Blake Arlin Edwards v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 25, 2021
Docket09-19-00180-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Blake Arlin Edwards v. the State of Texas (Blake Arlin Edwards 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
Blake Arlin Edwards v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-19-00180-CR __________________

BLAKE ARLIN EDWARDS, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee __________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 435th District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 18-10-14456-CR __________________________________________________________________

OPINION

Based on the allegations in an indictment, a jury found Blake Arlin Edwards

guilty of attempted sexual performance by a child.1 Edwards appealed and argues

that, for four reasons, his conviction should be overturned. First, he claims the

evidence is insufficient to support the jury’s finding that he attempted to induce a

person he believed to be a child to send him a picture that violated the Penal Code,

1 See Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 15.01(a), 43.25(b). 1 section 43.25.2 Second, Edwards suggests sections 15.01(a) and 43.25(b) of the

Penal Code—the statutory provisions he allegedly violated—are overly broad and

vague because as applied to him they violate his rights to freedom of speech under

the First Amendment. 3 Third, Edwards argues he should be awarded a new trial

because the trial court erred by admitting evidence over his objections asserting the

evidence was irrelevant or more prejudicial than probative in proving his guilt. Last,

Edwards contends he should be awarded a new trial based on his claim the

prosecutor engaged in improper jury argument in final argument when he called

Edwards a predator, a felon, and a liar.

Having reviewed the record and Edwards’ arguments, we conclude issues one

through three lack merit. We further conclude Edwards failed to preserve his

complaints about the prosecutor’s allegedly improper argument for our review by

failing to lodge objections to the arguments when they were made in his trial. For

the reasons more fully explained below, Edwards’ conviction and the trial court’s

judgment are affirmed.

Background

In January 2019, a grand jury indicted Edwards in an indictment alleging that

Edwards violated the Penal Code when he “engaged in a sexual chat with a person

Id.; see also id. § 43.25(a) (defining some terms in section 43.25(b)). 2

Id.; U.S. CONST. amend. I (“Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the 3

freedom of speech[.]”). 2 he believed to be fourteen years old [by] ask[ing] for a picture of a 14-year-old

masturbating, amounting to more than mere preparation that tended to but failed to

effect” the commission of the crime. In May 2019, Edwards pleaded not guilty and

went to trial.

The State called two witnesses in the guilt-innocence phase of the trial. The

State’s first witness, a detective employed by Montgomery County, explained that

he works on a task force that focuses on investigating crimes directed at children

over the internet. According to the detective, when working on this task force, he

posts messages on the internet by using a social media app. During the investigation

that led to Edwards’ arrest, the detective testified he posted messages over three days

in October 2018 through the internet under a fictitious name, Angie. The first

message Angie posted states: “It’s raining and I’m bored. If ur into younger hmu.

Conroe area[.]” 4 One of the exhibits admitted into evidence in Edwards’ trial shows

the app the detective uses allows using it “to create, post, send and store content,

including messages, text, photos, and other materials” through the internet.

Less than thirty minutes after posting the above message, Edwards responded

and said: “Hey Angie, what up in your world?” Soon after, Angie told Edwards:

“I’m 14 so I don’t work. Is that okay?” Edwards replied: “Ohh, wow you are

In final argument, the prosecutor argued hmu means “‘hit me up,’ [and] that’s 4

what [Edwards] did.” 3 young[.]” Seconds later, in another message, Edwards told Angie he was thirty-four.

The first night the two chatted, they exchanged messages for over three hours.

The following evening, Edwards contacted Angie again through the app. In

that message, Edwards asked Angie “how was your day?” Later, Edwards sent Angie

another message asking that she send him a picture of her. Angie sent Edwards

several photos, all admitted into evidence in the trial. The photos are of a female

that, according to the detective, were taken when the subject depicted in the photos

was fifteen years old. Angie and Edwards exchanged many messages on the second

day they talked. We need not, however, discuss each message. In the messages,

Angie told Edwards she liked sex. That same night, Edwards asked Angie: “Do you

masturbate?” The messages the two exchanged then turned to specific sexual acts.

After the conversation turned to sex, Edwards sent Angie a message asking: “Can I

see your p****[?]” Angie responded: “I’m not sending any nudes[.]” Edwards

replied: “What if I show you my c**k?” Angie responded: “If you want[.]” Edwards

responded by sending Angie a picture of his sexual organ. After that, Edwards told

Angie: “Your turn[.]” Angie responded: “To touch myself[?]” Edwards answered:

“Yes, but I want to see you touching yourself[.]” Angie then told Edwards she would

“not send[] any nudes[.]” At that point, Edwards said: “How about we meet in the

middle, you touch yourself through your panties[.]”Angie replied she would not.

4 Edwards then said: “Your freaking sexy and I want to see you, all of you.” Angie

did not respond to any of Edwards’ further messages he sent her that night.

That next day, Angie sent Edwards another message. It states: “It’s ok it just

makes me mad that I say no but you keep asking[.]” Edwards apologized, explaining

he “was just really turned on” and would not “do that again[.]” Angie replied that

she was home. At that point, Edwards asked Angie: “Can we just hang out[?]”Angie

replied they could. In response, Edwards told her: “Nothing sexual?” Angie

answered: “Well that’s up to you[.]” A short time later, Angie sent Edwards a

message asking: “Do you want to have sex?” Edwards responded: “No[.]” Later,

Angie sent Edwards another message in which she gave him her address and told

him they could meet.

Edwards drove an SUV to the location where the two agreed to meet. When

he pulled into a parking lot to park, a patrolman the detective contacted in

anticipation of Edwards’ arrival, pulled behind Edwards and placed him under arrest.

The detective testified that during his experience on the task force, it is not

uncommon for people to bring condoms and lubricants to meetings like the one

Edwards arranged to have with Angie. But the detective explained that Edwards did

not show up to the meeting with any of the items he mentioned and stated no such

items were discovered in a search of Edwards’ SUV.

5 The State also showed the jury the video of an interview Edwards voluntarily

gave to the detective after Edwards’ arrest. In the interview, the detective asked

Edwards why he went to the apartments. Edwards told the detective he went there

to take a friend whom he had not yet met to lunch. Edwards also told the detective

he did not know the person’s name or age. And Edwards denied he went to the

meeting for a purpose other than going to lunch. When the detective asked Edwards

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