Adrian Francisco Miranda v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 23, 2015
Docket14-14-00091-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Adrian Francisco Miranda v. State (Adrian Francisco Miranda 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
Adrian Francisco Miranda v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed April 23, 2015.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-14-00091-CR

ADRIAN FRANCISCO MIRANDA, Appellant V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 185th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 1400039

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found appellant Adrian Francisco Miranda guilty of aggravated sexual assault of a child by causing the sexual organ of a child to contact his sexual organ. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.021(a)(1)(B)(iii). The trial court sentenced appellant to twenty-five years’ confinement. In seven issues, appellant contends his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance. We affirm. I. BACKGROUND

Appellant is the brother of the complainant’s mother, so he is the complainant’s uncle. Appellant was twenty-four years old at the time of trial in January 2014. The complainant, who was ten years old at the time of trial, testified about multiple occasions when appellant sexually assaulted her.

The complainant lived in an apartment with her mother (the Mother), step- father, and younger brother when she was about five years old. She testified that she would see appellant sometimes over the weekends, and he would usually just visit during the day. He would “not really” spend the night. She described an incident when she and her brother were playing in their room, and appellant took her into a closet, pulled down her pants and underwear, pulled down his pants and underwear, put her close to him, and “started putting his private area in mine and started going back and forth.” She testified, “It felt bumpy and rough and hard.” He told her not to tell anyone. She testified that he did this “a couple more times” on different times and days, and it always happened in the closet.

When she was about six or seven years old, the complainant moved with the Mother to a one-story house. She testified that appellant would do “the same thing” with her in the restroom of this house “every night, like, around 1:00 or 2:00.” Appellant did this every night that he was there, but that was not very often, so it happened “about a few times.” One time appellant “sat down on the toilet and he actually had put me close and pushed me back and forth.” She testified that he “put lotion on it,” and so it felt “smooth and bumpy.” She testified that his private area was inside and touched her private area.

When she was seven or eight, the complainant moved with the Mother to a two-story house. The complainant testified that appellant came over to that house a lot, and she described two more instances of abuse. On one occasion, appellant 2 took the complainant to her bedroom and licked inside her private area. On another occasion, appellant took her to a restroom, locked the doors, pulled down her pants and underwear, pulled down his pants and underwear, turned off the lights, laid down, put the complainant on top of him, and started pushing her up and down. She testified that his private area went inside her private area.

The complainant’s stepmother (the Stepmother) testified as the outcry witness. The complainant was visiting her father (the Father) and the Stepmother on Saturday, March 24, 2012, and playing a video game with other children. In the game, the player was a rabbit, and the game ended when a man caught the rabbit. The Stepmother overheard the complainant say, “He’s about to dig in their vagina.” The complainant was eight years old at the time. When the Father got home from work, he and the Stepmother spoke with the complainant. The Stepmother asked the complainant if she knew what a vagina was, and the complainant said it was “something, you know, deep in her stomach.” When the Stepmother asked why she had said “vagina,” the complainant “started crying hysterically and at that point she just shut down and wouldn’t speak anymore at all.” The complainant would not respond or make eye contact, and this lasted about thirty minutes. The Stepmother and Father left the complainant alone in their bedroom.

Eventually the complainant asked to speak with the Stepmother and said she did not want to talk about vaginas anymore. The complainant started crying again. The Stepmother said, “I don’t like talking about vaginas, you know . . . . But my only concern is that every time you keep saying the word ‘vagina,’ you keep crying.” The complainant started talking about things going on in her life, such as the ongoing battle between the Mother and Father for custody of the complainant. The Stepmother testified that “the custody thing was stressing her out,” including

3 that she was being told to keep things from one parent or the other. The Stepmother repeatedly told the complainant that the Stepmother did not understand what those things had to do with vaginas, and the Stepmother asked the complainant why she was crying. As the conversation was coming to a close, the complainant said, “My uncle.” The Stepmother asked, “What about your uncle?” The complainant said, “He pulls down my pants . . . . And he touches me, and I don’t like it.”

The Stepmother then told the Father what the complainant had said, and they both talked with the complainant again. The complainant said, “My uncle Adrian pulls down my pants and he takes his private and he puts it in mine and he goes back and forth and he tells me this is what boys are going to do to me when I get older.” The Father asked how long it had been going on, and the complainant said since she was five or six years old. When asked the last time it had happened, the complainant said the previous Wednesday.

After the conversation, the Stepmother and Father took the complainant to a hospital for an examination. A nurse from the hospital testified that she did a head-to-toe and genital exam of the complainant. The nurse testified that there were no acute injuries. But the nurse also testified that the hymen does not break every time there is penetration, and even if there are no visible signs of injury, that does not mean there was never an injury because the tissue heals quickly. The time period between the complainant’s last reported assault and the exam was sufficient for any injuries in the genital area to heal. She testified it is very uncommon to find visible physical trauma, and “nine times out of ten we don’t see any injuries in children.”

Within a few days of the hospital examination, the complainant was interviewed by a forensic interviewer, Lisa Holcomb, at the Children’s Assessment

4 Center. Holcomb testified that the complainant was able to provide sensory detail and was never inconsistent with her details of what happened. Dr. Lawrence Thompson testified about why children might wait to tell someone about abuse and other issues such as how children can be groomed by abusers. He was the director of therapy and psychological services at the Children’s Assessment Center.

Appellant’s trial counsel, Ronald Esposito, cross-examined each of these witnesses and called four additional witnesses: appellant’s girlfriend (the Girlfriend), the Mother, the Father, and appellant. His apparent trial strategy was to show that the abuse was fabricated during a custody battle and to point out inconsistencies or conflicts with the complainant’s testimony.

On cross-examination, the complainant testified that she saw appellant’s private part, but she had told Holcomb that she never saw it. She also testified that she did not know what the word “vagina” meant when she used it, and the Stepmother had told the complainant what the word meant before the complainant told about the sexual assault.

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Adrian Francisco Miranda v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adrian-francisco-miranda-v-state-texapp-2015.