Court Opinion

ID: 3083129
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-10-16 02:16:46.850189+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:26:52.819914
License: Public Domain

NUMBER 13-11-00254-CR

                                  COURT OF APPEALS

                         THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                           CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

MARY ALICE PALACIOS,                                                        Appellant,

                                               v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS,                                                           Appellee.

                      On appeal from the 398th District Court
                            of Hidalgo County, Texas.

                                   OPINION

       Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Rodriguez and Garza
                      Opinion by Chief Justice Valdez
      Appellant, Mary Alice Palacios, was convicted of official oppression by intentionally

or knowingly subjecting Leroy Trevino and Francisco De Luna III to an arrest that she

knew was unlawful. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 39.03(a)(1) (West, Westlaw through

2013 3d C.S.). She was sentenced to thirty days’ confinement in the county jail and
assessed a fine of $4,000 for each count.1 However, the sentences were suspended,

and appellant was placed on community supervision for six months. By several issues,

appellant challenges the convictions.2 We reverse and render an acquittal.

                                           I.       UNLAWFUL ACT

        This case arises from appellant’s acts and decisions she made while exercising

her judicial duties as Justice of the Peace for Precinct 4, Place 2 in Hidalgo County,

Texas. At issue are appellant’s interpretation of applicable law in the area of truancy and

her authority to act in issuing arrest warrants for Trevino and De Luna. Specifically, the

State claimed that appellant’s court lacked jurisdiction to issue arrest warrants for De

Luna, that she violated double jeopardy principles, and that she caused Trevino to be

arrested for failure to appear in her court when he did in fact appear. In connection with

the foregoing, the State indicted appellant for three counts of official oppression, accusing

her of subjecting Trevino, De Luna, and Elizabeth Diaz to arrests that she knew were

unlawful.3 Appellant contends that the State’s premise is incorrect under the penal code’s

definition of unlawful. Specifically appellant argues that under the penal code, her court’s

lack of jurisdiction and her alleged violation of De Luna’s right against double jeopardy do

        1   The jury acquitted appellant of a third charge of official oppression of Elizabeth Diaz.
        2 Specifically, appellant contends: (1) the State failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that she
knew that the arrests were “unlawful,” that she was not justified or privileged, and that the arrests were
actually unlawful as defined by the penal code (issues one, two, and three); (2) the jury charge failed to
include the statutory definition of unlawful and appellant suffered egregious harm (issue four); and (3)
appellant’s trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance (issue five).
         3 Because the jury acquitted appellant of the charge related to Diaz, we will not provide a summary

of that charge in this opinion. See TEX. R. APP. P. 47.1.

                                                            2
not make her act of signing the arrest warrants in this case unlawful as defined by the

penal code.4 In other words, there was nothing criminal or tortious about her acts.

        Under a hypothetically correct jury charge, to convict appellant of official

oppression as alleged in this case, the State had to prove that appellant, a public servant,

while acting under color of her office or employment, intentionally subjected Trevino and

De Luna to an arrest that she knew was “unlawful.” See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. §

39.03(a)(1); see also State v. Edmond, 933 S.W.2d 120, 127 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996)

(explaining that when charged with official oppression by mistreatment, the defendant

must have known that the mistreatment alleged in the indictment was in fact unlawful in

that it was either criminal or tortious). The penal code defines “‘[u]nlawful’ as criminal,

tortious or both and includes what would be criminal or tortious but for a defense not

amounting to justification or privilege.” TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 1.07(a)(48) (West,

Westlaw through 2013 3d C.S.). Thus, the State had to prove that appellant, while acting

under color of her office, intentionally subjected Trevino and De Luna to an arrest that

she knew was criminal, tortious, or both. See id., § 39.03(a)(1); Edmond, 933 S.W.2d at

127 (“In order for a defendant to [know that his conduct] is unlawful [under the official

oppression statute, the conduct] must be in fact, unlawful. Otherwise a defendant’s

‘mistake of law’ as to the illegality of his own act would create liability where none before

existed.”).

        The preliminary issue before us is whether appellant’s acts of signing the arrest

warrants were criminal or tortious.5 Although at trial, the State did not allege that any of

        4   The State has not explained how appellant’s acts were criminal or tortious.
         5 It is undisputed that the jury was not provided the penal code definition of unlawful. Thus, it was

not informed that appellant’s act had to be criminal and/or tortious.

                                                           3
appellants acts were criminal or tortious, we understand the State’s theory as being that

appellant’s acts were criminal because her court lacked jurisdiction, she violated double

jeopardy principles, and she had Trevino arrested for an offense he did not commit.6 See

id. A crime is “an act or the commission of an act that is forbidden or the omission of a

duty that is commanded by a public law and that makes the offender liable to punishment

by that law.” Webster’s http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/crime. Here, the

State does not cite to any law, and we find no law or authority, that makes a judge

criminally liable to punishment if that judge performs an act, such as signing an arrest

warrant, though her court lacks jurisdiction. Regarding the violation of double jeopardy

principles, again the State cites no law, and we find none, that makes a judge criminally

liable to punishment if that judge signs a warrant for a person’s arrest in violation of the

defendant’s right against double jeopardy.

        Our interpretation of what constitutes an “unlawful” act under the penal code is

bolstered by our review of cases determining whether a police officer’s discharge of his

official duties is unlawful. For example, in Hall v. State, the issue before the court of

criminal appeals was whether a police officer had acted “unlawfully” or within the “lawful

discharge” of his official duties when he pushed an inmate. 158 S.W.3d 470, 474 (Tex.

Crim. App. 2005). The court explained that a police officer is acting within the lawful

discharge of his official duties if he “is not criminally or tortiously abusing his office as a

          6 The State argues that appellant had no right to violate De Luna’s constitutional rights by subjecting

him to double jeopardy, and issuing invalid warrants. The State further argues that the evidence “supports
a conclusion that an ordinary prudent man in Appellant’s circumstances would realize that it was unlawful
to arrest someone for not appearing in court who actually did appear and to arrest another person after
having transferred jurisdiction over their cases to the juvenile court.” However, the State has not explained
at trial or on appeal, how appellant’s act of signing the warrants when the court lacked jurisdiction, is
criminal, especially if that judge merely misinterpreted the law. We have been unable to find any authority
to support such a conclusion.

                                                            4
public servant.” Id. at 475. The court of criminal appeals explained that when determining

the “lawfulness” or “unlawfulness” of the officer’s acts, the appellate court does not

concern itself with whether the officer has crossed every “t” and dotted every “i.” Id. In

other words, whether the officer’s acts were unlawful does not depend on whether the

officer lawfully arrested the defendant or on whether the officer read the Miranda warnings

to the defendant. Id. (citing Guerra v. State, 771 S.W.2d 453, 461 (Tex. Crim. App. 1988);

Montoya v. State, 744 S.W.2d 15, 29 (Tex. Crim. App. 1987), overruled on other grounds

by Cockrell v. State, 933 S.W.2d 3, 89 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996)). 7 Instead, what matters

is whether the officer’s acts were criminal, tortious, or both. See Id.

        Although the case before us does not involve the issue of lawful discharge of

official duties, we find Hall instructive and analogous to the situation here. This same

reasoning applies to judges, whether a judge’s acts are unlawful as defined by the penal

code does not depend on whether the judge lawfully issues a warrant, indeed, there are

multiple cases wherein a judge’s warrant is found to be invalid or a police officer’s initial

        7 Under the State’s theory, it appears to us, that an officer could be guilty of official oppression
depending on the facts of the case if that officer lacked legal authority to make the arrest because under
the State’s theory in this case, the arrest would be “unlawful.” However, as the court of criminal appeals
has clearly stated, such a lack of legal authority is not criminal, tortious, or both. See Hall v. State, 158
S.W.3d 470, 474–75 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005); Montoya v. State, 744 S.W.2d 15, 29 (Tex. Crim. App. 1987),
overruled on other grounds by Cockrell v. State, 933 S.W.2d 73, 89 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996).

         In such cases, the State would also have to prove that the officer knew that the arrest was unlawful.
In this case, the State argued that appellant knew that her actions were “unlawful” because the law is so
obvious and clear. However, in our above example, what if an officer subjectively believed that he had
probable cause to arrest a defendant. But, the State believes that the law is so obvious and clear that there
was no probable cause to arrest. The State could bring official oppression charges against the arresting
officer and then argue to the jury, as it has in this case, that this officer knew the law and by implication, he
knew that there was no probable cause to arrest the defendant. Allowing such an outcome could lead to
inconsistent results because if the law is so obvious and clear that there is no probable cause, then the
officer will be convicted; however, if the law is more complex, and the State does not believe that there was
a lack of probable cause, even if no probable cause existed to arrest the defendant, the officer would not
be guilty of official oppression. We cannot agree with the State that merely knowing the law amounts to
knowing that the arrest is “unlawful,” unless the acts are criminal, tortious, or both.

                                                            5
warrantless arrest is without probable cause. See Stiggers v. State, 506 S.W.2d 609

(Tex. Crim. App. 1974) (concluding that the arrest of appellant was “unlawful” but stating

that “[a]n unreasonable seizure of the person that does not produce evidence of

culpability does not per se vitiate a conviction. This is particularly true where, as here,

there is no claim that any circumstance of the alleged illegal arrest led to appellant’s

conviction, the evidence supporting which is unchallenged.”); Hamm v. State, 709 S.W.2d
14, 15 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1986, no pet.) (“If a conviction is not based upon the

fruits of an illegal detention, the mere fact that the illegal detention occurred will not

invalidate the subsequent conviction.”).8 However, as set out in Hall, what matters is

whether the judge is criminally or tortiously abusing his office as a public servant. See

Hall, 158 S.W.3d at 475.

        We understand that the court in Hall analyzed whether a defendant had the right

to defend himself with physical force from a public servant. However, pertinent to our

         8 In the above-cited cases, the courts found that the arrest may have been “illegal” or “unlawful”

using the general definition of unlawful.           See http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/unlawful
(establishing that unlawful means that something is “not allowed by the law”); http://www.merriam-
webster.com/dictionary/illegal?show=0&t=1405349622 (defining illegal as “not according to or authorized
by law”). In those cases where a trial court has no jurisdiction or a double jeopardy violation has occurred,
the appellate court in reversing the trial court’s acts is concluding that the trial court’s acts are not allowed
by the law, which includes among other things, the United States Constitution. None of these appellate
courts applied the penal code’s definition of unlawful, which requires that the act be criminal, tortious, or
both. We agree that causing a person to be arrested without authority is serious and requires strict scrutiny.
However, we cannot conclude that a judge or police officer who mistakenly interprets the applicable law
has committed a crime or tort by arresting a person.

          The State’s theories in this case, will create precedent for charging police officers with official
oppression for the “illegal” or “unlawful” arrests if it is later shown that no probable cause existed or that
some other constitutional error has occurred. Here, neither Trevino nor De Luna appealed from appellant’s
judgments. There is no evidence in the record that any court has found that appellant’s court lacked
jurisdiction, that she violated double jeopardy, or that she arrested Trevino for an offense he did not commit.
Moreover, this precedent could also be used by defendants as a defense for the offense of assault on a
public servant. If for example, the arresting police officer’s initial arrest is unlawful because that officer
lacked probable cause to arrest the defendant, a defendant could cite to this case and argue that the officer
had engaged in official oppression, thus, the officer was not engaged in the lawful discharge of his official
duties. The State has not argued that by criminalizing official oppression, the legislature intended such a
result.

                                                            6
analysis, the Hall court held that in order for the police officer’s acts to be unlawful, it had

to be criminal, tortious, or both. Hall, 158 S.W.3d 470, 474. Therefore, based on the

plain reading of the definition of unlawful in the penal code, and our understanding of what

constitutes an unlawful act, as previously stated, the State had the burden of proving that

appellant’s act of signing the warrants was criminal or tortious. See TEX. PENAL CODE

ANN. § 39.03. The State, in this case, could not prevail by merely showing that appellant

lacked legal authority to act as it has alleged in this case. In addition, the State had the

burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant knew that her acts were

criminal, tortious, or both. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. §§ 1.07(a)(48), 39.03.

                     II.    STANDARD OF REVIEW AND APPLICABLE LAW

       In a sufficiency review, we examine the evidence in the light most favorable to the

prosecution to determine whether any rational fact-finder could have found the essential

elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307,

319 (1979); Brooks v. State, 323 S.W.3d 893, 898–99 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010) (plurality

op.). The fact finder is the exclusive judge of the facts, the credibility of witnesses, and

of the weight to be given testimony. Brooks, 323 S.W.3d at 899. We must resolve any

evidentiary inconsistencies in favor of the judgment. Id.

       We measure the legal sufficiency of the evidence by the elements of the offense

as defined by a hypothetically correct jury charge. Coleman v. State, 131 S.W.3d 303,

314 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 2004, pet. ref’d) (citing Malik v. State, 953 S.W.2d 234,

240 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997)).        Under a hypothetically correct jury charge, a person

commits the offense of official oppression, as charged in this case, if the “public servant

acting under color of his office or employment . . . intentionally subjects another to . . . [an]

                                                   7
arrest . . . that he [or she] knows is unlawful,” i.e., that is criminal, tortious, or both. TEX.

PENAL CODE ANN. § 39.03(a)(1).

        The definition of unlawful in the penal code, would not include an act that would be

criminal or tortious if not justified or privileged. See id. § 1.07(a)(48) (West, Westlaw

through 2013 3d C.S.). Thus, appellant is not guilty in this case, if a justification or

privilege existed for her acts.9 See id. A party is justified under section 9.21 of the Texas

Penal Code when “the actor reasonably believes the conduct is required or authorized by

law, by the judgment or order of a competent court or other governmental tribunal, or in

the execution of legal process.” Id. § 9.21(a) (West, Westlaw through 2013 3d C.S.).

Section 9.21(d)(1) further states that the actor’s conduct is justified if the actor “reasonably

believes” that “the court or governmental tribunal has jurisdiction or the process is lawful,

even though the court or governmental tribunal lacks jurisdiction or the process is

unlawful. . . .” Id. § 9.21(d)(1). A “reasonable belief” is one “that would be held by an

ordinary and prudent man in the same circumstances as the actor.” Id. § 1.07(42).

                                      III.    THE STATE’S CASE

        At appellant’s trial, the State presented testimony from a variety of lay witnesses

as to whether appellant’s court lacked jurisdiction to issue the warrants for De Luna. The

State also presented testimony from De Luna and Trevino, among others. The trial court

admitted State’s Exhibits 1 through 16, which include a variety of documents filed in

appellant’s court and with the Hidalgo County Sheriff’s Office (the “HCSO”). 10 The trial

        9
        We note that if appellant was in fact justified when she signed the arrest warrants, she could not
have known that her acts were unlawful, if they were.
        10 Specifically, we have reviewed, among many other things, the following pertinent documents:

(1) An order signed on January 28, 2010 granting De Luna’s application for writ of habeas corpus seeking
release for lack of probable cause; (2) an order discharging De Luna from custody; (3) documents filed in
appellant’s court regarding Trevino; (4) documents filed in appellant’s court regarding Diaz; (5) documents

                                                        8
court also admitted copies of the text of articles 45.057, 45.058, 45.059, and 45.060 of

the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. Appellant presented testimony from several

witnesses. The trial court also admitted Defendant’s Exhibit 1, which is a memo sent on

May 5, 2008 to the Hidalgo County Sheriff’s Office requesting that any defendant

incarcerated for a capias pro fine issued under her authority be released on a promise to

appear.11

        In its opening remarks, the State prosecutor stated the following: 12

               May it please the Court, opposing counsel, co-counsel.                           Good
        afternoon.

filed in appellant’s court regarding De Luna; (6) a handwritten list of the employees of appellant’s court and
their respective titles; (7) a handwritten note appearing to detail appellant’s actions in Trevino’s case; (8) a
form from the Hidalgo County Juvenile Center’s Probation Department stating that De Luna was placed on
Judicial Probation on January 24, 2008 due to contempt of court; and (9) a memo sent on October 8, 2009
from appellant to Guadalupe “Lupe” Trevino, then the Hidalgo County Sheriff, requesting that any person
that was incarcerated for a capias pro fine be arraigned.
        11   Article 45.045 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure provides that

        (b)       A capias pro fine may not be issued for an individual convicted for an offense
                  committed before the individual's 17th birthday unless:

                  (1)     the individual is 17 years of age or older;

                  (2)     the court finds that the issuance of the capias pro fine is justified after
                          considering:

                          (A)     the sophistication and maturity of the individual;

                          (B)     the criminal record and history of the individual; and

                          (C)     the reasonable likelihood of bringing about the discharge of the
                                  judgment through the use of procedures and services currently
                                  available to the court; and

                  (3)     the court has proceeded under Article 45.050 to compel the individual to
                          discharge the judgment.

See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 45.045 (West, Westlaw through 2013 3d C.S.) (Emphasis added). Neither
party provided this statute to the jury. However, this statute establishes that a justice court is authorized,
under the circumstances listed, to issue a pro capias fine for an individual who committed an offense when
under the age of seventeen.
        12 We have included the State’s opening and closing remarks because those remarks are relevant

to our understanding of the State’s theories as to how appellant’s acts were unlawful.

                                                           9
         In January of last year, 2010, Public Defender Jaime Gonzalez was
happening just to go through a list of the jail rosters. He came across a
name, Francisco De Luna, and he noticed that he was in jail approximately
18 days on a Class C misdemeanor, raised all types of red flags for him
because normally, for him, he notices when somebody is in jail more than
15 days on a Class B misdemeanor. He tries to get them out. They’ve been
in jail too long.

      It’s his responsibility as a public defender. He’s been charged or he’s
been requested by the County Commissioner’s Court to ensure that—that—
to make sure that all of those defendants who are in jail, especially those
misdemeanor offenses, that they are not spending too much time in jail
because we have—we spend so much money every day on these
defendants that every time they are in county jail, taxpayers have to pay so
much money per day for them and also to protect their rights.

       So this is what started the whole thing. And when—about the case,
the eventual civil case and the eventual criminal case against Judge Mary
Alice Palacios. You’re going to find through the evidence—and the
evidence is going to be in the form of exhibits and the form of testimony.
And those exhibits all are going to come from Judge Mary Alice Palacios’s
court.

         You’re going to find that these exhibits are very—they’re dismal.
But—but the evidence is there nonetheless. And all of this is from her court,
all of these exhibits, primarily all of them.

       And you’re going to notice with Francisco De Luna that he had
multiple failure to attend cases, including, also, failure to comply cases, as
well, but, regardless, they were all Class C misdemeanors, juvenile
offenses.

       You’re going to find that Judge Mary Alice Palacios signed orders
transferring each and every one of [De Luna’s] cases, except for the last
one, 22 orders transferring. You’re going to learn that by doing so, she no
longer has jurisdiction of a case. And just like Judge Aida Salinas Flores
mentioned during voir dire, a Court must have jurisdiction over a defendant.
She waived that jurisdiction by sending all those cases over to juvenile
court.

        He [De Luna] goes to juvenile court. There is a—at some point there
is a letter sent to Judge Mary Alice Palacios’s court, this is a letter by the
juvenile court that’s sent to all public officials, including police departments,
that says that the family did not respond to services and the cases are being
closed. Nowhere on that letter is there a signature by the judge transferring
the case back, nothing of that nature.

                                          10
              Francisco De Luna goes to juvenile court, he’s put on probation for
       the cases that Judge Mary Alice Palacios transfers up to juvenile court, he
       does his time, [and] he does his juvenile probation. The day—or close
       around about the time he turned 17, Judge Mary Alice Palacios issues out
       what’s called a birthday letter under 45.060 [of the Texas Code of Criminal
       Procedure13]. It’s one of the statutes you got to view during voir dire.

              And that letter, she sends it out, and then she has him arrested. He
       was originally supposed to spend, according to her—her order of arrest—
       she adjudicated him to arrest. He was supposed to spend 100 and some
       odd days for about $10,000 worth of fines. She stacked all of the fines in
       the cases he had been in her court for, even though she knew she had
       already transferred the cases. How do we know she knew? She signed 22
       orders transferring.

       13 Article 45.060 appears in the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure chapter forty-five, subchapter
B, which sets out the procedures for justice and municipal courts. Article 45.060 states:

       Unadjudicated Children, Now Adults; Notice on Reaching Age of Majority; Offense

       (a)     Except as provided by Articles 45.058 and 45.059, an individual may not be taken
               into secured custody for offenses alleged to have occurred before the individual's
               17th birthday.

       (b)     On or after an individual's 17th birthday, if the court has used all available
               procedures under this chapter to secure the individual's appearance to answer
               allegations made before the individual's 17th birthday, the court may issue a notice
               of continuing obligation to appear by personal service or by mail to the last known
               address and residence of the individual. The notice must order the individual to
               appear at a designated time, place, and date to answer the allegations detailed in
               the notice.

       (c)     Failure to appear as ordered by the notice under Subsection (b) is a Class C
               misdemeanor independent of Section 38.10, Penal Code, and Section 543.003,
               Transportation Code.

       (d)     It is an affirmative defense to prosecution under Subsection (c) that the individual
               was not informed of the individual's obligation under Articles 45.057(h) and (i) or
               did not receive notice as required by Subsection (b).

       (e)     A notice of continuing obligation to appear issued under this article must contain
               the following statement provided in boldfaced type or capital letters:

       “WARNING: COURT RECORDS REVEAL THAT BEFORE YOUR 17TH BIRTHDAY YOU
       WERE ACCUSED OF A CRIMINAL OFFENSE AND HAVE FAILED TO MAKE AN
       APPEARANCE OR ENTER A PLEA IN THIS MATTER. AS AN ADULT, YOU ARE
       NOTIFIED THAT YOU HAVE A CONTINUING OBLIGATION TO APPEAR IN THIS CASE.
       FAILURE TO APPEAR AS REQUIRED BY THIS NOTICE MAY BE AN ADDITIONAL
       CRIMINAL OFFENSE AND RESULT IN A WARRANT BEING ISSUED FOR YOUR
       ARREST.”

See id. art. 45.060 (West, Westlaw through 2013 3d C.S.).

                                                       11
       That individual who was in here, he would have spent a long time in
the county if it hadn’t been for Jaime Gonzalez seeing the injustice. So
essentially, Ladies and Gentlemen, what we discussed during voir dire,
double jeopardy violation of a Fifth Amendment right. He served two
punishments for the same crime. There is no getting around orders to
transfer. That’s just one.

       ....

       The last one Leroy Trevino. This is an individual who did everything
and appeared every time he was supposed to report. He appeared multiple
times. He was told to go to—he was put under full disposition.

        And then eventually—when he was told to come back, he came back
every time and, actually, there is a notation in his file that says the case was
going to be closed by her court staff because he was doing everything he
needed to do. And then the next entry says, no, he needs to pay court costs
and fines. There is eight months of inactivity on this file, eight months of
inactivity.

        A birthday letter is sent out, sent out, and he appears. He appears
at her court. We know that because it’s in the file. Yet she still arrests him
for failure to appear even though he showed up on the date the summons
told him to. It will state on the warrant, failure to attend school, and in
parenthesis it will say FTA. According to her court staff, that’s failure to
appear. Regardless if they say otherwise, it’s failure to attend school.

       Remember the statutes we read during voir dire. You can’t jail them
for those fines because those are juvenile cases.

         Ladies and Gentlemen, we bring these three before you and ask you
that you not judge those individuals for their actions. We’re here on Judge
Mary Alice Palacios. And I know that you would want the same rights for
yourself and your children and everybody else you know. Everybody has a
fair trial, including the judge. It should be the same way those individuals
who appeared before her.

        They came with their parents before her. Pay up or you’re going to
jail, no ifs, ands or buts. I don’t understand. Why do I have to pay when
I’m on deferred? Why am I going to have to suddenly pay? Why am I being
subjected to arrest? Just take him away.

      Ladies and Gentlemen, she knew the law. He appeared before her,
and he was arrested. Those are constants. The orders are constants, the
summons are constants. They cannot change at all.

                                          12
               The witnesses that you will hear, the majority of them, are all her
       court staff. They are very loyal to her. But they are State’s witnesses
       because we have to have them to testify. I just want you to remember that.
       Just because they’re State’s witnesses—they are still employed by her
       office. And a lot of those people that you saw in here come in—she has 20
       some odd employees.

             There is going to be a lot of testimony, I’m sure, that she has a big
       docket. You’re going to learn that she goes out and recruits—and recruit
       business, recruit truancy, failure to attend cases, from the school districts.

              When someone goes out and runs for this position, gets paid quite a
       bit of money from Hidalgo County, goes out and tries to round up more
       business from school districts and also more monies from them, she knows
       the law.

               We don’t know why she’s doing this, bending the law to her favor,
       but it was happening, and the evidence is there. The law is there. We are
       confident when you look at these documents and hear testimony, the law—
       the law, you will find Mary Alice Palacios guilty of three counts of official
       misconduct. Thank you.

A.     The Chief Public Defender, Jaime Gonzalez

       Gonzalez testified that the Public Defender’s Office of Hidalgo County “absorb[s]

currently 40 percent of the caseload in misdemeanor cases” and that he reviews the jail

roster log in order to assist defendants who are in jail for misdemeanor offenses to get

out of jail as quickly as possible. Gonzalez stated that his office “normally” “covers Class

A and Class B misdemeanors.” According to Gonzalez, Class C misdemeanors are fine-

only offenses. Gonzalez stated that he was reviewing a client’s case who had committed

a Class C misdemeanor, and he was conducting a “random check[]” of the jail roster

because “people fall through the cracks and even though they’re disposed of, they should

be released, they remain in custody.” Gonzalez testified that while he was checking on

his client,14 he discovered that De Luna had been in jail for eighteen days for similar

       14   Jaime Gonzalez could not recall his client’s name. Gonzalez explained that he recalled that his

                                                        13
reasons as his client.15 Gonzalez believed that De Luna had been confined due to

warrants that appellant had issued. Gonzalez could not recall exactly how long De Luna

had been ordered to stay in custody but believed De Luna was required to serve

approximately fifty or sixty days. Gonzalez stated that De Luna told him that he had

“roughly, $8thou [sic] or so of fines, and he could not pay it and that he was told if he

could not pay it, he had to serve time in jail.”

        According to Gonzalez, he reviewed the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure and

stated, “[I] basically just did a—in my opinion, a quick look over, if there was anything that

I could see that if this was correct under the law.” The prosecutor then asked, “So once

you determined that he was in there improperly, what did you do?” Gonzalez responded,

“At that point I—again, I wasn’t confident of my interpretation of—of the Juvenile Code

section, so I contacted Eric Schreiber with the District Attorney’s Office to explain to him

my position of my concern with Mr. De Luna and the other [unnamed] individual, their

incarceration, and I—that was the next thing.”16                       Gonzalez testified that “Mr.

Schreiber . . . considered it a gray area. He didn’t—he didn’t understand what I was

saying either. We were kind of talking back and forth, so with Mr. Schreiber, I know that

Mr. Schreiber and myself wanted to speak to Homer Vasquez with the District Attorney’s

Office.[17] And I again explained my position on the interpretation of the law.”

client’s cases had arisen out of the Justice of the Peace Court, Precinct 4, Place 2 appellant’s court.
        15   Gonzalez did not elaborate.
        16   Eric Schreiber did not testify at trial.
        17   Homer Vasquez did not testify at appellant’s trial.

                                                           14
        Gonzalez stated that after conferring with the other men, he filed a petition for writ

of habeas corpus requesting that De Luna be released because he was being held

improperly.     Gonzalez testified that he filed the writ of habeas corpus because he

“believe[d De Luna] was in custody illegally and that is the order to the [c]ourt, and it was

granted by Judge Rudy Gonzalez.”18 The trial court admitted the orders signed by the

District Court judge granting habeas corpus relief and ordering that De Luna be released

from jail. The trial court overruled defense counsel’s objections to the orders on the bases

that:   (1) they were not relevant to the arrest issue because the orders concerned

confinement issues; and (2) admission violated rule of evidence 404(b).

        Gonzalez admitted that he did not review the documents that were filed in

appellant’s court regarding De Luna. Gonzalez stated he did not conduct an investigation

into the facts, and “[i]t was just a cursory review of the law and what [he] saw off the

criminal case management system, Able Term, on my computer, basically.” According

to Gonzalez, the Able Term system documented that De Luna was arrested “for

possession of marijuana, a Class B misdemeanor.” When the prosecutor asked, “And

then he was—then that case [the marihuana possession case] was taken care of. . . . And

then he was arrested on those [juvenile] offenses,” Gonzalez replied, “He was arrested

for possession of marijuana, Class B misdemeanor, and he disposed of the case and he

continued to remain in custody on the [juvenile] offenses listed in [State’s] Exhibit No. 2.” 19

        18 Although the trial court admitted the order granting De Luna’s writ of habeas corpus, in this case,

the State did not seek admission of the reporter’s record of the habeas corpus proceeding.
         19 The offenses listed in State’s Exhibit 2 include the following: (1) eight counts of “Failure to

Comply with Directive—Class C Misdemeanor,” one count with a fine of $407.00 and the others each with
a fine of $416.00; (2) one count of “Excessive Tardies—Class C Misdemeanor” with a $407.00 fine; (3) ten
counts of “Fail to Attend School—Class C Misdemeanor” each with a fine of $533.00; (4) three counts of
“Abusive Language in School—Class C Misdemeanor,” each with a fine of $416.00; (5) one count of
“Disruption of Class—Class C Misdemeanor,” with a $416.00 fine; and (6) one count of “Rules and

                                                         15
The prosecutor asked, “And in order for him to have been in custody on those offenses,

he had to have been originally arrested for those,” Gonzalez responded, “Correct.”

Gonzalez believed “[f]rom what [he] saw” that De Luna committed all of the offenses

before he turned seventeen and that De Luna was arrested for those offenses.

        When asked to describe his understanding of “double jeopardy,” Gonzalez said,

        My understanding is when a person is accused of a crime, when he—either
        when he’s acquitted or found not guilty in a trial or there is a conviction, he
        cannot be retried in a trial or there is a conviction, he cannot be retried for
        the same crime or a similar crime after he’s been acquitted or convicted.[20]

Gonzalez agreed with the prosecutor that double jeopardy encompasses “multiple

punishments for the same crime.”

        The State asked Gonzalez if he was “aware of where Mr. De Luna was arrested,”

and Gonzalez replied, “I am not aware exactly where he was arrested. I know that he

was originally arrested for a possession of marijuana charge.” Gonzalez testified that he

spoke with appellant about De Luna’s case and that appellant “had a different

interpretation than” his own interpretation of the “two article sections” they discussed. The

prosecutor asked if appellant was “angry.” Gonzalez replied, “I wouldn’t say she was

angry, but she was—I recall that she did—she was forceful, raising her voice and her

position, defending her position.”

        On cross-examination, Gonzalez stated that he did not know that there were

twenty-two warrants for De Luna’s arrest. Gonzalez knew that there were ten offenses

Penalties—Class C Misdemeanor,” with a $416.00 fine.
        20 The trial court admitted Gonzalez’s testimony regarding his understanding of double jeopardy
after overruling appellant’s objection that Gonzalez was not designated an expert witness. The trial court
explained that the State designated Gonzalez as a witness and all parties were aware that he is a lawyer.
The trial court also took judicial notice that as a lawyer, Gonzalez has “specific knowledge and
understanding” of double jeopardy.

                                                       16
related to failure to attend school. Gonzalez agreed with appellant’s defense counsel that

in a criminal case, the accused will make several appearances in court. Appellant’s

defense counsel asked, “Now, sir, tell the jury what a judge can do if an accused individual

fails to make any of those appearances?” Gonzalez replied, “A judge can order what’s—

an order for their arrest for failure to appear [in court].” Gonzalez did not know who would

have had the obligation to notify the accused that he was summoned to appear in court,

but he “believed” the notice would come from either the “County Clerk’s Office or from the

actual court.” Gonzalez testified that an accused has an obligation to keep the authorities

“apprised” of his address.         Gonzalez explained that he wanted Schreiber’s opinion

regarding De Luna’s situation because Schreiber was a prosecutor in appellant’s court.

When appellant’s trial counsel asked Gonzalez if appellant had issued the warrants for

De Luna’s arrest for his failure to appear, Gonzalez said, “The warrant that I saw, the ten

that are listed on Exhibit 2, were for failure to attend school, from what I saw, and other

charges, abusive language, I believe is one of them, I can’t remember exactly.” 21

        On re-direct examination, the prosecutor stated, “Now, you’re not familiar with JP

law or Municipal Court law, are you?” Gonzalez responded, “I am not familiar with it

[especially when it comes to juveniles].” Gonzalez testified that he does not “handle”

truancy or failure to attend cases. The prosecutor then published article 45.060(a) of the

Texas Code of Criminal Procedure and asked Gonzalez to read it. Gonzalez said, “It

says, A, Except as provided by Articles 45.058 and 45.059, an individual may not be taken

        21 The State and Gonzalez interpreted the “FTA” notations differently. In Trevino’s case, the State
alleged that “FTA” meant that the warrants were issued for failure to appear in court. Gonzalez stated that
none of the warrants in De Luna’s case were for failure to appear in court, although all of the warrants in
De Luna’s case have the “FTA” notation.

                                                        17
into secured custody for offenses alleged to have occurred before the individual’s 17th

birthday.” The prosecutor asked, “Okay. Now, the offenses in which you have said that

the defendant [De Luna] was arrested on and—and detained were on offenses he

committed before his 17th birthday?” Gonzalez replied, “That was my—that was my

interpretation, yes.”

        On re-cross examination, Gonzalez stated that a person is considered an adult

when he or she turns seventeen and agreed that a person who is seventeen can be

placed in “secured custody” and go to jail. Gonzalez recalled that all of the offenses

occurred when De Luna was younger than seventeen. Gonzalez stated that he did not

know when appellant issued warrants for “the failure to appear offenses.” 22

B.      Appellant’s Court Coordinator, Roberto Leal

        Leal testified that he had worked as the court coordinator for appellant’s court for

approximately seven years. Leal stated, “I pretty much handle a variety of things, the

scheduling of her dockets, civil, criminal, you know, truancy court dates.” On cross-

examination, Leal explained that appellant’s court “has a civil docket which have to do

with small lawsuits under [$]10,000, evictions.              Lately we’re doing towing hearings,

unlawful towing. We do justice civil courts, we do peace bonds, we do criminal traffic”

and death inquests.

        Leal testified that appellant was required to have eighty hours of training in her first

year on the bench and then she was required to attend twenty hours of training every

        22Previously, when asked if appellant had issued the warrants against De Luna for his failure to
appear, Gonzalez stated, “The warrant that I saw, the ten that are listed on Exhibit 2, were for failure to
attend school, from what I saw, and other charges, abusive language, I believe is one of them, I can’t
remember exactly.”

                                                        18
year. Leal agreed that the majority of appellant’s cases were truancy cases. Leal

explained “the process that a person goes through when they are accused of being truant”

as follows:

              It goes from the filing of a case, whether it’s a juvenile or an adult,
       either in the form of a complaint or a citation, and it gets given a docket
       number. It’s processed. And a process, we mean—I mean it’s input into
       the system of Able Term, as the County uses it through our clerks, the
       truancy clerks. From there on out, it’s taken to the case managers, and we
       send up the ticket—if it’s a ticket, for the most part, a court date is already
       on the ticket that’s signed by the juvenile or the defendant, in particular,
       whether it’s a juvenile or an adult. When it’s a complaint, we send out to—
       a summons to the address that’s provided to us once it’s filed. If—if it’s a—
       and that’s on a complaint or a ticket.

              Once we go to court, everybody signs in, everybody gets the
       parent—the parents, if it’s a juvenile, they have sign-in sheets to get their
       information, to get John Doe’s mother’s name, their date of birth, their
       current address. They fill it out for us so we can put it in the file, and if for
       whatever reason they have to come back, at least that’s what we know that
       we have for them. Once they are seated in, the Judge would admonish
       them, once they are all there, give them their rights, whatnot.

              From there on out, the case managers would get the file, start looking
       through them to see which ones are their first times there; first timers I mean
       they’ve never been in trouble before, it’s the first time they appear in court
       and just talk to the parents. Everything was a case-by-case basis.

              They would also assess the cases that were set for status. These
       were people asked to come back under Court order to see how they’re
       doing, to do a checkup. You know, they were all referred for a drug test to
       see if anyone were positive or negative, just so we can narrow down why
       they’re being truant. If they’re positive for drugs, we can focus on that. If
       they were negative, they would do community service at the Boys and Girls
       Club Teen Court, you know, but that’s pretty much how the process was.

              Everything was on a case-by-case basis. If they are asked to come
       back, it varies. It would vary if they didn’t come back. I mean, it’s a big
       process.

       Leal explained that once the child comes into the court on a charge of truancy, that

child is read his rights and enters a plea of guilty or not guilty. Leal stated that if the child

                                                  19
pleads guilty, the court defers disposition and puts the child on probation. If the child

complies with the conditions of probation, then “there is [sic] no court fees that are actually

collected if he is compliant.” The judgments are written, and the conditions are provided

in writing to the child.

        Leal stated that as the judge, appellant would sign the orders that the child was

responsible for following. “The case managers would assess the cases. . . . If they would

say they need to do Teen Court or whatever that they—the person or the defendant was

asked to do by a case manager, and the judge would enforce the judgment if she agreed

with that.” Leal agreed that only the judge has the authority to issue a fine and enforce

the conditions. However, the case managers would make recommendations and fill out

the paperwork. “Signing the judgment would be the judge. Of course, she would look

over them before to make sure everything was where it was supposed to be, and the case

managers would fill out, if they could, and not leave the judge on the stand.”

        Leal explained that “deferred adjudication” occurs when the defendant is “put on

probation from the date of judgment,” and there are several conditions “just on truancy

that she can ask you to be on throughout probation. The probation can vary from one

month, two months, [or] three months. What it is [] that during that deferral period,

whatever the time frame may be, the judge is—if [the defendant] complied again, the

original fine assessed is waived, which is the County fine.”           Leal agreed with the

prosecutor that in deferred adjudication situations, the fine was also being deferred. Leal

testified that court costs are not deferred and are mandatory according to the county

auditors because court costs are only waived if the district attorney’s office dismisses the

case.

                                                 20
       Leal stated that if the defendant did not comply with the conditions, the defendant

is “brought back to court, and we had—we work with several agencies so they give us

stats, statistics on—John Doe was referred and he hasn’t gone, even though it was on

his judgment.” The defendant is then “brought back” to the court for a “show-cause

hearing” where the defendant is asked to explain to the judge his or her reasons for not

complying with the conditions of probation.

       On cross-examination, appellant’s defense counsel asked, “Are you able to tell the

jury how many of [25,000 to 26,000 children in the] truancy cases” that appellant presided

over came back to appellant’s court, Leal said, “You would—honestly between those

cases, you could say that—I would say maybe a fourth or maybe half, towards the middle,

come back. Other first-timers we never see again.” Leal stated that the “success rate of

the truancy program conducted by” appellant is “about 89 to 90 percent success rate

based on statistics [the court] receives from the other agencies, which are New

Beginnings and Teen Court.”

       Defense counsel then asked Leal to review the documents admitted into evidence

regarding De Luna’s case. Leal agreed that there were “about” twenty-five truancy

exhibits regarding De Luna. Leal reviewed Exhibit 90 and described it as “a warrant for

Francisco De Luna.” Leal testified that the Edinburg Consolidated Independent School

District had filed in appellant’s court a complaint alleging that De Luna had failed to attend

school. Warrants had then been “drafted and done in [the court’s] office.” Leal testified

that the records also contained three letters that were “FTA, which is failure to appear.”

When asked if the warrant was for failure to appear, Leal replied, “It’s more for a case

manager, but, I mean, it runs the same as ours. You could say that they failed to appear

                                                 21
for that original court setting that they were asked to as an adult.” Leal testified that based

on the documents, De Luna failed to appear “about 23, 22, 23, yes” times.

       Leal explained that they mail the notices to the defendant’s residence at the

addresses provided by the school districts and that it is the defendant’s duty to keep the

court informed of his or her change of address. Citations are sent to the defendants telling

them when and where to appear. Leal testified that based on the documents before him,

De Luna and his mother missed the court dates that they were ordered to attend. Leal

stated that without the paperwork, he has no independent recollection of De Luna. 23

       Defense counsel asked Leal to explain appellant’s philosophy regarding the

truancy cases. Leal said:

               Judge Palacios is not so much about collecting revenue. As far as
       these cases go, if you want to run numbers on how many delinquent—or
       how many fines we have out there for students that haven’t appeared, we
       have a lot to collect. If anything, it’s about getting kids back in school, you
       know, for the most part because nothing is collected. And to say that Jane
       Doe or John Doe was in court—we didn’t collect anything there, no.
       Everything waits after the case is finalized, whatever the outcomes may be,
       but it’s more about having these kids go to school, and if they have a drug
       problem, to take care of that, a family problem, to take care of that. It varies.

       Leal explained that the forms that are used in appellant’s court are approved by

the “D.A.’s office . . . particularly Eric Schreiber because he is the ADA that’s assigned to

our court. You know, that’s who we have gone to for the most part if anything—we have

questions in reference to a particular case or circumstances of a case.” According to

Leal, Schreiber “never” alerted him “to any potential problems” concerning the truancy

cases in appellant’s court.

       23   Leal also testified regarding Diaz’s documents.

                                                         22
       On re-direct-examination, the prosecutor asked Leal to review the documents

related to De Luna’s case in appellant’s court. Leal established that appellant signed an

order transferring De Luna’s case to the juvenile court on March 8, 2007, issued the

“birthday letter” on December 17, 2008, and issued the warrant for De Luna’s arrest on

January 21, 2009. Leal agreed with the prosecutor that a notation regarding the transfer

of De Luna’s case to juvenile court appeared on the docket sheet. Leal clarified that there

were twenty-two orders of transfer in De Luna’s case. The prosecutor asked, “All these

cases are on this birthday letter for basically notifying them, setting them up to get

arrested when he turns 17 for the same offenses that were transferred to juvenile court.

Are all of these the same cases?” Leal responded, “Yes, ma’am.”

       Leal acknowledged that State’s Exhibit 9X did not include “anything about [an]

order transferring [De Luna’s] cases back” to appellant’s court. State’s Exhibit 9X is a

document from the Hidalgo County Juvenile Center entitled, “Disposition.” It states, in

relevant part, that “On 3/23/07 a referral was received” from appellant’s court regarding

De Luna’s alleged “contempt of court.” The document states, “Please be advised the

following action has been taken.” The document then lists several possible actions.

However, none of these actions are checked. Instead, in a section entitled “Additional

Information,” the document states in hand writing the following: “[The] family did not

respond for services.” The document is signed by a juvenile probation officer.24 On re-

cross examination, appellant’s trial counsel asked if State’s Exhibit 9X was sent in

response “to your requests or to Palacios’s requests to appear in your court on this case,”

       24   We are unable to determine who signed the document because the signature is illegible.

                                                        23
Leal said, “No.” On re-direct examination, Leal agreed with the prosecutor that State’s

Exhibit 9X was sent before the transfer of De Luna’s cases to juvenile court.

C.     Appellant’s Former Case Manager, Marcela Adela Cherry

       Cherry testified that she is currently employed with the Texas Attorney General’s

Office as a field investigator. Cherry began working in that office on December 13, 2010.

Prior to that date, Cherry worked in appellant’s court as a case manager. Cherry held

that position from “September of 2008 up until December of 2010.” Specifically, Cherry

handled “[t]ruancy or school-related offenses.” Cherry said, “The majority of the training

[that she] received was on-the-job training” from appellant. The prosecutor asked if

Cherry was aware that appellant “signed arrest warrants for failure to appear for those

who turn 17,” and Cherry replied, “After a notice for continuing obligation was

mailed . . . . Yes.” Cherry could not tell the jury how many of the notices had been mailed

from appellant’s court to defendants.

       When asked by the prosecutor, Cherry identified State’s Exhibit 9A as “a notice of

continuing obligation.” Cherry read the notice as follows:

       Our court records reveal that before [your] 17th birthday, you were accused
       of a criminal offense and have failed to make an appearance or enter a plea
       in this matter. As an adult, you are notified that you have a continuing
       obligation to appear in this case. Failure to appear as required by this notice
       may be an additional criminal offense and [may] result in a warrant being
       issued for your arrest.[25]

       Cherry acknowledged that there was an order transferring De Luna’s cases from

appellant’s justice court to the juvenile court. The prosecutor asked, “Once this order is

signed and the case is transferred—once this order is signed, the judge, Mary Alice

       25 This notice tracks the language of article 45.060 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. See

TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 45.060.

                                                      24
Palacios, loses jurisdiction; isn’t that right?” Cherry responded, “It’s my understanding

that at least for a time being she does.” The prosecutor asked, “What’s the time being,”

and Cherry said, “Well, if the juvenile probation sends us a letter back saying that they

are not going to take on the case, we—we, in a sense, keep it again.”

        The prosecutor asked Cherry to review the documents included in State’s Exhibit

7A and 7B. 26 Cherry said that a “commitment order” signed by appellant appeared in the

documents included in State’s Exhibit 7A and explained that she understood that a

“commitment order” signed by a justice of the peace “commit[s] that person to jail for a

        26  State’s exhibits 7A and 7B contain over thirty pages of documents. It is unclear exactly which
documents Cherry reviewed during her testimony. However, we have reviewed all of the documents in
State’s Exhibit 7A, which include: (1) the docket sheet for Trevino’s case; (2) two forms from appellant’s
court regarding Trevino’s case with handwritten notes (the handwriting is messy and in some places
indecipherable); (3) a “Student Information” form, received in appellant’s court on February 11, 2008, with
an absent record log showing that Trevino was absent from school on January 21, 22, 24, 28, and February
1, 4, 5, and 6; (4) a referral for failure to attend school classes from Tiburcio Canas regarding Trevino’s
absences from school; (5) a complaint signed by Canas alleging that Trevino failed to attend school for
three or more days or part of days in a four week period; (6) Canas’s affidavit stating that Trevino failed to
attend school; (7) three summons from appellant’s court to Trevino’s parents informing them that Trevino
had to appear in her court on March 13, 2008, April 10, 2008, and October 16, 2008; (8) the “birthday letter”
sent from appellant’s court to Trevino ordering him to appear on August 4, 2009; (9) a “Notice to Show
Cause for Failing to Obey Deferred Disposition Order”; (10) an order for Trevino to “pay the entire fine and
costs adjudged at the end of this hearing”; (11) a “Waiver of Alternative Sentencing and Request for
Incarceration in Satisfaction of Fine and Costs” signed by Trevino; (12) an order of commitment issued by
appellant stating that Trevino should remain in custody “for the time required by law to satisfy the amount
of” his fine of $537.00; and (13) a warrant to arrest Trevino issued by appellant.

        We have also reviewed the documents in State’s Exhibit 7B which include the following: (1) case
manager’s notes regarding Trevino’s case; (2) two forms from appellant’s court with handwritten notes
regarding Trevino’s case; (3) an affidavit signed by Canas stating that Trevino had failed to attend school;
(4) a complaint signed by Canas; (5) a “Student Information” form with an absent record log showing that
Trevino had been absent on February 7, 8, 11, 12, 13, 18, 19, 20, 21, 28, 29 and March 3, and 6 , which
was received on March 11, 2008 by appellant’s court; (6) a “Referral for Failure to Attend School Classes”
from Canas to appellant’s court regarding Trevino; (7) “Minutes of the Justice of the Peace Court” deferring
Trevino’s adjudication; (8) a summons for Trevino to appear in appellant’s court on October 16, 2008; (9) a
“birthday letter” summoning Trevino to appear in appellant’s court on August 4, 2009; (10) a “Notice to
Show Cause for Failing to Obey Deferred Disposition Order”; (11) Trevino’s report card from October 15,
2008; (12) Trevino’s “Report card/Progress Summary” for April 14, 2008 to May 30, 2008; (13) Trevino’s
“Report Card” for August 25, 2008 through October 3, 2008; (14) an order from appellant’s court ordering
Trevino to “pay the entire fine and costs adjudged at the end of this hearing”; (15) a commitment order
issued by appellant; (16) a warrant for Trevino’s arrest issued by appellant; and (17) a “Waiver of Alternative
Sentencing and Request for Incarceration in Satisfaction of Fine and Costs” signed by Trevino.

                                                          25
specific charge.” Cherry stated that the specific charge against Trevino was “Failure to

attend school, failure to appear.”     Cherry explained that the “Notice of continuing

obligation” would have been sent before the individual could be arrested for failure to

appear. Cherry had never heard the “notice of continuing obligation” referred to as “a

birthday letter.”

       Cherry testified that she did not know why Trevino was arrested and that she

believed that he did appear on the date he was required to appear. Cherry believed that

there was a clerical error on the documents included in State’s Exhibits 7A and 7B. When

the prosecutor asked, “So what was he arrested for, then,” Cherry replied, “there was a

waiver that he, I guess, declined to do community service or waive any other type of—

waive any other type of alternative sentencing.” Cherry agreed with the prosecutor that

by signing the waiver, Trevino asserted that “he couldn’t pay the fine, essentially, and so

because he couldn’t pay the fine, he had to go to jail, right?” The following exchange then

occurred between the prosecutor and Cherry:

       Q       He appeared on August 4th, 2009, yet, the warrant says failure to
               attend school, FTA, and the FTA, it is your representation, stands for
               failure to appear?

       A       That’s correct, yes.

       Q       So if you’re saying it was a clerical error and he was obviously
               incarceration [sic] and arrested by Judge Mary Alice Palacios on
               August 4, 2009, what was he arrested for, then?

       A       I would—I don’t know if I can answer that question, but my
               understanding would be then that he was there for the failure to
               attend school, but to satisfy the fines and costs of that.

       Q       Oh, so it’s going back to an offense he committed prior to the age of
               17 then? Is that what your testimony is now?

       A       Right.

                                                26
             ....

      Q      Okay. Now, you are aware, though, that an individual who is 17
             cannot be jailed for offenses that happened prior to his 17th birthday,
             correct?

      A      Yes, ma’am.

      Cherry testified that according to the case manager’s notes regarding Trevino’s

case, he was doing well, and it had been recommended that his case be closed in October

of 2008 when he completed his probation. Cherry stated that the period of probation in

Trevino’s case could only be set for a maximum of six months and that there was no

document or order in the record indicating that his probation had been extended. Later,

Cherry clarified that the docket sheet indicated that Trevino’s probation had been

extended. Cherry agreed with the prosecutor that although the probationary period had

ended, the court could reset the cases beyond the six months. Cherry agreed that in

Trevino’s case, appellant ordered Trevino to pay the fines, he was unable to do so,

Trevino signed a waiver, he was arrested in appellant’s courtroom, and appellant

committed him to jail.   Cherry testified that the order sent to Trevino to appear in

appellant’s court was sent ten months after he completed the terms of his probation.

      Cherry explained that the reason there were two cause numbers related to

Trevino’s case is because “it’s assigned a juvenile—a juvenile cause number and then

an adult cause number.” Cherry agreed with the prosecutor that there was only one

judgment in the court’s file and that the only judgment on file indicated a probationary

period of six months. When asked if the judgment included a fine, Cherry replied, “No, I

didn’t see any.” Cherry agreed that in “November [Trevino was] ordered to pay a fine and

                                               27
court costs.” However, Cherry could not recall if the case sheet or the docket sheet

reflected imposition of the fine and court costs.

       Cherry stated that “the notice of continuing obligation birthday letter” went out on

July 22, 2009 ordering Trevino to appear in appellant’s court on August 4, 2009. Cherry

agreed that Trevino appeared on that date. Cherry agreed that appellant signed the

warrant for Trevino’s arrest on the “failure to attend school, failure to appear.” Cherry

stated she believed that, according to the docket sheet, Trevino appeared every time he

was summoned to appear in appellant’s court.

       On cross-examination, Cherry testified that Trevino would have been told that he

could pay the fine and court costs at a later date, that a payment plan could have been

arranged, and that he could perform community service in lieu of paying the fine. Cherry

stated that based on Trevino’s signature on the waiver, he had chosen to go to jail and

not pay the fine or perform community supervision. Cherry explained, that although a

case manager recommended that Trevino’s case be closed, appellant made the final

decision whether to close the case. Cherry stated that appellant apparently had not

accepted the recommendation because according to the case manager’s notes, Trevino

had additional absences. Defense counsel asked if Cherry agreed that Trevino was told

he had to immediately pay the fine or go to jail, and Cherry disagreed.27 Cherry clarified

that the language used in the warning that is included in the “birthday letter” or what

       27   Defense counsel’s questions appear to be in response to the prosecutor’s questions
characterizing appellant’s actions as demanding immediate payment from Trevino and sending him to jail
when he could not pay the fines and court costs.

                                                     28
Cherry referred to as the notice of continuing obligation came “straight out of the [Texas]

Code [of Criminal Procedure].”28

        Cherry testified that most of the forms used in appellant’s court were provided by

the Justice Training Center, which is the same agency that trains the justices of the peace

in Texas. Cherry stated that the other forms that were not provided by the Justice Training

Center had been approved by the District Attorney’s Office.                    Cherry testified that

Schreiber handled all of the cases in appellant’s court where the defendant pleaded “not

guilty,” which included “failure to attend cases.” According to Cherry, Schreiber never

expressed that there was a problem with the procedures followed in appellant’s court.

Cherry testified that she presented the notice of continuing obligation forms to Schreiber

before she sent them to the defendants and that Schreiber never expressed a concern

with the forms. When asked if any of the forms used in appellant’s court were created by

“her office,” Cherry replied, “Not to my knowledge, no.”

        On re-direct examination, the prosecutor asked, “[I]sn’t it true that Judge Mary Alice

Palacios was going to Valley View, Hidalgo and Donna ISD and recruiting truancy work?”

Cherry responded, “Recruiting work, I’ve never seen that, no.” Cherry elaborated, “Well,

actually, I was approached by the attendance clerk for Valley View when I just started, a

few months after I started, and they told me that they had seen an article in the paper for

what [appellant] was doing for the [ECISD].”

        Cherry agreed with the prosecutor that appellant’s staff writes in the information

regarding the defendant on the “birthday letter.” The prosecutor asked, “You could

          28 A copy of article 45.060 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure was admitted at appellant’s

trial as State’s Exhibit 3. See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 45.060.

                                                       29
actually put my name in there and say I failed to appear, couldn’t you? You could put that

in the birthday letter if you wanted to? Yes or no?” Cherry said, “No, you can’t do that.”29

        The prosecutor asked, “So essentially the way that [defense counsel] is insinuating

it and the way you are answering his questions, LeRoy Trevino was arrested on a clerical

error,” and Cherry responded, “No, he was not arrested on a clerical error.” Cherry agreed

with the prosecutor that the commitment and warrant documented that Trevino was

arrested for failure to appear.

        The prosecutor asked Cherry to read articles 45.041 and 45.048 of the Texas Code

of Criminal Procedure silently. After following the prosecutor’s directions, Cherry agreed

that “the word community service” did not appear in the articles. On re-cross examination,

Cherry explained that the code of criminal procedure did not authorize the imposition of

community supervision or an option to pay at a later date but that appellant “wanted to

[do] it for them.” Cherry agreed with defense counsel that Trevino “said no” to any

alternative sentencing. Cherry stated that the organizations where the “young people”

could perform community service included “the Humane Society, the library, Boys and

Girls Club. There were so many. The museum. There were so many places that they

could perform the hours.”

D.      Trevino

        Trevino testified that he was eighteen years old at the time of appellant’s trial.

When asked why he was cited for truancy, Trevino said, “I just wasn’t going to school.”

        29 The prosecutor also asked, “Okay. These, essentially—these birthday letter, notice of continuing
obligation letters, they are basically weapons that you can use at your disposal, isn’t it?” However, after
defense counsel objected, the prosecutor stated, “Withdraw the question, Your Honor.” The State
presented no evidence that appellant used the obligation letters as “weapons” for any purpose.

                                                        30
Trevino testified that while he was attending high school in McAllen, he was transferred

to alternative school in Weslaco. According to Trevino, someone from McAllen caused a

problem on the bus, and thereafter, no one from McAllen was allowed to ride the van that

transported the McAllen students to Weslaco. Trevino stated that he could not find a ride

to Weslaco and that is why he was absent.

        Trevino testified that appellant told him to pay a fine, and his parents would pay a

portion of the fine every time they appeared with him in appellant’s court. Trevino did not

receive any receipts for payment and did not receive “a piece of paper telling [him] what

[he] had to do.” Trevino testified that he “always appeared” when he was summoned to

appear in appellant’s court.

        Trevino recalled receiving a letter when he turned seventeen informing him that he

“had to go to court and take care of some payment plans that [he] hadn’t taken care of or

[he] was going to be arrested.” Trevino stated that he went to court, and he was arrested

“[b]ecause he hadn’t finished paying off [his] fines.” Trevino believed that he owed about

$1,000.00 in fines, but he did not have any money at the time. When the prosecutor

asked, “Were you offered community service,” Trevino replied, “No, ma’am. My mother

was.”   The prosecutor asked why Trevino had chosen to go to jail; he responded,

“Because it was my behalf, you know what I mean? It was my mistake so I was going to

have it.” Trevino stated that he spent “[m]aybe like a week and a half” in county jail after

he was arrested.

        On cross-examination, Trevino agreed that appellant had placed him on probation

and had ordered him to pay a fine. Trevino did not pay the fine, and appellant gave him

the option of additional time to pay the fine. He refused that option. Trevino agreed that

                                                31
while he was on probation for his truancy, he had the option of paying the fine in

installments but was not able to make those payments.

       On re-direct examination, Trevino testified that appellant ordered his mother to

serve community service hours and “extended [his] six-month probation to a nine-month.”

Trevino claimed that appellant threatened to “lock up” his disabled mother for his truancy

and that his mother cried.

E.     De Luna

       De Luna testified that he was nineteen years old at the time of appellant’s trial. De

Luna recalled that when he was in high school at “Johnny Economedes,” he “was missing

too much school” and was “told to go to court.” When asked, “And did you go to court,”

De Luna said, “Not all the times.” De Luna testified that he went to appellant’s court twice.

De Luna recalled that he went to a different court that ordered him to serve probation; he

served and successfully finished his probation. De Luna believed that once he completed

the probation, he “thought it was over” because that is what his probation officer told him.

De Luna testified that he had approximately twenty tickets and that he had “to serve the

time” in jail for all of those tickets. De Luna spent eighteen days in jail.

       On cross-examination, defense counsel asked, “Okay. And out of the 22 citations,

you only went to court on two of them; is that right,” De Luna said, “Yes, sir.” De Luna

agreed that he received notices from the judge to appear in court when he received the

tickets, but he “just didn’t go.” De Luna testified that his mother wanted to take him to

court, but he would not go.

       De Luna acknowledged that he had a pending federal lawsuit against appellant,

but denied that he was asking for money. De Luna admitted that the $10,000 or $11,000

                                                 32
fine he was ordered to pay was not paid. When defense counsel again asked De Luna if

he was seeking money damages in his federal lawsuit against appellant, De Luna said,

“Well, money damages. . . . Yes, sir.”

E.     De Luna’s Mother, Elsa De Luna

       Elsa testified that De Luna was diagnosed with A.D.H.D. in third grade. She added

that De Luna “has had a lot of learning disorders.” Elsa stated that De Luna began getting

in trouble for truancy “shortly after his father died.” Elsa testified that she appeared once

with De Luna in appellant’s court where he was ordered to pay a fine. Elsa said that they

went to appellant’s court two other times, “but she was not there, so they told [her] that

they would contact [them] both times, and then after that, they never contacted [them],

but, that was, like, years after.”

       Elsa testified that De Luna went to juvenile court and received probation with

community service, which he completed. Elsa was informed by the juvenile court that De

Luna’s case was closed. Elsa stated that subsequently, De Luna was arrested for “PI,”

and was told that the bail was $168.00. Once Elsa obtained the money, she was told that

De Luna owed $10,000 in tickets due to his truancy. Elsa believed that De Luna had

already served his probation on those tickets, so she went to speak with appellant. Elsa

stated that she spoke with a man at appellant’s court who told her that she had to pay

$10,000 for De Luna’s release. However, Elsa did not have the money, so she asked if

she could make payments. Elsa testified that she was told that she had to pay the entire

amount before De Luna would be released from jail. Elsa stated that she informed the

court that De Luna had already completed his probation for those truancy tickets. When

asked to describe appellant’s court’s employees’ attitude, Elsa said, “I believe it was very

                                                33
unprofessional, because I did ask them to please, please—I pleaded with them to please

let me make some kind of arrangement to get my son out. I mean, I was devastated. He

had never been in jail, and as a mother you don’t know what’s going to go on or happen

in there. And they didn’t give me the opportunity.” Elsa was told that her son would have

to serve 101 days in jail for the fines.

F.     Juvenile Probation Officer, Juan Tijerina

       Tijerina testified that he is assigned to “the court unit as a court officer” and is

currently assigned to the 430th District Court. Tijerina described the juvenile court as “a

court that has jurisdiction over juvenile cases, juveniles that commit crimes within the

community and are arrested, those offenses that are committed are submitted to the

probation department for review, and those are submitted to the District Attorney’s Office

to see if they will file a petition on those cases.” When the prosecutor asked if juvenile

cases are handled in the “JP court or a different court,” Tijerina said, “No. They are

handled in the—currently it’s the 449th District Court that handles juvenile cases, the

430th District Court and the 332nd.” Tijerina agreed with the prosecutor that cases can

be transferred from the justice of the peace courts to the juvenile court. Tijerina explained

that “what happens is that if an order to transfer is signed by a JP judge, it’s submitted to

the probation department’s intake unit, and they assign the case accordingly.” Tijerina

stated that once a case is transferred to the juvenile court, it does not to his knowledge

get transferred back to the justice of the peace court.

       Tijerina agreed with the prosecutor that there were several different orders from

appellant’s court transferring De Luna’s cases to juvenile court included in the court’s

documents admitted as State’s Exhibits 9-5, 9-B, 9-S, 9-T, 9-U, 9-D, 9-C, 9-E, 9-F, 9-G,

                                                34
9-H, 9-I, 9-J, 9-K, 9-L, 9-M, 9-O, 9-P, 9-Q, and 9-R. Tijerina stated that “[t]o [his]

knowledge,” if the justice of the peace court transfers a case to the juvenile court, the

juvenile court “retains jurisdiction” and the justice of the peace court loses jurisdiction.

       Tijerina stated that De Luna was ordered to serve one year of probation. Tijerina

was not aware if De Luna successfully completed probation. However, Tijerina could tell

from his file that Veronica Calvillo, the probation officer who was assigned to De Luna’s

case, “closed out the case.”30 Tijerina explained that if the child does not “successfully

complete [probation], we [the probation officers] usually—it depends. If the child ages out

of the—of the system, which is he turns 17 or 18, depending on the term of the probation,

we can normally—if—if he—if he commits another offense, then we revoke the probation,

but normally if—if everything seems to be well, then we just usually close the case out

once he completes probation.”                Tijerina said that in the disposition letter, Calvillo

documented that De Luna’s probation term had expired. Tijerina explained that meant

“that the 12-month period ended and usually if there wasn’t any kind of subsequent

offense, then the case was closed, successfully or not. It—it would depend on what that

probation officer.”

       When asked what “does [double jeopardy] mean,” Tijerina replied, “When

somebody is charged with a crime the second time around once they’ve been found true

or guilty of the offense.” Tijerina agreed with the prosecutor that regarding all of De Luna’s

cases, “it would be fair to say that Francisco De Luna paid for those crimes.” When asked,

“And so if he was ordered to go to jail on those same crimes, that would be double

jeopardy, would it not,” Tijerina responded, “I would think so.”

       30   Neither party requested admission of Tijerina’s file.

                                                           35
       On cross-examination, Tijerina testified that one of the charges De Luna had in the

juvenile court concerned his running away from home and the other charge was for

contempt of court. Tijerina clarified that “there was one set of contempts [sic] that were

submitted [to the juvenile court], and then there were a second set of contempts [sic] that

were submitted June 2007, and then there were another set of contempts [sic] that were

submitted October the 4th of 2007.” Tijerina stated that the juvenile court dealt with “[o]ne

of the contempts [sic] [which] involved Mr. De Luna having tardies, another contempt

involved Mr. De Luna having excessive tardies, and another contempt involved him

having failure to attend school, another contempt for failure to attend school.” Tijerina

continued, “Another contempt for failure to attend school, subsequent failure to attend

school, I believe the child having contraband or a weapon, another failure to attend

school, a subsequent—this one involves failure to comply, [with] rules and penalties.”

Appellant’s trial counsel stated, “Now, Mr. Tijerina, contempt is a separate offense from

failure to attend school; is that right?” Tijerina replied, “To my understanding” and agreed

that contempt and failure to attend school are different crimes. When asked what the

State alleged in its petition in the juvenile court that De Luna had done, Tijerina stated

that

       [the petition] included the runaway that occurred on August 20, 2007 and
       also included in Count Number 2 that Mr. De Luna failed to attend school
       on September—August the 22nd, 24th of 2006, September 1st, 25th, 20th,
       2006; Count 3, failed to attend school October 11th, 7th, 24th, 30th, and
       31st of 2006, also; Count 4, November 3rd, 10th, 16th, 29th, 2006;
       December 13th, 2006; Count 5 included January 8th, 10th, 11th, 17th, of
       2007; and Count 6 included February the 5th, 15th, 2007, March 19th, 21st,
       26th of 2007.

Tijerina testified that once the justice of the peace court transfers the cases to the juvenile

court, the juvenile court alone maintains jurisdiction over those cases. Tijerina stated that

                                                 36
as a courtesy, someone from his department sometimes sends a disposition letter to the

justice of the peace court indicating that the cases have been disposed. Tijerina testified

that such a letter was included in his file regarding De Luna’s cases, which was dated

January 4, 2008.31

        During re-direct examination, Tijerina testified that the probation department

notified appellant of “the action that was taken in the juvenile court” regarding De Luna’s

probation. Tijerina stated that State’s Exhibit 9X, a document entitled “Disposition” from

the Hidalgo County Juvenile Center and signed by a juvenile probation officer, was sent

to appellant’s court as a courtesy and “a way to inform the referring agency of what action

was taken in the case.” When asked “what was the action taken in this case,” Tijerina

said, “In this particular one, I believe that the probation officer marked off—or wrote in,

Family did not respond for services.” Tijerina stated that the disposition letter did not

transfer the cases back to appellant’s court and that the form indicated that the case was

not closed. However, Tijerina did not explain what the notation “[The] Family did not

respond for services” meant. The trial court also admitted into evidence State’s Exhibit

12, which is another “disposition letter” sent to appellant’s court. State’s Exhibit 12

documents that the juvenile court took action in De Luna’s case and that he was “placed

on Judicial Probation” on January 24, 2008 for “cont of court.” Tijerina agreed with the

prosecutor that based on the disposition letter, appellant should have “had knowledge”

        31 This January 4, 2008 disposition letter was not admitted into evidence, and there is nothing in
the record showing that this letter was received by appellant’s court. The record includes a disposition
letter signed on July 13, 2007 by a probation officer regarding De Luna’s case in the juvenile court.
However, the offense listed is “Contempt of Court (11 cts).” A second disposition letter signed on January
8, 2008 is also included in the record. However, it lists the offense committed as “cont of court.” No
disposition letters regarding De Luna’s multiple offenses committed at school for among other things,
truancy, appear in the record.

                                                       37
that the juvenile court had placed De Luna on probation. However, Tijerina did not

acknowledge that the probation was for contempt of court.

        On re-cross examination, when appellant’s defense attorney asked if De Luna

pleaded guilty to contempt of court, Tijerina responded, “Correct.” The disposition letter

states that De Luna had been placed on “judicial probation” for the offense of contempt

of court based on a referral received from appellant’s court. It does not state that De Luna

was punished for any other violations, which included the excessive absences and other

Class C misdemeanor offenses. Although Tijerina referred to his file during his testimony,

that file was not admitted into evidence.

G.      Probation Intake Supervisor, Rafael Ocon

        Ocon, a probation intake supervisor with the Hidalgo County Juvenile Probation

Department, testified that he had reviewed the files from appellant’s court in De Luna’s

case. Ocon observed that the file includes “orders to transfer, failure to attend” that

indicated that appellant had transferred De Luna’s cases on those Class C misdemeanor

charges from her court to the juvenile court. Ocon stated that once appellant signed the

transfer orders, “[s]he loses jurisdiction of those cases” and the juvenile court and the

juvenile probation department “retain” jurisdiction. Ocon agreed with the prosecutor that

appellant transferred all of De Luna’s cases to the juvenile court and lost jurisdiction over

the cases. According to Ocon, the judgment reflected that the probation department filed

the cases against De Luna as “truancies.”32 Ocon explained that a truancy is the same

        32  This judgment is not in the record. Thus, although Ocon testified that it “reflected” that the
probation department filed the cases against De Luna as “truancies,” there is nothing in the record showing
that the juvenile court disposed of those “truancies.” Moreover, there were other charges against De Luna
pending that were not “truancies,” and Ocon did not testify as to what occurred in those cases against De
Luna.

                                                        38
charge as a failure to attend school charge. Ocon testified that De Luna was placed on

probation for a year, ordered to perform fifty hours of community service, and that De

Luna completed those conditions.                 Ocon agreed that De Luna “completed the

probation.”33

H.      Closing and the Verdict

        The State rested, and defense counsel requested an instructed verdict on the basis

that “there is no evidence at all or insufficient evidence as a matter of law from which the

jury or any fact finder could find all of the elements beyond a reasonable doubt” because

“[t]here is no evidence from any source” that appellant: (1) ‘intentionally with intent as

defined by the—by this Penal Code subjected’ the alleged victims to arrest”; or (2) “knew

that any acts that she understood or she did were unlawful.” The State responded that

the evidence showed “that each of the warrants that were signed on each of the

individuals, warrants for their arrest” by appellant and that appellant “intentionally

subjected each of those individuals to arrest by signing the warrants.” The prosecutor

said, “When she signed those warrants, she intended—it was her conscious objective to

arrest these particular individuals.” The prosecutor argued that “the law is imputed to

[appellant] to know the law, and “[s]he signed 22 orders transferring [De Luna’s cases].

She knew the law of transfer. She lost jurisdiction in that case.” Finally, the prosecutor

argued that appellant “knew by sending that [letter of continuing obligation to Trevino]—

it’s her position she should have never sent that letter out. She still sent it out. And she—

        33  As stated above, the only documents from the juvenile court are the disposition letters that show
that the juvenile court had disposed of contempt of court charges against De Luna. There is no evidence
that the juvenile court ever disposed of the Class C misdemeanor charges against De Luna. Thus, although
Ocon testified that the judgment reflected that the probation department filed its case against De Luna as
“truancies,” there is nothing in the record showing that the juvenile court disposed of any truancy charges.

                                                         39
he came in on the designated time and place on that letter, and she still arrested him for

failure to appear. That was clear. The arrest warrants and commitment letters all reflects

failure to appear because it’s through testimony that FTA stands for failure to appear.”

The trial court denied defense counsel’s request for a directed verdict.

      In closing argument, the State prosecutor stated, in pertinent part, the following:

              I’m just going to read one of the counts to you, but basically says if
      you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that on or about—
      and then there is a different date for each victim in the—in the case—in
      Hidalgo County, Texas, had proof that these offenses happened in Hidalgo
      County, Texas, then Mary Alice Palacios, who we’ve had pointed out to you
      numerous times by most of the witnesses that came to testify, that she did
      intentionally subject each of the victims, [Trevino and De Luna] to an
      arrest—all she had to do was have them arrested—and that she knew her
      conduct was unlawful. Then you’ll find—and that she was acting under the
      color of her title—color of her title of her public office, in other words, if she
      was acting as judge when she did these things, then you’ll find her guilty.

             One other thing I want to point out to you. Most of the charge is self-
      explanatory, but it is not required that the prosecution prove guilt beyond all
      possible doubt. All we have to do is prove to you beyond a reasonable
      doubt. . . .

             Now, you want to look at the circumstances surrounding each of
      these arrests to try to determine the intent and the knowledge in each one
      of these cases.

              Now, Mary Alice Palacios, Judge Palacios, has been a judge for quite
      a few years. We know that she’s gone to training. The first year she was
      elected judge, she—now, these are required trainings. In addition to the
      required trainings, she can voluntarily go to more training, but she’s required
      the first year to take 80 hours of training. Each year thereafter she has to
      take 20 hours of training. And—and throughout—which was done in each
      case.

              Now, how would you know a person intended to do wrong? Okay.
      She signed a warrant on [Trevino’s] case. He comes to court. He appears
      as directed by the judge. And he shows up in court. She signs a warrant,
      failure to appear. It’s very obvious from all the testimony he did not fail to
      appear. She intentionally signed the warrant. She intentionally had him
      arrested. She knew he didn’t fail to appear. He did appear. So she
      obviously intended her conduct, and she knew that conduct was wrong.

                                                 40
                Now, when you look at these warrants—and I’ll get a couple of them
        to show you. In State’s Exhibits—in State’s Exhibit 9-B—we’ll take that one
        first. You’ll have a warrant. But we also brought the sheriff’s records, their
        warrants, copies of warrants, so you can compare if you care to. But it says,
        Violation:     Failure to Attend School, FTA. Well, you could interpret that
        FTA to mean failure to attend school; however, you’ve heard a lot of
        testimony that FTA in parenthesis means failure to appear.

              And I think one way that we can clear that up is if you’ll take a look,
        especially in De Luna’s cases, his warrant in 9-A is a different warrant. It
        says Violation, Failure to Comply with Directive. Then in parenthesis is
        FTA, Failure to Appear. So we know these arrests were for failure to
        appear.

                Francisco—I mean [Trevino] clearly could not have been arrested for
        failure to appear when he appeared. I mean, that’s obvious, very obvious.
        There is no two ways you can interpret that. If you don’t appear, you’ve
        been summoned to appear, you don’t appear, then you—then you can take
        a failure to appear warrant. And if you do appear, they can’t take a failure
        to appear warrant. It’s very, very obvious.

                Now, secondly, we come to [De Luna]. He had numerous cases,
        many, many, many cases. And all these cases were transferred by the
        Court to the juvenile court.[34] And you’ve heard testimony. Go back and
        read this order of transfer. What does it say? It says, on the Court’s own
        motion, we transfer [De Luna’s] case to the juvenile court. Remember, she
        is the JP court. She moved these cases from her court to the juvenile court.
        She moved all of them to the court, all but one. She lost jurisdiction of those
        cases.

               And she has attached to each one of these exhibits—I’m not going
        to go through each one with you. She has attached to these exhibits the
        order transferring the case. And if you will look through these exhibits, there
        is no order transferring the case back to the Court. She transferred this
        particular case I’m looking at on the 8th day of March of 2007.

                The next thing she does is on December 17th of 2008. That’s a year
        and about three-quarters, a year and eight or nine months later. A year and
        eight or nine months later, she sends out what they refer to as the birthday
        letter or the notice of continuing obligation on all these cases. You count
        these, these JP numbers up here, one, two, three, four, five, [and] six. It
        comes up to, like, 22 or 23 cases that she transferred—I mean that she is

        34 The State concedes that appellant had not transferred one of De Luna’s cases before she issued

an arrest warrant.

                                                       41
        noticing him to appear in court on; however, when you look at the file, there
        is no order transferring these cases back, none whatsoever. It’s very
        obvious she did not have jurisdiction in this case.

                 Yet she also gets a letter from the probation department, which I’d
        like to remind you of. She got a letter from the probation department telling
        her, in all these cases you’ve transferred to our court, we have put [De Luna]
        on probation.[35] She had notice of that.

               But in spite of all that, he took out all his warrants for failure to appear.
        And then if you’ll look at these warrants carefully, it’s a command to any
        peace officer that if they come across [De Luna] to arrest him. So when [De
        Luna] was arrested for a public intoxication charge, the sheriff’s office had
        all these warrants on file, so they arrested him for all these.[36] Clearly
        wrong, clearly wrong. Anybody would know it’s wrong.

               It’s double jeopardy. That’s a very basic fundamental right that we
        all have. Everybody knows about double jeopardy. It’s not something that
        you would make a mistake on. You know it’s wrong. You can’t punish a
        person twice. You can’t try a person twice for the same offense. If you have
        a murderer—if we try a murderer, as a prosecutor, if I lose that case, it’s
        over. We don’t get another shot at him. It’s over. If we try him for murder
        and we don’t like the punishment, whatever he gets, it’s over. We can’t go
        back and assess some more punishment. It’s over. We can only punish
        him once for the offense. It’s a very basic, very fundamental right that was
        violated by this Judge.[37]

          35 The letter does not state that De Luna was placed on probation in all of the cases that appellant

transferred to the juvenile court. The form letter filled in by a juvenile probation officer has one cause
number which is J-07702. The only offense listed is contempt of court. We have reviewed all of the charges
that were transferred to the juvenile court by appellant. De Luna was not accused of contempt of court in
any of those transferred cases. The State presented no evidence linking the contempt of court charge with
those transferred cases. See TEX. CODE OF CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 45.050 (West, Westlaw through 2013 3d
C.S.) (establishing that a justice court may, among other things, “refer the child to the appropriate juvenile
court for delinquent conduct [or] for contempt of the justice or municipal court order” if that child has failed
“to obey an order of a justice or municipal court under circumstances that would constitute contempt of
court”). Without an explanation of the procedures that are followed and how and when a justice court loses
jurisdiction, it is very difficult to determine whether appellant’s court had jurisdiction in this case.
       36 As explained further below, the State presented no evidence that the sheriff’s office arrested De

Luna again after he was arrested for either public intoxication or possession of marihuana.
        37  In her brief, appellant argues that one of the State’s theories was that she lost jurisdiction over
Trevino’s cases by the time she issued the warrants for his arrest. However, after reviewing the State’s
opening and closing argument and the evidence, we disagree that the State offered this theory as to Trevino
to the jury.

                                                          42
        The jury convicted appellant of official oppression of Trevino and De Luna.

Appellant filed a motion for new trial, and after a hearing, the trial court denied the motion.

This appeal followed.

                                          IV.      DISCUSSION

        As previously held, a judge is not subject to criminal liability when it is proven that

the court she presides over does not have jurisdiction or if that judge commits a double

jeopardy violation. Nonetheless, as explained below, we have also determined that the

evidence is insufficient to support any of the State’s theories.

        Specifically, appellant, by her first, second, and third issues, argues that the

evidence was insufficient to show that she knew that her acts were unlawful and that the

State did not provide any evidence that she was not justified when she signed the

complained-of warrants. The State claims that the fact finder in this case could have

inferred from the evidence that appellant knew that her court lacked the requisite

jurisdiction in De Luna’s case and that in Trevino’s case, even a lay person knows that

one cannot arrest a person for failure to appear when the person did in fact appear.

        We agree with appellant. All of the alleged acts involve appellant’s discharge of

official duties and her judicial interpretation of the applicable law. If appellant signed the

warrant for Trevino’s arrest for a crime he did not commit, the State was still required to

prove that appellant intended to subject Trevino to an arrest that she knew was unlawful.38

A.      Trevino

        38 Although, the State alluded to a civil lawsuit against appellant, it did not provide any evidence
that appellant committed a tort when she issued the complained-of warrants. Moreover, the State did not
allege at trial and has not alleged on appeal that appellant committed any torts when she signed the
warrants.

                                                        43
        In our sufficiency review, we must review all of the evidence presented in order to

determine whether the jury’s finding of guilt is a rational finding. See Brooks, 323 S.W.3d

at 907 (explaining that although a jury may believe one witness and disregard some of

the evidence, “based on all the evidence” the jury’s finding of guilt must be rational).

Therefore, we will set out all of the evidence below and explain how that evidence is

insufficient under the State’s theories.

        1.      The “FTA” Notation

        At appellant’s trial, the State relied on evidence that Trevino’s arrest warrants had

the notation “FTA.” The State argued this meant that Trevino was arrested for failure to

appear, and it was undisputed that Trevino always appeared in appellant’s court when

summoned.

        The evidence presented at trial showed that Trevino owed court imposed fines in

two cases for failure to attend school. The evidence shows that when Trevino appeared

in appellant’s courtroom on the day that appellant signed the arrest warrant (August 4,

2009), he signed a waiver indicating that he would serve a sentence in jail in lieu of paying

the fines that he had been ordered to pay for two counts of failure to attend school.39

        39 Although not presented to the jury, article 45.046 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure states
the following:

        (a)     When a judgment and sentence have been entered against a defendant and the
                defendant defaults in the discharge of the judgment, the judge may order the
                defendant confined in jail until discharged by law if the judge at a hearing makes a
                written determination that:

                (1)     the defendant is not indigent and has failed to make a good faith
                        effort to discharge the fine and costs; or

                (2)     the defendant is indigent and:

                        (A)      has failed to make a good faith effort to discharge
                                 the fines and costs under Article 45.049; and

                        (B)      could have discharged the fines and costs under

                                                         44
        The docket sheets from appellant’s court show that appellant ordered Trevino to

pay fines in two causes by August 4, 2009.40 In addition, Trevino acknowledged that

appellant had ordered him to pay fines and that he had not done so. Trevino testified that

he believed he owed about $1,000.00 in fines. Trevino also agreed that, although

appellant had offered to give him more time to pay the fines, he refused her offer. The

State presented no evidence that Trevino did not owe the fines and court costs or that

appellant committed any improper acts in allowing Trevino to waive payment of his fines

and go to jail. Moreover, when the prosecutor asked why he was arrested, Trevino

replied, “Because I hadn’t finished paying off my fines.”41 Trevino explained that he chose

to go to jail instead of paying his fines or his mother doing community service “[b]ecause

it was my behalf, you know what I mean? It was my mistake so I was going to have it.”

Trevino never stated that he had been arrested for failing to appear in appellant’s court.

        State’s Exhibit 7A and 7B include a “Waiver of Alternative Sentencing and Request

for Incarceration in Satisfaction of Fine and Costs” signed by Trevino on August 4, 2009

under two separate cause numbers in appellant’s court. Each waiver states:

                The Court has explained to me my right to be released to pay the
        fine(s) and court costs at some later date in the manner prescribed in Art.
        45.041, C.A.C.C.P.[42] I understand that I have such a right and I do hereby

                                    Article 45.049 without experiencing any undue
                                    hardship.

TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 45.046 (West, Westlaw through 2013 3d C.S.).
        40 The record also contains an order showing that appellant conducted a hearing before she

ordered Trevino to pay the fines.
        41 Trevino stated that appellant’s court’s secretary told him that “there were $500 that were missing.”

Trevino said, “I remember specifically because my dad was asking for 200. Only 3 and I told him that was
too much money just to get me in there so I’d take the time instead.” The prosecutor asked, “And how
much total did you owe?” Trevino responded, “I think it was around—I think maybe 1,000 and a half, like
almost 2,000.”
        42   Article 45.041 states, in relevant part, the following:

                                                             45
       expressly waive this right in the above-styled case and request that I be
       imprisoned in jail for a sufficient length of time to discharge the full amount
       of fine(s) and costs adjudge [sic] against me as provided by Art. 45.048.[43]

       Each warrant issued by appellant states:

       Judgment

       (a)        The judgment and sentence, in case of conviction in a criminal action before a
                  justice of the peace or municipal court judge, shall be that the defendant pay the
                  amount of the fine and costs to the state.

       (b)        Subject to Subsection (b–2), the justice or judge may direct the defendant:

            (1)   to pay:

                  (A)       the entire fine and costs when sentence is pronounced;

                  (B)       the entire fine and costs at some later date; or

                  (C)       a specified portion of the fine and costs at designated intervals;

                  ....

       (b-2)      When imposing a fine and costs, if the justice or judge determines that the
                  defendant is unable to immediately pay the fine and costs, the justice or judge shall
                  allow the defendant to pay the fine and costs in specified portions at designated
                  intervals.

       (c)        The justice or judge shall credit the defendant for time served in jail as provided by
                  Article 42.03. The credit shall be applied to the amount of the fine and costs at the
                  rate provided by Article 45.048.

TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 45.041 (West, Westlaw through 2013 3d C.S.).
       43   Article 45.048 states:

       Discharged from Jail[]

       (a)        A defendant placed in jail on account of failure to pay the fine and costs shall be
                  discharged on habeas corpus by showing that the defendant:

            (1)   is too poor to pay the fine and costs; or

            (2)   has remained in jail a sufficient length of time to satisfy the fine and costs, at the
                  rate of not less than $ 50 for each period of time served, as specified by the
                  convicting court in the judgment in the case.

       (b)        A convicting court may specify a period of time that is not less than eight hours or
                  more than 24 hours as the period for which a defendant who fails to pay the fines
                  and costs in the case must remain in jail to satisfy $ 50 of the fine and costs.

Id. art. 45.048 (West, Westlaw through 2013 3d C.S.). The jury was not provided with copies of articles
45.041 and 45.048.

                                                              46
                To any Peace Officer of the State of Texas, Greeting: You are
        hereby Commanded to arrest Trevino, Lee Roy if be found in your County
        and bring Him/Her before me, a Justice of the Peace in and for Precinct No.
        4, Place 2, of Hidalgo County, Texas at my office at 222 N. 12th Ave., Tx.,
        in said County Immediately, then and there to answer the State of Texas for
        an offense against the laws of said State, to-wit: . . . . Fine $537 . . . Name
        of Complainant: JJAEP- . . . Herein Fail not, but of this writ make due return,
        showing how You have executed the same. Violation: 1. Failure to Attend
        School (FTA).

Each commitment order states:

                The State of Texas, to the Sheriff or any Constable of Hidalgo
        County, Greeting: . . . YOU ARE HEREBY COMMANDED to commit to the
        jail of Hidalgo County, Texas the body of [Trevino] . . . Who has been
        convicted in this court of the offense of Fail to Attend School (FTA) . . . .

               The said defendant to be released upon remaining in custody for the
        time required by law to satisfy the amount of such fine and cost, or upon
        such fine and costs being remitted by the proper authority, or upon the full
        payment of fine and cost, the amount of which is now due is $537.

The warrants set out that appellant ordered the arrest of Trevino “for an offense against

the laws of said State, to wit” a “Fine $537” and that the complainant was the “JJAEP” for

the violation of “Failure to Attend School (FTA).”44 The violation noted on the warrant is

for “Failure to Attend School (FTA)” on the basis of a complaint filed by Trevino’s school,

“JJAEP.” The failure to attend school complaint was filed on March 7, 2008, and the

offense date documented on the warrant was March 7, 2008. 45 Thus, the warrant clearly

documents that Trevino’s offense occurred on March 7, 2008 and was based on a

        44   “JJAEP” is the alternative school that Trevino attended.
        45 If Trevino had been arrested for failure to appear, the warrant should have listed the date of the
offense for that charge and the complainant would have been appellant’s court. Moreover, the date on the
warrant would not have been March 7, 2008, and the complainant would not have been Trevino’s school.

                                                          47
complaint filed in appellant’s court by his school.46 The warrant does not state that

appellant’s court is the complainant.47

        In summary, Trevino signed the waiver on August 4, 2009, and appellant signed

the arrest warrants and commitment orders on August 4, 2009. The waivers state that

appellant had explained to Trevino that he had a right to be released to pay the fines and

court costs at some later date in the manner prescribed in article 45.041.48 Thus, because

Trevino signed the waiver to spend time in jail in lieu of paying the fines, no rational jury

could have inferred that the “FTA” notation on the arrest warrants proved beyond a

reasonable doubt that appellant issued the warrants to arrest Trevino for failure to appear.

Accordingly, there is no evidence that appellant knew that arresting Trevino was

“unlawful” for the reasons claimed by the State.

        The commitment orders signed by appellant committing Trevino to the jail were

filed in the Hidalgo County Sheriff’s Office (“HCSO”) by the custodian of records. In those

commitment orders, the “Officer’s Return” has been completed and documents that the

commitment orders were executed on August 4, 2009 at 12:00 p.m. However, the HCSO

File does not contain any arrest warrants for Trevino. Thus, there is nothing in the record

showing that the arrest warrants with the “FTA” notation were actually served on Trevino.

Trevino was placed in confinement on August 4, 2009, thus, at some point perhaps he

        46   The record contains copies of the complaints filed in appellant’s court by Trevino’s school.
       47 Therefore, we interpret the warrants as documenting that appellant ordered Trevino’s arrest

because he had not paid the fines for two separate failure-to-attend-school offenses. We emphasize that
we respectfully disagree with the State’s interpretation of the warrants.
        48The deferred adjudication judgment signed by appellant in one of Trevino’s cases, states that
Trevino was charged with the offense of “FTA School” committed on March 7, 2008. It defies logic to
suggest that appellant meant that Trevino was charged with the offense of “failure to appear in court school.”

                                                           48
was arrested. However, the evidence undisputedly shows that if Trevino was in fact

arrested, he was arrested after signing the waivers. And there is no evidence in the record

that the HCSO ever executed the warrants with the erroneous “FTA” notation. See id.

art. 15.22 (West, Westlaw through 3d C.S.) (“A person is arrested when he has been

actually placed under restraint or taken into custody by an officer or person executing a

warrant of arrest, or by an officer or person arresting without a warrant.”). Although we

cannot discern from the record under which authority Trevino may have been arrested, it

was the State’s burden to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Trevino’s arrest was

unlawful due to these allegedly erroneous warrants. Finally, the docket sheets from

appellant’s court in Trevino’s cases state that on August 4, 2009, Trevino’s cases were

closed due to “Time served.” If Trevino had in fact been arrested for failure to appear,

Trevino’s unpaid fines would have still been pending in appellant’s court, and Trevino’s

cases would not have been closed.

       Here, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict, we

conclude that based on all of the evidence presented, no rational juror could have found

beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant ordered Trevino’s arrest for failure to appear.

Moreover, because Trevino signed the waiver, the evidence presented in this case does

not support a finding that appellant’s act in signing the arrest warrant with the “FTA”

notation was in any way unlawful.

       2.     Article 45.060

       The State also attempted to invoke article 45.060 as proving that appellant was

precluded from having Trevino arrested for offenses he committed before the age of

seventeen. Article 45.060 is entitled, “Unadjudicated Children, Now Adults; Notice on

                                               49
Reaching Age of Majority; Offense,” and it states, in relevant part, “Except as provided by

Articles 45.058 and 45.059, an individual may not be taken into secured custody for

offenses alleged to have occurred before the individual’s 17th birthday.” However, the

State did not provide any evidence regarding the meaning of the term “secured custody.”

And, it is well established that individuals under the age of seventeen can be arrested

under certain circumstances. See Lanes v. State, 767 S.W.2d 789 (Tex. Crim. App.

1989) (establishing that a juvenile may be arrested if probable cause exists). Because

there is no evidence regarding the meaning of “secured custody” as used in article 45.060,

no rational jury could have found beyond a reasonable doubt that article 45.060 prohibits

the arrest of an individual for offenses committed before the age of seventeen. Moreover,

article 45.045 allows a justice of the peace to issue a capias pro fine for person who

committed an offense before the age of seventeen if the individual is seventeen years of

age or older, and “the court finds that the issuance of the capias pro fine is justified after

considering” (1) “the sophistication and maturity of the individual;” (2) “the criminal record

and history of the individual;” and (3) “the reasonable likelihood of bringing about the

discharge of the judgment through the use of procedures and services currently available

to the court;” and “the court has proceeded under Article 45.050 to compel the individual

to discharge the judgment.”49 TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 45.045. Article 45.045 further

states, that “(a) If the defendant is not in custody when the judgment is rendered or if the

defendant fails to satisfy the judgment according to its terms, the court may order a capias

pro fine issued for the defendant’s arrest.” Id. (Emphasis added).

        49 The State provided no evidence that appellant did not comply with article 45.045 when she issued

the pro capias fine for Trevino.

                                                        50
        Nonetheless, even assuming without deciding, that the State showed that pursuant

to article 45.060, appellant’s placing Trevino in “secured custody” for his failure to pay the

fines and court costs was improper, the State did not provide any evidence that

appellant’s act was criminal, tortious, or both. At best, the State showed that appellant

misinterpreted the applicable law.            The State cites no authority, and we find none,

providing that a judge’s misinterpretation of a statute amounts to a crime or tort.

Therefore, the State failed to prove that appellant’s act, even if true, was unlawful. See

TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 1.07(a)(48) (defining unlawful as criminal or tortious without a

justification or privilege).

        3.      Knowledge and Justification

        Finally, the evidence fails to support a finding that appellant did not reasonably

believe that her conduct was required or authorized by law when she signed the warrants

for Trevino’s arrest. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 9.21(a). The “FTA” notation is no more

than a mere modicum of evidence, and as previously stated, no rational jury could have

reasonably inferred that the “FTA” notation proved beyond a reasonable doubt that

appellant had Trevino arrested for failing to appear in her court.50 Instead, the evidence

        50   As Judge Cochran’s concurring opinion in Brooks emphasized, the mere existence of some
evidence is not sufficient in criminal cases—there must be sufficient evidence for a rational juror to reach a
conclusion beyond a reasonable doubt. Brooks, 323 S.W.3d at 917 (Cochran, J., concurring). Legal
sufficiency is judged not by the quantity of evidence, but by the quality of the evidence and the level of
certainty it engenders in the fact finder’s mind. Id. at 918. In Brooks, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
provided the following analogy:

        The store clerk at trial identifies A as the robber. A properly authenticated surveillance
        videotape of the event clearly shows that B committed the robbery. But, the jury convicts
        A. It was within the jury's prerogative to believe the convenience store clerk and disregard
        the video. But based on all the evidence the jury's finding of guilt is not a rational finding.

Brooks, 323 S.W.3d at 907 (quoting Johnson v. State, 23 S.W.3d 1, 15 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000) (McCormick,
P.J., dissenting)).

        As the example in Brooks shows, the jury in this case was free to disregard the undisputed evidence
that appellant had Trevino arrested because he signed a waiver in lieu of paying the fines he agreed to pay.

                                                          51
undisputedly shows that Trevino signed a waiver and chose to serve a jail sentence in

lieu of paying his fines.51 Thus, the evidence does not support a conclusion that appellant

knew that she lacked authority to sign the arrest warrants for Trevino, despite any

documentation or testimony that he was arrested for “failure to appear.” 52 Accordingly,

we conclude that the evidence was insufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that

appellant committed the offense of official oppression under these facts.

        C.       De Luna

        Regarding De Luna, the State claimed that appellant’s court lacked jurisdiction to

issue the warrants for De Luna’s arrest and that she allegedly violated double jeopardy

principles by punishing De Luna for crimes that he had already been punished for

committing by the juvenile court. The State’s theory was that once appellant transferred

De Luna’s cases to the juvenile court, her court lost jurisdiction to perform any acts in De

Luna’s cases. And once De Luna served his sentence in the juvenile court, he had

already been punished for the offenses that appellant had transferred.

        In order to convict appellant under the State’s theory, the jury had to determine

whether appellant’s court had jurisdiction over De Luna’s cases and whether De Luna

However, the jury was not free to infer from the "FTA” notation alone that appellant knew that Trevino
always appeared in her court but had him arrested for failure to appear anyway because Trevino admitted
that he was arrested pursuant to his signed waiver. See id.
        51The State did not present any evidence that appellant was not authorized to allow Trevino to sign
the waiver and chose to serve a jail sentence instead of paying his fines. In addition, under articles 45.046,
45.045, and 45.048 state otherwise.
        52 We note that if appellant believed that Trevino had failed to appear in her court, the evidence still
had to establish that she knew that her acts were “unlawful.” Although such a mistake cannot be condoned,
and we disapprove of such error, mistakes are nonetheless made by trial judges in criminal matters, and
we cannot conclude that such mistakes amount to criminal or tortious behavior. Under this record, no
evidence was presented that appellant knew that Trevino always appeared in her court and that despite
this knowledge, she still had him arrested for failure to appear. In addition, as previously stated, we
respectfully disagree with the State’s contention that appellant had Trevino arrested for failure to appear.

                                                          52
had already been punished by the juvenile court for the offenses that he was allegedly

arrested for committing.53 The State cites no authority, and we find none, which allows a

fact finder to determine whether a trial court lacked jurisdiction to perform a certain act or

to determine whether a judge’s order violates double jeopardy.54 The usual procedure in

these matters is for the defendant to appeal the case to a higher court or to seek relief by

filing a writ of habeas corpus.55

        By presenting the issue of whether appellant’s court lacked jurisdiction to the jury,

the trial court judge in appellant’s case agreed that jurisdiction may be determined from

the testimony of lay witnesses as a factual issue. We find no authority, and the State

cites none, supporting a conclusion that the issue of whether a court has jurisdiction can

be determined by lay witness testimony or that a fact finder may determine jurisdiction by

either believing or disbelieving the witnesses. Instead, whether a court has jurisdiction is

determined as a matter of law. See Tex. Dep’t of Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda, 133 S.W.3d
217, 226, 228 (Tex. 2004) (determining whether a court has subject matter jurisdiction is

question of law that is reviewed de novo by an appellate court); Tex. Natural Res.

Conservation Comm’n v. IT–Davy, 74 S.W.3d 849, 855 (Tex. 2002); Robinson v. Neeley,

192 S.W.3d 904, 907 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2006, no pet.). To determine as a matter of law

        53A defendant is subjected to double jeopardy when he receives multiple punishments for the same
offense. Cervantes v. State, 815 S.W.2d 569, 572 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991) (citing North Carolina v. Pearce,
395 U.S. 711, 717 (1969)).
        54  Even a Justice of the United States Supreme Court opined that the Supreme Court’s cases “in
this area indicate, [that] the meaning of the Double Jeopardy Clause is not always readily apparent.” Tibbs
v. Fla., 457 U.S. 31, 47 (U.S. 1982) (J. White, dissent).
        55 We note that the jury was never informed that appellate courts have reversed trial courts on the
basis that the arrest of the defendant was invalid because the warrants issued were improper and on the
basis that the trial court’s conviction violated the prohibition of double jeopardy. See Littrell v. State, 271
S.W.3d 273, 275 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) (holding that appellant was subjected to double jeopardy and
reversing court of appeals decision finding that there was no double jeopardy violation).

                                                          53
whether a court has jurisdiction, we review the Texas Constitution or applicable statutes

granting the court its jurisdiction. See Gallagher v. State, 690 S.W.2d 587, 593 (Tex.

Crim. App. 1985) (“Where jurisdiction is given by the Constitution over cases involving

designated kinds of subject matters, the grant is exclusive, unless a contrary intent is

shown by the context. Further, it has been stated that the jurisdiction of the district court

is fixed by the state Constitution and is immutable except by constitutional method of

amendment”); Simpson v. State, 137 S.W.2d 1035, 1037 (1940) (determining whether a

district court lacked jurisdiction to try a police officer for official misconduct by construing

the Texas Constitution); Hall v. State, 736 S.W.2d 818 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]

1987, pet. ref’d) (analyzing jurisdiction of a district court by reviewing the articles of the

Texas Code of Criminal Procedure); State v. Hall, 829 S.W.2d 184, 188 (Tex. Crim. App.

1992) (reviewing whether the lower court lacked jurisdiction by analyzing both the Texas

Code of Criminal Procedure and the Texas Constitution).

       In this case, the State failed to present to the jury the statute conferring jurisdiction

to the justice courts or the statute conferring jurisdiction to the juvenile courts. The State

made no effort to show that as a matter of law, appellant’s court lacked jurisdiction when

she issued the complained-of warrants to arrest De Luna. The State further failed to

recognize that appellant’s acts were done in the administration of her court’s docket and

that, as the judge, appellant had a duty to make those administrative decisions and to

interpret the law. Instead, the State presented testimony from lay witnesses who stated

that it was their understanding and belief that once appellant transferred the cases to the

juvenile court, the justice court lost jurisdiction completely. We have reviewed the records

from appellant’s court and the disposition letters sent by the juvenile court.             The

                                                  54
documents signed by appellant transferring the cases to the juvenile court do not mention

any contempt-of-court charges against De Luna. However, it is undisputed and the

evidence shows that the juvenile court disposed of several contempt of court charges

filed by appellant’s court against De Luna and that De Luna served probation on those

charges.

       The evidence the State presented regarding De Luna’s case was not clearly

explained. For example, the State presented no evidence regarding what punishment, if

any, De Luna received in the Class C misdemeanor charges. Also, there is no evidence

that the juvenile court disposed of the twenty-two Class C misdemeanor charges or that

the State dismissed those charges. The State also failed to provide any law on this issue.

Thus, the State did not fully explain the procedure a justice court follows when the juvenile

court does not dispose of class C misdemeanor offenses that have initially been

transferred to the justice court but not disposed of by that court. It appears that more

information was necessary to determine whether appellant’s court lost jurisdiction over all

of De Luna’s cases. Moreover, the State did not offer into evidence the entire file from

the juvenile court regarding De Luna’s cases. Finally, appellant did not transfer one of

De Luna’s cases to the juvenile court, and the State failed to explain the impact of that

decision. It was the State’s burden to show that appellant’s acts were unlawful, and it

insisted on proving that her court’s alleged lack of jurisdiction made her acts unlawful.

Therefore, the State had the burden of providing the necessary information to the jury.

       Also, there are questions regarding a “disposition letter” sent by the probation

department to appellant’s court stating that the “family had refused services” in one of the

cases she transferred to the juvenile court. The State presented no evidence regarding

                                                55
how a family can refuse services when a child has been accused of a misdemeanor

offense. When asked, Cherry, a former case manager in appellant’s court, stated that

the letter “would be something we would get back from juvenile probation as to whether

or not they were going to pursue the matter or not.” Cherry then testified that her

interpretation of this letter was that the juvenile court did not have jurisdiction over that

particular case. Thus, although a probation officer testified that the disposition letter did

not transfer jurisdiction back to appellant’s court, a legal conclusion that the officer was

not qualified to make or for which the jury was not entitled to pass judgment upon, the

only evidence before the jury shows that appellant’s court personnel believed that the

letter did in fact transfer jurisdiction back to her court. Thus, even if the State proved that

Cherry was mistaken, the State did not prove that appellant knew that Cherry was

mistaken. In other words, the evidence before the jury only supports a finding that

appellant did not interpret the disposition letter in the same way that the probation officer

interpreted it. Therefore, the evidence does not support a finding that appellant knew that

her court lacked jurisdiction and that her acts were as the State alleged “unlawful.”

       The difficulty in determining the legal sufficiency of the evidence under our

standard of review is readily apparent because the offenses, as alleged by the State turn

on a determination of questions of law.56 This includes a determination of whether a

defendant’s double jeopardy rights have been violated. Nonetheless, we will address the

sufficiency of the evidence to the extent that we find that it is possible.

       The evidence presented showed that De Luna had twenty-two Class C

misdemeanor charges pending in appellant’s court. De Luna committed those offenses

       56   We do not usually apply sufficiency of the evidence review when determining questions of law.

                                                        56
at school. The record contains multiple transfer orders signed by appellant, transferring

De Luna’s cases to the juvenile court. The evidence further showed that appellant did

not transfer one of De Luna’s cases to the juvenile court.                      However, the evidence

presented undisputedly shows that the juvenile court placed De Luna on probation only

for contempt-of-court offenses. There is nothing in the record showing that the juvenile

court made any ruling on the Class C misdemeanor cases or otherwise disposed of them.

        Next, it was undisputed at trial that De Luna was not initially arrested pursuant to

the warrants issued by appellant and that he was instead arrested for either public

intoxication or possession of marihuana. In fact, the State conceded at trial that De Luna

was originally arrested for public intoxication. The prosecutor stated in closing argument

the following: “So when [De Luna] was arrested for a public intoxication charge, the

sheriff’s office had all these warrants on file, so they arrested him for all these. Clearly

wrong, clearly wrong. Anybody would know it’s wrong.” 57 It was further undisputed that

the reason that De Luna was not released from jail when his mother went to post his bail

after he was arrested for public intoxication was due to De Luna’s failure to pay the fines

he had not paid in appellant’s court.58 However, there is no evidence in the record that if

appellant’s court had jurisdiction, she was not allowed to issue the capias pro fine

warrants for De Luna’s arrest.59 The entirety of the State’s case rests on whether

        57 We note that the State presented no evidence of the proper procedures that occur in a case
where a person is arrested and then it is discovered that the person has warrants for his arrest. First of all,
it is unknown what agency arrested De Luna for the public intoxication charge. Also, as further explained
below, there was no evidence presented that the Sheriff’s Office ever executed these warrants.
        58The commitment orders do not appear in the record. However, at appellant’s motion for new trial
hearing, defense counsel stated that the Honorable Rosa Trevino signed the commitment orders in De
Luna’s case.
        59Again, articles 45.045 and 45.050 allow capias pro fines to be issued for a person’s arrest for an
offense he or she committed before the age of seventeen under certain circumstances already explained.
There is no evidence that appellant failed to comply with those articles when she issued the capias pro fine

                                                          57
appellant subjected De Luna to an unlawful arrest because her court lacked jurisdiction

and she somehow violated his right against double jeopardy.

        At trial and on appeal, the State relies on the theory of constructive arrest wherein

the State argues once a person has been arrested for an offense, if a separate arrest

warrant has been issued for that person, the person is then re-arrested on the warrants.

At trial, although the State made this argument, it did not provide any evidence to the jury

regarding the theory of constructive arrest.

        However, in its brief, the State claims that De Luna’s mother “indicated that [De

Luna] had been arrested for failure to appear in January of 2010.” The State supports its

claim with the following colloquy between the prosecutor and De Luna’s mother:

        [Prosecutor]: Okay. Now, do you recall when your son was arrested on
                      these [sic] failure to appear warrants or these truancy
                      warrants?

        A:              It was back in January of last year.

        [Prosecutor]: Okay. And did you inquire into how much he owed and how
                      long he was going to have to spend in jail?

        A:              When I called, they told me that he was arrested for PI, and
                        his—his bail was $168, so I said, Okay, I’ll be there shortly
                        and take your—you this money so we can bail him out, but I
                        was having problems obtaining that money, because at that
                        time I was not employed.

                        And so later on I got the money together and called back and
                        told them, Okay, I got the money, I’m going to go to the bail
                        bondsman and have him bailed out, but they told me that he
                        owed $10,000 in tickets.

                        And I’m like, What? I’m like, From what? They said, From
                        truancy. I’m like, But he already went to court for that. How
                        can he be charged again? He already went to court for that.
                        And they said, No ma’am, this has to do with the county. That

warrants for De Luna’s arrest.

                                                  58
                     was the State. And I’m like, But it’s the same charge, so how
                     are you charging me again? They said, Well, you go and
                     speak to [appellant’s] office, which I did the next day.

                     And then I spoke to some gentleman there, and I told him,
                     How are you charging—I want to know what all these charges
                     are about. Oh, well, these tickets have to do back when he
                     was in seventh grade. And I go, It’s taken you this long to
                     notify me that he owes all this? And he said, The only way
                     that he can get out is if you pay the amount of $10,000. I go,
                     But I don’t have that amount. Can I make some kind of
                     arrangements to pay? I have $300 right now, and I can pay
                     $300 a month. And they said, No, they wanted the whole
                     amount, $10,000. I had—I didn’t have that money.

On cross-examination, De Luna’s mother agreed that De Luna was arrested for public

intoxication.   We disagree with the State’s characterization of De Luna’s mother’s

testimony. When read in context, De Luna’s mother testified that De Luna was arrested

for public intoxication. Although she agreed with the prosecutor’s leading question asking

when De Luna was arrested for “failure to appear,” she then clarified that he was actually

arrested for public intoxication. In addition, De Luna’s mother explained that De Luna

was not released from custody due to $10,000 worth of tickets.

       Next, the State asked, “And then [after his possession of marihuana charge was

disposed of,] he [De Luna] was arrested on those offenses [the offenses for which

appellant issued the warrants]?” Gonzalez, the Chief Public Defender, replied, “He was

arrested for possession of marijuana, Class B misdemeanor, and he disposed of the case

and he is continued [sic] to remain in custody on the offenses listed in Exhibit 2 [(the

offenses for which appellant issued the warrants]).” Also, when the prosecutor attempted

to elicit testimony from him that De Luna was arrested for “failure to appear,” Gonzalez

did not agree and stated that the Able Term system documented that De Luna was

arrested for possession of marihuana, and held in jail due to the warrants signed by

                                               59
appellant. Again, the State did not allege that appellant subjected De Luna to unlawful

continued confinement.

       We acknowledge that Gonzalez agreed with the prosecutor when asked, that “in

order for [De Luna] to have been in custody on those offenses, [De Luna] had to have

been originally arrested for those” and responded “yes” when the prosecutor asked, “And

in order for [De Luna] to have been in custody on those offenses, he had to have been

originally arrested for those?” And Gonzalez “believed” that De Luna was arrested for

those offenses.   However, when asked by the State where the warrants issued by

appellant were served, Gonzalez replied, “That, I don’t know. Exactly I don’t know where

they were served.”     Moreover, Gonzalez admitted that in De Luna’s case, he only

conducted a “cursory review of the law”, that he “wasn’t confident” of his interpretation of

the Juvenile Code, he sought advice from an employee of the district attorney’s office,

Schreiber, on the issue, and that he did not review De Luna’s files from appellant’s court

or “do any kind of investigation.”     Gonzalez further testified that Schreiber “didn’t

understand what [Gonzalez] was saying” and informed Gonzalez that this area of the law

is in his opinion “a gray area.” The evidence must support a rational finding, and we

cannot conclude that a rational juror could have concluded beyond a reasonable doubt

that De Luna was arrested again pursuant to the warrants on the basis of Gonzalez’s

“belief.” Instead, the undisputed evidence shows that those warrants were never served.

       In its brief, the State also cites portions of testimony of appellant’s court

coordinator, Leal, for support that De Luna was arrested pursuant to the warrants signed

by appellant. However, the portion of the record cited by the State is in the form of a voir

dire conducted by the prosecutor during defense counsel’s direct examination of Leal.

                                                60
Defense counsel attempted to elicit testimony from Leal regarding the judges who

arraigned Trevino and De Luna. However, the State objected on the basis of hearsay.

The trial court allowed the prosecutor to take Leal on voir dire. During the voir dire, the

prosecutor asked, “And the arraignment at the County Jail, those—that’s after [Trevino

and De Luna] having been arrested on the warrants issued by Judge Mary Alice Palacios;

is that correct,” Leal replied, “Yes, ma’am.” After the prosecutor completed the voir dire

of Leal, the trial court sustained the State’s objection to Leal’s testimony regarding who

arraigned De Luna and Trevino. The trial court allowed the above cited questions for the

purpose of determining whether Leal’s testimony was based on hearsay, and it sustained

the State’s hearsay objection. Therefore, we will not consider the prosecutor’s voir dire

of Leal as admitted evidence.

       Also, the documentary evidence shows that the warrants signed by appellant for

De Luna’s arrest were not actually executed. Thus, the evidence in the record contradicts

Gonzalez’s testimony that he believed De Luna was arrested pursuant to the warrants

signed by appellant. Each docket sheet from appellant’s court in De Luna’s cases states

that on January 11, 2010, the “warrant[s] [were] recalled/Pending jail rpt fm HCSO.” No

one explained what was meant when appellant documented that the warrants had been

recalled.

       The State asked Leal, “So, essentially, that was—you are aware that Francisco De

Luna was arrested and jailed and then you recall the warrant on this particular case,” Leal

replied, “Yes. It was recalled at the Sheriff’s Office when he was served with it.” However,

when Leal made this statement, he was reviewing the one case that appellant did not

transfer to the juvenile court. Thus, the State could not argue that appellant lacked

                                                61
jurisdiction to issue the warrant in that case. The State did not ask Leal to review any of

the other warrants pertaining to De Luna. Therefore, there is no evidence that, in general,

the notation “warrant recalled/pending jail report fm HCSO” meant that the warrant had

been officially served. Leal simply stated that he remembered that in that particular case,

the warrant had been served. Moreover, all of the warrants for De Luna’s arrest filed by

the HCSO’s custodian of records have blank Officer’s Return sections. In contrast, the

Officer’s Return in the commitment orders in Trevino’s case filed by the HCSO’s custodian

of records is completed and documents that it was executed on August 4, 2009 at twelve

o’clock p.m. The Officer’s Return on the warrant for Diaz’s arrest is also completed and

documents that it was executed on February 25, 2010 at 1:37 p.m.60

        Nonetheless, even assuming without deciding that the arrest warrants had been

served on De Luna and that he was in fact arrested pursuant to those warrants, there is

no evidence that appellant knew her acts were improper in any way or that she was not

justified when she issued those warrants as further explained below. The State alleged

that appellant transferred all of De Luna’s cases to the juvenile court. However, the

“Docket Sheets” from appellant’s court in De Luna’s cases show that before appellant

transferred De Luna’s cases involving the tickets he received for the various offenses he

committed, De Luna failed to appear in appellant’s court on several of those cases.61 The

        60 Although the State called the custodian of records, Faustina Tijerina, to testify, it did not ask her
to explain the process of “constructive arrest” to the jury.
        61  The court of criminal appeals has stated that failure to appear before a judge is an offense and
a warrant issued for that offense is expressly authorized under article 45.103 of the Texas Code of Criminal
Procedure. Black v. State, 362 S.W.3d 626, 629, 637 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012) (citing TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC.
ANN. art. 45.103 (West, Westlaw through 2013 3d C.S.) (“If a criminal offense that a justice of the peace
has jurisdiction to try is committed within the view of the justice, the justice may issue a warrant for the
arrest of the offender.”)). In this case, the State presented no evidence that appellant’s court lacked
jurisdiction to issue the warrants for De Luna’s multiple failures to appear in her court or that these multiple
failures to appear were not separate offenses from the cases she transferred to the juvenile court. See id.
Moreover, the jury heard evidence that “failure to appear” is considered contempt of court. Thus, assuming

                                                          62
docket sheets in De Luna’s cases also show that before appellant transferred several of

the cases, De Luna pleaded guilty to some of the charges, and appellant signed a

judgment ordering De Luna to pay those fines. In those cases, the docket sheet shows

that the court received the disposition letter from the juvenile center that De Luna’s family

did not respond for services. The disposition letter states that the offenses De Luna

committed were contempt of court offenses. However, the disposition letter does not

mention any of the class C misdemeanor offenses that De Luna pleaded guilty to

committing in appellant’s court.

        The record also shows that appellant summoned De Luna to appear in her court

after he turned seventeen possibly for his failure to appear or in order to pay the fines

appellant ordered him to pay. The State presented no evidence that a justice court that

has transferred cases involving violations, such as, for example, truancy, to the juvenile

court loses jurisdiction over the failure to appear charges committed in the justice court

prior to the transfer and that the justice court is not authorized to send the so-called

“birthday letter” to that person for the separate offense of failure to appear in the justice

court prior to the transfer.62 From our review of the record, it appears that appellant

arguendo that this is a jury issue, a rational juror could not have found beyond a reasonable doubt that
appellant lacked jurisdiction to cite De Luna for his multiple instances of contempt of court. We note that
the Black court stated that there is no rule requiring that the face of the arrest warrant identify the source
for the issuing magistrate’s finding of probable cause to arrest the defendant. Id. at 637.

         In addition, the trial court admitted article 45.060 into evidence which allows a court that has “used
all available procedures under this chapter to secure the individual’s appearance to answer allegations
made before the individual’s 17th birthday, the court may issue a notice of continuing obligation to appear.”
See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 45.060. The notice of continuing obligation requires that the court warn
the individual that failure to appear pursuant to the notice of continuing obligation may be an additional
offense and result in a warrant being issued for the individual’s arrest. See id. In this case, evidence was
presented that De Luna failed to appear in appellant’s court on multiple occasions before she transferred
the cases, that appellant sent out the so-called “birthday letters” after De Luna turned seventeen, and that
De Luna again failed to appear in her court.

         We make no legal determination regarding whether appellant’s court had jurisdiction under these
        62

circumstances. Instead, we are merely reviewing the evidence to determine whether the State met its

                                                          63
transferred the cases to the juvenile court to determine whether De Luna’s multiple failure

to appear violations in her court constituted contempt-of-court. This explains why the

disposition letter from the juvenile court states that De Luna was put on probation for

contempt of court offenses and that appellant’s court was the complainant in those cases.

The disposition letter does not concern De Luna’s class C misdemeanor offenses

because appellant’s court was not the complainant in the class C misdemeanor cases

against De Luna, and those complaints were filed by school district personnel for offenses

committed at school—not for contempt of court.

        The State presented no evidence regarding the procedure that a justice and

juvenile court must follow when the justice court transfers a case to the juvenile court for

a determination of whether the defendant committed contempt of court. The State had

this burden because its theory was that appellant’s transfer orders resulted in her court

losing jurisdiction over De Luna’s cases. The evidence presented to the jury does not

include the juvenile court records. The State did not explain what happened to the class

C misdemeanor offenses that De Luna pleaded guilty to committing in appellant’s court.

The evidence undisputedly shows that De Luna pleaded guilty to those offenses, and

appellant ordered him to pay the fines for those offenses prior to appellant’s transfers to

the juvenile court.63 Without any of this information, even assuming arguendo it is a jury

burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant’s acts were unlawful under its theories.
Whether her court lacked jurisdiction over De Luna’s failure to appear violations is a question of law that is
not for the finder of fact to determine. We do not intend to imply that the State could have proven that
appellant’s court lacked jurisdiction as a matter of fact in this case.
        63  This is where we believe the confusion occurred. Appellant signed the transfer orders listing the
class C misdemeanor offenses. However, the documentary evidence shows that the juvenile court
disposed of contempt-of-court charges against De Luna. We cannot explain such a discrepancy, and the
State made no attempt to do so. Moreover, this does not support a finding that appellant’s court lacked
jurisdiction.

                                                         64
issue, the jury was in no position to determine whether appellant’s court lacked

jurisdiction.64

        Moreover, appellant’s court sent De Luna several notices of continuing obligation

regarding the underlying class C misdemeanor offenses ordering that De Luna appear in

appellant’s court because those causes of action were still pending. It is undisputed that

De Luna failed to appear when summoned pursuant to the notices of continuing

obligation, also called the “birthday letters” by the State. Article 45.060, which was

admitted into evidence and reviewed by the jury, states that a court that “has used all

available procedures under this chapter to secure the individual’s appearance to answer

allegations made before the individual’s 17th birthday” may issue a notice of continuing

obligation to appear in that court. TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 45.060(b). “Failure to

appear as ordered by the notice under Subsection (b) is a Class C misdemeanor

independent of section 38.10, Penal Code, and Section 543.003, Transportation Code.”

Id. art. 45.060(c). However, article 45.060 does not state that there are any exceptions

allowing a person to disregard the notice of continuing obligation and not appear to

answer for those charges. Thus, De Luna was required to appear when summoned and

inform appellant of the fact that he had already been punished by the juvenile court for

those offenses, if that had in fact happened. De Luna did not testify that he disregarded

the notice of continuing obligation because appellant’s court lacked jurisdiction or

because he believed that appellant was violating double jeopardy principles. Instead, the

evidence presented show that failure to appear after receiving the notice of continuing

        64  As set out earlier, it is our interpretation of the law that a jury is not entitled to make the legal
determination of whether a court has jurisdiction. However, we are merely explaining that the State failed
to fully explain to the jury its own theory that appellant’s court lacked jurisdiction.

                                                           65
obligation is a separate class C misdemeanor offense from the underlying charges. The

undisputed evidence shows that De Luna failed to appear in appellant’s court after he

turned seventeen and therefore, committed separate class C misdemeanor offenses of

failure to appear after being summoned, which is punishable by arrest. Appellant then

issued the warrants for De Luna’s arrest.

        We conclude that based on the complexity of the issue before the jury, the

evidence does not support an inference that appellant knew that her act of issuing the

warrants for De Luna’s arrest was in any way improper. This is so because the only

evidence presented shows that appellant’s interpretation of the law was different from the

State’s interpretation and from witnesses’ interpretation.                   Our conclusion is further

supported by the evidence that De Luna failed to appear in appellant’s court after

receiving the letters of continuing obligation, which is a class C misdemeanor. Thus, the

evidence does not support a finding that appellant knew that her court lacked jurisdiction,

even if it did.65

        Furthermore, although the State insisted that appellant’s court did not have

jurisdiction and that the disposition letter did not grant her court jurisdiction, Cherry

testified that she understood the letter as giving appellant’s court jurisdiction. However,

even if the letter did not mean what Cherry claimed, the State was still required to prove

beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant knew that her court lacked jurisdiction or that

De Luna had already been punished for the offenses. As explained above, it did not do

so. As set out in detail above, the evidence clearly shows that the State’s witnesses were

        65 Again, even if her court did lack jurisdiction, the remedy for a court acting without jurisdiction,

which is not uncommon, is reversal on appeal, not criminal punishment.

                                                         66
confused by the transfer orders and the disposition letter.66 The State’s theory was that

appellant knew she lacked jurisdiction because the law is so clear. We disagree.

        Finally, we conclude that the evidence does not support a finding that appellant

was not justified when she signed the warrants for De Luna’s arrest because the

undisputed evidence shows that he failed to appear in appellant’s court after her court

sent him the letters of continuing obligation; thus, he committed a separate class C

misdemeanor offense for which appellant could have reasonably believed allowed her to

sign the warrants. Moreover, the State cites no authority, and we find none, making it

unlawful as defined by the penal code for a trial judge to perform her statutory duties even

if it is later determined as a matter of law that the court lacked jurisdiction to act. In

addition, the State cites no authority, and we find none, making jurisdiction of appellant’s

court an element of the offense of official oppression. Thus, although we usually give the

jury deference to believe or disbelieve the witnesses, in this case, whether appellant’s

court lacked jurisdiction to sign the warrants was a question of law and not one of fact for

a jury to decide. We conclude that appellant acted with a reasonable belief that her court

had been granted jurisdiction to do the complained-of acts; therefore, she did not know

that the act of signing the arrest warrants was unlawful, if it was. See id. § 39.03(a)(1).

Accordingly, we conclude that the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s verdict

that appellant committed the offense of official oppression under these facts. We sustain

appellant’s first, second, and third issues.

         66 We are not able to determine from the limited information admitted at appellant’s trial the effect

that the transfer orders and disposition letter had on De Luna’s cases.

                                                         67
                                          III.    CONCLUSION

       Having concluded that the evidence is insufficient to support the jury’s finding that

appellant committed two counts of official oppression, we must acquit appellant. See

Aldrich v. State, 296 S.W.2d 225, 230 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2009, pet. ref’d); Jacobs v.

State, 230 S.W.3d 225, 232 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2006, pet. ref’d) (citing

Clewis v. State, 922 S.W.2d 126, 133 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996) (en banc)). We therefore

reverse the judgment, dismiss the indictments, and render a judgment of acquittal in both

counts.67

                                                                  /s/ Rogelio Valdez
                                                                  ROGELIO VALDEZ
                                                                  Chief Justice

Publish.
TEX. R. APP. P. 47.2(b).

Delivered and filed the
31st day of July, 2014.

       67   Having rendered a judgment of acquittal, we do not reach appellant's remaining issues.

                                                        68