Bobby Allen Russell v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 15, 2017
Docket06-16-00191-CR
StatusPublished

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Bobby Allen Russell v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana

No. 06-16-00191-CR

BOBBY ALLEN RUSSELL, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 188th District Court Gregg County, Texas Trial Court No. 44,918-A

Before Morriss, C.J., Moseley and Burgess, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Moseley MEMORANDUM OPINION A Gregg County jury convicted Bobby Allen Russell of continuous violence against the

family, and he was sentenced to five years’ confinement and assessed a fine of $5,000.

On appeal, Russell argues (1) that the trial court erred by denying his motion to quash the

indictment and (2) that the trial court erred in allowing the State’s expert on family violence to

testify.

We affirm the trial court’s judgment because the trial court acted within its discretion in

denying Russell’s motion to quash and in admitting the expert testimony.

I. Factual Background

In Gregg County, Texas, Russell was indicted for the offense of continuous violence

against the family under Section 25.11(a) of the Texas Penal Code. The indictment alleged that

on May 25, 2015, and July 9, 2015, Russell committed family violence assault against Wendy

Carter.

A trial, Wendy testified that on May 25, 2015, she and her two children, sixteen-year-old

John Carter and eleven-year-old Grace Carter, were watching television in the guest bedroom of

her home when her live-in boyfriend, Russell, arrived. Wendy knew from his text messages that

he was angry and had been drinking, and she heard him “kicking the back door trying to get it

open.” Wendy closed the bedroom door and met Russell in the hallway. He was yelling and

cursing at her, and she could tell that he was “very intoxicated.” He grabbed her by the neck and

threw her up against the wall. When the children opened the bedroom door, she told them to “stay

in there.” He held her by the throat and twice choked her to the point that she lost consciousness.

2 When Wendy regained consciousness from the second choking, Russell had left the scene. She

and her children waited in an upstairs bedroom for the police to arrive, and after speaking with the

police, Wendy went to the emergency room at Good Shepherd Medical Center. As a result of the

assault, she suffered a broken arm, a concussion, several bruises, and marks on her throat.

John testified that when Russell entered the house, his mother looked scared. He and Grace

heard yelling and Russell cursing. Neither John nor Grace saw the assault take place; however,

John heard a loud “boom on the wall” that he believed to have been caused by Russell pushing his

mother against the wall. During the assault on his mother, John took Grace and ran to an upstairs

bedroom. He put Grace in the closet because he did not want her to get hurt. John was scared, so

he got out his hunting rifle and called his father, Wendy’s ex-husband, Dean Carter, who called

the police. After the assault, John and the rest of the family spent the night elsewhere with family

and friends, and when Wendy returned to the home late the next day, all of Russell’s things had

been removed from the dwelling. After the day of the assault, Russell no longer lived with Wendy,

but he continued to appear at the home sporadically in the late hours of the night, although Wendy

was then attempting to have a protective order issued to prohibit him from coming to her home.

Several weeks later, on July 9, 2015, Wendy was at home with Jeff Burnett, a man she met

online. Burnett testified that after he had been there for about fifteen minutes, Russell appeared

and it seemed apparent to him that Russell had been drinking “[v]ery heavily.” Russell began to

curse Wendy and to ask her what was going on and inquire about the identity of each person in the

house and where they were. Russell was visibly angry and told Burnett that the residence was his

house and that Wendy was his wife. Russell grabbed Wendy’s arms and shoved her against a wall

3 and started pushing Burnett, telling him to leave. With Russell’s attention on Burnett, Wendy

quickly hid and called 9-1-1. However, when the police arrived, they arrested Wendy on an

outstanding warrant but did not arrest Russell. A few days after this more recent assault, Wendy

still had bruises on her arms.

Kirk Haddix, a lieutenant in the Criminal Investigations Division of the Gregg County

Sheriff’s Office, testified that he was familiar with Russell because he had three family violence

assault cases regarding Russell. The dates of the assaults were May 8, May 25, and July 9, 2015.

Wendy testified that after she came home on the night of May 8, 2015, Russell ripped her shirt off

and broke her arm, but she did not call the police. Russell apologized and said that it would never

happen again. She and Russell went to the hospital the next day, but because Russell was with

her, she failed to reveal the assault but told the hospital staff that she had fallen. After the assault,

Russell continued to live at Wendy’s house.

Near the conclusion of the State’s case, Russell objected to the testimony of Lyndell

McAllister, saying that her testimony would be more prejudicial than probative and that it was no

more than an attempt to bolster testimony. The trial court temporarily halted the proceedings and

conducted a hearing outside the presence of the jury. This included a voir-dire examination of the

proposed witness and, after the hearing, the trial court allowed the expert testimony of McAllister

about the dynamics of family violence and typical behavior of domestic violence victims in

relation to their abusers. See TEX. R. EVID. 403, 703. McAllister, a licensed master social worker

with a concentration and specialization in child welfare, had an extensive history of high-level

work with various family-violence-related organizations in East Texas. At the time of trial, she

4 worked for the City of Longview in the “Partners in Prevention” program, and having helped write

the curriculum, had taught a class for twenty years for the Parent Resource Center of East Texas,

a course for people that have been arrested for family violence and their significant others.

McAllister described domestic violence as a cycle where there is a tension-building phase,

an explosive phase, and a honeymoon phase. She explained that the general public is not well-

informed regarding domestic violence and that it is common for people to fail to understand why

the victim returns to the battering relationship; even so, victims often feel as if they cannot leave

because they are emotionally and financially dependent on the batterer.1 She testified that the

victims of family violence often minimize or refuse to speak of the abuse they have suffered

because of shame and guilt and that when they do tell others about being the victim of family

violence, they are not always believed.

Russell called only one witness, Wendy’s friend, Cristi Parsons, who testified that on the

night of May 8, 2015, Wendy was intoxicated and that when Russell confronted her, he was direct,

but was not yelling or screaming. Between the night of May 8 and May 25, Parsons saw no bruises

on Wendy’s face. Although she saw no marks on Wendy on the night of May 25, she did feel a

bump on Wendy’s head.

The jury found Russell guilty of continuous violence against the family. Russell was

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