Baldwin v. State

264 S.W.3d 237, 2008 WL 339815
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 20, 2008
Docket01-06-00859-CR, 01-06-00860-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 264 S.W.3d 237 (Baldwin 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
Baldwin v. State, 264 S.W.3d 237, 2008 WL 339815 (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

JANE BLAND, Justice.

A jury found Barbara Dean Baldwin guilty of two charges of the first degree felony offense of injury to a child. Following her convictions, the jury assessed punishment at thirty and forty years’ confinement for each charge, respectively. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.04 (Vernon *239 Supp.2007). On appeal, Barbara challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence supporting her convictions and the trial court’s admission of testimony and a videotape concerning the victims’ forensic interviews. Finding no error, we affirm.

Background

R.D. and his younger brother, T.D., were born while their mother, Surrelia, was still a teenager. At first, they lived with their maternal grandmother. After a few years, their grandmother died, and the boys then went to live with their mother. She had a drug problem, however, and was unable to provide adequate care. When CPS intervened and investigated the boys’ care, Surrelia agreed to let the boys live with her mother’s sister, Barbara, and Barbara’s husband, Tommy Baldwin.

Surrelia periodically had supervised visits with R.D. and T.D. at the CPS office. During one visit, Surrelia noticed marks on R.D.’s face. R.D. told her that he got the marks from sleeping on the garage floor where he had been sent to sleep as punishment for doing something wrong. When Surrelia reported this incident to CPS, the boys were removed from the Baldwin home and placed in foster care. But, after a few months, CPS returned the boys to the Baldwins. Soon after, Surrelia was convicted of theft and possession of a controlled substance and went to prison. During that time, she did not see her children.

According to R.D., who was fourteen years old at time of trial, he and his brother slept in the very back room of the Baldwin house. They would eat meals separately from the family, by the front door in the hallway. Most of the time, the Baldwins fed him sauerkraut, or rice and beans. Both boys qualified for free breakfast and lunch at school. At some point, Barbara began bringing the boys to school after breakfast time and taking the boys out of school at lunchtime and bringing them back after lunch. Barbara gave him either a sandwich or, if he got in trouble at school, sauerkraut as a “punishment food.” R.D. recalled having a lot of problems at school.

R.D. testified that, while living with the Baldwins, he did not get enough to eat and was usually hungry. He was so hungry that he would take other people’s food at school. After this happened, Barbara took the boys out of public school and homes-chooled them. If R.D. did not complete his homework, he would not be allowed to eat. When asked if he ever ate things that people did not normally eat, R.D. testified that he had eaten dog food and cat food found in the garage, and feces. T.D. also testified that he and his brother had eaten garbage and dog food because they were not given enough to eat. R.D. recalled that when Tommy returned from work, he would see R.D. in the locked garage on his way into the house but did nothing to help him, other than to give him ice cream occasionally.

T.D. testified that if he did not complete his school work, Barbara would punish him by having him kneel and lift his arms over his head until he was allowed to get up. T.D. also recalled not getting enough to eat.

T.D. and R.D. did not get along. The Baldwins dealt with this by keeping the boys separated at night. One would sleep in the locked bedroom and the other would be locked in the garage to sleep there. They would switch back and forth. The Baldwins would give the boy in the garage a bucket instead of allowing him to use the bathroom inside.

When T.D. began attending public elementary school, he was evaluated as emo *240 tionally disturbed and placed in special education. An elementary school administrator recalled that both boys had behavioral problems. When they got in trouble, it usually was for stealing food. The administrator also testified that when she discussed the boys’ hunger with Barbara, Barbara continued to insist on bringing the boys home for lunch, even though free school lunch was available to them. She also began to bring the boys later to school, so that they would miss breakfast, which was also free.

One of R.D.’s elementary school teachers testified at trial. She stated that she did not think that R.D. had any behavior problems. She recalled that when Barbara came to the classroom, she would check R.D.’s desk and got upset with him if he had already eaten part of his lunch. After that, she began to take R.D. home for lunch. The teacher noticed that R.D. still seemed hungry when he came back to school, and she would occasionally share her lunch with him. T.D. likewise testified that the nurse and some of the teachers would share their food with R.D. and him. R.D.’s teacher also remembered a few occasions when R.D. had stolen food from others in the classroom. She further recalled that he was becoming noticeably thinner before Barbara withdrew him from school.

The elementary school nurse recalled that the boys appeared to be hungry and always wanted to eat. They would come to her office, and she would talk with them and give them snacks. The nurse met with Barbara when she took the boys out of school, and gave her a chart of the basic food groups. Barbara took the chart without comment. The nurse also testified that she would see the Baldwins at church. Sometime after Barbara removed the boys from school, the nurse saw the boys at church and noticed that R.D. appeared very thin, as if he were receiving chemotherapy or had cancer.

In late summer 2002, CPS received a referral concerning R.D. and T.D. The referral stated that the boys were not receiving proper nutrition and were being kept in the Baldwins’ garage. When a CPS caseworker made contact with the boys, the caseworker brought them to the CPS office and gave them something to eat. After R.D. ate, his stomach began to hurt, and the caseworker brought him to Texas Children’s Hospital emergency room.

Dr. Kathleen Motil, a board-certified pediatrician and board-certified pediatric gastroenterologist nutrition specialist at Texas Children’s, was called into the emergency room to consult on R.D.’s case. Mo-til testified that R.D. was the most severely malnourished child she had seen in a long time. According to Motil, R.D. was suffering from severe protein calorie malnutrition, specifically of a combined kwash-iorkor and marasmus type. She added that numerous other diagnoses, reflecting from the metabolic abnormalities of his body and resulting from the severe malnutrition, could also apply. These additional conditions suffered by R.D. included anemia, hepatitis, hypokalemia, and hypohosp-hatemia. Motil explained that these metabolic abnormalities were life-threatening conditions. For example, Motil explained, potassium is extremely important in heart function, so that abnormally low levels of potassium, such as those occurring in R.D., place malnourished children at risk of death.

As a result of the malnutrition, R.D. also was so constipated from the malnutrition that he had an extremely protuberant and hard abdomen. Motil diagnosed R.D.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
264 S.W.3d 237, 2008 WL 339815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-state-texapp-2008.