Carlos Jesus Vega v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 15, 2011
Docket14-10-00318-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Carlos Jesus Vega v. State (Carlos Jesus Vega 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
Carlos Jesus Vega v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed March 15, 2011.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-10-00318-CR

Carlos Jesus Vega, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 2nd 25th District Court

Guadalupe County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 09-1010-CR

MEMORANDUM  OPINION

A jury found appellant Carlos Jesus Vega guilty of aggravated sexual assault of a child and indecency with a child by contact.  See Tex. Pen. Code Ann. § 22.021(a); 21.11(a)(1) (Vernon 2003).  The trial court sentenced appellant to imprisonment for 30 years and 10 years, respectively, and ordered the sentences to run consecutively.  We affirm.[1]


FACTUAL BACKGROUND

I.         History of Abuse

The complainant, C.C., testified that she was approximately 10 or 12 years old and in third grade when her step-father, appellant, began touching her breasts and vagina with his hand while he masturbated.  C.C. testified that this activity occurred more than once a week in her home in Seguin, Texas.  C.C. also testified that appellant once made her pose on her hands and knees while he masturbated.  She stated that appellant told her not to tell anyone unless she wanted him to go to jail or “see [her] mom hurt.”  She testified that she did not want appellant to go to jail at that time because he was “like a father to [her],” and she “didn’t want the family to break up.” 

C.C. testified that her mother and appellant began to have relationship problems.  She testified that when her mother’s relationship with appellant was going well, her mother was happy; when it was not, her mother was depressed and angry.  C.C. testified that she wanted to help her mother stay happy.  C.C.’s mother encouraged C.C. to help her mother “get back together” with appellant, and C.C. testified that she felt like this was a lot of responsibility for someone her age.  C.C.’s mother and appellant separated, and C.C. and her mother moved out of appellant’s home.

C.C. testified that she had been a good student who didn’t get into trouble before the abuse began; after the abuse started, she “became bad,” and “nothing mattered” to her anymore.  She became angry at her mother because although C.C. had not told her mother about the abuse, she “thought [her mother] knew, but [her mother] wouldn’t do anything about it.”  She testified that if appellant had not sexually abused her, she “wouldn’t be trying to hurt [herself], or getting into trouble, or staying in school.”

Professional counselor Christina Castleberry testified that she started counseling C.C. in 2006 after she was hospitalized for threatening to jump from a building. Castleberry stated that “very often,” C.C.’s mother and appellant would accompany her during the sessions.  She testified that she did not recall C.C. making any negative statements about appellant.

II.        Charged Offenses

During C.C.’s spring break in March 2007 when she was 13 years old, C.C. testified that her mother took her to live with appellant because of C.C.’s behavior problems.  C.C. testified that her mother had nowhere else to take her except appellant’s house because (1) C.C. was not speaking with her biological father at the time; (2) C.C.’s sister was “having [her own] problems;” and (3) C.C.’s grandmother was angry with her. 

C.C. testified that she stayed with appellant for five days.  C.C. spoke with her mother on the telephone and asked to be picked up, but her mother refused because there was no electricity or running water in her mother’s home. 

On the first two days, nothing unusual happened between C.C. and appellant.  C.C. testified about what happened on the third day:

A.        He just goes into my room and tries to like talk me into stuff.

Q.        Okay.  When you say “talk you into stuff,” what — what —

A.        Like he tried to tell me that he — for me to let him have sexual —

Q.        Okay.  He — he’s asking you to have sex with him?

A.        Yes.

Q.        And what kind of things is he saying to you?

A.        Just like if — if I can let my boyfriend, then why couldn’t I let him.

Q.        Okay.  And what did you say to him?

A.        It’s not the same, and you’re just — you’re with my mom.  That’s not cool.

Q.        Uh-huh.

A.        And what I do with my boyfriend is not something I had to do with my step-dad.

C.C. testified further that appellant left for several hours, then returned to C.C.’s room.  C.C. was watching television and listening to music on her bed.  She stated: “He just starts — he just starts to touch me on my — my breast area, and then my vaginal area,” over and under her clothes for six to eight minutes.  She testified that he kissed her on her cheek and mouth.  She stated, “I can’t stop it, so I would just zone out . . . and think of things.”  Afterward, appellant left her room.  C.C. testified that she invited friends over to stay the night with her the fourth day. 

On the fifth day, she testified that appellant entered her bedroom around 2:00 a.m. or 3:00 a.m. and told her “that if [she] give[s] it to [her] boy friend, [she] should give it to [appellant].”  Appellant removed C.C.’s clothes and underwear and had sexual intercourse with her.  C.C. testified that she closed her eyes and looked away during the abuse, but that she saw appellant take a condom wrapper from the floor when he left her bedroom.  C.C. testified that she stayed awake all night and “just squatted in the corner” until her mother came to pick her up around 10:00 a.m. the next morning.  C.C. testified that she did not tell anyone because, “I didn’t want people judging me; and it was embarrassing, so I didn’t say nothing.”

III.      Outcry

C.C. testified she moved in with her biological father and step-mother about four months later because she was “being bad” and she and her mother were not getting along.  During this time, C.C.’s step-mother told C.C. that she should not be “out on the streets” at night because “men could hurt [her].”  C.C. became very quiet.  When her step-mother asked her what was wrong, C.C.

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Carlos Jesus Vega v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlos-jesus-vega-v-state-texapp-2011.