Andreas Peter Starz v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 30, 2009
Docket01-07-01075-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Andreas Peter Starz v. State (Andreas Peter Starz 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
Andreas Peter Starz v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion issued September 30, 2009

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


NO. 01-07-01074-CR

NO. 01-07-01075-CR

NO. 01-07-01076-CR

NO. 01-07-01077-CR

NO. 01-07-01078-CR

NO. 01-07-01079-CR


ANDREAS PETER STARZ, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee


On Appeal from the 208th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause Nos. 1079811, 1079812, 1079813,

1079814, 1084538, 1084539


O P I N I O N

          The State charged Andreas Starz with committing two separate felony offenses of aggravated sexual assault, three separate felony offenses of sexual assault of a child, and one felony offense of engaging in an improper relationship with his student.[1]  Starz pleaded guilty to all six offenses after agreeing to a plea bargain with the State.  As recommended by the State, the trial court assessed punishment at six years’ confinement for each of the six offenses, to run concurrently.  Starz moved for a new trial, alleging that his trial counsel provided constitutionally ineffective assistance in connection with Starz’s guilty plea.  After a five- day hearing, the trial court denied the motion.  Starz appeals, contending that the trial court erred in denying his ineffective assistance claim, and that he was prejudiced by the trial court’s failure to admit evidence at the motion for new trial hearing.  After reviewing all of the evidence the trial court heard, we affirm.

Background

In August 2006, two girls, P.M. and K.M., each fourteen at the time of her outcry,[2] alleged that their seventh-grade history teacher, Andreas Starz, sexually assaulted them in May 2006.  Police interviewed both girls at the Children’s Assessment Center in Houston.  P.M. stated that Starz took her to his girlfriend’s apartment on May 29, 2006, Memorial Day, and had sexual intercourse with her on both the couch and the bed.  Starz claimed to have asked P.M. to babysit his son that morning while he participated in a group bicycle ride, but instead, he took his son to his ex-wife’s house, and P.M. did not need to babysit.  K.M. stated that Starz assaulted her by touching her vagina while watching a video during class.  K.M. also alleged that in two other separate incidents, Starz made K.M. perform oral sex on him and they engaged in sexual intercourse while at K.M.’s apartment.

The State charged Starz with six offenses:  two felony offenses of aggravated sexual assault, three felony offenses of sexual assault of a child, and one felony offense of engaging in an improper relationship with a student.  After his arrest, Starz’s family hired L.T. Bradt to defend him.  Bradt met with Starz in jail and described his credentials.  Starz testified that Bradt spent most of their first hour-long meeting talking about himself and his legal experience.  He expressed confidence that Starz could win his case, and Starz’s parents testified that Bradt told them Starz had a ninety percent chance of winning his case.  They also testified that Bradt told them he cracked the case of misconduct in the Harris County crime lab.  In contrast, Bradt testified that he told Starz that he had represented sexual assault defendants in the past, both successfully and unsuccessfully, and that he believed Starz had a good chance of winning, but did not express that chance in terms of a percentage.  He testified that he mentioned his role in the crime lab case to explain that he had a controversial relationship with the Harris County District Attorney’s office, which might limit his ability to negotiate a favorable plea bargain.  In fact, Bradt told the Starzes that if they wanted a plea bargain, he might not be the best lawyer to handle Starz’s case because of this unfavorable relationship.

Starz’s parents paid Bradt’s $100,000 fee in two installments of $50,000 each.  Bradt indicated at the beginning of the representation that he believed Starz was not guilty and would win his case.  Bradt’s contract for representation, however, states that he does not guarantee any outcome or the success of the defense.

In addition to the $100,000 fee, Bradt required that the Starzes pay the cost of engaging private investigators and certain experts that he alleged would be necessary to Starz’s defense.  Bradt engaged Kim Hart, the director of the National Child Abuse Defense and Resource Center, as a trial consultant; Starz’s parents paid her $30,000.  Bradt testified that Hart helped put him in touch with experts, reviewed transcripts of P.M. and K.M.’s statements, reviewed telephone records, and participated in discussions with one of the expert witnesses.  Bradt, with Hart’s help, engaged Dr. Stephen Guertin to review P.M. and K.M.’s medical records; review of the records showed that there was no clear evidence of trauma, which frequently occurs in cases where the victim’s outcry is delayed.  Bradt also testified that he consulted with Dr. Philip Esplin, who he hoped could testify as to P.M. and K.M.’s mental states and the psychological dynamics of their age group.  After speaking with Dr. Esplin and reviewing P.M. and K.M.’s statements, Bradt testified that he determined Esplin would not be a helpful witness but instead might harm Starz’s case.  Starz testified that sometime before the second trial setting, he asked Bradt about the cost of having experts appear for trial.  Bradt told him that with fees and paying the experts’ expenses, it could cost as much as $60,000.

At the early stages of trial preparation, the State did not order any DNA tests because both P.M. and K.M. had made delayed outcries.  Shortly before the second trial setting, however, the State ordered DNA testing on items from the apartment where P.M. was assaulted.  Starz and Bradt were made aware of the testing.  The DNA results had not returned when Starz pleaded guilty.  The results later linked P.M. to the materials tested from Starz’s girlfriend’s apartment. 

Bradt hired J.J.

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