It would also be fairly naive to think that the judges who sit on Texas appellate courts, all of whom are elected in partisan elections, are going to be wholly apolitical in reviewing a verdict.
With that said, unless there's a considerable legal error in the way the trial was conducted, it is almost impossible to overturn the way that a jury resolves the facts of a case. The controlling standards of appellate review preclude the appellate court from subs uting its views for the jury's. So, unless the evidence is just completely not there or unless there was some fundamental legal error in the way the trial judge handled the proceedings, the chances of reversal in Texas state appellate courts, in any criminal matter, are relatively low.

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