Archer Lee Evans v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 2015
Docket11-13-00296-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Archer Lee Evans v. State (Archer Lee Evans 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
Archer Lee Evans v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion filed March 31, 2015

In The

Eleventh Court of Appeals ___________

No. 11-13-00296-CR ___________

ARCHER LEE EVANS, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 350th District Court Taylor County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 10795-D

MEMORANDUM OPINION The jury convicted Archer Lee Evans of the offenses of aggravated sexual assault of a child and sexual assault of a child.1 Appellant elected for his punishment to be assessed by the trial court, and it assessed punishment at confinement for sixty-five years for the aggravated sexual assault of a child and

1 See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 22.011 (West 2011), § 22.021 (West Supp. 2014). twenty years for the sexual assault of a child. The trial court then sentenced Appellant accordingly. Appellant asserts five issues on appeal. We affirm. I. The Charged Offenses The grand jury indicted Appellant on five separate counts, but the jury only convicted on Counts II and V. The second count charged Appellant with aggravated sexual assault of a child, and the fifth count charged Appellant with sexual assault of a child. The second count alleged that Appellant intentionally and knowingly caused the sexual organ of K.L., a child under the age of fourteen, to be penetrated by Appellant’s sexual organ on or about February 20, 2010. The fifth count alleged that Appellant intentionally and knowingly caused the sexual organ of K.L., a child younger than seventeen and not the spouse of Appellant, to be penetrated by Appellant’s sexual organ on or about April 20, 2012. As relevant here, a person commits the offense of aggravated sexual assault of a child if the person intentionally or knowingly “causes the penetration of the anus or sexual organ of a child by any means” and the victim is younger than fourteen years of age. PENAL § 22.021(a)(1)(B)(i), (a)(2)(B). An offense of aggravated sexual assault of a child is a felony of the first degree. Id. § 22.021(e). A person commits sexual assault of a child if he engages in the same conduct as outlined above with a child under the age of seventeen. Id. § 22.011(a)(2)(A), (c)(1). An offense of sexual assault of a child is a felony of the second degree. Id. § 22.011(f). II. Evidence at Trial Appellant is the father of K.L., the victim. Child Protective Services (CPS) removed K.L. from her mother’s home when she was three years old, and she moved in with Appellant. K.L. testified that, around that time, Appellant started “touching” her vagina and mouth with his penis. K.L. testified that the same kind of “touching” continued throughout her childhood while she and Appellant moved 2 to various households to live with Appellant’s family members, girlfriends, or friends. K.L. also lived with her grandmother, without Appellant, for part of middle school. K.L. said that, when she was in the seventh grade, she and Appellant moved in with Appellant’s girlfriend and that the “touching” became “more aggressive.” K.L. testified that, when she was around twelve or thirteen years old, Appellant started penetrating her vagina with his penis. K.L. said that Appellant no longer forced her to perform oral sex on him but that he would penetrate her vagina with his penis two to three times a week. She further testified that Appellant penetrated her “butt” with his penis two times. K.L. said she and Appellant moved into their own apartment when she was in the ninth grade, and she agreed that the abuse “got more violent” because she fought him more. K.L. described the more violent nature of the abuse and testified that Appellant hit her and tried to tie her down. She claimed that Appellant would use sexual abuse as punishment or as a requirement before she could do an activity that she wanted to do. At the end of K.L.’s ninth grade year, she made a statement to her boyfriend, who was eighteen years old at the time, that her father had raped her. She did not tell him any details about the rape or any other sexual abuse. The following day at school, she made the same statement to a female friend, who was sixteen years old. Both K.L.’s boyfriend and her female friend convinced K.L. to report the abuse to school administrators. K.L. testified that, when she reported the abuse to the school counselor, Cindy Darby, she could only write down an account of the abuse because she was crying and could not speak. K.L. said that, overall, the abuse lasted from when she was three years old to when she made the outcry at sixteen. K.L. also said that Appellant used coconut shampoo as a lubricant during the assaults, that he made her wear women’s panties, and that he would ejaculate onto the floor in her room and rub his semen into the carpet with his tube socks. When 3 asked if law enforcement could search Appellant’s home, Appellant consented to a search of the living room, kitchen, and K.L.’s bedroom. Appellant was present during the search. According to Detective Stacey Cisneros of the Abilene Police Department, Appellant appeared “pretty cautious” and “very paranoid” when the officers were in his home; he would only allow two officers in the home at a time. Upon a search of K.L.’s bedroom, officers and the forensic team found tube socks near K.L.’s bed, women’s panties under the headboard and mattress, stains on the wall and the carpet, and a bottle of coconut shampoo on the headboard. Officers also photographed the bedroom and a Tweety Bird blanket. Officer Wallace McDaniel, a latent print examiner with the Abilene Police Department, testified that he took two swabs: one from the east wall and one from the carpet. Amy Smuts, a forensic DNA analyst with the University of North Texas Health Science Center in Fort Worth, testified that the sample on the east wall was semen. Smuts compared the sample to Appellant’s DNA profile and determined that he could not be excluded as a contributor. Detective Cisneros said that he, the other officers, and Appellant returned to the Law Enforcement Center (LEC) after the search of Appellant’s home. At the LEC, Detective Cisneros read Appellant his Miranda 2 rights and made it clear that Appellant was a suspect. Detective Cisneros testified that Appellant was not in custody, that Appellant was free to leave, and that he never threatened Appellant with arrest. Appellant waived his rights and talked with Detective Cisneros. Detective Cisneros said that Appellant told him that an adult woman that had stayed in K.L.’s room, which would explain the women’s panties, and that he had sex with that woman in K.L.’s room, which would explain why his DNA was found in K.L.’s bedroom. Detective Cisneros also said that Appellant remarked that K.L. had fabricated the allegations against him because he was opposed to her 2 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 444 (1966). 4 dating a Puerto Rican boy. Appellant also appeared very anxious and paranoid; he remarked that he thought his cellphone was being tapped because K.L. had sent him messages. Appellant later requested an attorney, and Detective Cisneros stopped the interview, which had lasted less than an hour. Appellant left the LEC. Tatum Woodson, a licensed professional counselor with the Regional Victim Crisis Center, testified that K.L., as a result of the sexual abuse, suffered from post- traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). He stated that this included nightmares, irritability, loss of sleep, and a feeling of helplessness; hypervigilance and lack of concentration; and avoidance behavior, such as detachment and withdrawal from people. Woodson testified that, due to the abuse from her father—her caregiver, K.L. did not realize she could say “no” to others who requested an intimate relationship and K.L. was at risk to act in sexually inappropriate ways. Judith LaFrance, a registered sexual assault nurse examiner (SANE) at Hendrick Medical Center, testified that she interviewed and examined K.L.

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