Abigail Elizabeth Young v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 10, 2012
Docket14-10-00646-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Abigail Elizabeth Young v. State (Abigail Elizabeth Young v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abigail Elizabeth Young v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion filed January 10, 2012.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals ___________________

NO. 14-10-00646-CR ___________________

ABIGAIL ELIZABETH YOUNG, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 232nd District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 1227879

OPINION

Appellant, Abigail Elizabeth Young, appeals her conviction for the offense of recklessly causing serious bodily injury to a child younger than fifteen years of age. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.04 (West 2011). We affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

About 8:30 in the evening on June 27, 2009, Benjamin Struesand was a passenger in a car driven by his wife. As they were returning home after dinner at a restaurant, they encountered a car stopped in the road. Struesand saw a lady getting out of the car as they drove by. Almost immediately, Struesand‘s wife and the other passenger in the car heard the lady yelling, and she pulled their car over to the side of the road. The two ladies walked back to the stopped car, and Struesand followed moments later. When Struesand approached the stopped car, he saw an unconscious child lying in the middle of the street. Struesand‘s wife, an LVN, had commenced CPR on the child. According to Struesand, the woman from the stopped car was standing about five to ten feet away from the child. The other passenger in Struesand‘s vehicle called 9-1-1.

Eventually emergency medical personnel arrived on the scene. Matthew Tomlinson, the paramedic treating the child, noticed an abnormal number of bruises all over the child‘s torso. These bruises did not appear to have been caused by the administration of CPR by a trained practitioner. Tomlinson testified that bruising was possible if the bystanders had done CPR for twenty to thirty minutes before EMS arrived. According to Tomlinson, the bruises on the child evidenced different stages of healing. Tomlinson testified that the child ―was dead when [they] got there. She was not going to come back.‖ In addition, Nancy Harris, an emergency room nurse trained in CPR, who had stopped to assist, testified that the child never appeared to be alive and never responded to CPR. Tomlinson also observed that when the paramedics arrived, appellant was walking around the scene talking to somebody on the telephone.

Harris County Deputy Sheriff Adam Hawyler arrived after the child had been placed in the back of an ambulance. Hawyler observed a female child wearing only panties. According to Hawyler, he immediately observed that the child‘s stomach

2 appeared distended and bruised on top. Hawyler also observed a cut on the child‘s bottom lip, redness around her mouth, and ―bruising on her inner thighs relatively close to her vagina area.‖ Hawyler also observed the woman from the stopped car in the back of the ambulance. He identified her as appellant, the child‘s mother. Hawyler also identified the child as four year old Emma Thompson.

Hawyler then asked appellant what had happened to Emma. Appellant told Hawyler that Emma had been sick with a urinary tract infection. Appellant explained that two hours earlier, Emma had an abnormally large bowel movement. Appellant then reported that Emma ―didn‘t feel right, and [she] stood up on the floor, off of the toilet, fell backwards, hit her head, then fell forward onto the floor.‖ Appellant also told Hawyler she had wiped blood off of Emma‘s face after she fell.

As Hawyler questioned appellant further, ―she started getting a little bit aggravated at the fact that I was asking questions.‖ Hawyler observed the location of appellant‘s vehicle and ―it immediately sparked [his] curiosity as to why it appeared as if she was going back home rather than towards the hospital, which was in the opposite direction.‖ After the ambulance left the scene, Hawyler went to secure appellant‘s residence to make certain ―there weren‘t people coming in and out of the house.‖

Appellant told several bystanders that she was on the way to the emergency room when her daughter threw up and stopped breathing. Harris did not notice any vomit in Emma‘s mouth. Harris later drove appellant‘s car back to appellant‘s house. Harris testified that she did not notice any vomit or blood in the car. Harris also noticed that appellant‘s car was headed away from the hospital.

Emma was transported to the hospital where, after efforts to revive her failed, she was pronounced dead by emergency room physician Kevin Catney. According to Dr. Catney, it is very unusual to see a child as young as Emma arrive at the hospital in full

3 cardiac arrest. Dr. Catney testified that there is a less than one percent chance of resuscitation with a pediatric out-of-hospital cardiac arrest with no activity on a heart monitor. Dr. Catney observed numerous bruises and injuries on Emma‘s body. Dr. Catney also noted that prior to death, Emma would have been dizzy and disoriented because her blood sugar level was over 400. After he had pronounced Emma dead, the emergency room nurses informed Dr. Catney they had observed an injury in Emma‘s vaginal area.

During Emma‘s autopsy conducted on June 29, 2009, Dr. Patricia Moore found numerous injuries, including a distended stomach and marks on Emma‘s lower abdomen and around the belly button consistent with finger or knuckle marks. Dr. Moore also discovered that Emma had three fractured ribs.1 In addition, Emma had experienced hyperglycemia as a result of an injury to her pancreas.2 Dr. Moore found a large amount of blood in Emma‘s peritoneal cavity, an area where there should be no blood present. 3 The autopsy also revealed that a portion of Emma‘s transverse colon had hemorrhagic necrosis or recent tissue death. Dr. Moore‘s examination found a 2.5 by 1.5 centimeter tear across Emma‘s vagina consistent with a large object‘s being inserted into it. Dr. Moore also found fresh blood in Emma‘s vagina, indicating that the injury had occurred within 24 hours of Emma‘s death. According to Dr. Moore, while Emma could have walked with this injury, it would have caused her significant pain. In addition, Emma would have bled continuously unless the wound were sutured. Dr. Moore also found contusions of the right forehead, the nose, left cheek, a laceration of the lip, a one-inch,

1 Dr. Moore determined that two of the rib fractures had occurred within 24 to 48 hours of Emma‘s death, while the third fracture was three to five days old. In addition, Dr. Moore testified that while it was conceivable the fractures were caused by the efforts to save Emma‘s life, she did not believe that they were the result of CPR. 2 Dr. Moore also found injuries to Emma‘s liver and stomach. Dr. Moore opined that a large amount of force was needed to produce these types of injuries. 3 Dr. Moore explained that the large amount of blood in the peritoneal cavity was the cause of Emma‘s distended abdomen. 4 gaping laceration to Emma‘s scalp, and a skull fracture. Dr. Moore opined that these injuries were inconsistent with a mere fall. Dr. Moore determined that Emma‘s death was caused by blunt force trauma to the abdomen, resulting in blood loss and damage to the pancreas.

An investigation into Emma‘s death began immediately. The investigation revealed that in the months prior to Emma‘s death, appellant, while still married to Emma‘s father Benjamin Thompson, began a romantic relationship with Lucas Coe. At the time the relationship began, Coe was on deferred adjudication community supervision for aggravated assault. Coe was eventually imprisoned for failure to pay the court-ordered restitution. Appellant paid half of Coe‘s $20,000.00 restitution to obtain his release.

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Abigail Elizabeth Young v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abigail-elizabeth-young-v-state-texapp-2012.