Bradley Gregg v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 1, 2016
Docket02-16-00117-CR
StatusPublished

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Bradley Gregg v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 02-16-00117-CR

BRADLEY GREGG APPELLANT

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS STATE

----------

FROM THE 16TH DISTRICT COURT OF DENTON COUNTY TRIAL COURT NO. F-2014-0360-A

MEMORANDUM OPINION1

Appellant Bradley Gregg appeals his conviction for sexual assault. See

Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.011 (West 2011). We affirm.

1 See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. Background

On June 25, 2013, 15-year-old A.V. made an outcry of sexual abuse

against Appellant, her 36-year-old maternal uncle.

At the time of the outcry, A.V. was living with her father and stepmother,

and her mother exercised supervised visitation rights every other weekend.

A.V.’s mother did not have a stable place to live, and during many of these

weekend visitations, A.V. and her sister would stay with Appellant in Denton.

The relationship between A.V. and Appellant was a close one, and they

talked about many things, including sex. At trial, A.V. acknowledged that over

time she had developed romantic feelings for Appellant, which she described as

a “crush.”

According to A.V., during this time she had a boyfriend, and when she

attempted to send a topless photograph of herself to him over her cell phone, she

accidentally sent it to Appellant instead. A.V. testified that Appellant did not ask

her to send the photograph to him and that she and Appellant never discussed it.

Nevertheless, forensic testimony at trial established that Appellant did not delete

the photograph, but twice saved and stored the photograph on his cell phone. 2

The investigating detective, Detective David Bearden of the Denton Police

Department, testified that Appellant had informed his parents—A.V.’s

2 The photograph was sometimes referred to in the record as “photographs” and was admitted as two exhibits. For simplicity, we will refer to the admitted exhibits as the single “photograph.”

2 grandparents—of the photograph, but his testimony did not establish when

Appellant may have told them.

On Friday, June 22, 2013, Appellant picked up A.V. and brought her to his

residence to spend the weekend with him. During the evening of the next day,

Appellant showed A.V. a pair of thong underwear and asked A.V. if she had ever

worn underwear of that kind. A.V. testified that she was “a little shocked” at first,

but she took the thong from Appellant and tried it on underneath her pajama

bottoms. According to A.V., she –

kind of flaunted it around like saying, “Oh, I’m wearing it.” And he said that was cool. And he asked if it fit right and stuff like that.

Later that evening, while they were playing a video game on his bed,

Appellant leaned in and kissed her on the lips. According to A.V., this, too,

surprised her, but she testified that “it just really didn’t matter. The hormones

were kind of kicking in, and I figured I could trust him.” Eventually the two

removed their own clothing and Appellant asked A.V. if she had ever “69’ed”

before. When A.V. responded that she had not, Appellant and A.V. began

performing oral sex on each other in that manner for what A.V. described as

“quite a while.” At some point, Appellant “pushed [her] off of him,” and as she lay

on the bed she heard a wrapper being opened, and she knew that Appellant was

getting a condom. A.V.testified,

And so I was like, Okay, everything is fine, nothing is going to happen. Well, then he said, I’m sorry, I just have to do this. And I said, What? And then he’s like, Nothing, it’s okay. And I said, Okay.

3 And he stuck his penis in me two times. It hurt really bad. I got up as fast as I could and ran to the door and just started crying.

A.V. later testified that although she had wanted it to happen, once it

actually did, she wished it had not. Afterwards, she ran out of the bedroom and

into the bathroom, where she immediately took a shower, got dressed, and then

went to another bedroom where she slept when she stayed the night. According

to A.V., at that point she was feeling “disgust” and “regret.” Appellant later came

into the room, said he was sorry and told her that if she told anyone, “he would

probably kill himself because he felt so bad.” Before he left A.V., Appellant tried

to hug her, telling her everything was okay and that he hoped she slept well.

A.V. then cried herself to sleep.

The next morning, Appellant again told A.V. not to say anything, and A.V.

responded that she would not. But a few days later, in a regularly-scheduled

appointment with her counselor, she told her counselor what had happened with

Appellant during the prior weekend. A.V. testified that when she was

subsequently examined by a Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner (SANE), she “made

it sound like he was just a bad guy and did everything,” but in reality “[they] both

had some kind of part in this.” She later regretted having placed the blame

completely on Appellant in her conversation with the SANE.

During an interview with Crystal Powell, an investigator at the Children’s

Advocacy Center, A.V. recanted and said that nothing had happened. She told

Powell that it was all a “big lie,” that it was “just a really bad dream,” and that she

4 did not want to get her uncle in trouble. A.V. testified that she felt she was in an

“impossible situation” and that she “lied during th[e] whole thing.” She testified at

trial that she had decided to tell Powell it was a dream because, “I don’t want to

have to deal with what I’m dealing with right now. I would still have my family,

and things would be normal.”

Detective Bearden observed Powell’s interview of A.V. and testified at trial

that he thought A.V. was not being truthful in the interview. He noted that A.V.

appeared “bewildered when she started talking about the allegations or what had

taken place” and that she gave a significant amount of details regarding the

assault considering her newfound claim that it was all a dream.

A.V.’s maternal family members, who did not believe A.V’s allegations

against Appellant, reacted with hostility and alienation after her outcry. Detective

Bearden described A.V.’s mother as showing anger and disbelief toward A.V.

both after the interview with Powell and again when he met with her mother in

July 2013. At the time of trial, A.V. had not seen her maternal grandparents

since the day she told them of the assault.

After A.V. recanted in her interview with Powell, Detective Bearden

interviewed her personally. In that interview, A.V. told him that the sexual assault

had actually happened, but she left some details out, including the oral sex that

she and Appellant had performed on each other. When asked at trial why she

had told Detective Bearden it had really happened, A.V. testified, “I wanted things

5 to be okay again, but even if I said it did happen, it’s still going to be awkward.

Like I’m never going to be able to look at my uncle the way I used to, ever.”

Detective Bearden also interviewed Appellant. According to Detective

Bearden, Appellant claimed that A.V. fell asleep while they were playing the

video game and that when she woke up, she was in a panic and quickly went to

the bathroom. Appellant surmised that A.V. must have dreamed that the assault

occurred, and since A.V.

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