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CROSSOVER: Capital Murder Appeal Offers Family-Law Crossover: Defendant’s Self-Serving Police Interview Kept Out as Hearsay Despite Excited-Utterance/Mental-State Claims

New Texas Court of Appeals Opinion - Analyzed for Family Law Attorneys

Melvin Orlando Guevara Jr. v. The State of Texas, 12-25-00064-CR, March 25, 2026.

On appeal from 114th Judicial District Court, Smith County, Texas

Synopsis

The Twelfth Court of Appeals affirmed a capital murder conviction and life-without-parole sentence, rejecting claims of (1) ineffective assistance for declining to cross-examine the State’s key eyewitness, (2) charge error for refusing a lesser-included instruction on murder, and (3) evidentiary error for excluding the defendant’s custodial interview statements as hearsay. Most relevant for litigators, the court treated the defendant’s “I didn’t mean to hurt anyone / I didn’t know what I was doing / I was intoxicated / I was remorseful” custodial narrative as classic self-serving hearsay not salvaged by excited-utterance or mental-state theories.

Relevance to Family Law

Texas family cases increasingly feature parallel criminal conduct (family violence, stalking, protective-order violations) and the resulting audio/video records—911 calls, body-cam, and custodial interviews—often get repurposed in SAPCRs, divorces, and protective orders. This opinion is a reminder that a party cannot typically introduce their own out-of-court narrative (especially a police interview) for the truth of the matter under the guise of “state of mind” or “excited utterance,” and then use it to shape conservatorship findings, credibility determinations, or property-dispute narratives. If you want the factfinder to hear your client’s exculpatory version, the clean vehicle is usually live testimony (with the corresponding cross-exposure) or a properly supported hearsay exception that actually fits the statement’s purpose and timing.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The State alleged the defendant shot and killed the victim during the course of committing or attempting to commit burglary of a building or habitation, elevating the case to capital murder. The record reflected a relationship-driven catalyst: the defendant’s former girlfriend (T.C.) had moved out, disabled location sharing, and was communicating with the victim on Snapchat on the victim’s birthday. T.C. went to the victim’s mother’s residence and was in the victim’s bedroom when the defendant arrived, entered the residence without permission, confronted T.C., displayed a firearm, and fired multiple shots, killing the victim.

After the shooting, law enforcement located the defendant through vehicle leads and cell-phone/location information. Text messages to a close friend (M.A.) included accusations that T.C. was “cheating,” that he was going to see it for himself, and later, “I messed up,” “I’m tossing my phone.” Detectives conducted a custodial interview. The defense attempted to elicit portions of the interview suggesting the defendant was intoxicated, not trying to hurt anyone, did not know what he was doing, had not slept for days, and was remorseful and distraught—invoking excited utterance, present sense impression, and existing mental/emotional/physical condition exceptions. The trial court excluded those statements as hearsay.

At trial, the State’s eyewitness T.C. testified about the confrontation and shooting, including a voicemail in which the defendant accused her of cheating and said, “I’m going to kill him right now.” Notably, after a short break at the end of the State’s direct examination, defense counsel asked T.C. no questions. The defense requested a lesser-included instruction on murder; the trial court denied the request. The jury convicted of capital murder, and because the State did not seek death, the sentence was life without parole.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

Application

The opinion’s practical gravity is the evidentiary discussion: the defense attempted to get the jury the defendant’s version of events through the detective—without placing the defendant on the stand—by characterizing interview statements as exceptions to hearsay. The trial court rejected that route, and the court of appeals upheld the exclusion. Even when a defendant appears upset, remorseful, sleep-deprived, or intoxicated, custodial interview statements offered by the defendant are typically self-serving hearsay when offered for their truth (e.g., “I wasn’t trying to hurt anyone,” “I didn’t know what I was doing,” “I was intoxicated”). The court treated the proffered exceptions as mismatched to the purpose: the statements were being offered to prove the truth of the defendant’s exculpatory narrative, not merely to show contemporaneous condition independent of culpability.

On ineffective assistance, the court rejected the premise that “no cross” equals deficient performance. Without a developed record (e.g., motion for new trial testimony from trial counsel), appellate courts will rarely label a cross-examination choice as objectively unreasonable. “No questions” can be strategic: avoiding repetition of harmful testimony, avoiding opening doors, preserving a theme, or preventing the witness from rehabilitating on redirect. The court also found no prejudice showing sufficient to undermine confidence in the verdict given the State’s evidence (including eyewitness testimony, prior statements/voicemail, and post-offense conduct).

On the lesser-included instruction, the court affirmed the trial court’s refusal. In capital-murder cases predicated on murder plus an aggravating element (here, burglary), the defendant must identify evidence that would allow a rational jury to acquit of the aggravator yet still convict of murder. The court concluded the record did not supply that “guilty only of murder” evidentiary lane in a way that required submission of the lesser.

Holding

The court held trial counsel was not shown ineffective for failing to cross-examine T.C. Because the record did not affirmatively demonstrate deficient performance—and because strategic motivations are presumed on a silent record—the claim failed. The court further concluded the defendant did not establish a reasonable probability of a different result.

The court held the trial court did not err by refusing a lesser-included instruction on murder. The defendant did not meet the evidentiary requirement that would permit a rational jury to find him guilty only of the lesser offense while rejecting the capital element alleged.

The court held the trial court did not abuse its discretion by excluding the defendant’s custodial interview statements as hearsay. The proposed hearsay exceptions did not convert an exculpatory, self-serving police interview into admissible evidence offered by the declarant to prove the truth of the declarant’s narrative.

Practical Application

Family-law litigators should treat this case as a cautionary authority when a party tries to inject their own “cleaned-up” narrative into evidence via recordings, police interviews, or third-party witnesses. The most common family-law analog is the respondent in a protective order or the parent in a SAPCR trying to introduce their own statement—“I wasn’t threatening her,” “I was intoxicated,” “I didn’t mean it,” “I was just upset,” “I didn’t know what I was doing”—through an officer or counselor. If it’s offered for truth, expect a hearsay objection and a skeptical bench.

Strategically, the decision also underscores a trial reality in family court: sometimes the best cross is no cross. In high-conflict SAPCRs, cross-examining a volatile complaining witness can provide the other side a platform to repeat and embellish allegations, recover from weak direct testimony, or smuggle in new details. But if you choose “no cross,” preserve the record elsewhere—your theory must still arrive through admissible evidence, not your client’s out-of-court narrative.

Finally, on the lesser-included framework, the opinion maps onto family cases when litigators attempt “middle-ground” submissions (e.g., trying to submit a lesser finding of family violence or narrower abusive conduct). If you want the court to have a lesser option, you need record evidence that supports the lesser while negating the greater—otherwise the request is an invitation, not a requirement.

Checklists

Getting Your Client’s “State of Mind” Evidence Admitted (Without Hearsay Traps)

Custodial Interviews, Body-Cam, and 911 Audio in Divorce/SAPCR/PO Cases

“No Cross” Decisions: Appellate-Proofing the Strategy

Citation

Melvin Orlando Guevara Jr. v. State of Texas, No. 12-25-00064-CR (Tex. App.—Tyler Mar. 25, 2026) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

This opinion can be weaponized in family court as a disciplined evidentiary gatekeeping tool: when the opposing party tries to introduce their own police interview (or portions of it) to establish “I wasn’t violent,” “I didn’t threaten,” “I was intoxicated,” or “I was remorseful,” you can frame it as exactly what the Twelfth rejected—self-serving hearsay dressed up as excited utterance/mental state. That forces a binary choice that often favors you strategically: either (1) the statement stays out, preventing a curated narrative from reaching the judge, or (2) the party testifies, opening them to impeachment with the same recording, text messages, location data, protective-order history, and inconsistencies. In conservatorship disputes, that leverage is real—keeping out a respondent’s exculpatory “story” can preserve the integrity of family-violence findings, while compelling live testimony can unlock credibility collapses that shape best-interest rulings, possession schedules, and protective-order relief.

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