

As Officer Ontiveros was securing the scene, a vehicle approached, and he stopped it because. the same thing that they just heard the gunshots and then all of a sudden she just saw the emergency vehicles there. hey came out and that s when they saw the two bodies on the ground. Two men who were also standing outside reported that they were inside their residence when they heard gunshots. 1 Officer Ontiveros also spoke to several witnesses around that area. At that point, Officer Ontiveros radioed dispatch and reported Arredondo s description of the suspect s vehicle. Officer Ontiveros asked Arredondo how he knew it was a Dodge truck, and he said because he got to observe the Dodge emblem on the tailgate. He went outside and saw a white truck leaving location.


The husband, Arturo Arredondo, told him that he 3 was asleep in bed when his wife woke him up to tell him that there were some people arguing outside in the street. He spoke to the resident owners there, a husband and wife. where he discovered the lifeless bodies of the two men later identified as David Garcia and Victor de la Cruz. Then, he walked over to 901 Santa Monica Street, a house right in front of. Both men appeared to have sustained fatal gunshot wounds to the head. The van s headlights were on, and the engine appeared to be running. One body was right in front of a brown minivan that was parked by a stop sign at the intersection. When he arrived, he discovered two bodies, two men down. Officer Ontiveros was the first officer to arrive at the scene.

Although he had no reason to know it at the time, the white Dodge truck was about to become the focus of an intense police investigation and manhunt. As Officer Ontiveros was approaching the scene of the crime, the dash-cam captured an image of what appeared to be a white Dodge truck parked on the side of the road on the 700 block of Santa Monica Street, about two blocks away from the scene of the crime. At trial, the video from the dash-cam was played for the jury. The dash-cam was wirelessly connected to a microphone Officer Ontiveros was wearing that night. The police cruiser in which Officer Ontiveros was travelling was equipped with a dashboard video camera ( dash-cam ) that was activated when Officer Ontiveros turned on his vehicle s police sirens. Officer Ontiveros turned north onto Laurel Street, then east onto Santa Monica Street, and proceeded toward the intersection with Sabino Avenue. While he was en route, a hot call or emergency call went out over the radio advising all patrol officers of reports of gunshots and two 2 men down at the intersection of Santa Monica Street and Sabino Avenue, located in a small subdivision northeast of Officer Ontiveros s position. Officer Ontiveros then advised the dispatcher that he was going to investigate the gunshots he heard. He radioed the police dispatcher to ask if there had been any reports of gunshots heard in the area of the 500 block of Dicker Road.
#MOVE IT STORAGE LAS MILPAS WINDOWS#
He had the windows down when he heard what sounded like three gunshots. on October 8, 2010, Officer Enrique Ontiveros of the City of Pharr Police Department was in his police cruiser patrolling an area of the city known as Las Milpas. Officer Enrique Ontiveros At approximately 1:30 a.m. The following evidence and testimony are relevant to the issues raised by Alcala in this appeal. These witnesses included police officers, investigators, eyewitnesses, and experts. BACKGROUND At trial, the State offered physical evidence and the testimony of a number of different witnesses in support of its case.
#MOVE IT STORAGE LAS MILPAS TRIAL#
For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the judgment of the trial court. Alcala now appeals his conviction by four issues, which we have reordered as follows: (1) the evidence is insufficient to support his conviction because the State failed to establish that he shot either of the victims or that he was a party to the capital murder (2) the trial court erred in admitting the hearsay testimony of David Garza (3) the trial court violated Alcala s Sixth Amendment right to confront and cross-examine witnesses by admitting hearsay statements through the testimony of David Garza and (4) the trial court erred in allowing Janie Arrellano of the Pharr Police Department to testify as an expert. OPINION Before Justices Benavides, Perkes and Longoria Opinion by Justice Longoria A jury found Eloy Jiovanni Perez Alcala guilty of capital murder involving a double-homicide, and because the State did not seek the death penalty, the trial court assessed a life sentence. On appeal from the 332nd District Court of Hidalgo County, Texas. NUMBER 13-12-00173-CR COURT OF APPEALS THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS CORPUS CHRISTI EDINBURG ELOY JIOVANNI PEREZ ALCALA, Appellant, v.
