            IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
                        OF TEXAS

                                         NO. AP-75,968



                             WESLEY LYNN RUIZ, Appellant

                                                 v.

                                   THE STATE OF TEXAS

               ON DIRECT APPEAL FROM CAUSE NO. F07-50318-M
                   IN THE 194 TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
                               DALLAS COUNTY

        P RICE, J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which K ELLER, P.J. and M EYERS,
W OMACK, K EASLER, H ERVEY and C OCHRAN, JJ., joined. J OHNSON, J., concurred in the
result.


                                          OPINION

       The appellant was convicted of intentionally or knowingly causing the death of a

Dallas police officer, a capital offense.1 The jury answered the statutory special issues in


       1

         TEX . PEN . CODE § 19.03(a)(1) (“A person commits an offense if the person commits murder
as defined under Section 19.02(b)(1) and . . . the person murders a peace officer . . . who is acting
in the lawful discharge of an official duty and who the person knows is a peace officer[.]”).
                                                                                           Ruiz – 2

such a way that the trial court was obliged to assess the death penalty.2 Appeal to this Court

is, therefore, automatic.3 The appellant raises fourteen points of error, including challenges

to the sufficiency of the evidence to support both the guilty verdict and the first special issue

at the punishment phase of trial. We will therefore summarize the evidence in the light most

favorable to the jury’s verdicts.4

                           GUILT/INNOCENCE PHASE ISSUES

                               Evidentiary Sufficiency Issues

       On March 21, 2007, the homicide division of the Dallas Police Department issued a

bulletin to its officers to be on the lookout for a 1996 four-door Chevy Caprice with dark

tinted windows and chrome wheels, red and gray in color, that was suspected to have some

involvement in a capital murder. Two days later, on March 23rd , two plainclothes officers

in an unmarked police vehicle spotted a car matching this description on Stemmons

Freeway.5 They summoned marked patrol cars to stop the suspect vehicle and followed it

as it exited the freeway at Mockingbird Lane and drove into West Dallas. Corporal Mark

Nix arrived, positioning his patrol car directly behind the Caprice and activating his overhead

       2

        TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 37.071(2)(b) & (2)(e).
       3

        Id., Section (2)(h).
       4

       Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307 (1979); Burns v. State, 761 S.W.2d 353, 355 (Tex. Crim.
App. 1988).
       5

         Although it matched the description of the car sought in the March 21st bulletin, this
particular Chevy Caprice did not turn out to be the one sought in the capital-murder investigation.
                                                                                        Ruiz – 3

lights and video camera. The Caprice momentarily braked as if to pull over, but then

suddenly raced off at high speed down the winding road, followed by Nix and at least one

other patrol car in hot pursuit. The ensuing events were recorded by Nix’s video camera and

that of the patrol car directly behind him, both of which recordings are in evidence.

       Apparently taking a curve too fast, the Caprice hit the left-hand curb and spun out of

control. It barreled backwards down a slight incline on the right side of the street and came

to rest facing the roadway, its back-end apparently blocked by a fence. Nix followed the

Caprice down the incline and pulled to a stop, directly hood to hood. The patrol car behind

Nix also pulled off the road and came to a halt on the passenger side of the Caprice, a short

way off but close enough to effectively hem it in. Corporal Nix jumped out of his patrol car

and rushed to the front passenger side of the Caprice. There he began to swing his baton

with his left hand, smashing it against the tinted front passenger window.6 He paused

momentarily to place his pistol on the ground so that he could use both hands to wield the

baton and continued striking the window, punching a small hole through it. A second later,

a single gun shot shattered the rear passenger window, the bullet striking Nix’s badge and

splintering. A fragment entered Nix’s chest at the level of his clavicle, severing his left

common carotid artery. The other officers responded with a hail of gunfire, then dragged Nix

to cover and summoned the SWAT team. The appellant was eventually pulled from behind



       6

        All of the windows were so darkly tinted that the officers could barely make out a
“silhouette” behind the wheel of the Caprice.
                                                                                                 Ruiz – 4

the wheel of the Caprice, wounded and unconscious, the pistol with which Nix had been shot

found in his lap. Nobody else was in the car. Nix was pronounced dead at the hospital, but

the appellant was able to survive his multiple wounds.

        In his fourth point of error, the appellant contends that the evidence was legally

insufficient to establish that Nix was acting in the lawful discharge of an official duty when

the appellant shot him. Pointing to a written Dallas Police Department (DPD) policy, the

appellant argues that Nix acted outside the bounds of his official duty when he failed to use

his public-address system to order the appellant out of the Caprice, but instead rushed the car

and began to pound on the window with his baton. He claims that this violated departmental

policy for felony traffic stops, which expressly and emphatically provides that officers

ordinarily should not “rush” a suspect who has been stopped on the roadside. And indeed,

DPD policy declares that “[t]his is true for most types of felony stops, whether end of chase,

or any other high risk stop.”7 The appellant acknowledges that the case law from this Court

plainly holds that, for purposes of Section 19.03(a)(1) of the Penal Code, an officer acts in

the lawful discharge of his official duties so long as he is on duty and in uniform; the fact that

he may be effectuating an unconstitutional arrest, or a lawful arrest in an improper or




        7

        (Emphasis supplied.) This written policy was admitted into evidence as Defendant’s Exhibit
1. Several DPD officers testified for the State that the official policy prohibition against “rushing”
a suspect applies only to an initial felony traffic stop, and that, once the appellant initiated the high-
speed chase in this case, that policy no longer applied.
                                                                                              Ruiz – 5

unlawful manner, does not mean he is not acting in the lawful discharge of an official duty.8

Regardless of whether Nix violated departmental policy by “rushing” the Caprice and

breaking the window in an attempt to ascertain and apprehend whoever was inside, such a

breach of departmental policy would not render his conduct in discharging his duty as a

peace officer any less “lawful,” in contemplation of Section 19.03(a)(1),9 than had he tried

to effectuate the appellant’s arrest in an unconstitutional manner. As long as Nix was acting

within his capacity as a peace officer, as we have held, he was acting within the lawful




       8

       Montoya v. State, 744 S.W.2d 15, 29-30 (Tex. Crim. App. 1987); Guerra v. State, 771
S.W.2d 453, 460-61 (Tex. Crim. App. 1988); Hughes v. State, 897 S.W.2d 285, 297-98 (Tex. Crim.
App. 1994).
       9

          Section 1.07(48) of the Penal Code defines “unlawful” to mean “criminal or tortious or
both[.]” TEX . PEN . CODE § 1.07(48). We are aware of no precedent, and the appellant cites none,
holding that a violation of a police department policy constitutes criminal or tortious conduct per se.
Instead, he relies upon Tennessee v. Garner, 471 U.S. 1, 11-12 (1985), in which the Supreme Court
held that law enforcement use of deadly force to accomplish a felony arrest violates the Fourth
Amendment unless there is reason to believe the suspect “has committed a crime involving the
infliction of serious physical harm, . . . and if, where feasible, some warning has been given.” But
there is no evidence that Nix used deadly force against the appellant when he rushed the Caprice and
breached the passenger side window. (The jury was instructed on self-defense. But applicability of
self-defense to the present facts turns on the reasonableness of the appellant’s perception, should the
jury find that he in fact harbored such a perception, that Nix was attempting unjustifiably to use
deadly force—not on whether Nix actually was using deadly force. TEX . PEN . CODE § 9.32.) Nor
can it be said, under the circumstances, that Nix’s conduct “shocks the conscience” so as to amount
to a violation of substantive due process under another case that the appellant relies upon, City of
Sacramento v. Lewis, 523 U.S. 833 (1998). In an analogous context, we have held that a public
servant acts within the lawful discharge of his official duties so long as his conduct, committed
during the course of those duties, does not rise to the level of a criminal or tortious abuse of his
office—regardless of whether it violates official agency policy. See Hall v. State, 158 S.W.3d 470
(Tex. Crim. App. 2005) (construing “lawful discharge of an official duty” for purposes of Texas’s
assault-on-a-public-servant statute).
                                                                                            Ruiz – 6

discharge of his official duties.10 To intentionally or knowingly cause an officer’s death

under these circumstances still constitutes a capital offense.

       In his second point of error, the appellant suggests that by adhering to the cases that

have construed Section 19.03(a)(1) in this way, we risk rendering the statute too indistinct

to withstand constitutional scrutiny. The Eighth Amendment requires that any scheme for

imposing the death penalty involve guided jury discretion at the so-called “eligibility” stage.11

In Texas, at least part of the eligibility determination is built into Section 19.03 itself, which

defines the subset of the broader class of all murders that constitutes a capital offense.12 To

pass constitutional muster, the Supreme Court has said, the eligibility stage must operate to

channel jury discretion by “genuinely narrow[ing] the class of persons eligible for the death

penalty and . . . reasonably justify[ing] the imposition of a more severe sentence on the

defendant compared to others found guilty of murder.”13 The appellant argues that our past

construction of Section 19.03(a)(1), by effectively removing the word “lawful” from the

       10

        Guerra v. State, supra, at 461.
       11

         Tuilaepa v. California, 512 U.S. 967, 971-75 (1994). To satisfy the Eighth Amendment, any
capital punishment scheme must include both an “eligibility” process, during which jury discretion
must be narrowly circumscribed so as to avoid arbitrary and capricious application, and a “selection”
process, during which the jury’s discretion must remain relatively unfettered so as to ensure an
assessment of punishment that is tailored to the individual. Id.
       12

         See Lowenfield v. Phelps, 484 U.S. 231, 245 (1988) (under Texas statutory scheme,
constitutionally required narrowing function occurs, not by the use of aggravating factors at the
punishment phase, but in the definition of capital murder itself, litigated at the guilt phase).
       13

        Zant v. Stephens, 462 U.S. 862, 877 (1983).
                                                                                           Ruiz – 7

statute, fails sufficiently to narrow the class of murderers eligible for capital punishment,

resulting in the arbitrary and capricious imposition of the death penalty.

       But the Supreme Court has also said that, “[b]ecause ‘the proper degree of definition’

of eligibility . . . factors often ‘is not susceptible of mathematical precision,’ our [Eighth

Amendment] vagueness review is quite deferential.”14 So long as an eligibility factor “has

some common-sense core of meaning . . . that criminal juries should be capable of

understanding[,]” it will adequately serve its Eighth Amendment narrowing function.15 As

our case law has construed Section 19.03(a)(1), it certainly has a common-sense core of

meaning: A police officer is acting within the lawful discharge of his official duties under

the statute so long as he is “on duty, in uniform[.]”16 A jury would have no trouble

comprehending this core meaning. Moreover, as so construed, the statute clearly identifies

a sub-class of murderers that the Legislature could rationally conclude is deserving of the

most severe penalty available. As a matter of public policy, the Legislature may legitimately

extend the presumed deterrent effect of capital punishment to discourage citizens from

murdering police officers—even those officers who are not necessarily operating within the

precise parameters of official departmental policy. Protection of police officers while they

are on duty represents a reasonable justification for imposing a more severe penalty than

       14

       Tuilaepa v. California, supra, at 973 (quoting Walton v. Arizona, 497 U.S. 639, 655 (1990)).
       15

       Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
       16

       Guerra v. State, supra, at 461.
                                                                                         Ruiz – 8

applies to other murderers. Even if the appellant were right to criticize our past construction

of Section 19.03(a)(1)—which we by no means concede—our construction of the statute

does not make it indefinite or its imposition arbitrary and capricious. That it narrows the class

of murderers susceptible to execution to a sub-class that is broader than the appellant would

prefer does not render it intolerably vague for Eighth Amendment purposes. For these

reasons, we recently (and unanimously) rejected a similar argument that the aggravating

element embodied in Section 19.03(a)(1), as we have construed it, is unconstitutionally

vague.17 We likewise reject it here and hold that the evidence was sufficient to support the

appellant’s conviction for capital murder. We overrule the appellant’s second and fourth

points of error accordingly.

       In his third point of error, the appellant also argues that the evidence is factually

insufficient to support the conviction, for the same reasons. This Court no longer entertains

claims of factual insufficiency in capital-murder cases, however.18           We overrule the

appellant’s third point of error.

                 Specific Misconduct Evidence to Show First Aggressor

       In his first point of error, the appellant argues that the trial court erred in sustaining

the State’s objection to the admission of testimony with respect to three prior acts of

misconduct on Corporal Nix’s part. The appellant proffered this testimony in order to show


       17

        Mays v. State, 318 S.W.3d 368, 388-89 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).
       18

        Martinez v. State, 327 S.W.3d 727, 736 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).
                                                                                              Ruiz – 9

Nix’s state of mind at the time he rushed the Caprice; the purpose was to help the jury

understand and appreciate why Nix acted (and therefore, inferentially, to establish that he

acted) as the first aggressor under the circumstances. The appellant argued that this evidence

was admissible in support of his claim that he was compelled to use deadly force in self-

defense, which theory was indeed presented to the jury in the court’s charge. The State

maintained that the testimony was inadmissible under Rule 404(b) of the Texas Rules of

Evidence,19 arguing that it had no relevance apart from inferences of character conformity,

and adding, incidentally and without elaboration, that it was “also prejudicial to the State.”

The trial court sustained the State’s objection, expressly invoking Rule 404(b), but allowed

the appellant to develop the record in the jury’s absence. In response, the appellant presented

testimony from three witnesses who related past incidents in which Nix, in his capacity as

a police officer, allegedly treated suspects who either fled apprehension or did not

immediately respond to his assertion of official authority with arguably greater force than

was necessary under the circumstances.

       The first witness, Raquel Sosa, testified that, in June of 2002, Nix shot and killed her

boyfriend when they tried to outrun the police after an attempted traffic stop.20 Karlous Lake,


       19

        TEX R. EVID . 404(b).
       20

         Sosa denied that her boyfriend was carrying a weapon that night or that he shot at Nix first.
The State proffered evidence that Sosa’s boyfriend gave a dying declaration in which he admitted
having discarded a nine-millimeter pistol after he was shot. The police subsequently found the pistol
where Sosa’s boyfriend said he had discarded it, and a nine millimeter cartridge was discovered at
the site of the shooting. The State also proffered that, “after investigation, this use of deadly force
                                                                                              Ruiz – 10

the second witness, was a marine who testified that, as he was leaving a bar with friends in

the early morning hours in March of 2005, a group of police officers told them to “hurry up,

get home before your curfew.” When Lake asked them what time the curfew was and began

to walk away, Nix shot him with a taser, though Lake did not believe he had done anything

threatening or provocative. Another officer told Lake that the reason he had been tasered

was that he had refused to stop, but Lake maintained that none of the officers ordered him

to stop. Lake was arrested for public intoxication though he claimed to have had only one

drink; the case was later dismissed.21 Finally, Anthony Williams testified that, in August of

2006, when he was fourteen years old, he was running down the street when Nix ordered him

to stop and get down on the ground. When Williams immediately complied, Nix handcuffed

him behind his back, lifted him up by the handcuffs, and “threw” him into a squad car,

threatening to “knock all [his] teeth out.” Williams was soon released and never charged

with any offense. Other officers at the scene filed a complaint against Nix for using

excessive force to lift Williams up, but made no mention of Nix’s having thrown Williams

into the squad car.

        The appellant argued that the specific misconduct evidence was admissible because

it explained that Nix’s conduct in rushing the Caprice and battering the passenger side



was ruled as . . . justifiable” on Nix’s part.
        21

         The State proffered testimony from another officer that Lake had incited the incident with
the police officers and, when they tried to arrest him for public intoxication, he resisted arrest. When
Lake “approached” Nix with an apparently threatening gesture, Nix fired his taser.
                                                                                        Ruiz – 11

window was typical of the sort of violent responses he demonstrated over the course of his

career when confronted with suspects who did not immediately accede to his authority. He

argues that the testimony of his proffered witnesses was admissible under of Rule 404(b) of

the Texas Rules of Evidence,22 as we have construed that rule in Tate v. State.23 We need not

address this contention, however, because we hold that any purported error was harmless

under Rule 44.2(b) of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure.24

       Because the error, if any, was not of constitutional dimension, we measure harm

against the standard in Rule 44.2(b), which requires us to “disregard” any “error . . . that does

not affect” the appellant’s “substantial rights[.]” That Nix was the first aggressor in this

case, in the sense that his conduct in rushing to the Caprice and breaking out the window

with his baton constitutes an act of aggression that came before the appellant’s use of deadly

force, is uncontradicted on the present record. In fact, it was established beyond cavil by the

videos that were taken from the squad cars. There was no need on the part of the defense to

shore up that evidence with specific misconduct evidence explaining that Nix had a history

of overreacting to resistence to his police authority. It is most unlikely on the facts of this

case that the jury’s resolution of the appellant’s self-defense claim would have turned on the

question whether Nix’s aggressive behavior came first. Whether the appellant legitimately

       22

        TEX . R. EVID . 404(b).
       23

        981 S.W.2d 189 (Tex. Crim. App. 1998).
       24

        Id.
                                                                                      Ruiz – 12

resorted to deadly force to protect himself from Nix’s aggression depended on the nature of

that aggression and the appellant’s reasonable perception of it under the circumstances—not

on its timing. The jury was called upon to decide, not when Nix’s aggression occurred with

respect to the appellant’s own conduct, which was definitively established by the video

evidence, but whether Nix’s aggression was of such a degree and character that the appellant,

from his standpoint, was reasonable in concluding (if, in fact, he did conclude) that he must

immediately resort to deadly force to protect himself. Because there is no showing that

appellant had any knowledge of Nix’s history, proof of Nix’s past misconduct while on duty

was not relevant to this pivotal jury issue. We therefore conclude that any error in failing to

admit the appellant’s proffered testimony did not affect his substantial rights. Accordingly,

we overrule his first point of error.

                              PUNISHMENT PHASE ISSUES

                                Evidentiary Sufficiency Issues

       In his sixth point of error, the appellant challenges the legal sufficiency of the

evidence to establish, beyond a reasonable doubt, that there is a probability he would commit

criminal acts of violence that would constitute a continuing threat to society.25 We review

the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s disposition.26 As aptly summarized by

the State in its brief, “the evidence [relevant to this special issue] showed appellant was a


       25

        TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 37.071, § 2(b)(1).
       26

        Hunter v. State, supra, at 673.
                                                                                          Ruiz – 13

veteran criminal and gang member fully immersed in a life of drugs, guns, and violence.” 27

And indeed, the appellant expressly “concedes that some of the Keeton factors seem to cut

against an argument of insufficiency of the evidence to support an affirmative finding to the

future dangerousness special issue.”28 He argues, however, that there is insufficient evidence

to support a jury finding, beyond a reasonable doubt, that he will probably continue to

commit acts of violence in the setting in which he would find himself for the rest of his life

under current law, namely prison. But, as we recently re-emphasized in Estrada v. State,29

our appellate review of the sufficiency of the evidence to establish future dangerousness is

not limited to the defendant’s probable conduct within prison walls, even with the advent of

life-without-parole as the exclusive alternative to the death penalty for capital offenders.30

We hold that the evidence was legally sufficient to support the jury’s determination that the

appellant would commit criminal acts of violence that would constitute a continuing threat

to society and overrule the appellant’s sixth point of error.



       27

        State’s brief, at 46.
       28

        Appellant’s brief, at 52 (citing Keeton v. State, 724 S.W.2d 58, 61 (Tex. Crim. App. 1987)).
The Keeton factors include the circumstances of the offense, the calculated or deliberate nature of
the defendant’s acts, the degree and severity of the defendant’s prior criminal record, his age and
personal circumstances, whether duress was involved, and any psychiatric or character evidence.
       29

        313 S.W.3d 274 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010)
       30

         Id. at 280-85 (even following the passage of life-without-parole in 2005, appellate review
of legal sufficiency of the evidence to establish future dangerousness looks to defendant’s likely
conduct in the abstract, “whether [the defendant will be] in or out of prison”).
                                                                                       Ruiz – 14

       In his seventh point of error, the appellant also argues that the evidence is factually

insufficient to support the jury’s finding of future dangerousness. We have never indulged

claims of factual insufficiency with respect to future dangerousness.31 Moreover, this Court

no longer entertains claims of factual insufficiency in capital-murder cases on issues for

which the State bears the burden of proof.32 The appellant argues at some length that this

Court’s refusal to assay factual sufficiency of the evidence to support a jury finding of future

dangerousness invidiously discriminates against capital-murder defendants, contrary to the

Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. Whatever validity this

argument may once have held,33 there is none now, in light of our recent rejection of factual

sufficiency review across the board.34 Accordingly, we overrule the appellant’s seventh point

of error.

                  Prosecutor’s Comment Regarding Parole Eligibility

       In his fifth point of error, the appellant claims that the prosecutor reversibly erred to

suggest to the jury, during his examination of a State’s witness, that the law might change

at some future date to provide that a capital defendant, sentenced to life without parole,



       31

        Hunter v. State, 243 S.W.3d 664, 672 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007).
       32

        Martinez v. State, supra.
       33

        But see McGinn v. State, 961 S.W.2d 161, 169 (Tex. Crim. App. 1998).
       34

        Brooks v. State, 323 S.W.3d 893 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).
                                                                                        Ruiz – 15

would nevertheless be eligible for parole. He contends that, broaching this suggestion in the

jury’s presence, over the appellant’s objection, and then reiterating it shortly thereafter over

the appellant’s renewed objection, violated his right to due process of law. He relies

primarily upon the United States Supreme Court’s plurality opinion in Simmons v. South

Carolina.35 In our view, however, the objection that the appellant leveled at trial was

insufficiently specific to preserve his present claim for appeal.

       In an effort to counter what it anticipated to be the appellant’s defensive posture at the

punishment phase of the case, namely that the appellant would not pose a significant danger

to society if assessed a sentence of life without parole, the State presented testimony from

A. P. Merrilott. Merrilott is a long-time investigator with a special prosecution unit, based

in Walker County, that prosecutes violent crimes committed within the state prison system.

He testified with regard to the classification of incoming inmates, and specifically, non-

death-sentenced capital offenders, within the prison system, describing the opportunities that

such inmates have to commit violent acts while in prison. Toward the end of Merillott’s

direct-examination testimony, the relevant colloquy occurred:

                Q. [By Prosecutor] Recently Mr. Merrilott, the law has changed here
       in Texas to where if one is convicted of capital murder by a jury and sentenced
       to life, that defendant no longer has the option of parole; is that correct?

              A. That’s correct.

              Q. So Mr. Ruiz is sentenced to life in this case based on the answers


       35

        512 U.S. 154 (1994) (plurality opinion).
                                                                             Ruiz – 16

to the two special issues, he has no possibility or potential for parole?

       A. That’s correct.

       Q. Unless the laws change sometime in the future?

       A. Right.

              [Defense Counsel]: Your Honor, we would object to that as
being improper. There is no evidence that the law is ever going to change and
for him to imply that it may at some point in time is incorrect.

              THE COURT: I will overrule that objection.

              [Defense Counsel]: May we have a running objection on that?

              THE COURT: You may.

           [Defense Counsel]: To sit here and make these jurors think that
somehow something is going to change in what they are sentencing him to –

               [Prosecutor]: That’s why I said unless, Judge, unless. I am not
saying it is going to happen. I said unless.

                [Defense Counsel]: Well, this is making the matter worse, he is
saying that maybe it will happen and everybody in this room has to work on
the premise that nothing is ever going to change about what we are told them
[sic] in voir dire and what the law says now. So to imply that it is somehow,
some way this is just a wink-and-a-nod process down here, is certainly
improper.

              THE COURT: Overrule your objection, [Defense Counsel].

       Q. (By [Prosecutor]) That’s the law right now, is that correct?

       A. That’s correct.

              [Defense Counsel]: Once again, Your Honor, we would object
to him going back to it by saying “That’s the law right now,” once again imply
that somehow there is something in the works that will change what we all
                                                                            Ruiz – 17

know is for the going to [sic].

              THE COURT: Overruled.

       Q. (By [Prosecutor]) Parole serves many purposes; is that correct?

              [Defense Counsel]: We would object to talking about to parole
[sic] because it is not available in this case.

              [Prosecutor]: That’s what I am getting to, Judge.

       Q. (By [Prosecutor]) What purpose does parole serve?

                [Defense Counsel]: Your Honor, once again we would object
to this. It is not a factor in a case that’s life without parole.

              THE COURT: May I see the attorneys.

              (Following proceedings had at Bench Conference.)

              THE COURT: I presume you are going to tie parole up?

             [Prosecutor]: Parole is for good behavior and the defendant will
not have access to that. That’s all I am going into it.

              [Defense Counsel]: That’s not the only incentive for good
behavior.

              [Prosecutor]: It is an accurate statement.

              THE COURT: I will overrule the objection.

              (End of Bench Conference.)

              THE COURT: Overruled.

      Q. (By [Prosecutor]) The availability of parole for most of the general
population inmates, that help to maintain order and security?

       A. Yes, sir, it gives an inmate a reason to behave.
                                                                                          Ruiz – 18

             Q. And a capital murder life without parole, obviously parole is
       unavailable, does he have that incentive?

               A. That incentive is not there for him. I don’t know what it would
       take, the incentive is not there.

With this, the prosecutor turned briefly to other matters and then passed Merrilott to the

defense for cross-examination.

       Simmons held that, consistent with the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth

Amendment, a state “may not create a false dilemma by advancing generalized arguments

regarding the defendant’s future dangerousness while, at the same time, preventing the jury

from learning that the defendant never will be released on parole.”36 In the instant case, the

jury was fully aware that, under current Texas law, the only alternative to the death penalty

for a defendant convicted of capital murder is life without parole. Nevertheless, in an

extrapolation of the due-process principle announced in Simmons, the appellant argues that

the prosecutor’s suggestion that the law might at some future point in time retroactively

change with respect to parole eligibility for life-sentenced capital defendants deprived him

of due process. We need not decide, however, whether Simmons’s due-process holding can

or should be extended in this way because, in any event, the appellant’s trial objection was

insufficiently specific to alert the trial court that the purported impropriety of the prosecutor’s

suggestion that the Legislature could someday retroactively change the parole law for life-

sentenced capital defendants was grounded in federal due process.


       36

        512 U.S. at 171.
                                                                                       Ruiz – 19

       To preserve a complaint for appellate review, a party must first timely lodge his

complaint in the trial court by way of a “request, objection, or motion that . . . stated the

grounds for the ruling that the complaining party sought from the trial court with sufficient

specificity to make the trial court aware of the complaint, unless the specific grounds were

apparent from the context[.]”37 Here, when the prosecutor suggested that, if the appellant

were sentenced to life, he would not be eligible for parole “[u]nless the laws change

sometime in the future[,]” the appellant timely objected, but the immediately stated ground

for his objection was simply that this suggestion was “improper.” He did not explain what

he believed to be improper about the suggestion, and a precise basis for the purported

impropriety would not have been readily apparent to the trial court from the context. He next

suggested that there was “no evidence” in the record “that the law is ever going to change”

and that to imply that it would change “is incorrect.” If we construe this to constitute an

objection that the prosecutor was arguing facts outside of the record,38 then we observe that

the appellant’s Simmons due-process complaint on appeal fails to comport with the objection

raised at trial. And the appellant’s further trial assertion that the prosecutor’s suggestion is

“incorrect” provides no clearer basis for the ruling he sought from the trial judge than did his



       37

        TEX . R. APP . P. 33.1(a)(1)(A) (emphasis supplied).
       38

        See George E. Dix & Robert O. Dawson, 43 TEXAS PRACTICE : CRIMINAL PRACTICE AND
PROCEDURE § 37.21 (2d ed. 2001), at 611 (“The most fundamental rule of closing argument is that
counsel must confine their arguments to the evidence that was introduced during the trial and to
reasonable deductions from that evidence.”).
                                                                                               Ruiz – 20

naked assertion that the suggestion was “improper.” While it is abundantly clear from the

context what the appellant was objecting to, the “grounds for the ruling” he sought are not.39

“A trial objection must specify the legal theory later relied upon on appeal.” 40                   The

appellant’s initial objection here did not. It is true that the appellant persisted in his

objection, but his later iteration that the prosecutor’s suggestion was simply “improper”

likewise failed to identify a legal basis for the ruling he sought. We hold that the appellant

failed to preserve his presently asserted Simmons-derived complaint for appeal.

        In addition, we hold that, any error that may have emanated from the prosecutor’s

suggestion with respect to parole eligibility, on the particular facts of this case, did not

contribute to the jury’s answer to the statutory special punishment issues and was therefore

harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.41 The prosecutor’s suggestion was not part of any

broader strategy (as was the case in Simmons) to persuade the jury that it should find that the

appellant constitutes a continuing threat to society because the evidence shows he is


        39

        TEX . R. APP . P. 33.1(a)(1)(A).
        40

      George E. Dix & Robert O. Dawson, 43A TEXAS PRACTICE : CRIMINAL PRACTICE                      AND
PROCEDURE § 42.94 (2d ed. 2001), at 283.
        41

         For purposes of this harm analysis, we will assume that the appellant did preserve his present
Simmons-derived due-process complaint for appeal. We will also assume, without deciding, that the
trial court erred to overrule the appellant’s objection and that the objection preserved a constitutional
error for appeal, invoking Rule 44.2(a) of the Rules of Appellate Procedure. See TEX . R. APP . P.
44.2(a) (“If the appellate record in a criminal case reveals constitutional error that is subject to
harmless error review, the [reviewing court] must reverse a judgment of conviction or punishment
unless the court determines beyond a reasonable doubt that the error did not contribute to the
conviction or punishment.”).
                                                                                                Ruiz – 21

dangerous to the public at large and might someday, if not sentenced to death, be again

released into that segment of society. Indeed, quite the opposite. As the balance of the

testimony quoted above demonstrates, the suggestion occurred, more or less incidentally, in

the context of a colloquy in which the prosecutor was attempting to show that the appellant

would actually constitute a threat of violence even in the context of prison society.42 The

prosecutor did not repeat his suggestion at any later point in the punishment proceedings.

He never argued or intimated during his punishment summations that the jury should answer

the first special issue affirmatively in order to protect itself by assuring that the appellant will

never pose a future danger to the general public. In other words, the prosecutor did not

broach the possibility that the parole law would change as part of any concerted scheme to

convince the jury to impose the death penalty as an act of societal self-preservation, and the

jurors were unlikely, on the record before us, to have construed it in that way. We are

confident that the prosecutor’s suggestion did not contribute to the jury’s affirmative answer

to the future-dangerousness special issue. We therefore hold that any error in failing to

sustain the appellant’s objection was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. The appellant’s

fifth point of error is overruled.




        42

         And indeed, in this context, what the prosecutor was really emphasizing was the appellant’s
parole ineligibility, in an attempt to persuade the jury that, in the absence of the “incentive” of parole
to regulate his behavior, the appellant would be more likely to commit acts of violence in the
penitentiary.
                                                                                         Ruiz – 22

                             Constitutionality of Article 37.071

       The appellant maintains in his eighth point of error that Article 37.071, Section

2(f)(4)’s definition of mitigating evidence is unconstitutionally narrow insofar as it fails to

accommodate jury consideration of any mitigating evidence that does not directly reduce a

capital defendant’s moral blameworthiness. We have repeatedly reject this claim,43 and do

so again today. The appellant’s eighth point of error is overruled.

       As a corollary to his eighth point of error, the appellant argues in his ninth point of

error that the trial court erred in refusing to submit a jury instruction that he requested at the

close of the punishment phase that would have expressly informed the jury that its

consideration of mitigating evidence was not limited to that evidence which directly reduces

his “moral blameworthiness”;44 they could also, according to this proposed instruction,

“consider any other evidence that would justify a sentence of life without parole.” The trial

court’s refusal to submit this requested instruction, the appellant contends, caused him “some

harm” under Almanza v. State.45 He argues that, because his requested instruction was not

an incorrect instruction in contemplation of our case law, it was therefore “law of the case”




       43

        Lucero v. State, 246 S.W.3d 86, 96 & n.11 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008).
       44

        TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 37.071, § 2(f)(4).
       45

        686 S.W.2d 157, 171 (Tex. Crim. App. 1985) (op. on State’s motion for reh’g).
                                                                                             Ruiz – 23

for purposes of Article 36.14 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.46 We recently rejected an

almost identical claim in Coble v. State,47 in which we observed that the statutory definition

of mitigating evidence contains no “nexus” requirement, and that prior case law has

       never suggested that a jury can, should, or must be instructed not to consider
       any nexus between the crime and the mitigating evidence. Such an instruction
       would be necessary only if the jury would be reasonably likely to infer a nexus
       requirement from the statutory words. That is not the case.48

That the appellant’s proposed jury instruction was not incorrect does not mean that the trial

court was necessarily obliged to submit it under Article 36.14 if the court’s charge was

otherwise adequate to instruct the jury on “the law applicable to the case.” Having rejected

a substantially similar argument in Coble, we reject the appellant’s argument today. His

ninth point of error is overruled.

       In his point of error number ten, the appellant challenges the constitutionality of that

aspect of Article 37.071 which requires at least ten negative votes before the jury is

authorized to return a negative verdict on any of the special punishment issues.49 We have




       46

         See TEX CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 36.14 (“in each felony case . . . the judge shall, before the
argument begins, deliver to the jury . . . a written charge distinctly setting forth the law applicable
to the case[.]”).
       47

       ___ S.W.3d ___ (Tex. Crim. App., No. AP-76,019, 2010 WL 3984713, delivered October
13, 2010) (slip op. at *23).
       48

        Id.
       49

        TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 37.071, §§ 2(d) & (f)(2).
                                                                                             Ruiz – 24

rejected this challenge to the so-called “10-12 rule" on many prior occasions,50 and we reject

it today as well. We overrule the appellant’s tenth point of error.

       In his eleventh point of error, the appellant complains that the future-dangerousness

special issue is unconstitutional because it fails to define “probability,” “criminal acts of

violence,” and “continuing threat to society.”51 We have previously rejected this claim,52 and

do so again in the instant case. We overrule the appellant’s eleventh point of error.

       In his twelfth and thirteenth points of error, the appellant invokes Ring v. Arizona 53

and Apprendi v. New Jersey54 to argue that the mitigation special issue is unconstitutional to

the extent that it fails to place the burden of proof upon the State, and to a level of confidence

beyond a reasonable doubt, to demonstrate an absence of mitigating circumstances sufficient

to justify imposition of a life sentence.55 We have consistently declined so to hold,56 and we


       50

        Russeau v. State, 171 S.W.3d 871, 886 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005).
       51

          See TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 37.071, § 2(b)(1) (“On conclusion of the presentation of
the [punishment phase] evidence, the court shall submit the following issues to the jury: . . . whether
there is a probability that the defendant would commit criminal acts of violence that would constitute
a continuing threat to society[.]”).
       52

        Coble v. State, supra (slip op. at *24 & n.150).
       53

        536 U.S. 584 (2002).
       54

        530 U.S. 466 (2000).
       55

         See TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 37.071, § 2(e)(1) (“The court shall instruct the jury that if
the jury returns an affirmative finding to each issue submitted under Subsection (b), it shall answer
the following issue: . . . Whether, taking into consideration all of the evidence, including the
                                                                                             Ruiz – 25

likewise reject the appellant’s argument today. The appellant’s twelfth and thirteenth points

of error are overruled.

       Finally, in his fourteenth point of error, the appellant contends that Article 37.071

violates the Texas constitution because it simultaneously restricts and allows open-ended jury

discretion in imposing the death penalty, relying on Justice Blackmun’s dissenting opinion

in Callins v. Collins.57 Having previously rejected this claim,58 we likewise reject it now.

The appellant’s fourteenth point of error is overruled.

                                         CONCLUSION

       The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.




DELIVERED:     March 2, 2011
DO NOT PUBLISH




circumstances of the offense, the defendant’s character and background, and the personal moral
culpability of the defendant, there is a sufficient mitigating circumstance or circumstances to warrant
a sentence of life imprisonment without parole rather than a death sentence be imposed.”).
       56

        Segundo v. State, 270 S.W.3d 79, 102 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008).
       57

        510 U.S. 1141 (1994) (Blackmun, J., dissenting).
       58

         See, e.g., Escamilla v. State, 143 S.W.3d 814, 828 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004) (rejecting
identical claim under both federal and state constitutions).
