Bilford Junious v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 28, 2010
Docket14-09-00400-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Bilford Junious v. State (Bilford Junious 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
Bilford Junious v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed September 28, 2010.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-09-00400-CR

Bilford Junious, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 263rd District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1207799

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, Bilford Junious, challenges his aggravated sexual assault conviction for which he was sentenced to forty years in prison.  In two issues, he asserts that the trial court reversibly erred by (1) failing to grant his request for a lesser-included offense and (2) admitting his statement during the punishment phase of his trial.[1]  We affirm.

BACKGROUND

In the early morning hours of August 24, 2003, the complainant walked to a corner store to get a cup of ice and a pack of cigarettes.  She had fallen asleep the night before at her deceased former mother-in-law’s house.  She had been cleaning the house to help the family reclaim it from squatters.  As she was walking back from the store, a previous back injury caused her leg to fail her, and she fell to the ground.  An individual, later identified by the complainant as appellant, drove up to her in a small truck, dressed in a pizza delivery uniform, and offered her a ride.  She accepted the ride because the man appeared nice and was wearing a pizza delivery uniform.

After she got in his truck, he started to drive the correct route to take her home.  He soon deviated from this route, however, and pulled out a gun and pointed it at the complainant.  He drove her to a secluded area between two vacant houses and told her that he would not hurt her if she did as he said.  He ordered her out of his truck and grabbed her neck after she got out.  He pinned her to the truck and smashed her head into the truck door.  He then sexually assaulted her.  After the assault, he drove away.  The complainant managed to find a nearby telephone and called 911.  She was transported to the hospital, where a sexual assault nurse examiner (“SANE”) collected evidence, including material containing DNA. 

Six years later, in 2009, appellant was arrested for another offense.  His DNA was matched to the DNA collected from the complainant, and he was indicted for the aggravated sexual assault of the complainant.  In the indictment, the State alleged as follows:

[T]the Defendant . . . did then and there unlawfully, intentionally and knowingly cause the penetration of the female sexual organ of . . .  the Complainant, by placing his sexual organ in the female sexual organ of the Complainant, without the consent of the Complainant, namely, the Defendant compelled the Complainant to submit and participate by threatening to use force and violence against the Complainant, and the Complainant believed that the Defendant had the present ability to execute the threat, and by acts and words the Defendant placed the Complainant in fear that serious bodily injury would be imminently inflicted on the Complainant.

It is further presented that at the time the Defendant committed the felony offense of Aggravated Sexual Assault . . . , as hereinabove alleged, he used and exhibited a deadly weapon, namely, a firearm during the commission of and during the immediate flight therefrom.

Appellant’s trial began on April 20, 2009.  Prior to his trial, in a related case, appellant sought to suppress an oral statement he had made to Houston Police Department officers.  Although the trial court conducted a hearing on the motion, it did not rule on it.  At the start of appellant’s trial, both appellant and the State moved to consolidate all the motions from the various related cases; the trial court granted this joint motion.[2]  The complainant testified to the facts described above.  She further stated several times that she had feared for her life during the assault.  She testified:  “I was praying, God, just let me make it, let him not kill me. . . .  He was so rough.  He just had my head to that door, smashing, smashing it. . . .”  On cross-examination, the complainant conceded that she had not mentioned appellant’s gun when she made her first report to police shortly after the offense occurred; it was not until another statement before trial that she provided the details about the gun.

In addition to the complainant, several police officers testified, describing the complainant’s identification of appellant through a video line-up and the statements she had made.  A DNA expert testified that appellant’s DNA matched the DNA collected from the complainant after the assault.  Finally, the SANE who had examined the complainant after the offense testified regarding the examination.  The State rested after her testimony.

The trial court conducted a charge hearing outside the presence of the jury.  Appellant requested that the trial court include in its charge the lesser-included offense of sexual assault, but the trial court denied this request.  After the charge conference, the defense rested.  The trial court’s charge to the jury included a special issue regarding the use or exhibition of a deadly weapon.  After deliberating, the jury found appellant guilty as charged in the indictment, but did not find that the defendant used or exhibited a deadly weapon during the commission of the offense.

Before the punishment phase of appellant’s trial, the court conducted a brief hearing on appellant’s motion to suppress filed in a related case (cause number 1079415).  Rather than hearing evidence, the trial court, which had already heard evidence on the motion in the related case, permitted the attorneys to argue the relevant issues.  Appellant’s counsel reminded the court that appellant had “invoked his Fifth Amendment rights” by asking for counsel during his first interview with the police  The officers stopped the interview and left, but returned the next day to speak to appellant regarding several other cases.  They recorded this interview.  Several times during the interview, after the officers read appellant his statutory warnings, he waived his rights and agreed to talk with them.  Following argument of counsel, the trial court denied appellant’s motion to suppress. 

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Bilford Junious v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bilford-junious-v-state-texapp-2010.