Brandon Keoni Rickard v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 3, 2019
Docket02-18-00350-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Brandon Keoni Rickard v. State (Brandon Keoni Rickard 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
Brandon Keoni Rickard v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________

No. 02-18-00350-CR ___________________________

BRANDON KEONI RICKARD, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

On Appeal from Criminal District Court No. 3 Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 1478001D

Before Sudderth, C.J.; Womack and Wallach, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Womack MEMORANDUM OPINION

I. INTRODUCTION

A jury convicted Appellant Brandon Keoni Rickard of two counts of

aggravated sexual assault of a child younger than fourteen years of age and assessed

his punishment at eighteen years’ and six months’ confinement. The trial court

sentenced Rickard accordingly and ordered that his sentences be served consecutively.

Rickard brings a single point on appeal, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence

supporting his conviction. Because the evidence is sufficient to support the jury’s

verdict, we affirm the trial court’s judgments.

II. BACKGROUND

A. Outcry, Examination, Interview, and Mother’s Testimony

At the time of the offenses, Rickard lived in a Fort Worth apartment in Tarrant

County with his young daughter, Bailey; the complainant, Jane; and the girls’ mother,

Alice.1 On August 7, 2016, Alice was arrested for committing the offense of domestic

violence against Rickard. Within a few days, an investigator for the Department of

Family and Protective Services, Yolanda Johnson, screened Jane and Bailey to

determine whether the children were living in a safe environment. While answering

Johnson’s questions, Jane initially disclosed that Rickard had touched her “private

1 We use fictitious names to refer to the complainant and her family members to protect the complainant’s identity. See Tex. R. App. P. 9.8 & cmt., 9.10; 2nd Tex. App. (Fort Worth) Loc. R. 7.

2 parts . . . on top of [her] clothes.” Before Johnson left to speak with Alice, Jane

grabbed Johnson and told her that Rickard had also touched her “under [her]

clothes . . . with his penis and his fingers.” Johnson wrote down Jane’s statements.2

Fort Worth Police Detective Ebony Bryan was assigned to Jane’s case on

August 17, 2016, and later observed Jane’s September 1, 2016 forensic interview.

Bryan understood that Jane’s assaults occurred close in time to the forensic interview,

and based on her investigation, Bryan sought an arrest warrant for Rickard. In her

probable-cause affidavit, Bryan detailed Jane’s forensic-interview statements and

commented that Jane “was consistent through her outcry.” Bryan did not seek a

search warrant to obtain a sample of Rickard’s blood for testing of sexually-

transmitted diseases but did refer Jane to the Child Advocacy Resource and

Evaluation (CARE) team, a department within Cook Children’s Medical Center in

Fort Worth that cares for children who have suffered abuse or exposure to drugs.

Samantha Torrence, referenced in the record as Samantha Shercliff, of Alliance

for Children conducted Jane’s forensic interview. Torrence explained that most

children do not excel at remembering dates well but may remember other information

regarding an event that occurred. A child may also recant a report of abuse and later

reaffirm the abuse or make statements of empowerment—reporting acts that did not

happen such as punching a perpetrator—that enable the child to cope with what has

2 Although Johnson recorded her interview of Jane, no recording of the interview was presented at trial.

3 happened. During her forensic interview with Torrence, Jane made an outcry of

sexual abuse and gave sensory and peripheral details regarding her experience. Under

cross-examination, Torrence agreed that she did not observe during the interview any

signs that are typical of a coached child.

Terri Fugate, a sexual-assault nurse examiner on the CARE team, examined

Jane on September 7, 2016. When Fugate asked Jane why she was there, Jane replied,

“Because my sister’s dad, Brandon, touched me,” and explained that “it happened

starting when I was five or six years old.” Jane specified that the computer “didn’t

work to watch a movie, so [Rickard] came in the room and locked the door.” Jane

stated that Rickard “put the covers up and he put his private part . . . [in] my private

part . . . . He moved my panties and went under it[,] and it hurt[,] and I was kicking

him[,] and my mom came and knocked on the door[,] and he got off.” Jane also

reported that Rickard had touched her “private part” as well.

Fugate noted that “the last contact” had occurred about one month earlier. As

part of typical testing on prepubescent children, and because Alice had stated that

Jane was complaining of pain with urination, a test was performed on Jane’s urine.

Fugate testified that Jane’s test result was positive for chlamydia, which Fugate stated

is only contracted by genital–to–genital contact or, as Fugate agreed on cross-

examination, through the birth canal from mother to child. Fugate agreed that a

person with chlamydia can be asymptomatic. Although she is not an expert in blood

tests for chlamydia and confirmed the CARE team does not “do blood tests for

4 chlamydia,” Fugate admitted that she did not know whether a blood test would reveal

“chlamydial antigens in the blood.” She explained that contact beyond the labia

majora constitutes penetration and that such contact would have been required for

Jane to have contracted chlamydia. Chlamydia may also cause urinary tract infections,

and Jane also had tested positive for that as well. A large dose of azithromycin, an

antibiotic, was prescribed to treat Jane’s chlamydia.

Fugate also noted that because Jane is prepubescent, genital penetration would

have been extremely painful for Jane because the estrogen that renders the genitalia

stretchable and pliable is not present until closer to puberty. Although injury to the

hymen can occur from either consensual or abusive contact, Fugate explained that

95% of children, like Jane, do not present with injury and that the absence of injury

does not negate a child’s report of sexual assault.

Alice testified that Rickard was the only unrelated male with whom Alice had

lived after Jane’s birth, and Jane had never spent the night with her own biological

father. Alice testified that she had contracted herpes and chlamydia from Rickard and

that Jane had been prescribed medication that is used to treat chlamydia.

B. Jane’s Testimony

Jane was nine years old at the time of trial. She testified that she knew the

difference between the truth and a lie and demonstrated her knowledge of these

concepts in court by explaining that a person who described a green or blue shirt as

pink would not be telling the truth.

5 Jane estimated that she was “seven or something” when Rickard lived in their

apartment. When Jane was in prekindergarten or kindergarten, Jane asked Rickard to

come into her bedroom to fix the television. Rickard entered Jane’s bedroom to work

on the television and closed and locked the door. While Jane was on her bed and

under her covers, Rickard removed Jane’s clothes and used his hand to touch “the

place where you pee from” and then used his hand to go inside “the place where you

pee from.” This made Jane’s body feel “uncomfortable.” While his clothes were

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