Bryan Jerome Moore v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 9, 2004
Docket02-03-00030-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Bryan Jerome Moore v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS
FORT WORTH

 

NO. 2-03-030-CR

 
 

BRYAN JEROME MOORE                                                        APPELLANT

 

V.

 

THE STATE OF TEXAS                                                                  STATE

 
 

------------

 

FROM THE 396TH DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

   

OPINION

 

INTRODUCTION

        Appellant Bryan Jerome Moore appeals from his conviction by a jury for the offense of knowingly causing injury to a child. Appellant complains in three issues of appeal that the trial court committed error (1) when it allowed the use of a doll to demonstrate the offense over Appellant’s objection, (2) when it allowed into evidence a written statement from a purported learned treatise over Appellant’s objection, and (3) when it refused Appellant’s requested jury charge regarding the lesser included offense of negligently causing injury to a child.  We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

        Appellant was indicted for the offense of knowingly causing serious bodily injury to a child younger than 15 years of age, L.M., by shaking her, which caused her to suffer traumatic brain injury.  The State further alleged that the use of Appellant’s hands in shaking L.M. constituted the use of a deadly weapon.  Appellant pleaded not guilty to the charge and not true to the allegation of a use of a deadly weapon.  At trial, Gregory Noone, a Hurst police detective, testified that he first interviewed Appellant at Cook Children’s Hospital regarding the circumstances of injuries to L.M., a six-month old baby. Appellant denied causing the injury or having any knowledge of how L.M. sustained injury.  Detective Noone interviewed Appellant again at a later date, at which time Appellant admitted that he was responsible for causing L.M.’s injuries.  At the interview, Detective Noone asked Appellant to demonstrate on a doll how he caused L.M.’s injuries.  At trial Detective Noone reenacted the demonstration on a doll similar to that used by Appellant.  Appellant objected to the use of the doll and was overruled.  Detective Noone demonstrated how Appellant had shaken L.M. and described how the head “whiplashed back and forth several times.”

        Appellant testified that he watched L.M. on June 11th, while his wife, Linda, was at work.  According to Appellant, he realized that L.M. had been sleeping all day and upon checking her noticed that she was limp and that her eyes were rolled back in her head.  Appellant testified that he spent approximately thirty minutes to an hour trying to wake L.M. by “squeezing water on her face” and “patting her face.”  L.M. still had not awakened when Linda returned home from work, at which time Linda immediately took L.M. to the hospital.

        Appellant admitted shaking L.M. on three or four occasions, but denied shaking her during June, the month L.M. was admitted to the hospital with her injuries.  Over his objection, Appellant was also asked to demonstrate how he had shaken L.M. in the past.  Appellant testified and demonstrated that, in an attempt to get L.M. to stop crying, he would bounce her on his knee.  Appellant testified that when L.M. would not stop crying, the “motion” would become more intense, but he continued to only bounce L.M. on his knee.  Appellant further testified that when bouncing L.M. on his knee, he supported her head and she never came off his leg.  Appellant denied shaking the doll during his interview with Detective Noone as forcefully as Detective Noone had demonstrated.  Appellant testified that the way he had demonstrated on the doll in the courtroom was the same way he had shaken the doll during his interview with Detective Noone.

        During the State’s cross-examination, the prosecutor took the doll from Appellant and shook the doll as Detective Noone had demonstrated.  Appellant agreed that this demonstration by the State was how Detective Noone had shaken the doll. Appellant’s counsel did not object to the prosecutor’s shaking of the doll at that time.  However, Appellant’s counsel did object to the use of the doll during the State’s closing argument.  During closing, the State argued that “anyone knows if you shake a baby like this, like what Detective Noone showed you that Bryan Moore showed him on June 29th, what do you know is going to happen? You’re not doing that for the baby’s welfare.”  Appellant renewed his objection to the use of the doll and was overruled.

        At trial Dr. Howard Kelfer, a child neurologist, testified that he had examined a CAT scan of L.M.’s brain taken upon L.M.’s admission to the hospital.  Dr. Kelfer testified that L.M. had received a “traumatic brain injury” and the trauma had probably occurred on several different occasions.  Dr. Kelfer further testified that although L.M. was over two years old, she was unable to walk and her language skills were not developing.  Additionally, Dr. Kelfer explained that L.M. suffered from “severe weakness on the right side of her body” and seizures, which were not able to be completely controlled by medication.  Dr. Kelfer also testified that because of L.M.’s brain damage, she will be unable to attend school in a regular classroom setting.  The jury found Appellant guilty of knowingly causing injury to a child and further found that Appellant used a deadly weapon, his hand, in the commission of the offense.  The jury sentenced Appellant to forty years’ confinement.

Play Doll Simulation

        In his first issue, Appellant complains that the trial court erred by allowing the State to use a play doll to demonstrate the offense because its probative value was substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.  Appellant complains that it was error for the trial court to allow the use of the doll for demonstration purposes during the State’s examinations of Detective Noone and Appellant and during the State’s closing argument.

        An appellate court reviews a trial court’s decision on whether to admit or exclude evidence under an abuse of discretion standard of review.  Green v. State, 934 S.W.2d 92, 101-02 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996), cert. denied, 520 U.S. 1200 (1997); Montgomery v. State, 810 S.W.2d 372, 391 (Tex. Crim. App. 1990)   A trial court’s determination on admissibility of evidence will not be disturbed unless there is a clear abuse of discretion. Werner v. State, 711 S.W.2d 639, 643 (Tex. Crim. App. 1986).  The trial court’s ruling will be upheld as long as it is within the “zone of reasonable disagreement.”  Montgomery, 810 S.W.2d at 391.

        

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