IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
OF TEXAS
NO. AP-77,089
RUBEN GUTIERREZ, Appellant
v.
THE STATE OF TEXAS
ON DIRECT APPEAL FROM DENIAL OF MOTION FOR
FORENSIC DNA TESTING IN CAUSE NO. 98-CR-00001391-A
FROM THE 107TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
CAMERON COUNTY
Per curiam.
OPINION
Appellant appeals from a trial court order denying his motion for post-conviction
DNA testing filed pursuant to Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Chapter 64.1 Appellant
1
References to Chapters or Articles are to the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure unless
otherwise specified. Appellant also filed a motion to stay his execution pending resolution of
this appeal. However, because we stayed appellant’s execution in conjunction with appellant’s
pending motion for leave to file a petition for a writ of mandamus, this motion is moot and it is
dismissed. See In re Ruben Gutierrez, No. WR-59,552-03 (Tex. Crim. App. Oct. 22, 2019) (not
(continued...)
Gutierrez Page 2
raises only two points of error but argues extensively about a third issue on which the
court did not expressly rule. After reviewing all of the issues, we find appellant’s points
of error to be without merit. Consequently, we affirm the trial court’s order denying
testing.
I. Background
A. Facts of the Case/Direct Appeal and Initial Habeas
In our opinion affirming the trial court’s denial of appellant’s prior Chapter 64
motion for DNA testing, we summarized the facts of the case as follows:
Appellant was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death
for his participation in the robbery and murder of eighty-five-year-old
Escolastica Harrison. Mrs. Harrison lived with her nephew, Avel Cuellar,
in a mobile-home park in Brownsville. She owned the mobile-home park,
and her home doubled as the park’s office. Mrs. Harrison did not trust
banks, and, at the time of her murder, she had about $600,000 in cash
hidden in her home. Appellant was one of the few people who knew about
Mrs. Harrison’s money. Mrs. Harrison had befriended appellant because he
was friends with her nephew, Avel. Appellant sometimes ran errands for
Mrs. Harrison, and he borrowed money from her. Appellant, Avel, and
others routinely gathered behind Mrs. Harrison’s home to drink and visit.
Appellant, then 21 years old, orchestrated a plan to steal her money.
On September 5, 1998, he and an accomplice, Rene Garcia–whom Mrs.
Harrison did not know–entered Mrs. Harrison’s home to carry out this plan.
A third accomplice, Pedro Gracia, was the driver. When appellant and
Rene Garcia left with Mrs. Harrison’s money, she was dead. Avel Cuellar
found her body late that night–face down in a pool of blood. She had been
severely beaten and stabbed numerous times. Mrs. Harrison’s bedroom was
in disarray, and her money was missing.
1
(...continued)
designated for publication).
Gutierrez Page 3
The next day, detectives canvassed the area for information.
Detective Garcia, the lead investigator, already knew that appellant’s
drinking buddies–Avel Cuellar, Ramiro Martinez, and Crispin
Villarreal–had all said that appellant was in the trailer park the evening of
the murder. Another witness, Julio Lopez, also said appellant was there.2
On September 8, 1998, detectives went to appellant’s home. He was
not there, but his mother said she would bring him to the police station.
The next day, appellant voluntarily came to the police station to make a
statement. He gave an alibi. He said he had seen Avel Cuellar and another
friend, Ramiro Martinez, at the trailer park on the Friday before the murder,
but on the Saturday of the murder, he drove around with Joey Maldonaldo
in Maldonaldo’s Corvette all day long. They were nowhere near Mrs.
Harrison’s mobile-home park. When police asked him if he had his days
mixed up, appellant cut off questioning. The alibi did not pan out. Joey
Maldonaldo’s statement did not mesh with appellant’s.
Four days later, as a result of statements given by appellant’s two
accomplices, Rene Garcia and Pedro Gracia, and their own investigation,
the police obtained an arrest warrant for appellant. He made a second
statement. This time, he admitted that he had planned the “rip off,” but said
that he had waited at a park while Rene Garcia and Pedro Gracia did it. He
said that when his two cohorts came to pick him up, Rene Garcia was
holding a screwdriver covered in blood and said that he had killed Mrs.
Harrison. Rene Garcia and Pedro Gracia had taken a blue suitcase and a
tackle/tool box full of money. Appellant said, “There was no doubt about
the fact that I planned the whole rip off but I never wanted for either one of
them to kill Mrs. Harrison. When I saw that Pedro was grabbing the money
from the tackle/tool box and heard some crumbling plastic I decided that I
did not want any money that they had just ripped off.” Appellant told the
police that his accomplices had told him where they had thrown the blue
suitcase away. Appellant led the detectives to a remote area, but when the
officers could not find the blue suitcase, appellant was allowed out of the
car, and he walked straight to it.
The next day appellant made a third statement, admitting that he had
2
Mr. Lopez did not know appellant. The police showed him some “loose photos,” and
he picked out appellant in “a few seconds” and was “absolutely positive” about that
identification. But by the time of trial, Mr. Lopez was not able to identify appellant in person.
Gutierrez Page 4
lied in his previous one “about being dropped off in the park, about not
being with Rene.” He said Pedro Gracia drove the truck and dropped him
and Rene Garcia off at Mrs. Harrison’s home. The initial plan was for Rene
Garcia to lure Mrs. Harrison out of her home by asking to see a trailer lot.
Then appellant would come around from the back of her home, run in, and
take the money without her seeing him. But when appellant ran around to
the front, Rene Garcia and Mrs. Harrison were still inside the house.
Appellant said Rene Garcia knocked out Mrs. Harrison by hitting her, and
then he repeatedly stabbed her with a screwdriver. The screwdriver “had a
clear handle with red, it was a standard screwdriver. We had got the
screwdriver from the back of the truck in a tool box along with another
screwdriver, a star type.” Appellant gathered the money. “When he started
stabbing her, I pulled out the blue suitcase from the closet and the black tool
box fell. It opened when it fell and I saw the money.” Appellant tossed the
tool box to Rene Garcia, and headed out the door with the blue suitcase.
Rene Garcia followed, and Pedro Gracia pulled the truck around to pick
them up. Pedro Gracia dropped them off down a caliche road and appellant
filled “up the little tool box with the money that was in the suitcase,” while
Rene Garcia filled up his shirt. They abandoned the suitcase, and Pedro
Gracia picked them up and drove appellant home.
Much of the money was recovered. Appellant’s wife’s cousin, Juan
Pablo Campos, led police to $50,000 that appellant had given him to keep
safe. The prosecution’s theory at trial was that appellant, either as a
principal or as a party, intentionally murdered Mrs. Harrison during a
robbery. The prosecution emphasized (1) the medical examiner’s testimony
that two different instruments caused the stab wounds,3 (2) appellant’s
admission that he and Rene Garcia went inside Mrs. Harrison’s home office
with two different screwdrivers, and (3) the fact that four different
people–Avel Cuellar, Ramiro Martinez, and Crispin Villarreal from “the
drinking group” and another passerby, Mr. Lopez, who did not know
appellant–all saw him at the mobile-home park the day that Mrs. Harrison
was killed.
3
The medical examiner testified that Mrs. Harrison suffered defensive wounds that
indicated she had struggled for her life and tried to “ward off blows or attacks of some sort.” He
said that she was stabbed approximately thirteen times by two different instruments. One
“almost certainly” was a flat-head screwdriver and the other was possibly a Phillips-head
screwdriver.
Gutierrez Page 5
The jury was instructed that it could convict appellant of capital
murder if it found that appellant “acting alone or as a party” with the
accomplice intentionally caused the victim’s death. The jury returned a
general verdict of guilt, and, based on the jury’s findings at the punishment
phase, the trial judge sentenced appellant to death.
Ex parte Gutierrez, 337 S.W.3d 883, 886-88 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011) (footnotes in
original).
Appellant raised ten points of error on direct appeal, including challenges to the
sufficiency of the evidence and the voluntariness of his statements. We affirmed
appellant’s conviction and sentence. Gutierrez v. State, No. AP-73,462 (Tex. Crim. App.
Jan. 16, 2002) (not designated for publication). In his initial state habeas application,
appellant raised twenty allegations, including challenges to the voluntariness of his
statements. This Court denied appellant relief. Ex parte Gutierrez, No. WR-59,552-01
(Tex. Crim. App. May 14, 2008) (not designated for publication).
B. Prior Chapter 64 DNA Appeal and Subsequent Habeas Proceeding
In April 2010, appellant filed in the trial court a Chapter 64 motion for DNA
testing. In the motion, appellant acknowledged that three men were involved in the
Harrison robbery: himself, Rene Garcia, and Pedro Gracia. Relying on evidence that
only two people entered the home, appellant argued that exculpatory DNA test results
would show that he would not have been convicted of capital murder or sentenced to
death. Although appellant did not specifically state in his motion which items he wanted
tested, his discussion of the evidence indicates that he sought DNA testing of:
Gutierrez Page 6
• a blood sample taken from the victim;
• a shirt belonging to the victim’s nephew and housemate, Cuellar, containing
apparent blood stains;
• nail scrapings taken from the victim during the autopsy;
• blood samples collected from Cuellar’s bathroom, from a raincoat located
in or just outside his bedroom, and from the sofa in the front room of the
victim’s house; and
• a single loose hair found around the third digit of the victim’s left hand
during the autopsy.
Appellant accompanied his request for testing with a statement in which he
asserted that the identity of Harrison’s killer was an issue at trial and continues to be an
issue. He also asserted that testing excluding him as a contributor of the biological
material would have changed the trial’s outcome. In other words, appellant essentially
asserted that exculpatory results would have supported his position that he neither
murdered Harrison nor anticipated her murder. The trial judge denied the request, finding
that:
• appellant had the opportunity to have the evidence tested before trial, but
did not avail himself of that opportunity;
• the single loose hair “does not exist because it was never recovered as
evidence in the investigation of the case”;
• the defendant failed to show that identity was an issue in the case
considering his own statements, the statements of the co-defendants, and the
statement of an eyewitness who connected him to the murder scene; and
• the defendant failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that he
would not have been convicted if exculpatory results had been obtained
Gutierrez Page 7
through DNA testing.4
This Court affirmed the trial court’s denial of testing. See Gutierrez, 337 S.W.3d 883.
Immediately after this Court affirmed the trial court’s denial of appellant’s motion
for Chapter 64 DNA testing, appellant filed in the trial court a subsequent writ of habeas
corpus application. In one of the claims raised in that application, appellant asserted that
the State failed to disclose material and exculpatory evidence under Brady v. Maryland,
373 U.S. 83 (1963). Specifically, appellant asserted that the State should have submitted
certain biological evidence for DNA testing. This Court dismissed the application
because it failed to meet the Article 11.071, section 5, requirements for a subsequent writ
application. Ex parte Gutierrez, No. WR-59,552-02 (Tex. Crim. App. Aug. 24, 2011)
(not designated for publication).
In November 2015, appellant filed in the trial court a “Motion for Miscellaneous
Relief.” In the motion, appellant sought a court order declaring that he had
a constitutional due process right under Brady v. Maryland, . . ., to conduct
independent DNA tests on potentially exculpatory biological evidence in
[the State’s] custody or control and that [the State] . . . be ordered to release
the evidence to Defendant under a reasonable protocol regarding chain of
custody and preservation of the evidence, in order that Defendant can have
the evidence tested at his own expense.
Appellant requested access for DNA testing to the same items that he had previously
requested in his Chapter 64 motion. The State did not oppose the request for testing, but
neither did the State agree to the relief requested. The trial court ultimately denied the
4
See Arts. 64.01 and 64.03 (2010).
Gutierrez Page 8
motion in April 2018. Slightly more than a year later, appellant filed his second Chapter
64 motion for post-conviction DNA testing, which is the subject of this appeal.
II. Chapter 64 and the Standard of Review
As we stated in our opinion on appellant’s prior Chapter 64 appeal, “There is no
free-standing due-process right to DNA testing, and the task of fashioning rules to
‘harness DNA’s power to prove innocence without unnecessarily overthrowing the
established system of criminal justice’ belongs ‘primarily to the legislature.’” Gutierrez,
337 S.W.3d at 889 (quoting District Attorney’s Office v. Osborne, 557 U.S. 52, 62
(2009)); see also Ex parte Mines, 26 S.W.3d 910, 914 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000) (stating
that there is no constitutional right to post-conviction DNA testing). The Texas
Legislature created a process for such testing in Chapter 64.
Under Chapter 64, the convicting court must order DNA testing only if the court
finds that:
1. the evidence “still exists and is in a condition making DNA testing
possible;”
2. the evidence “has been subjected to a chain of custody sufficient to
establish that it has not been substituted, tampered with, replaced, or altered
in any material respect;”
3. “there is a reasonable likelihood that the evidence contains biological
material suitable for DNA testing; and”
4. “identity was or is an issue in the case[.]”
Art. 64.03(a)(1). Additionally, the convicted person must establish by a preponderance of
Gutierrez Page 9
the evidence that:
1. he “would not have been convicted if exculpatory results had been obtained
through DNA testing; and”
2. “the request for the proposed DNA testing is not made to unreasonably
delay the execution of sentence or administration of justice.”
Art. 64.03(a)(2).
In reviewing a judge’s ruling on a Chapter 64 motion, this Court gives almost total
deference to the judge’s resolution of historical fact issues supported by the record and
applications-of-law-to-fact issues turning on witness credibility and demeanor. Reed v.
State, 541 S.W.3d 759, 768 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017). But we consider de novo all other
application-of-law-to-fact questions. Id. at 768-69.
III. The Current Chapter 64 Motion and the Trial Court’s Ruling
In June 2019, appellant filed in the trial court his second Chapter 64 motion for
DNA testing. In the motion, he requested testing of:
• fingernail scrapings collected from the victim;
• the victim’s nightgown, robe, and slip;5
• a hair found in the victim’s hand;
• blood samples collected from the victim’s bathroom, from a raincoat
located in Cuellar’s bedroom, and from the sofa in the victim’s living room;
and
5
In the first paragraph of his motion, appellant requests testing of the victim’s
nightgown, robe, and slip. However, in the conclusion paragraph, appellant requests testing of
the victim’s nightgown, robe, slip, and socks. For purposes of our analysis, this discrepancy
makes no difference.
Gutierrez Page 10
• clothing collected from Cuellar.
Appellant accompanied his request with an affidavit. Therein, he asserted that the
identity of Harrison’s killer was an issue at trial and that, had the jury learned of a third
party profile on the items collected as evidence, it would not have convicted him or
sentenced him to death.
The trial judge denied the request in a written order stating in pertinent part:
On review of the pleadings, evidence, and arguments, the court finds that
Movant has not shown by a preponderance of the evidence that a reasonable
probability exists that defendant would not have been prosecuted or
convicted if exculpatory results had been obtained through DNA testing.
The court further finds by a preponderance of the evidence that Movant’s
request for the proposed DNA testing is made for the purpose of
unreasonably delaying the execution of sentence or administration of
justice.
The court made no other explicit findings of fact or conclusions of law.
IV. Appellant’s Arguments on Appeal and the Court’s Analysis
The two points of error appellant raises on appeal specifically concern the Article
64.03(a)(2) requirements, and neither implicates the Article 64.03(a)(1) requirements.
However, a substantial portion of appellant’s brief and of his reply brief discuss a third
issue: the (a)(1) identity requirement. We will review all of the Article 64.03(a)
requirements.
A. Article 64.03(a)(1) Requirements
In his motion for DNA testing, appellant asserted that the items he sought to have
Gutierrez Page 11
tested contained biological material, were in a condition making DNA testing possible,
and had an intact chain of custody.6 See Art. 64.03(a)(1)(A) and (B). The State did not
contest these assertions. The trial court did not make express findings that these
requirements of Article 64.03(a)(1) had been met, but we will assume in the absence of
argument or evidence to the contrary that they have been.
Appellant also asserted in his motion that identity was an issue in this case. See
Art. 64.03(a)(1)(C). He conceded that this Court found in its opinion on his prior DNA
appeal that identity was not an issue in this case. However, he argued that new evidence
requires the Court to re-evaluate this holding. Specifically, appellant asserted that new
evidence: casts doubt on a witness’s identification of him at the crime scene; shows that
the lead detective testified falsely in the case; and shows that his third statement was not
voluntarily given. Further, appellant asserted that compelling evidence points to the
victim’s nephew, Cuellar, as the actual killer. The State contested appellant’s assertions
on the identity issue. Again, the trial court did not make an express finding regarding this
requirement of Article 64.03(a)(1).
Appellant raises the same arguments on appeal, and the State continues to contest
appellant’s assertions that identity is an issue. However, we need not determine whether
6
In his 2010 motion for DNA testing, appellant requested testing of “a single loose hair
found around the third digit of the victim’s left hand that was recovered during the autopsy.” The
State could not locate the hair, and the trial court determined that the loose hair was not collected
as evidence. See Gutierrez, 337 S.W.3d at 897-98. Appellant’s counsel represent that they have
located the hair with the other evidence in the case, and appellant again requests testing of this
hair.
Gutierrez Page 12
identity is an issue in this case because appellant has failed to establish that he would not
have been convicted if exculpatory results had been obtained through DNA testing. See
Wilson v. State, 185 S.W.3d 481, 485 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006) (stating that, even if DNA
testing showed that an additional perpetrator was involved, it would have “no effect
whatsoever” on the appellant’s conviction as a party).
B. Article 64.03(a)(2) Requirements
In his first express point of error on appeal, appellant asserts that “the district court
wrongly concluded that [he] failed to prove that exculpatory DNA test results would
likely have resulted in his acquittal[.]” In the second, he asserts that “the district court
wrongly concluded that [his] request for DNA testing was intended to unreasonably delay
the execution of sentence or the administration of justice[.]”
1. Whether the district court wrongly concluded that appellant failed to
establish that he would not have been convicted if exculpatory
results had been obtained through DNA testing
According to the evidence presented, the eighty-five-year-old Harrison lived with
her nephew (Cuellar) in a trailer park that she owned. She did not trust banks, so she kept
large sums of cash in her home/office, a fact that appellant knew. Harrison was killed in
her home by what appeared to be two different weapons. She also suffered bruising and
contusions. Four people had seen appellant in the trailer park on the day Harrison was
killed. Three of those witnesses knew appellant.
Although the police initially suspected Cuellar, their investigation led them to
Gutierrez Page 13
appellant. When questioned, appellant originally told the police that he was driving
around with a friend on the day of the offense, but the friend did not corroborate
appellant’s account. During their investigation, the police obtained statements from
appellant’s accomplice Garcia.7 In the last of three statements he gave the police, Garcia
stated that appellant planned “the whole rip off.” He said that he (Garcia) entered the
home office to talk to Harrison about renting a lot. Garcia said he was then supposed to
hit Harrison, but he could not do it. He stated that appellant, who had subsequently
entered the home, hit Harrison and dragged her into another room. When she started
waking up, appellant stabbed her with a screwdriver.
Accomplice Gracia also gave a statement to the police. Gracia explained that
appellant showed him a house appellant intended to burglarize. Appellant then pressured
Gracia until he agreed to pick up appellant and another person after they finished the job.
Gracia stated that, soon after the burglary, he heard that the woman who owned the trailer
park had been killed.
As a result of these statements and their own further investigation, the police
arrested appellant. At this time, appellant gave a statement in which he admitted that he
planned “the whole rip off,” but he stated that he stayed at a park while Garcia and Gracia
committed the offense. He also stated that he never wanted them to kill the victim. In a
7
As established in appellant’s prior DNA appeal, statements from Garcia and Gracia are
properly considered in a Chapter 64 motion for DNA testing analysis. Gutierrez, 337 S.W.3d at
892.
Gutierrez Page 14
second statement, appellant repeated what he had said earlier, but added details about
Cuellar. Appellant said that: Cuellar had stolen from Harrison a couple of months
earlier, he was mean to her, she was going to kick him out, and he shot up heroin and
smoked marijuana. Finally, in a third statement, appellant admitted that he lied in his
earlier statements about not being in the house. He further admitted that he had been in
Harrison’s house during the offense and that he had found the money. But he stated that
Garcia stabbed the victim multiple times. He also noted that Cuellar told him to “rip . . .
off” Harrison. Appellant later led the police to a remote area where he and his
accomplices had thrown the suitcase that had contained money stolen from the house.
Finally, sometime after the crime, appellant’s wife’s cousin led police to $50,000 that
appellant had given him to keep safe.
Appellant now asserts that he should be allowed to DNA test the several items
previously listed because exculpatory results will show by a preponderance of the
evidence that he never would have been convicted. Appellant cannot make this showing.
In appellant’s prior DNA appeal, during the discussion of whether identity was an issue,
we recognized that this case was tried under the law of parties. We found that the
combination of the following was highly probative of whether identity was, in fact, an
issue: (1) appellant’s third statement, placing him inside Harrison’s home with a
screwdriver; (2) Garcia’s statement placing appellant inside Harrison’s home and
stabbing her; and (3) Gracia’s statement placing appellant inside Harrison’s home at the
Gutierrez Page 15
time of the murder. Gutierrez, 337 S.W.3d at 894-95.
Here, as in the 2010 DNA appeal, these three consistent statements unequivocally
place appellant inside Harrison’s home at the time of her murder. As they were probative
of the identity issue in the prior appeal, these statements are also highly probative here.
Specifically, they are highly probative of whether appellant can meet his burden to show
that he would not have been convicted should DNA testing reveal exculpatory results.8
See id. at 899. Appellant admitted planning “the whole rip off,” showing his involvement
as a party. In cases involving accomplices, a defendant can only meet his burden under
Article 64.03(a)(2)(A) if he can show that the testing, if exculpatory, will establish that he
did not commit the crime as either a principal or a party. Id. at 900; see also Wilson, 185
S.W.3d at 485. We now turn to each of the items requested.
a. Fingernail scrapings collected from the victim
Appellant asserts that, since the victim fought her attacker, DNA under her
fingernails will show the killer’s identity. We disagree. First, even though the medical
examiner opined that the victim had “defensive wounds,” there is no evidence in the
record to suggest that the five-foot-four-inch, 105-pound, 85-year-old Harrison was able
8
As previously noted, appellant asserts that his third statement was not voluntarily given.
He asserts that new evidence confirms this. We disagree. Appellant challenged the
voluntariness of his third statement in a pretrial motion to suppress, on appeal, and in his initial
state habeas application. See Gutierrez at 892 n.23. Both the trial court and this Court found the
statement to be voluntary. Appellant now presents “new evidence” allegedly showing that the
police coerced and mistreated two other witnesses in this case. Therefore, he postulates that the
police also coerced him. Appellant’s argument does not overcome the prior court holdings.
Gutierrez Page 16
to hit or scratch her murderers as they attacked and stabbed her thirteen times in the face
and neck. Second, even if DNA were found in the fingernail scrapings, it could just as
easily have come from an accomplice. Notably, in his own statement, appellant accused
Garcia of actually killing Harrison. Therefore, appellant’s DNA might well not be
present in the fingernail scrapings. Such a finding would not relieve him of liability as a
party in the case.
Further, even if testing revealed the presence of DNA belonging to someone other
than Garcia or appellant, it would not negate appellant’s own admission in his statements
that he planned “the whole rip off.” Appellant asserts that a DNA profile tying Cuellar to
the crime “would be especially likely to have changed the outcome of the trial.” But one
would expect to find Cuellar’s DNA among the samples collected from the scene.
Cuellar lived in the home and he found Harrison’s body. Finding Cuellar’s DNA in the
fingernail scrapings would not negate appellant’s own admissions or other evidence
placing appellant at the scene of the crime. Given the evidence, appellant simply cannot
show a greater than 50% chance that a jury would not convict him if DNA results
excluded him as a contributor of any material under Harrison’s fingernails since appellant
expressly admitted to planning “the whole rip off” and could have been convicted as a
party. See Art. 64.03(a)(2).
b. The victim’s nightgown, robe, and slip
Appellant asserts that touch-DNA from the victim’s nightgown, robe, and slip
Gutierrez Page 17
could show the murderer’s identity. Again, appellant simply cannot show a greater than
50% chance that a jury would not convict him if DNA results excluded him as a
contributor of any material. By appellant’s own statement, Garcia killed Harrison, not
him. Therefore, one would expect not to find appellant’s DNA on these items. That
result would not release appellant from party liability for the offense.
Appellant again asserts that finding Cuellar’s DNA on the victim’s clothing would
show that Cuellar was the murderer. However, just as the murderer could have
transferred DNA to the victim, so could have Cuellar when he found the body or just by
sharing the same house. This possibility would not make a different trial outcome likely.
c. A hair found in the victim’s hand
Even if the hair found in Harrison’s hand belonged to her attacker, appellant
cannot show by a preponderance of the evidence that the result of the trial would have
been different if DNA results exculpated him as the contributor of the hair. By
appellant’s own statement, Garcia killed Harrison, not him. Therefore, one would not
expect to find appellant’s DNA on this item. An exculpatory result would not release
appellant from party liability for the offense.
d. Blood samples collected from the victim’s bathroom, from a
raincoat located in Cuellar’s bedroom, and from the sofa in
the victim’s living room
Again, by appellant’s own statement, Garcia killed Harrison, not him. Further,
appellant admitted involvement and Cuellar discovered Harrison’s body. Regardless of
Gutierrez Page 18
whose DNA, if any, is found in these samples, no result would release appellant from
party liability for the offense.
e. Clothing collected from Cuellar
From the facts presented, blood on Cuellar’s clothing is likely to be the victim’s.
Cuellar lived with the victim and he found her body. Appellant speculates that Cuellar is
actually the killer. He postulates that a “blood stain . . . pattern interpretation” of
Cuellar’s clothes would show that the blood on his clothing was actually cast off from
Cuellar killing Harrison and not transfer that would be expected when a person picks up a
bloody victim. But blood stain pattern interpretation is not accomplished through DNA
testing. Therefore, this argument is not properly part of a Chapter 64 motion or analysis.
Under the circumstances, appellant has not established by a preponderance of the
evidence that he would not have been convicted if exculpatory results were obtained
through DNA testing. Thus, he has not met the requirements of Article 64.03(a)(2) and
the trial court properly denied him testing.
f. General due process argument
Finally, appellant argues in this point of error that, by limiting Chapter 64 to
innocence (a finding that he would not have been convicted), he was denied his due
process rights. Appellant raised a similar argument in his previous DNA appeal. In that
opinion, we stated:
Chapter 64 deals only with testing evidence that could establish, by a
preponderance of the evidence, that the person “would not have been
Gutierrez Page 19
convicted if exculpatory results” were obtained. The statute does not
authorize testing when exculpatory testing results might affect only the
punishment or sentence that he received. In this case, even supposing that a
DNA test result showed Gracia’s DNA in the fingernail scrapings taken
from Mrs. Harrison, this evidence would, at best, show only that Gracia,
rather than appellant, was the second stabber in the house. It would not
establish that appellant, who admittedly masterminded “the rip-off,” was
not a party to Mrs. Harrison’s murder. And, even if Chapter 64 did apply to
evidence that might affect the punishment stage as well as conviction,
appellant still would not be entitled to testing. Appellant would still have
been death-eligible because the record facts satisfy the Enmund/Tison[ 9 ]
culpability requirements that he played a major role in the underlying
robbery and that his acts showed a reckless indifference to human life.
Gutierrez, 337 S.W.3d at 901 (footnotes omitted). The reasoning in that appeal continues
to apply here. Appellant’s first point of error is overruled.
2. Whether the district court wrongly concluded that appellant failed to
establish that the request for the proposed DNA testing was not
made to unreasonably delay the execution of sentence or
administration of justice
Because appellant has not met the requirements of Article 64.03(a)(2)(A), he is not
entitled to DNA testing under Chapter 64. Thus, even if we resolved this claim in his
favor, he would not receive relief. Therefore, we need not determine whether the trial
court properly found that appellant also failed to establish by a preponderance of the
evidence that his request for DNA testing was not made to unreasonably delay the
execution of sentence or the administration of justice. Appellant’s second point of error
9
Enmund v. Florida, 458 U.S. 782 (1982), and Tison v. Arizona, 481 U.S. 137 (1987)
(Eighth Amendment does not prohibit death penalty as disproportionate in case of defendant
whose participation in felony that results in murder is major and whose mental state is one of
reckless indifference).
Gutierrez Page 20
is moot.
Having determined that appellant failed to meet his burden under the statute, we
affirm the convicting court’s order denying the motion for forensic DNA testing pursuant
to Texas Code Criminal Procedure Chapter 64.
Delivered: February 26, 2020
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