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Father (Not Guilty) of killing drunk driver who killed his sons.Update

Posted on 8/18/14 at 6:55 pm
Posted by Tigerlaff
FIGHTING out of the Carencro Sonic
Member since Jan 2010
20855 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 6:55 pm
LINK

Anybody think he should be convicted? Anyone think he's guilty of something, but shouldn't be punished? Interesting case, to say the least.

quote:

ANGLETON, Texas (AP) — David Barajas denies killing a drunk driver in a fit of rage after his two sons were fatally struck in 2012 on a rural road in Southeast Texas.

His defense attorney says Barajas is a good man, a grieving father and not a murderer. At the same time, his defense hasn't publicly suggested who else might be responsible for Jose Banda's shooting death.

Barajas' trial is set to begin Monday in a case with many complexities: No weapon was recovered, no witnesses identified him as the shooter and many in Barajas' community have strongly sympathized with him, with some saying they might have taken the law into their own hands if faced with a similar situation.

Legal experts acknowledge prosecutors could face a greater challenge than simply proving who committed the shooting, similar to another Texas case from 2012 in which a grand jury declined to indict a father who killed a man who molested his child.

"It's not the right way to do it, but jurors a lot of times make judgments based on moral responsibility, not legal responsibility," said Joel Androphy, a Houston defense attorney who isn't connected to the case.

The trial will focus on prosecutors' allegations that Barajas shot 20-year-old Banda in the head in December 2012 near Alvin, about 30 miles southeast of Houston. Minutes earlier, Banda's car struck Barajas' sons as they pushed the family's broken-down truck down a dark, narrow road just 50 yards from their home. Twelve-year-old David Jr. died at the scene; 11-year-old Caleb died at a hospital.

If convicted of murder, Barajas faces up to life in prison.

Many in the community have rallied around the 32-year-old father, including setting up a Facebook page called "Free David Barajas," which details fundraising events and where individuals have expressed their support.

But Banda's family says their loved one's fate should have been decided by the justice system and no one else.

"What (Barajas) did wasn't right," said Felicia Leija, 22, Banda's common-law wife. The couple has a 2-year-old daughter, Alisa, who was born a few months before the crash. "For other people to say they would have done the same thing ... you don't know what you would have done."

Barajas' attorney, Sam Cammack, says claims that his client took the law into his own hands are untrue, noting that Barajas didn't even own a gun. Brazoria County District Attorney Jeri Yenne declined to comment.

Neighbors said they heard gunshots minutes after the crash, and authorities allege Barajas went home, retrieved a gun and went back to the crash site, where he shot Banda in the head.

Toxicology tests later determined Banda had been driving while intoxicated. But Brazoria County sheriff's investigator Dominick Sanders said that in the moments after the crash, there had been no way to know it was alcohol related.

Witnesses have identified Barajas as the person who approached the vehicle before the shooting, Sanders said. And other witnesses said there was a man opening fire but none could identify Barajas as that person. Investigators never found the weapon, and gunshot residue tests done on Barajas came back negative.

A search of Barajas' home found ammunition consistent with the bullet that killed Banda, but Sanders said the missing weapon could still make "a big difference in the case."

So could the perceived moral circumstances, which legal experts agree may influence jurors. In June 2012, a grand jury in Shiner decided not to charge a father who fatally beat up a man who was found molesting his 5-year-old daughter behind a barn. In that case, the father called 911 afterward and urged paramedics to rush to the scene, shouting, "Come on! This guy is going to die on me!"

From a strictly legal perspective, experts say the Barajas case will be difficult to prosecute given the lack of hard evidence.

"The prosecutor is starting from behind the eight ball," Houston criminal defense attorney Grant Scheiner said.

Cammack would not speculate on who may have shot Banda.

"Mr. Banda lost his life out there at the scene that night, somehow," he said. "That is not a good thing. But to suggest Mr. Barajas has anything to do with it is a far stretch of the imagination."

This post was edited on 8/27/14 at 2:19 pm
Top Replies
Posted by TigerFred
Feeding hamsters
Member since Aug 2003
27168 posts
Posted on 8/27/14 at 2:17 pm to
Dad Found Not Guilty

quote:

ANGLETON, Texas -

The jury returned a verdict Wednesday in the trial of a father accused of fatally shooting a drunken driver who killed his two young sons in a crash. David Barajas was found not guilty.
Posted by TigerFred
Feeding hamsters
Member since Aug 2003
27168 posts
Posted on 8/27/14 at 3:10 pm to
This story explains some of the evidence. More Detailed story from KHOU

All Replies (452)
Posted by TH03
Mogadishu
Member since Dec 2008
171035 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 6:56 pm to
yes, he's a murderer, you idiot. we have laws and trials for a reason.
Posted by Tactical1
Denham Springs
Member since May 2010
27104 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 6:56 pm to
quote:

Anybody think he should be convicted?


Yes
Posted by TIGRLEE
Northeast Louisiana
Member since Nov 2009
31493 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 6:56 pm to
Aren't you just the board bully tonight.


Simmer down kid.
Posted by More beer please
Member since Feb 2010
45044 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 6:57 pm to
Uhhhh yeah. He just murdered someone
Posted by NorthshoreTiger76
Pelicans, Saints, & LSU Fan
Member since May 2009
80160 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 6:58 pm to
Murder is murder
Posted by Tigerlaff
FIGHTING out of the Carencro Sonic
Member since Jan 2010
20855 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 6:58 pm to
quote:

yes, he's a murderer, you idiot. we have laws and trials for a reason.


Did I give an opinion? No, I didn't. You really are one of the dumbest posters on this site.
Posted by BayouBandit24
Member since Aug 2010
16548 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 6:58 pm to
quote:

Anybody think he should be convicted?


without a doubt
Posted by TH03
Mogadishu
Member since Dec 2008
171035 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 6:59 pm to
lol

quote:

Anybody think he should be convicted? Anyone think he's guilty of something, but shouldn't be punished?


no, you just asked retarded questions, but I'm the idiot
Posted by Srbtiger06
Member since Apr 2006
28255 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 6:59 pm to
quote:

Did I give an opinion? No, I didn't. You really are one of the dumbest posters on this site.



Point, Tigerlaff.
Posted by BRgetthenet
Member since Oct 2011
117678 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 6:59 pm to
Sometimes taking the law into your own hands is all you have left.
Posted by LordSaintly
Member since Dec 2005
38856 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 7:00 pm to
He should definitely be convicted.
Posted by Tigerlaff
FIGHTING out of the Carencro Sonic
Member since Jan 2010
20855 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 7:00 pm to
quote:

no, you just asked retarded questions, but I'm the idiot


If you want to talk to me about the law, go to law school.

I haven't given my opinion.
Posted by Tigah in the ATL
Atlanta
Member since Feb 2005
27539 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 7:00 pm to
quote:

Anybody think he should be convicted?
everyone with sense
Posted by oleyeller
Vols, Bitch
Member since Oct 2012
32021 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 7:01 pm to
hell no he shouldnt be convicted nor go to trial! i applaud him!
Posted by BRgetthenet
Member since Oct 2011
117678 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 7:01 pm to
He should walk free. I'd prolly murder somebody if they killed my kids too.
Posted by Topwater Trout
Red Stick
Member since Oct 2010
67589 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 7:02 pm to
He needs to go to prison
Posted by LSUtigerME
Walker, LA
Member since Oct 2012
3789 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 7:04 pm to
If there was more evidence that he did it, he should be convicted. Sentencing should be reduced IMO based on mitigating circumstances and act of rage/love/passion.

Based on the evidence in the case as presented, no, he shouldn't. Everything is circumstantial.
Posted by UL-SabanRival
Member since May 2013
4651 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 7:04 pm to
If he did it, he deserves to be convicted, but it doesn't look like the prosecution has much of a case.
Posted by breauxski
BUGANATION
Member since Jul 2013
190 posts
Posted on 8/18/14 at 7:04 pm to
Murder is murder but I'd more than likely have done it too.
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