Andrew Collin Potter v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 6, 2024
Docket09-21-00386-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Andrew Collin Potter v. the State of Texas (Andrew Collin Potter v. the State of Texas) 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
Andrew Collin Potter v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

________________ NO. 09-21-00386-CR ________________

ANDREW COLLIN POTTER, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

________________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 359th District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 18-12-16820-CR ________________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Andrew Collin Potter appeals his conviction for continuous sexual abuse of,

Sara, a child. 1 Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 21.02(b). In three issues on appeal, Potter

argues the trial court erred by denying his two motions for mistrial, contending that

1 We have used pseudonyms to protect the privacy of several individuals who are mentioned in the opinion. See Tex. Const. art. I, § 30(a)(1) (granting crime victims “the right to be treated with fairness and with respect to the victims’ dignity and privacy throughout the criminal justice process”). 1 the State violated the Michael Morton Act and Brady requests by failing to disclose

material evidence, and by erroneously admitting Sexual Assault Nurse Examination

records. We affirm.

Background

We limit our recitation of the background facts to those necessary to address

the issues raised on appeal. Potter married Sally in 2014. Sara is Sally’s youngest

sister. Sara was seventeen years old at the time of trial and testified that when Potter

first married Sally, Sara considered her relationship with Potter to be “like a sister-

in-law[,]” but it became more “personal[.]” According to Sara, she and Potter started

“dating” when Sara was around “11 or 12” and while Potter was still married to

Sally. Potter became more sexual with Sara, grabbing her breast, touching her

vagina, eventually escalating to sexual intercourse. Sara testified that in 2017, Sally

and Potter separated, but Potter continued to have a sexual relationship with Sara.

Potter bought Sara a cell phone to communicate with her, and he would pick her up

from her home, and they would have sex in his vehicle. Sara hid the cell phone in

one of her stuffed animals. Sara confided in her best friends, Cindy and Callie, that

she was in a relationship with an “older boy.” She testified that her friends did not

know it was Potter, but they had “suspicions.” Unbeknownst to Sara, her friends

recorded the conversation Sara had been telling them about her sexual relationship

with the “older boy” and the friends sent the recording to Sara’s mother. When Sara

2 found out the friends sent the recording to her parents, she called Potter and told him,

and he told her to throw the phone away that he had given her, and she threw it into

the lake.

Sara also testified that before her friends told her parents, she recalled that

Cindy had observed Sara on a FaceTime phone call with Potter. In the FaceTime

call, Potter told Sara that Cindy was “really pretty[,]” and that he wanted to have a

“threesome” with Sara and Cindy.

When Cindy testified, she testified that she remembered being with Sara when

Sara had a Facetime call with someone known as “Panda,” and initially Sara went

to the bathroom to take the call and then Sara came out of the bathroom while still

on the Facetime call with “Panda.” Cindy testified that she observed the older man

on the call. And Cindy recalled that the older man tried to get Sara to turn the camera

around and show him Cindy’s “butt” and “boobs” that he wanted to have a

“threesome.” Cindy stated that the person she saw on the Facetime call was Potter,

and she identified him in the courtroom. After Cindy testified and identified Potter

as the person on the Facetime call, the court adjourned for the day and on the next

day, the defense attorney argued:

And at the conclusion of [Cindy’s] testimony yesterday, we approached [the State’s Attorney] and asked him about the -- you know, when he knew about this testimony and why he did not disclose it to us. And we learned at that time that he, in fact -- well, I guess at that point, he was unclear whether he interviewed [Cindy] in advance or not. But it was our understanding that she had been interviewed in preparation for trial 3 during which time she had given inconsistent statements, including, at some point, a statement that -- reflected her testimony that she gave on the stand. She’s also given inconsistent statements to the State, at other times when she was preparing for trial, regarding not being able to identify him or not being able to see him on the FaceTime video. That was also not disclosed to us in advance of trial or at any point until we asked for it and we were told this morning.

So that’s – that’s my initial objection, that we believe that the State has violated discovery statute. They also failed to give us proper extraneous notice as to what amounts to attempted online solicitation of a child, which is a significant offense that the State is well aware of. And they should have given us, you know, more notice about that particular offense, as well as the information that was in their possession. I think it’s important to point out, Judge, that the officer testified that there was no attempt to interview [Cindy]. We had no discovery whatsoever about [Cindy]. Based on discovery that we had been given, it is our assumption that the only purpose that she would be taking the stand for was to -- possibly to authenticate the recording that was discussed earlier in the proceedings. And so, we were caught completely by surprise. And based on all that, I know that the Government will argue that this is -- these statements were disclosed during trial preparation. They may argue that they are work product; but the discovery statute is very clear that if they are in possession of any evidence that’s material, that they have a duty to disclose it to us. If they are in possession of any evidence that tends to be exculpatory, they must give it to us when they have it and in reasonable time before trial. And that was not done.

So that is our initial objection. And I would like to hear from the State about when. And I would ask the Court to ask them about when they knew about these disclosures and why they did not disclose them to the Defense and then we can proceed.

[State’s Attorney]: Yes, Judge. So in our conference prior to going on the Record, I laid out the Brady notice. And so now I would like to do that for the Record –

THE COURT: Okay.

4 [State’s Attorney]: -- so that it is straight as far as the notice that we’re providing.

I, [State’s Attorney], met with the witness, [Cindy], in December of 2020; and it was in preparation for trial at that time and she described - - specifically relating to the incident that she testified to, she described that she walked into a room and saw [Sara] on FaceTime showing her chest to the person. She stated that she could see the face of the person that [Sara] was FaceTiming and that it appeared to be a much older male. And said that she could identify him from his booking photo as Andrew Potter.

On Monday of this week before trial, [], whose witness it was at trial, met with the witness, [Cindy]. I was not there. My understanding of that meeting is that when asked [Cindy] said that she -- she didn’t think that she saw the face on the screen. She knew that this person had glasses, but she didn’t know how she knew that.

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