Fourth Court of Appeals
San Antonio, Texas
MEMORANDUM OPINION
No. 04-14-00382-CR
Rene ESCALANTE,
Appellant
v.
The
The STATE of Texas,
Appellee
From the 452nd Judicial District Court, Edwards County, Texas
Trial Court No. 1679
The Honorable Robert Hoffman, Judge Presiding
Opinion by: Karen Angelini, Justice
Sitting: Karen Angelini, Justice
Marialyn Barnard, Justice
Rebeca C. Martinez, Justice
Delivered and Filed: June 10, 2015
AFFIRMED
A jury convicted Rene Escalante of arson. On appeal, Escalante argues the evidence was
insufficient to support his conviction because the State failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt
that the fire was deliberately set and that he set the fire. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
At approximately 11:30 p.m. on September 5, 2013, Edwards County sheriff deputies
were dispatched to the scene of a fire at a house located at 306 South College Street in Rocksprings,
Texas. The inhabitants of the house, who were at home when the fire started, were able to escape
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unharmed. The first deputy to arrive at the scene noticed that the fire was coming from a storage
shed at the back of the house. Firefighters soon arrived and extinguished the fire.
The sheriff’s deputies talked to witnesses at the scene and began an investigation into the
cause of the fire. The next morning, a deputy state fire marshal examined the site where the fire
took place and concluded that the fire had been deliberately set. Escalante was subsequently
indicted for arson, and pled not guilty. The case was tried to a jury, which found Escalante guilty
as charged in the indictment. Escalante appealed.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
In a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, we review all of the evidence in the light
most favorable to the jury’s verdict and determine whether, based on that evidence and the
reasonable inferences therefrom, a jury was rationally justified in finding guilt beyond a reasonable
doubt. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 318-19 (1979); Merritt v. State, 368 S.W.3d 516, 525
(Tex. Crim. App. 2012); Brooks v. State, 323 S.W.3d 893, 899 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010). “It is the
State’s burden to prove each element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt, not to exclude
every conceivable alternative to a defendant’s guilt.” Merritt, 368 S.W.3d at 525.
In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, we look at events occurring before, during,
and after the commission of the offense. Hooper v. State, 214 S.W.3d 9, 13 (Tex. Crim. App.
2007). “Each fact need not point directly and independently to the guilt of the appellant, as long
as the cumulative force of all the incriminating circumstances is sufficient to support the
conviction.” Id. As the reviewing court, we give deference to the responsibility of the trier of fact
to fairly resolve conflicts in testimony, to weigh the evidence, and to draw reasonable inferences
from basic facts to ultimate facts. Jackson, 443 U.S. at 318-19; Hooper, 214 S.W.3d at 13. We
determine whether the necessary inferences are reasonable based upon the combined and
cumulative force of all the evidence when viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict. Clayton
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v. State, 235 S.W.3d 772, 778 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007). In evaluating the legal sufficiency of the
evidence, we consider all of the evidence that sustains the conviction, whether properly or
improperly admitted and whether introduced by the prosecution or the defense. Simpson v. State,
227 S.W.3d 855, 861 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2007, no pet.) (citing Conner v. State, 67
S.W.3d 192, 197 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001)).
A criminal conviction may be based upon either direct or circumstantial evidence. See
Merritt, 368 S.W.3d at 525. Circumstantial evidence is as probative as direct evidence in
establishing the guilt of an actor, and circumstantial evidence alone can be sufficient to establish
guilt. Id.; Hooper, 214 S.W.3d at 13.
CHALLENGED ELEMENTS OF ARSON
A person commits the offense of arson if the person “starts a fire, regardless of whether the
fire continues after ignition, or causes an explosion with intent to destroy or damage any building,
habitation, or vehicle knowing that it is within the limits of an incorporated city or town.” TEX.
PENAL CODE ANN. § 28.02(a)(2)(A) (West 2011). Thus, to establish the crime of arson, one of the
elements that the State must prove is that someone “designedly” set the fire. See Adrian v. State,
587 S.W.2d 733, 735 (Tex. Crim. App. 1979). “The essential element of the crime of arson is the
willful burning of the building, without which that crime has not been committed.” Massey v. State,
226 S.W.2d 856, 859 (Tex. Crim. App. 1950). Mere proof that the building burned is not sufficient.
Id. “There must be some testimony showing that the fire was of incendiary origin—that is, that
someone willfully burned the building.” Id.
The State also must prove that the accused set the fire or was criminally connected to the
setting of the fire. Merritt, 368 S.W.3d at 525. The latter element is sometimes referred to as
“identity.” See id. at 524-25 “There must be some proof, direct or circumstantial, showing the
willful burning of the building by [someone] and the criminal connection of the accused
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therewith.…” Massey, 226 S.W.2d at 859. Although motive and opportunity are not elements of
arson, they are circumstances indicative of guilt. Merritt, 368 S.W.3d at 526.
FIRE DELIBERATELY SET
In this case, Escalante challenges the sufficiency of the evidence as to two elements of
arson: (1) that the fire was deliberately set, and (2) that he was the person who set the fire. 1 We
first examine the record for evidence that the fire was deliberately set. The only witness to testify
on this issue was Greg Houston, a deputy state fire marshal. Houston testified that he was
dispatched to Rocksprings on the morning of September 6, 2013, to conduct an origin and cause
investigation for the fire that occurred at 306 South College Street. The purpose of an origin and
cause investigation is to determine what caused the fire and how it was caused. Arriving on scene
at about 9:30 a.m., Houston saw crime scene tape surrounding the property. The structure on the
property was a blue house with an affixed storage room at its northeast corner. The house had a
handicap access ramp leading to the back door. Fire debris was visible. Houston also noticed a
lawn chair by the fence at the rear of the property.
Houston began by conducting a scene examination, which is a systematic procedure he
uses in all his investigations. Houston begins his scene examination by examining the property
around the burned structures for burn pits, burn barrels, campfires, or other similar items. He then
proceeds to the interior of the burned structures to examine them. As Houston conducts his scene
examination, he looks for competent ignition sources. Houston explained that there are some
1
In support of his argument, Escalante cites two cases in which the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals found the
evidence legally insufficient to support an arson conviction. See Baugh v. State, 776 S.W.2d 583 (Tex. Crim. App.
1989); O’Keefe v. State, 687 S.W.2d 345 (Tex. Crim. App. 1985). Escalante acknowledges that these cases employed
the “outdated ‘reasonable hypothesis’” analysis, but nevertheless contends they are instructive here. We disagree.
Because Baugh and O’Keefe applied a different legal standard, one that required evidence negating every reasonable
hypothesis except arson, they are not instructive here. See McNeil v. State, 398 S.W.3d 747, 760 (Tex. App.—Houston
[1st Dist.] 2011, pet. ref’d) (concluding that Baugh and O’Keefe were inapposite because they were based on “a
defunct legal standard.”).
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ignition sources that are accidental, such as an electrical fault, an appliance fault, a burning candle,
or a cigarette; and there are other ignition sources that are deliberate. In conducting a scene
examination, Houston looks for fire travel and fire patterns as well as heat and smoke damage. He
also takes photographs of the scene as he performs his examination. After conducting a scene
examination, Houston reaches an independent conclusion about where the fire started. Thereafter,
Houston conducts witness interviews and further evaluates his initial conclusion.
Based on the scene examination he performed at 306 South College Street, Houston
concluded that the fire originated just inside the storage room. Houston found no signs of an
electrical fault, either in the shed or the circuit panel box. Houston examined the wiring for the
house and found no evidence of any arcing in the wiring, which can start a fire. None of the items
in the kitchen were the source of ignition for this fire. Neither the toaster nor the microwave had
any internal damage, the power cords plugged into the outlets were still completely intact, and the
only damage to the outlets themselves was exterior damage. Houston further found that there were
no appliances in the storage shed, and there were no signs that anyone had been cooking in the
shed. During his examination, Houston also ruled out that the source of the fire was “self-heating.”
Houston explained that a trained canine was brought to the scene to determine if the shed contained
any products known to contribute to self-heating, such as linseed oil or petroleum-based paint
thinners or ethers. The canine did not indicate that any such material was at the scene in this case.
Additionally, Houston found no barbecue or grill at the scene, nor did he find any discarded
cigarettes. Houston said he considered discarded cigarettes because one of the inhabitants of the
house stated that she sometimes smoked outside. Houston considered this possible source, but he
eventually ruled it out based on the timing. According to Houston, a discarded cigarette would not
have had sufficient time to ignite any of the combustible materials that were in the storage room.
He explained that a cigarette—in and of itself—does not put off enough heat to self-ignite when it
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is just thrown onto a piece of paper. According to Houston, a cigarette dissipates the heat faster
than it generates it.
Houston ruled out any ignitable liquid as a source, such as Molotov cocktails, gas cans,
and charcoal lighter bottles because the canine did not alert to the presence of any of the chemicals
associated with these sources. Additionally, samples of debris from the storage room underwent
laboratory testing. The lab test results revealed no ignitable liquid in the storage room. Houston
ruled out the possibility that grass, brush, or trash ignited and caused the fire because there was no
indication of any such burning being done, either on the exterior of the structure or inside the
storage room. Houston ruled out lightning as a source because there were no storms reported in
the vicinity on the night of the fire. Houston ruled out candles, which is a type of accidental open
flame. Houston ruled out candles as a source because one of the inhabitants of the house told him
she was allergic to candles and had no candles on the property.
Based on the scene examination, the canine’s failure to alert to the presence of certain
chemicals, and the laboratory test results, Houston concluded that the fire was started by “some
type of intentional introduction of an unknown open flame, like a match or a lighter, to the
materials that were located within the storage room, namely magazines, newspapers, cardboard
boxes, and rags, and then whatever was used to ignite it was taken away from the scene.”
Furthermore, based on the totality of circumstances, and after ruling out other possible causes,
Houston opined that the fire was caused by arson.
On cross-examination, defense counsel pressed Houston about other potential causes for
the fire. First, defense counsel asked if the existence of a light in the storage shed would alter his
opinion about the cause of the fire. Houston acknowledged that his initial opinion did not take into
account the existence of a light in the storage shed, primarily because the inhabitants of the house
had said there was no light in the storage shed. However, Houston explained that even if there was
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a light in the storage shed, it would not change his opinion in this case because he was able to rule
out a light as the source of the fire based on the burn patterns and the damage to the storage shed.
Houston explained that this evidence indicated that the fire started low to the ground. If a light had
been the source of the fire, the fire would have started higher up in the room. Next, defense counsel
asked Houston whether a discarded cigarette could have been the source of the fire. Houston was
aware that one of the inhabitants was a smoker, but he did not believe that a discarded cigarette
was the source of the fire here. Houston explained that studies have shown that when a burning
cigarette is laid down on a piece of paper, the heat dissipates too quickly for it to cause the total
ignition and combustion of the paper. When pressed by defense counsel, Houston acknowledged
that a burning cigarette could cause a fire under certain conditions. For example, if a burning
cigarette landed on some leaves, and sunk down into the leaves, and if there was enough wind, the
cigarette could be a source of ignition. Finally, Houston said he was aware that house painters had
stored some painting equipment in the shed in July 2013. Houston acknowledged that under some
circumstances rags soaked in paint thinners or other products could spontaneously ignite.
On re-direct examination, Houston testified that none of the scenarios posed to him by
defense counsel changed his opinion that the fire was deliberately set. Houston explained that if
the fire was caused by rags containing paint thinners or other flammable liquids, the canine would
have alerted to the presence of these chemicals. He further explained that spontaneous ignition
typically occurs when a cluster of rags is wadded up and placed together in a can. Under this
scenario, some remnants of the rags survive the fire. In this case, however, no such remnants were
found in the debris. Houston also testified that—regardless of the existence of a light in the shed—
faulty wiring did not cause the fire because the fire started down low in the room. Houston also
pointed out that he examined all the wiring and found no signs of arcing. Finally, Houston
addressed the theory that the fire was caused by a cigarette discarded by one of the inhabitants of
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the house. Houston had ruled out a cigarette as the cause of the fire because studies have found
that heat dissipates too quickly for it to cause the total ignition and combustion of paper. Houston
also thought that the timing did not support this theory; for a cigarette to have caused the fire it
would have had to have smoldered over the span of several hours. Furthermore, during the scene
examination, Houston did not find any cigarette butts in the area where the fire originated. Houston
explained that a cigarette does not burn up entirely because its filter is made of fiberglass. In other
words, if a discarded cigarette had caused the fire, some trace of the cigarette would have remained.
In his briefing, Escalante argues the evidence in this case was insufficient to support a
finding that the fire was deliberately set because Houston failed to take into account three factors:
(1) the existence of a light in the shed; (2) the fact that one of the house’s inhabitants was a smoker
who routinely smoked just outside the back door; and (3) the possibility that the fire could have
ignited from the combustion of painting products. We disagree. As shown above, Houston
considered and ruled out each of these factors and stated that none of them altered his opinion that
the fire was caused by arson. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict,
we conclude that the evidence was sufficient to support the finding that the fire was deliberately
set.
CONNECTION TO THE FIRE
We next examine the record for evidence that Escalante set the fire. At trial, the State
presented numerous witnesses and photographs as well as a note and an audiotape recording. The
evidence most pertinent to this issue is summarized below.
Carolyn Williams
The first witness to testify at trial was Carolyn Williams. Williams lived at the house at
306 South College Street for about five years. The house was owned by her brother. Williams
explained that there was a shed or a storage room at the back of the house, which contained
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miscellaneous items including boxes. The shed and the house were connected by a common roof.
The door to the shed was never locked.
In July 2013, Williams, who was disabled and used a wheelchair, asked Maria Gonzales if
she would come to work for her as a caregiver. Gonzales agreed and came to live with Williams.
Escalante would sometimes come to the house to visit Gonzales. Because Gonzales did not have
a cell phone, Escalante would send text messages for Gonzales to Williams’s cell phone. Williams
would let Gonzales use her cell phone to view the text messages from Escalante.
Williams characterized the relationship between Escalante and Gonzales as adversarial.
Williams testified that Escalante typically would come to the back of the house to talk to Gonzales
or to wait for her. Escalante would sometimes sit on a lounge chair behind the house, waiting for
Gonzales to come back to talk to him.
On the evening of September 5, 2013, Gonzales left the house to visit friends who lived
down the street. Gonzales returned at around 11:30 p.m. According to Williams, Gonzales was
“mildly hysterical” when she returned. Escalante had been waiting for Gonzales outside the house.
Because Gonzales had dropped her keys, she banged on the door and asked Williams to let her in.
Williams let Gonzales in, then made sure the door was locked behind her. About thirty minutes
later, while Williams and Gonzales were talking in the bedroom, Williams heard a crackling noise.
Gonzales went to check on the noise and discovered a fire at the back of the house. Williams called
911. Williams could see the flames of the fire through the back door window. Because of the
flames, Williams could not leave the house through the back door. Williams exited the house
through the front door, which was not equipped with a ramp for her wheelchair. The wheelchair
ramp was located at the back of the house, but the ramp was on fire. Neighbors assisted Williams
in getting down her front porch steps and across the street. Once she had crossed the street,
Williams could see the smoke and flames coming up from behind the house.
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Williams never saw Escalante on the property on the night of the fire; however, she did
hear his voice when Gonzales returned to the house that night. Williams could tell that Escalante
and Gonzales were arguing.
Maria Gonzales
Maria Gonzales testified that Escalante was her common law husband. The two had been
together since 1998. She described their relationship as physically, verbally, and mentally abusive.
Gonzales was released from jail in July 2013 after serving a sentence for assaulting Escalante.
Escalante had also assaulted Gonzales in the past.
When Gonzales was released from jail, she accepted a job as Williams’s caregiver and
went to live with her in the house at 306 South College Street. In August 2013, Gonzales and
Escalante started seeing each other again. Escalante begged Gonzales to come home to live with
him, but she refused. The two began to argue again. When Gonzales was not comfortable with the
way Escalante was acting, she avoided him. When Escalante could not get in touch with Gonzales,
he would go crazy. He would call her on the landline telephone at Williams’s house, and if he
could not reach Gonzales on that line, he would call her on Williams’s cell phone.
Gonzales knew that Escalante watched her. When Escalante called her, he would ask her
where she was the night before. Or, Escalante would mention that he had been at Gonzales’s
window and had heard her talking on the phone. Gonzales, who was a cigarette smoker, would
sometimes go outside to smoke behind the house. Sometimes Gonzales would find evidence that
Escalante had been there. On some occasions, a patio chair would be moved from its usual place
to under a tree in the yard. Once Gonzales found a pack of cigarettes, apparently left for her by
Escalante.
Three nights before the fire, Escalante had called Gonzales and asked her if she was going
to come over. Gonzales told him she was not, and she did not want him to come over to see her.
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Escalante did not take this well. Escalante wanted to know if she was seeing someone else.
Escalante wanted to know why Gonzales kept doing this to him. Gonzales told him that she did
not want to be with him anymore. Escalante told Gonzales that he would come see her if he felt
like seeing her.
The day before the fire, Gonzales and a friend were walking to the store when Escalante
appeared out of nowhere and started talking to Gonzales. Gonzales ignored him. Escalante kept
saying, “Oh really?” When Gonzales came out of the store, Escalante was still there and continued
talking to Gonzales and calling her names. Gonzales told Escalante she was not going to have a
confrontation in public, and she walked away from him.
At around 4:00 or 5:00 p.m. on September 5, 2013, Gonzales was outside socializing at a
motel where two of her friends lived. Escalante’s cousin walked by, saw Gonzales, and stopped to
talk. Gonzales told Escalante’s cousin not to tell Escalante where she was. Nevertheless, about an
hour and a half later, Escalante walked by the motel. Gonzales went inside to avoid Escalante.
When Gonzales was ready to go home that night, her friends walked her part of the way home. As
Gonzales approached the deck behind the house, she heard Escalante call out to her and say that
they needed to talk. Gonzales told Escalante she did not want to talk to him. At that point, a motion
detector light turned on and Gonzales could see that Escalante was close. Gonzales ran up the deck,
unlocked and opened the door, and went inside. 2 When she was inside, she told Williams that
Escalante was outside and wanting to talk to her, but she did not want to talk to him. Gonzales also
told Williams not to answer the phone.
About ten or fifteen minutes later, Gonzales and Williams heard a noise that sounded like
the crackling of wood. Gonzales looked out the back door toward the deck and she could see flames
2
Here, Gonzales’s testimony differed from Williams’s testimony. Williams testified that she opened the door for
Gonzales who had dropped her keys.
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coming out of the door to the shed. Williams called 911. Because the area around the back door
was engulfed in flames, Gonzales and Williams exited the house through the front door. Gonzales
spoke to the first deputy to arrive on the scene. Gonzales told the deputy that Escalante was trying
to kill her. Gonzales was convinced that Escalante had started the fire.
The next morning Gonzales noticed that a chair had been set up against the fence on the
property. On the ground below the chair were multiple beer cans, cigarette butts, and a sack of
mulch. Gonzales noticed that the chair was in an unusual place. The chair had been positioned as
far back on the lot as it could go. Escalante had never placed the chair up against the fence like
that; he usually placed it under a tree.
Gonzales also testified about a series of text messages she received on Williams’s cell from
Escalante on September 6, 2013. The first text message, which was sent at 12:28 a.m., stated: “So
what? You with someone else? He walked you home?” According to Gonzales, the second text
message, which was sent at 1:17 a.m., stated: “So what, you be with someone else? Be a woman
and answer me.” The second text also accused Gonzales of “messing around.” The third text, which
was sent at 1:19 a.m., stated: “What, you ain’t got enough balls?” The fourth text, sent at 2:07 a.m.,
stated: “So what up? You going to answer or not?” The fifth text, sent at 2:17 a.m., stated: “So
what up Chiquita? I love you, mi amor. Love you mi amor con todo mi corazon. Always and
forever.” The sixth text, sent at 3:07 a.m., stated: “Cops were here. What? You got a restraining
order or what? You seeing someone else? Don’t lie to me. Please. That’s all I ask.” The seventh
and final text, sent at 10:54 p.m. states, “What the fuck happened?” Photographs of the text
messages were also admitted into evidence.
Finally, Gonzales testified that Escalante had recently burned some of her clothing. When
Gonzales was released from jail and decided to work for Williams, she went to Escalante’s house
to retrieve her clothes. All of Gonzales’s dresses, about twenty total, were gone. At the time, she
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assumed that Escalante had simply placed the dresses in a bag and put them outside in the shed
because he was mad at her. Gonzales went to the shed to look for the dresses, but they were not
there. A few weeks later, after she and Escalante started seeing each other again, she asked
Escalante about her dresses. Escalante told her that he had burned them all. When she asked him
why he had done that, he said he just did. Escalante added that some of her dresses took him longer
to burn because they meant more to him.
Dennis Mitchell
Dennis Mitchell testified that he lives in Rocksprings and owns the property immediately
behind 306 South College Street. A fence runs along the property line. On the night of the fire,
Mitchell arrived home sometime between 11:00 p.m. and 12:30 a.m. When Mitchell arrived home,
the fire was already burning. Initially, Mitchell watched the fire from the front of his house; later,
he watched the fire from his backyard. While in the backyard, Mitchell saw Escalante sitting in a
chair and watching the fire. The chair was placed far away from the fire, up against the fence.
Escalante was drinking beer. Mitchell, who knows Escalante, did not say anything to him. The
next morning, Mitchell noticed empty beer cans on the ground by the chair where Escalante had
been sitting and a sack of fertilizer. Mitchell recalled that Escalante had propped his feet up on the
sack while he watched the fire burn.
Yesenia Flores
Yesenia Flores, a former Edwards County sheriff’s deputy, testified that she was the first
deputy to arrive on the scene of the fire at 306 South College Street. Flores described Gonzales’s
demeanor at the time as scared and hysterical. Gonzales told Flores about how Escalante had
confronted her outside of Williams’s house shortly before the fire and how she had refused to talk
to him. Gonzales also told Flores that she thought Escalante had set the fire because he wanted to
kill her. Based on Gonzales’s story, Flores thought the fire was set intentionally. After the fire was
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out and the site was secure, Flores and another officer went to Escalante’s house to talk to him.
They knocked on the door repeatedly, but Escalante did not answer the door. A few days later,
Flores reviewed a videotape taken at a local convenience store at 6:00 a.m. on September 6, 2013.
The videotape showed Escalante buying a twenty-ounce bottle of Coca-Cola.
Mark Allen Cox
Cox testified that he was also employed as an Edwards County sheriff’s deputy. Cox said
he arrived at the fire at 306 South College Street at 12:35 a.m. on September 6, 2013. According
to Cox, the fire was extinguished by 1:08 a.m. At around 2:00 a.m. or 2:15 a.m., Cox went to
Escalante’s house to talk to him. Cox was accompanied by Flores. Cox worked his way around the
house, knocking on all its doors and windows. No one responded. Cox said he knocked so loudly
that he was concerned that Escalante’s neighbors would complain.
Later that morning, Cox returned to 306 South College Street. Cox noticed a Coca-Cola
bottle on the handrail of the ramp that led to the back door. Under the Coca-Cola bottle was a
handwritten note from Escalante to Gonzales. The Coca-Cola bottle and the note were not there
the night before. At trial, Cox read portions of the note, which stated in part: “Chiquita, what is
your problem? Are you seeing someone else or what? Just let me know. Someone was walking
you home last night, right?” The note also stated, “Is this what you really want? Why?” The Coca-
Cola bottle and the note placed Escalante at the scene of the house after the firefighters and
deputies had left.
Bobby Buscha
Another deputy sheriff, Bobby Buscha, testified that he participated in the investigation of
this case. The day after the fire, he and Cox located Escalante at his workplace. Buscha drove
Escalante to the sheriff’s office so Cox could interview him. On the way to the police station,
Buscha went to 306 South College Street. When they drove up to the house, which was obviously
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damaged by the fire, Escalante yelled something to the effect of, “What the fuck happened? Where
is my wife?” Escalante’s reaction was “extremely loud,” “startling,” and “it seemed a bit
exaggerated.” Escalante said nothing about going to the house earlier that morning to leave a note
and a Coca-Cola bottle on the ramp handrail.
Greg Houston
In addition to his testimony about the origin and cause of the fire, Houston testified that
when he arrived at 306 South College Street on the morning of September 6, 2013, the house was
cordoned off with crime scene tape. Houston noticed and photographed the Coca-Cola bottle and
the note on the handrail. Houston pointed out these items could not have been there during the fire
because the objects were devoid of smoke or soot deposits.
Rene Escalante
Escalante testified on his own behalf at trial. Escalante denied that he set the fire at 306
South College Street. Escalante admitted that while Gonzales was in jail he had burned two or
three of her dresses. Escalante said that Gonzales had been losing a lot of weight, and he had
bought all of her clothes. At the time, Escalante was cleaning out his closet, and he burned some
of his own clothes with some of Gonzales’s dresses. Escalante added that the dresses he burned
were stained. Escalante had a hole in his back yard, where he burned stuff all the time. Escalante
also gave about 10 or 12 of Gonzales’s dresses to his next door neighbor.
Escalante testified about the status of his relationship with Gonzales. Gonzales and
Escalante resumed their relationship when Gonzales was released from jail. Sometimes Gonzales
would spend the night at his house, and sometimes he would stay with her at the house at 306
South College Street. Escalante had been inside the shed; he had helped Gonzales move boxes in
there. Escalante and Gonzales would sometimes sit outside on the back porch. Escalante said he
had a job opportunity in Seguin, and he and Gonzales had planned to move there together.
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However, Escalante also noticed that Gonzales was becoming more irritable. Escalante attributed
Gonzales’s irritability to stress related to her work. Escalante said that he and Gonzales were trying
to give each other a little bit of space. Escalante denied that he was stalking Gonzales.
On September 5, 2013, Escalante came home from work at around 5:30 p.m. Escalante
walked by the motel and saw Gonzales outside on the porch with some of her friends. When
Gonzales saw Escalante, she went inside. This struck Escalante as odd, and he wondered why
Gonzales was hiding from him. Escalante then went to talk to neighbors, grabbed some dinner out,
bought a six-pack of beer, drank two beers, and continued to socialize with neighbors. Escalante
decided to go to 306 South College Street to wait for Gonzales to come home, which was not
uncommon for him to do. When he arrived at the house, Escalante grabbed a chair at the back of
the house and sat there, drinking beers, smoking a couple of cigarettes, and playing games on his
phone. Over the course of the evening, Escalante consumed two Smirnoffs, a six-pack of beer, and
a natural light. When Escalante saw Gonzales walking toward the house, he got up and walked
toward her. Gonzales told him that she did not want to talk to him. Escalante explained that he
wanted to talk to her, but Gonzales refused and told him he needed to go home. Gonzales unlocked
the door, walked in, and told him again that he needed to leave. Gonzales warned him that if he
did not leave, she would call the police. At that point, Escalante said that he walked back down
the ramp and off the property and went straight home. Escalante denied that he stopped by the
shed, walked in, and lit something in there on fire. Escalante added that it would not have been
easy for him to get into the shed because the nearby walkway and the door were “booby trapped”
with posthole diggers and other equipment.
Escalante testified that he arrived home at about 11:00 p.m. Escalante started texting
Gonzales around 12:30 a.m. because he could not fall sleep. Escalante was irritated when Gonzales
did not respond, but said that this was pretty typical for their relationship. Escalante then fell
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asleep. Escalante said he never heard the deputies knock on the door, explaining that his room is
in the middle of the house. At around 3:00 a.m., Escalante sent Gonzales a text that made reference
to the cops’ presence at his house because he had received a notification on Facebook. Escalante
woke up at 4:30 a.m., wrote the note to Gonzales, and took it over to the house at 306 South College
Street before 5:00 a.m. Escalante did not see the crime scene tape around the property, and did not
remember crossing the tape. It was still dark out. Escalante walked up to the back door ramp
railing, set the note on the railing, and placed the Coca-Cola bottle on top of it. Escalante said that
he had obtained the Coca-Cola bottle from his house. Escalante then went home, finished making
his lunch, and went to work.
Later that day, a sheriff’s deputy arrived at Escalante’s work, and said that one of the
deputies wanted to talk to him. The deputy drove Escalante to the house at 306 South College
Street. This was the first time Escalante noticed that there had been a fire at the house, and he was
concerned for Gonzales and Williams. During his interview, Escalante told the deputy that the
biggest problem he and Gonzales had was that she did not want to come home to live with him. 3
On cross-examination, Escalante admitted that he carried a lighter on him. He further
admitted that on the evening of September 5, 2013, he sat on the lawn chair in the back yard, drank
beer, and smoked cigarettes. Nevertheless, Escalante denied that he sat there watching the fire as
it burned. Escalante said that Mitchell’s claim that he had seen him watching the fire was a lie.
Escalante denied that he was intoxicated on September 5, 2013, or that he sometimes lost his
memory when he was intoxicated. Escalante denied that he was stalking Gonzales. Escalante said
that when he left the note and the Coca-Cola bottle on the ramp handrail he did not notice that the
house and storage room had been burned.
3
The jury also heard the audio recording of this interview.
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In reviewing sufficiency of the evidence, we look at events occurring before, during, and
after the commission of the offense. Hooper, 214 S.W.3d at 13. The facts need not point directly
and independently to the guilt of the appellant. Id. We consider whether the cumulative force of
all the incriminating circumstances is sufficient to support the conviction. Id. The jury is the sole
judge of credibility and weight to be attached to the testimony of witnesses. Merritt, 368 S.W.3d
at 525. The jury is permitted to draw multiple reasonable inferences from facts, as long as each is
supported by the evidence presented at trial. Id.
Viewed in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict, there was sufficient evidence to
support the jury’s finding that Escalante set the fire. Escalante knew the layout of the house and
was familiar with the storage shed and its contents. Three days before the fire, Gonzales had told
Escalante that she did not want to be with him anymore. Escalante nevertheless followed Gonzales
around town, trying to talk to her. Gonzales repeatedly avoided him. Escalante was angry and
jealous as established by the testimony of several witnesses, text messages, and a note. It is
undisputed that Escalante was on the property shortly before the fire. Escalante was sitting in a
chair behind the house waiting for Gonzales. However, when Gonzales came home, she refused to
talk to him. Just ten or fifteen minutes after Gonzales refused to talk to Escalante, Gonzales and
Williams heard the crackling of wood and noticed the flames outside the back door. While the
structures were burning and the firefighters were trying to extinguish the fire, a neighbor saw
Escalante sitting in a chair at the back of the property and drinking beer. The next morning,
Gonzales noticed a chair positioned at the back of the property. The ground below the chair was
littered with beer cans and cigarette butts. The chair was in an unusual place; it was situated against
the fence, as far away from the house as possible.
Escalante’s own account of the events of September 5 and 6, 2013, further supported the
jury’s finding that Escalante deliberately set the fire. Parts of Escalante’s story were contradicted
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by other evidence. Escalante testified that he was home by 11:00 p.m. on September 5, 2013.
However, several hours later, when law enforcement officers visited his house and knocked on the
doors and windows, Escalante did not respond. Other evidence showed that Escalante was aware
of the visit from law enforcement officers, because he sent a text message to Gonzales at 3:00 a.m.
stating the cops had been to his house. Escalante also testified that he went to 306 South College
Street before 5:00 a.m. on September 6, 2013, to leave a note for Gonzales, and that he brought a
bottle of Coca-Cola from his house. Escalante further testified that after he delivered these items,
he went home, made his lunch, and went to work. However, a convenience store videotape showed
Escalante buying a bottle of Coca-Cola at 6:00 a.m. on September 6, 2013. When a deputy brought
Escalante to the house the next day, Escalante acted like he was unaware that the house had been
destroyed by fire. According to one deputy, Escalante’s reaction seemed “extremely loud” and
“exaggerated.” Escalante should not have been surprised by the fire because he had been to the
house earlier that morning and the fire damage was obvious. Attempts to conceal incriminating
evidence, inconsistent statements, and implausible explanations are probative of wrongful conduct
and are circumstances indicating guilt. Guevara v. State, 152 S.W.3d 45, 50 (Tex. Crim. App.
2004). Here, Escalante’s conduct after the fire—his avoidance of the deputies when they went to
his house, his return to the scene of the fire later that morning, his feigned surprise when he was
taken to the house later the same day, and his attempts to cover up some of his actions—supported
an inference of guilt.
In his briefing, Escalante emphasizes that no one saw him set the fire. However, such direct
evidence was not necessary to establish Escalante’s guilt. “Circumstantial evidence is as probative
as direct evidence in establishing the guilt of the actor, and circumstantial evidence alone can be
sufficient to establish guilt.” Hooper, 214 S.W.3d at 13; see Krebsbach v. State, 962 S.W.2d 728,
734 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 1998, pet. ref’d) (“[U]nlike [in] the movies and on television,
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circumstantial evidence can be used to convict one of arson.”). Escalante further contends that
there were only three facts connecting him to the fire: (1) his presence on the property shortly
before the fire; (2) Mitchell’s testimony that he saw Escalante sitting in a lawn chair on the edge
of the property watching the fire burn; and (3) Escalante’s leaving a Coca-Cola bottle and a note
on the ramp handrail the day after the fire. We disagree. Other facts connected Escalante to the
fire. Escalante avoided the officers who came to visit him at his house immediately after the fire
was extinguished. Escalante failed to admit that he was present on the property to watch the fire
burn. Escalante feigned surprise when he was taken to the charred house the day after the fire.
And, in the past, Escalante had disposed of Gonzales’s dresses by burning them. Furthermore,
there was evidence that Escalante had a motive to set the fire: Escalante suspected that Gonzales
was cheating on him, three nights before the fire Gonzales had told him that she did not want to
be with him anymore, Escalante was upset that Gonzales was ignoring him and refusing to talk to
him, and Escalante desperately wanted Gonzales to come back to live with him. Considering the
combined and cumulative force of the evidence and viewing the evidence in the light most
favorable to the jury’s verdict, we conclude that the evidence was sufficient to support the finding
that Escalante set the fire.
CONCLUSION
We conclude the evidence was sufficient to support the elements of the offense challenged
on appeal. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Karen Angelini, Justice
Do not publish
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