-trial continuance so the defense could investigate the background and testimony
    of its own witness, Deputy Tasha Lass. And, in point of error five, appellant asserts that his
    trial attorneys were ineffective in failing to investigate Deputy Lass before calling her as a
    witness in the defense case-in-chief.
    As noted above, appellant called Deputy Lass in the guilt stage to testify to the lack
    of privacy in the Travis County jail cells. Her testimony could explain how appellant’s
    cellmate might have learned about the details of the capital murder from a source other than
    25
    Appellant’s Brief at 28.
    26
    See Tex. Workers’ Comp. Comm’n v. Garcia, 
    893 S.W.2d 504
    , 518 (Tex. 1995) (facial
    constitutional challenge requires a showing that a statute is unconstitutional in every application);
    Gillenwaters v. State, 
    205 S.W.3d 534
    , 536 n.2 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006).
    27
    See 
    Gillenwaters, 205 S.W.3d at 537
    n.3 (“A claim that a statute is unconstitutional ‘as
    applied’ is a claim that the statute, although generally constitutional, operates unconstitutionally
    as to the claimant because of his particular circumstances.”).
    Gobert   Page 20
    appellant’s confession to him. When the defense requested that Deputy Lass be allowed to
    remain in the courtroom after her short testimony was complete, however, the prosecutors’
    suspicion were aroused.     They investigated and later called Deputy Lass during the
    punishment phase to testify to her improper relationship with appellant and to the fact that
    appellant had manipulated her into sneaking a cell phone into the jail for him. The State
    called her again when, at the suggestion of her own attorney, she admitted that appellant had
    tried to talk her into bringing him a .45 pistol, silencer, and four magazines of ammunition
    to help him implement his escape plan.
    After hearing the testimony of the escape plan, appellant’s counsel made an oral
    motion for continuance because Deputy Lass’s testimony was “highly inflammatory” and
    “devastating, to say the least. . . . I mean, for all we know she may be psychotic.” Counsel
    explained, “We need to have my investigator check her background, check some of the stuff
    she said, whether or not it’s true, classic impeachment stuff that we’re now being denied
    because all of a sudden this stuff just came up.”
    The trial judge told the prosecutors to give defense counsel any criminal record they
    could find on Deputy Lass, and he suggested that counsel take her on voir dire to “establish
    a baseline” for impeachment research. After completing that voir dire, the trial judge
    postponed cross-examination until the next day to give the defense time to research possible
    avenues of impeachment. The next day, defense counsel said that they had not had enough
    time to make a thorough investigation, so the trial judge gave them a daylong continuance
    Gobert    Page 21
    and ordered jailers to permit defense counsel to view appellant’s cell and the jail layout.
    When the court reconvened, defense counsel made another oral motion for
    continuance.    At that point, the trial judge overruled the motion, stating that cross-
    examination was likely the best means of discovering information because he would not
    allow other witnesses to impeach Deputy Lass on collateral matters.
    First, we hold that appellant failed to preserve error because he did not file a sworn
    written motion for continuance.28 Although he might be excused from filing a written motion
    immediately after Deputy Lass’s direct examination, he clearly had an opportunity to file a
    written motion the next day–when the trial judge granted a daylong continuance–or the day
    after that–when the trial judge denied any further continuance. Moreover, appellant did not
    file a motion for new trial on this basis, setting out what specific admissible impeachment
    evidence he would have discovered had a longer continuance been granted.29
    Second, appellant has failed to show that the trial judge abused his discretion in
    declining to grant a lengthier continuance because he has not shown any prejudice. In Gallo
    28
    Dewberry v. State, 
    4 S.W.3d 735
    , 755 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999); see TEX . CODE CRIM .
    PROC. art. 29.03 (“A criminal action may be continued on the written motion of the State or of
    the defendant, upon sufficient cause shown; which cause shall be fully set forth in the motion. A
    continuance may be only for as long as is necessary.”); 
    id., art. 29.08
    (“All motions for
    continuance must be sworn to by a person having personal knowledge of the facts relied on for
    the continuance.”).
    29
    See, e.g., Varela v. State, 
    561 S.W.2d 186
    , 191 (Tex. Crim. App. 1978) (no error in
    denying motion for continuance when there is no motion for new trial alleging the failure of the
    trial court to grant a motion for continuance and no evidence showing what a missing witness
    would have testified to); Love v. State, 
    730 S.W.2d 385
    , 401 (Tex. App.–Fort Worth 1987, no
    pet.); Chambliss v. State, 
    633 S.W.2d 678
    , 682-83 (Tex. App.–El Paso 1982), aff’d on other
    grounds, 
    647 S.W.2d 257
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1983).
    Gobert     Page 22
    v. State,30 we held that “a bare assertion that counsel did not have adequate time to interview
    the State’s potential witness does not alone establish prejudice.” 31 Here, appellant has failed
    to show what impeachment evidence he would have uncovered if he had been granted a
    longer continuance and how the inability to present that admissible evidence caused his trial
    to be unfair.32
    Finally, to establish reversible error based on the denial of a motion for continuance,
    “a defendant must demonstrate both that the trial court erred in denying the motion and that
    30
    
    239 S.W.3d 757
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2007).
    31
    
    Id. at 764;
    see also Janecka v. State, 
    937 S.W.2d 456
    , 468 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996)
    (capital-murder defendant who asserted that trial judge abused his discretion by refusing to grant
    a motion for continuance because he had not had sufficient time to interview witnesses failed to
    show any specific prejudice; thus, no error in denying motion). See also Quinones v. State, No.
    13-10-00140-CR, 
    2011 WL 3841586
    , *3 (Tex. App.–Corpus Christi Aug. 25, 2011, n.p.h.) (not
    designated for publication) (trial judge did not abuse discretion in denying motion for
    continuance when defendant claimed that he did not have sufficient time to fully investigate
    State’s witness and recently obtained medical records to conduct effective cross-examination
    because defendant failed to show specific prejudice); Lutz v. State, No. 04-04-00236-CR, 
    2005 WL 1551722
    , *1-3 (Tex. App.–San Antonio July 6, 2005, no pet.) (not designated for
    publication) (trial judge did not abuse his discretion in granting only a fifteen-minute recess to
    allow defense counsel to interview State’s “surprise” eyewitness; defendant failed to demonstrate
    actual prejudice or show “what length of time would have been sufficient to allow him to
    adequately prepare” for witness’s testimony).
    32
    See Cooper v. State, 
    509 S.W.2d 565
    , 567-68 (Tex. Crim. App. 1974) (trial judge did
    not abuse his discretion in denying mid-trial motion for continuance when defendant claimed he
    was “surprised” by a State’s witness identifying him as one of the robbers although, before trial,
    she had told defense counsel that she could not identify defendant; “Neither the motion for
    continuance nor any statement by appellant’s counsel found in the record indicated to the trial
    court how counsel could have benefitted by a continuance, or that there was any expectation that
    a continuance would enable appellant to present any fact or facts contrary to the identification
    testimony given by [the surprise witness].”).
    Gobert     Page 23
    the lack of a continuance harmed him.”33 That is, appellant must offer evidence to satisfy
    three separate prongs:      (1) the trial judge abused his discretion in failing to grant a
    continuance because he would have discovered admissible impeachment evidence about
    Deputy Lass; (2) his cross-examination of Deputy Lass was circumscribed as a result of that
    ruling; and (3) his inability to fully cross-examine Deputy Lass with admissible impeachment
    evidence was so critical that it caused his sentencing hearing to be unfair and the result
    unreliable. Appellant has not satisfied any of those three prongs. We therefore overrule his
    fourth point of error.
    In his fifth point of error, appellant asserts that his trial counsel were constitutionally
    ineffective because they failed to investigate Deputy Lass before calling her to the witness
    stand. As the State notes, it was appellant who suggested that his attorneys should call
    Deputy Lass.        Nonetheless, Deputy Lass’s testimony concerning her inappropriate
    relationship with appellant, her conduct in smuggling in a cell phone for him, and appellant’s
    confiding his murderous “escape plan” to her is so unexpected that we cannot find that
    counsel’s failure to independently investigate the potential for this type of relationship was
    deficient conduct.
    Counsel has a duty to conduct an independent investigation into the facts of the case
    and “should not blindly rely on the veracity either of his client’s version of the facts or
    33
    Gonzales v. State, 
    304 S.W.3d 838
    , 843 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).
    Gobert    Page 24
    witness statements in the State’s file.”34 But counsel’s duty to investigate his own witnesses
    and their relationship to the client is not absolute; he is obliged only to make a reasonable
    decision as to whether a particular investigation is necessary.35 Reviewing courts “must
    indulge [the] strong presumption” that counsel “made all significant decisions in the exercise
    of reasonable professional judgment.”36          Thus, “[j]ust as there is no expectation that
    competent counsel will be a flawless strategist or tactician, an attorney may not be faulted
    for a reasonable miscalculation or lack of foresight or for failing to prepare for what appear
    to be remote possibilities.” 37
    Appellant fails to explain why his counsel should have anticipated that Deputy Lass
    was carrying on an improper relationship with appellant and would testify to the cell-phone-
    smuggling incident or the “escape plan.” Appellant himself knew these facts, of course, but
    they are so unusual and unlikely that an objectively reasonable attorney is not deficient for
    failing to investigate the possibility of such a relationship before calling a deputy to testify
    to the lack of privacy in jail cells.38 We cannot conclude that counsel’s conduct in this regard
    34
    McFarland v. State, 
    928 S.W.2d 482
    , 501 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996).
    35
    Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 690-91 (1984) (“counsel has a duty to make
    reasonable investigations or to make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations
    unnecessary.”) (emphasis added).
    36
    
    Id. at 689-90.
           
    37 Harrington v
    . Richter, 
    131 S. Ct. 770
    , 791 (2011).
    38
    See 
    id. (counsel need
    not be prepared for “any contingency”; defense attorney was not
    ineffective for failing to retain forensic expert when he reasonably believed that State was not
    going to call its own forensic expert and State originally had not planned to call any expert).
    Gobert     Page 25
    fell below prevailing professional norms, especially as the prosecutors and trial judge were
    clearly just as astounded by this evidence as appellant’s counsel. The only two people who
    knew about this evidence were appellant and Deputy Lass; if appellant did not want this
    relationship exposed, he should not have suggested Deputy Lass as a witness.
    Appellant’s counsel had no reason to suspect any secret relationship between appellant
    and a law-enforcement officer and thus no reason to investigate that relationship or the
    officer’s background. “Counsel was entitled to formulate a strategy that was reasonable at
    the time and to balance limited resources in accord with effective trial tactics and
    strategies.”39 To hold otherwise, would require counsel to be prepared for “any contingency”
    regardless of how improbable or remote it may be and would require counsel to divert scarce
    resources to investigate minor law-enforcement witnesses whose veracity and integrity may
    normally be assumed.40
    Furthermore, we should not find that counsel’s failure to investigate Deputy Lass’s
    relationship with appellant before calling her as a minor witness was “so outrageous that no
    competent attorney would have engaged in it,” without affording counsel the opportunity to
    39
    See 
    id. at 789.
           40
    See 
    id. at 791
    (holding that lower court had erred in suggesting that counsel must be
    prepared for “any contingency”); Yarborough v. Gentry, 
    540 U.S. 1
    , 8 (2003) (per curiam)
    (stating that there is a “strong presumption” that counsel’s attention to certain issues to the
    exclusion of others reflects trial tactics rather than “sheer neglect”); Bobby v. Van Hook, 130 S.
    Ct. 13, 19 (2009) (per curiam) (counsel may avoid investigation likely to yield only cumulative
    evidence because it will “distract[] from more important duties”).
    Gobert    Page 26
    explain.41 Because appellant has not shown constitutionally deficient performance by his
    counsel, we need not address the second, prejudice prong of Strickland.42 We overrule
    appellant’s fifth point of error.
    Trial Counsel’s Statement that Appellant Was Testifying
    “Against the Advice of Counsel”
    In his sixth point of error, appellant complains that his trial counsel provided
    ineffective assistance of counsel by telling the jury that appellant was testifying against the
    advice of counsel. He claims that trial counsel undermined his Fifth and Sixth Amendment
    right to testify by letting the jury know that counsel thought it was a bad idea.
    At the end of the punishment phase, appellant’s counsel informed the trial judge,
    outside the presence of the jury, that appellant insisted on exercising his right to testify. All
    three defense counsel were concerned and registered their opposition, on the record, to
    appellant’s decision. When lead counsel began his direct examination of appellant before
    the jury, he acknowledged his disagreement with appellant’s decision to testify and
    characterized appellant’s decision to plead for his life as one that would subject him to
    41
    See Goodspeed v. State, 
    187 S.W.3d 390
    , 392 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005) (“‘[T]rial
    counsel should ordinarily be afforded an opportunity to explain his actions before being
    denounced as ineffective.’ Absent such an opportunity, an appellate court should not find
    deficient performance unless the challenged conduct was ‘so outrageous that no competent
    attorney would have engaged in it.’”) (citations and footnotes omitted).
    42
    
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694
    (to establish prejudice, a defendant must show “a
    reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding
    would have been different.”).
    Gobert    Page 27
    “dehumanization” by the prosecutor.43 This introductory colloquy–that appellant wanted to
    take the witness stand to make a plea for his life even though he knew the prosecutor would
    attempt to shred his story and dehumanize his actions–set the stage for the beginning of
    counsel’s impassioned closing argument at punishment: “Milton Dwayne Gobert wanted his
    opportunity to come up here and basically ask each one of you, don’t take my life. And I
    know he did something very terrible and it’s going to be hard for you to listen to his plea.
    All I can do is say, please, don’t take his life.” Then, at the end of his argument, counsel
    circled back again to the colloquy at the beginning of appellant’s testimony and plea for his
    life: “I am pleading with you. He pleaded with you. He said, spare my life, spare my life.”
    Appellant cites no case law from any jurisdiction holding that counsel’s introductory
    questions expressing concern about a defendant’s decision to testify and subject himself to
    cross-examination are constitutionally deficient. As the State points out, the limited authority
    43
    The colloquy was as follows:
    Q:     Mr. Gobert, you asked–you asked to address this jury; is that correct?
    A:     Yes, sir.
    Q:     Let me just go through some ground rules with you, okay, because you and I don’t
    necessarily agree with this, correct? It that right?
    A:     Yes, sir, we don’t agree.
    Q:     And you know that I have concerns that because you are taking the witness stand they are
    going to be able to question you about everything and try to make you look bad. You saw
    what happens on that witness stand to witnesses. You know what happens to them, don’t
    you?
    A:     Yeah. It is not a concern, though, to me.
    Q:     Okay. But you wanted to address this jury and make a plea for you life, didn’t you?
    A:     Yes, sir.
    Q:     Even though in making that plea for your life, now they are going to put you under
    intense cross-examination to dehumanize you. Do you know that?
    A:     Well, they did–done a lot of dehumanizing, yes, sir. I’m not concerned with that.
    Gobert    Page 28
    on this issue indicates that counsel’s conduct was both reasonable and non-prejudicial. The
    State cites to Noel v. Norris,44 in which the Eighth Circuit upheld the state court’s finding that
    counsel’s statement during direct examination that his client–a capital-murder defendant–was
    testifying against counsel’s advice “was designed to impress the jury with [the defendant’s]
    sincerity.”45 The Eighth Circuit held that “[t]he trial strategy that counsel pursued was not
    professionally unreasonable. Our conclusion finds strong support in the fact that [the
    defendant] could not identify, nor could we find, a single case where counsel, under similar
    facts, was found to be ineffective.” 46
    The record in this case reflects that counsel’s apparent strategy was a reasonable one:
    he was framing appellant’s decision to testify and plead for his life as something he felt so
    strongly about that he was willing to risk the consequences of a merciless cross-examination.
    As the State notes, “Counsel used the opportunity to frame the State’s subsequent cross-
    44
    
    322 F.3d 500
    (8th Cir. 2003).
    45
    
    Id. at 502.
    The colloquy in that case, as described by the Arkansas Supreme Court, was
    as follows:
    Q:      All right. Now, Riley, you’re taking the stand here because you want to tell the jury your
    story. Is that correct?
    A:      Yes, sir.
    Q:      And that’s over my advice?
    A:      Yes, sir.
    Q:      Against my advice?
    A:      Yes, sir.
    Noel v. State, 
    26 S.W.3d 123
    , 127 (Ark. 2000).
    
    46 322 F.3d at 502
    .
    Gobert    Page 29
    examination as dehumanizing not only of appellant but also of other witnesses.” 47
    Appellant asserts that the colloquy concerning the advisability of testifying takes place
    outside the presence of the jury, but “[i]n this case the colloquy took place in front of the
    jury, and was of benefit only to trial counsel,” not appellant.48 This is not entirely accurate.
    All three counsel expressed their disagreement with appellant’s decision to testify on the
    record outside the presence of the jury. Counsel had no need to “benefit himself” by
    repeating that disagreement in front of the jury. The record supports the inference that this
    strategy was designed to benefit his client and emphasize how strongly appellant wanted to
    make a sincere personal plea to the jury for mercy.
    We find that appellant has failed to establish that his counsel provided ineffective
    assistance of counsel in his strategy of framing appellant’s choice to testify despite counsel’s
    concerns about a “dehumanizing” cross-examination. Because we find that counsel’s
    performance was not constitutionally deficient, we need not address the second, prejudice
    prong of Strickland.49 We overrule appellant’s sixth point of error.
    The Search Warrant Affidavits
    In his seventh and final point of error, appellant claims that the trial judge erred in
    failing to grant his motion to suppress evidence of his DNA and items taken from his
    47
    State’s Brief at 59.
    48
    Appellant’s Brief at 33.
    
    49 466 U.S. at 694
    .
    Gobert    Page 30
    apartment and car under four separate search warrants. He argues that the first two
    affidavits did not establish probable cause to search and the second two affidavits were
    based, in part, on his illegally obtained confession. He claims that, without the inclusion of
    those statements, the magistrate lacked a substantial basis for concluding that there was
    probable cause to search appellant’s apartment or obtain his DNA. We conclude that all four
    affidavits contain sufficient, lawfully obtained, information to support a finding of probable
    cause to search.
    At a pretrial hearing, the trial judge granted appellant’s motion to suppress his
    confession. The judge found that, at the beginning of the interview, appellant had invoked
    his Fifth Amendment right to counsel, thus the detectives violated his Miranda rights in
    continuing to question him after that invocation.50 Appellant then filed a motion to suppress
    evidence obtained from four separate search warrants.
    At the suppression hearing, Officer Fuentes testified that he prepared affidavits on
    October 7, 2003, to search appellant’s apartment and car. He drafted those affidavits and
    search warrants–State’s Exhibit 5 & 6–at the time that appellant was being interviewed by
    others, and he did not rely upon any information from that ongoing interview. In his
    affidavit, Officer Fuentes relied upon information
    !       from Demetrius that the murderer was “a male, not white, with a shaved head
    and mustache wearing a striped shirt and silver shorts,” and Demestrius’s
    50
    The State pursued a pretrial appeal of this ruling, but this Court ultimately upheld the
    trial judge’s ruling excluding the confession. State v. Gobert, 
    275 S.W.3d 888
    , 889 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2009).
    Gobert    Page 31
    statement that the murderer put his mother’s purse inside a black bag that the
    man brought with him;
    !      from Christina Pocharansang that she suspected appellant was the murderer
    and her report that appellant had assaulted her the previous month, so she
    called Ms. Cotton to help her secretly move out of appellant’s apartment, that
    Ms. Cotton had several friends help her move out, but in the process “they
    stole some of Gobert’s property”;
    !      that appellant had open arrest warrants for parole violations and assault;
    !      that when officers went to arrest appellant at his apartment, the manager
    showed them appellant’s blue Taurus car;
    !      that when officers arrested appellant, they saw what appeared to be blood in
    several places on the living room carpet;
    !      that, after arresting appellant, one of the officers looked into appellant’s blue
    Taurus and saw “what appeared to be blood on the steering column and on the
    driver’s door lock”;
    !      that, after arresting appellant, the officers saw knife cuts on appellant’s hands;
    !      from appellant’s brother’s girlfriend that appellant arrived at their apartment
    shortly after the murders to take a shower and when he arrived he was carrying
    a black duffel bag.
    Officer Fuentes went through all of this information and verified that none of it came
    from appellant. The magistrate found probable cause to search both appellant’s apartment
    and car based on this information and officers conducted those searches, under warrant, the
    next day. They seized numerous items of evidentiary value.
    Detective Burgh then compiled a second search warrant for appellant’s apartment on
    October 15, 2003. This affidavit includes the same information as that in the first two
    affidavits, but added some information from appellant’s confession as well. The only
    Gobert    Page 32
    evidence seized under this third warrant was a black and blue bag with toiletries in it. Det.
    Burgh also compiled a November 5, 2003, search warrant and affidavit to collect appellant’s
    DNA. That affidavit included the same information that was in the October 7th affidavits as
    well as information from appellant’s confession.
    The trial judge overruled the motion to suppress evidence and entered findings that
    the first two search warrant affidavits contained sufficient facts to establish probable cause
    and the second two affidavits contained sufficient facts to establish probable cause, even
    after appellant’s illegally obtained statements were excluded.
    The Fourth Amendment expresses a strong preference for searches to be conducted
    pursuant to a search warrant based on probable cause.51 “Probable cause for a search warrant
    exists if, under the totality of the circumstances presented to the magistrate, there is at least
    a ‘fair probability’ or ‘substantial chance’ that contraband or evidence of a crime will be
    found at the specified location.”52 Our duty, and that of the trial judge, in reviewing the
    magistrate’s finding of probable cause “is simply to ensure that the magistrate had a
    substantial basis for concluding that probable cause existed.” 53 As appellant aptly noted,
    reviewing courts do not act as a “rubber stamp,” but “the magistrate’s decision should carry
    51
    Illinois v. Gates, 
    462 U.S. 213
    , 236 (1983); Rodriguez v. State, 
    232 S.W.3d 55
    , 61
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2007).
    52
    Flores v. State, 
    319 S.W.3d 697
    , 702 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010) (citing 
    Gates, 462 U.S. at 243
    n.13).
    53
    
    Flores, 319 S.W.3d at 702
    .
    Gobert   Page 33
    the day in doubtful or marginal cases, even if the reviewing court might reach a different
    result upon de novo review.” 54
    Appellant argues that, at the time the first two affidavits were drawn up, “there was
    a lot of circumstantial evidence included, but the crux of the affidavits” was Christina’s
    “guess” that appellant was the murderer. We disagree. The magistrate had before him not
    only Christina’s suspicion, but also her cogent reasons for that suspicion, as well as the
    evidence of bloodstains on appellant’s carpet, bloodstains on his car steering column and
    driver’s door lock, evidence of cuts–apparently superficial knife wounds–on appellant’s
    hands, evidence that appellant had arrived at his brother’s apartment shortly after the murders
    to take a quick shower and then leave, and Demetrius’s description of the murderer–a
    description consistent with appellant’s appearance.
    Based on the totality of the information contained in the first two affidavits and giving
    “great deference” to the magistrate’s finding, we agree that the magistrate had a “substantial
    basis” for concluding that the affidavits established probable cause to search appellant’s car
    and apartment.55 Thus, the trial judge did not err in denying appellant’s motion to suppress
    evidence obtained as a result of the first two search warrants.
    As for the second two search warrants, State’s Exhibits 7 & 8, the affiant repeated,
    54
    Appellant’s Brief at 36 (quoting WAYNE LA FAVE , SEARCH AND SEIZURE: A TREATISE
    th
    ON THE FOURTH AMENDMENT § 11.7(c) at 452 (4 ed. 2004 & Supp. 2009-2010)).
    55
    State v. Jordan, 
    342 S.W.3d 565
    , 569 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011); 
    Flores, 319 S.W.3d at 702
    .
    Gobert    Page 34
    almost verbatim, all of the information contained in the first two affidavits and then added
    more facts gleaned from appellant’s illegally obtained confession. However, we agree with
    the trial judge’s finding that, excising the additional information from that confession, there
    is still ample information in the affidavits to support the second search of appellant’s
    apartment and the search to obtain his DNA.56
    We therefore overrule appellant’s final point of error.
    Finding no reversible error, we affirm the trial court’s judgment and sentence.
    Delivered: November 23, 2011
    Do Not Publish
    56
    See United States v. Karo, 
    468 U.S. 705
    , 721 (1984) (search-warrant affidavit, after
    striking of facts about illegal beeper monitoring inside a residence, contained sufficient untainted
    information to establish probable cause for issuance of search warrant); United States v.
    Restrepo, 
    966 F.2d 964
    , 970-71 (5th Cir. 1992) (in assessing whether search warrant contains
    sufficient untainted information to establish probable cause, court should excise illegally
    obtained information and then decide whether remaining information suffices); cf. Franks v.
    Delaware, 
    438 U.S. 154
    , 155-56 (1978) (in deciding whether intentional misrepresentations in
    warrant affidavit require suppression of evidence obtained as a result of search, courts must
    excise the false information and decide if sufficient, untainted information exists to establish
    probable cause in affidavit); Klingenstein v. State, 
    624 A.2d 532
    , 538 (Md. 1993) (the existence
    of tainted information in search-warrant affidavit does not necessarily render warrant invalid;
    remaining, untainted information should be examined to determine if it suffices to establish
    probable cause).