Opinion issued February 11, 2010
In The
Court of Appeals
For The
First District of Texas
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NO. 01-08-00176-CR
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RAFAELA DAVILA, Appellant
v.
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
On Appeal from the 400th District Court
Fort Bend County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. 44972
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Appellant, Rafaela Davila, pleaded guilty to aggravated robbery, without an agreed recommendation from the State. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 29.02, 29.03 (Vernon 2003). At appellant's request, the trial court ordered that a presentence investigation (PSI) report be prepared. Following the PSI hearing, the trial court assessed punishment at forty years' confinement.
Appellant argues that the trial court erred in considering unadjudicated extraneous offenses that were not proven beyond a reasonable doubt in assessing her punishment. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Shortly before 9:00 p.m. on the night of June 12, 2006, appellant rang the doorbell of a home belonging to Ki Hee Oh. Oh shared the home with her husband, but at the time, she was home alone. As Mrs. Oh approached the glass front door, she saw a Hispanic female, later determined to be appellant, standing alone outside the door. Appellant appeared to be saying something but Oh could not hear her, so she unlocked and opened the front door. As she opened the door, three men, who had been hiding behind the wall, jumped out and grabbed Oh. One of the men pointed a gun to Oh's neck, and the men carried her to her bedroom, where they bound her arms and legs and covered her with a blanket. Oh could hear the intruders opening drawers in her home. Finally, when she could no longer hear them in the home, she untied herself. Oh discovered that the intruders stole laptops, a video camera, a digital camera, and a safe that contained all of her jewelry and her family's citizenship documents, social security cards, passports, and birth certificates. Oh estimated the value of the stolen jewelry at around $100,000. Three pieces of jewelry (a ring, Oh's wedding ring, and one earring) were found at a pawn shop, but at the time of trial, the rest of her jewelry had not been recovered.
After Oh identified her from a photo line up, a warrant was issued for appellant's arrest. Appellant was arrested on July 18, 2006. When she was interviewed shortly after her arrest by Detective Gillespie, appellant claimed she did not have anything to do with the home invasion. Some time later appellant requested to talk to a detective, claiming she could provide information on some Columbians who were involved in robberies of homes in Fort Bend and Houston. Detective Novosad spoke with appellant on approximately five occasions. Appellant maintained that she knew nothing about the invasion of Oh's home and denied ever being there. However, appellant claimed she had knowledge that would help authorities identify the Columbians that were committing a large number of home robberies going on in the area at the time. Appellant described a pattern of how the home invasions occurred. She said that a few females were involved, and in each invasion, a female would knock on the door, and then there would be three or four men that would rush inside the house. Appellant was shown a book of approximately 50 pictures of suspects and was able to identify over half of them by their street names. She also showed the detective locations where she claimed the Columbians "hung out and lived," a pawnshop where jewelry from the home invasions was taken, and the place where the stolen safes were taken to be cut open. The detectives were already aware of all of the information provided by appellant except for the location where the stolen safes were opened. At the time of trial, the detective testified that none of the information appellant provided lead to prosecutions.
On November 13, 2007, appellant entered a plea of guilty to the offense of aggravated robbery. At the time of the plea, the State offered two exhibits, which were admitted into evidence without objection. State's Exhibit Two was the offense report prepared by the Sugar Land Police Department. The exhibit included information that the Police Department received from an informant implicating appellant in several home invasions. The informant said appellant's role was to drive the vehicle, knock on the door and then pawn stolen jewelry at pawnshops. The exhibit also included pawn receipts and pictures of pieces of jewelry that appellant attempted to sell at pawn shops.
At the time of her plea, appellant was advised by the court that the range of punishment for the offense was five to 99 years' or life imprisonment and a fine of up to $10,000. Appellant acknowledged that she understood the range of punishment prior to making her plea of guilty. At appellant's request, a PSI report was prepared and the case was reset for a punishment hearing.
On February 4, 2008, the punishment hearing was held. At the hearing, the State called Mrs. Oh, who testified regarding the home invasion, and the State rested its case in chief. The defense called appellant to the stand. Appellant testified that the offense was committed by herself and a group of Columbians. She said that she knew the Columbians were involved in many home invasions and knew that the men were dangerous. Appellant testified that she was involved in two of the home invasions, but later said, "Well, I wasn't there, but I knew of it." She testified that the first time she participated with the Columbians was in the invasion of Oh's home. Regarding the invasion of Oh's home, appellant testified that she did not expect anyone to be home. Despite Oh's testimony that appellant was inside the home with the men, appellant claimed that "she never stepped foot inside her house."
Appellant said that the jewelry that she pawned had "nothing to do with the robbery" and all of it was given to her by her boyfriend, John Achito. She said that the other men who carried out the robbery of Oh told her that there was no jewelry in the safe.
Appellant said she became involved with the Columbians in 2001, after she began dating one of them. Appellant admitted to being arrested in 2002 for conspiracy to import and distribute heroin. She stated that she was on her way back into the United States from Columbia and was traveling with two women who were actually transporting the drugs. After being caught with the drugs, appellant agreed to help law enforcement in exchange for a reduced sentence. Appellant served eighteen months of a two year sentence in federal prison for the drug charge. Seven or eight months after getting out of federal prison, appellant said she met the group of Columbians that were involved in the home invasions.
In rebuttal, the State called Detective Gillespie. Detective Gillespie testified that appellant was identified as a suspect after an informant provided information and Oh positively identified appellant from a photo lineup. The detective used a software program that searches the inventory of pawnshops across the State to try to locate some of Oh's stolen belongings. Detective Gillespie searched under appellant's name and found that she had "pawned a ton of jewelry" recently. Appellant's name and driver's license were on the pawn tickets for several items that were stolen from Oh's home, including Oh's wedding ring and another ring that was in her safe. Detective Gillespie testified that appellant told him she could provide him with the street names of people involved in home invasions but denied having knowledge of the Oh robbery. Detective Gillespie also testified that he was contacted six to eight times by appellant's attorney who wanted the detectives to interview her in exchange for "a better deal." Appellant's attorney finally told Detective Gillespie that appellant was involved and wanted to come clean, but at that point, the detective did not speak with her because he did not consider her to be reliable. Detective Gillespie testified that the information appellant provided to the other detectives was not helpful. While he acknowledged that appellant accurately identified approximately 30 Columbians involved in the home invasions by their "nicknames," Detective Gillespie testified that appellant's going through a book of people who were already identified as suspects was not helpful to solving the home invasions.
Also in rebuttal, the State called Adrian King, the probation officer who prepared the PSI report on appellant. He testified that when he interviewed appellant, there were a number of inconsistencies or misrepresentations in her statements. Specifically, she misrepresented her criminal record, claiming she had only been arrested one time in her life, which was for conspiracy to import heroin. After obtaining a copy of appellant's criminal record, he discovered that she was also arrested for aiding and abetting illegal entry of an alien and for driving without a license. In the interview with Officer King, appellant also claimed that she believed no one would be at the Oh's home and she intended it to be "just a burglary of a habitation." Officer King testified that he conducted a "risk/needs assessment" on appellant, and she scored the highest possible score for reoffending.
Following the closing argument by both parties, the court reaffirmed its finding of guilt for aggravated robbery and also made a deadly weapon finding. Just prior to announcing the sentence, the trial court stated:
This Court considers a home invasion of this type one of the most serious crimes that can be committed against a civilized society, to have someone burst into your home and place a gun to you. It's obvious to me that this was, more likely than not, not the first time or the only time that this occurred with this defendant, based on the amount of jewelry that had been pawned and the information from the informant that was testified to.
The trial court announced that it assessed punishment at 40 years' imprisonment.
Analysis
On appeal, appellant argues that the trial court erred by considering unadjudicated extraneous offenses against the appellant in assessing punishment that were not established beyond reasonable doubt, as required by Article 37.07, Section 3(a)(1) of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 37.07, § 3(a)(1) (Vernon Supp. 2009). Appellant argues that the comment by the trial judge just prior to announcing the sentence shows that the "trial court clearly considered extraneous offenses against the Appellant for which there was not proof beyond a reasonable doubt."
Appellant's argument is flawed because it assumes that all extraneous offenses must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt before a trial court may take them into account in assessing punishment. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has expressly held to the contrary: "Section 3(a)(1) of Article 37.07 does not prohibit a trial court, as a sentencing entity, from considering extraneous misconduct evidence in assessing punishment just because the extraneous misconduct has not been shown to have been committed by the defendant beyond a reasonable doubt, if that extraneous misconduct is contained in a PSI." Smith v. State, 227 S.W.3d 753, 763 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007). The trial court, as the sentencing entity, may consider extraneous acts not proven beyond a reasonable doubt, if the PSI provides some basis from which a trial court may rationally infer that the defendant is responsible. Id. at 763-64 (holding that due process is only limitation, requiring that there be evidence from some source from which it can be rationally inferred that defendant had criminal responsibility for extraneous misconduct).
Here, the testimony at the punishment hearing and the corresponding references in the PSI support a rational inference that appellant had participated in other home invasions. The PSI report included statements by the informant indicating that appellant was involved in multiple home invasions. Additionally, the PSI report included pawn tickets and pictures showing approximately thirteen pieces of jewelry pawned by appellant at various pawnshops in the weeks following the Oh robbery. Included in the jewelry pawned by appellant were items that belonged to the Ohs. During the punishment hearing, appellant testified she was involved in two home invasions, then changed her answer, explaining she was only involved in one but was aware of another. Additionally, detectives who had interviewed appellant revealed that she had extensive knowledge regarding the series of robberies committed in Fort Bend and Houston. Appellant made no objection to the PSI or the evidence.
From the evidence contained in the PSI report, it can be rationally inferred that appellant was criminally responsible for the extraneous offenses. Accordingly, the trial court was not prohibited from considering the information contained in the PSI report in deciding punishment under Article 42.12, Section 9(a). See id. at 763-64; see also Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 42.12, § 9(a) (Vernon Supp. 2009).
We overrule appellant's only issue on appeal.
Conclusion
We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
George C. Hanks, Jr.
Justice
Panel consists of Justices Jennings, Hanks, and Bland.
Do not publish. See Tex. R. App. P. 47.2(b).