Anthony Trent Barbour v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 27, 2010
Docket06-09-00092-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Anthony Trent Barbour v. State (Anthony Trent Barbour 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
Anthony Trent Barbour v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion



In The

Court of Appeals

Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana



______________________________



No. 06-09-00092-CR



ANTHONY TRENT BARBOUR, Appellant



V.



THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee





On Appeal from the 6th Judicial District Court

Lamar County, Texas

Trial Court No. 21634





Before Morriss, C.J., Carter and Moseley, JJ.

Memorandum Opinion by Justice Carter



MEMORANDUM OPINION



C.S., an eight-year-old child, nearly died as a result of ingesting an unknown quantity of morphine. A jury convicted Anthony Trent Barbour of two counts of injury to a child. The court sentenced Barbour to twenty years' imprisonment on the first count and to ten years' imprisonment on the second count with the sentences to run concurrently. Appealing only the first count in a single point of error, Barbour argues that the evidence was insufficient to establish he knowingly or intentionally caused serious bodily harm to C.S. by administering or exposing him to morphine or heroin. We affirm the trial court's judgment.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Paramedic Robert Cody rushed to respond to the dispatch of an eight-year-old boy in distress. When he arrived at the home of Lisa Hurst, he found her son C.S. unresponsive and on the verge of death. His agonal respirations were slow and erratic, and he was blue, due to the lack of oxygen. After noting that Barbour, his caretaker for the day, was nowhere to be found, Cody intubated C.S. and raced to the Paris Regional Medical Center (PRMC) emergency room.

On arrival, emergency room nurse Karen Vrba noted C.S.'s core temperature was an extremely low 87.5 degrees and his blood pressure was "pretty low." She was shocked to find C.S.'s body covered with excessive fresh and older bruising. C.S. was bruised on both sides of the forehead, his eye, neck, right buttock, right hip, knee, lower back and down the thighs, shins, and legs. Additionally, there was bruising above the rectum, "right above the penis and scrotum . . . linear bruising, along the right side of his scrotum . . . [and] bruising to the tip of his penis." After taking his vital signs and charting the bruises, Vrba ran blood tests, obtained a urine specimen via catheter, and sent the samples to the laboratory for testing. When questioned, Hurst admitted to whipping the boy with a belt a few days before because he had run away. Barbour did not show up at the hospital and could not be questioned. When probed to offer an explanation of his condition, Hurst suggested C.S. had fallen and hit his head earlier in the day. A CAT scan ruled out brain trauma.

C.S.'s pediatrician, Ed Clark, took over and found C.S. "had been beat . . . [i]t was beyond spanking." Clark reviewed the PRMC toxicology report and was amazed to find it was positive for "Fentanyl, which is a very potent opioid . . . [and][m]orphine, which is also an opiate," although none had yet been given to C.S. PRMC was able to stabilize C.S., but he required transfer by helicopter to Children's Medical Center (CMC).

C.S. was in critical condition when he arrived at CMC in Dr. Matthew Cox's care. Dr. Cox also ran tests which confirmed PRMC's positive result for opiates. C.S. slipped into a coma and required aggressive resuscitation. Cox documented "[t]he pattern of bruising . . . was consistent with being abused." Finally, Barbour arrived at CMC around 5:30 the following morning and met with Dr. Cox. Barbour said C.S. was spinning around to make himself dizzy and fell on his buttocks and forehead simultaneously around 10:00 a.m. Barbour explained that he did not notify Hurst, who was at work until thirty minutes before the ambulance was called, because C.S. was active and playful after the fall. Cox concluded Barbour provided "inadequate explanation for [C.S.'s] hospitalization." CMC continued to treat C.S.'s life-threatening condition and notified the police and the Department of Family and Protective Services of the possible abuse.

Fortunately, C.S. awoke from the coma and family was allowed to visit him. Intensive care unit nurse Debbie Kay Smith monitored his vital signs. Smith noticed a curious pattern in C.S. Whenever Barbour would enter the room, his "blood pressure . . . would go up by 20 points every time." She could tell C.S. was uncomfortable, especially when left alone with Barbour because "[h]is heart rate was going up; his blood pressure was going up," and he did not have this physiological reaction to anyone else. At one point, C.S. requested to speak to Hurst. "[A]s she walked in the room, he was going to start to try to talk to her. And then when [Barbour] got into his line of vision, . . . he had tears well up in his eyes. And he says, oh, never mind."

Detective Shane Boatwright responded to the report provided by Dr. Cox. Again, Hurst admitted to spanking C.S., but only three times. Next, Boatwright spoke to Barbour, who was described as "just kind of bubbly . . . it was just kind of rapid, rapid fire talking to me . . . he was eager to talk." He "didn't appear to be upset or . . . even really concerned." Barbour said "he had been spinning the kids around and, like in a circle, and that he and [C.S.] had both gotten dizzy, said that [C.S.] had fell down, said he sort of hit his butt and his head on the floor simultaneously." C.S. complained of a headache a few hours later. Barbour then claimed it was normal for C.S.'s lips to turn purple on occasion. He told the detective that he was a weak disciplinarian and that the bruising on the scrotum might have occurred when he put C.S. in the shower. Boatwright concluded there were discrepancies in Barbour's story.

After the interview, C.S.'s grandfather asked Boatwright to come to C.S.'s room "because [C.S.] was trying to talk and that [Barbour] was trying to keep him from it." Boatwright cleared the room of family and interviewed C.S. in the presence of nurses and another detective. C.S. stated during the interview that Barbour had given him a yellow liquid that made him feel dizzy and that he did not remember anything after ingesting the liquid. C.S. stated Barbour hit him with a switch two nights before because he had wet the bed. He described how Barbour put him between a mattress and a box spring and laid on the bed, making it hard for C.S to breathe. Barbour would spank him with a belt and a wooden spoon. C.S. said Barbour told him to lie to the officers and say he had fallen off a bike if they asked him what happened. After hearing C.S.'s statement, Boatwright looked for Barbour to continue with questioning, but he had left the hospital. Hurst claimed Barbour left to get something to eat, but Barbour said he was visiting a friend.

The State prosecuted Barbour on two counts of injury to a child, that he intentionally or knowingly caused serious bodily injury to C.S.

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