Charles Henry Hawkins v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 10, 2019
Docket09-17-00450-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Charles Henry Hawkins v. State (Charles Henry Hawkins 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
Charles Henry Hawkins v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-17-00450-CR __________________

CHARLES HENRY HAWKINS, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee __________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 252nd District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. 14-19778 __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A Jefferson County grand jury indicted Charles Henry Hawkins 1 for the

offense of possession of child pornography, a third-degree felony. See Tex. Penal

Code Ann. § 43.26(a), (d) (West 2016). Following a plea of not guilty, a jury

convicted Hawkins and sentenced him to ten years of confinement in the Institutional

1 Appellant is also known as Charles Hawkins-Griffin and Charles Henry Hawkins-Griffin. 1 Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, plus a $10,000.00 fine. See

id. § 12.34 (West 2019). In one issue on appeal, Hawkins complains the evidence

was insufficient to support the jury’s verdict. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Background

On June 5, 2013, a flooring company was replacing the carpet in vacant Unit

11 of the Hyde Park West Apartments in Beaumont, Texas. One of the company’s

helpers testified that as the job concluded, he vacuumed the carpet while another

employee cleaned the work area. As he was vacuuming, the vacuum hit the closet

door frame and an SD card fell on the floor from inside of the closet. The helper

testified that after the card fell, he reached up on top of the interior door frame and

located two additional SD cards. The helper testified that he took the three SD cards

to the carpet company’s warehouse and put them in the company’s digital camera to

see if they contained any images, but none appeared. Because he thought they

contained no images, the helper placed them on a desk in the warehouse.

Two days later, the helper told the vice president of the flooring company

about the SD cards, and they decided to use an SD card reader attached to a company

computer to check them. Both employees testified that when they inserted the first

card, an adult pornographic video appeared on the screen, which they promptly

closed. They both told the jury that when they checked the second card, the first

2 image that “popped up” was of a child posed in some sort of costume, and the child

appeared to be under the age of eighteen. The employees’ testimony established that

they ejected the card and immediately contacted the police. When a Beaumont police

officer responded the same day, the employees gave the officer the cards, explained

what happened, and described what they observed. The vice president denied adding

any files to the SD cards. The employees testified that a Beaumont police detective

contacted them later to obtain witness statements.

A Beaumont police detective, who is assigned to online child exploitation

crimes and conducts visual forensic examinations, investigated the case. The

detective described his specialized training in these types of cases for the jury and

the types of child exploitation crimes he investigates. He testified that he retrieved

the three SD cards from the property room the day the department assigned him the

case. Since witnesses reported that the cards might contain child pornography, the

detective thought it prudent to first conduct a “forensic preview” and determine if

the case merited further investigation. He explained that by conducting a forensic

preview, he could see the information on the cards, including file names, dates, and

times.

3 The detective testified that he conducted the forensic preview the same day he

retrieved the cards and observed child pornography on the SD2 card. 2 Having

discovered child pornography, the detective wanted to determine where the cards

had been and who had access to them to identify a suspect. The detective explained

that during the preview of the SD2 card, the information he looked for included (1)

the file name, which can be indicative of the content, (2) the location on the SD card

and whether it is buried in several folders, (3) metadata including the created dates

and times, (4) last modified dates, and (5) last access dates. He testified that the SD2

card contained images he considered child pornography, images he considered child

erotica or child modeling, images of adult pornography, and sixteen “selfie-type

photographs” he attributed to a single individual.3

After conducting the initial preview, the detective testified that they went to

the leasing company for the apartment complex and identified occupants who lived

in Unit 11 over a three-year period in order to develop a suspect. The detective

testified, and evidence in the form of business records confirmed, that Hawkins

2 At trial, the three SD cards were referred to as SD1, SD2, and SD3. The State only admitted the images from the SD2 card, which it separated onto three different CDs for the jury to see as State’s Exhibits 4, 5, and 6. 3 The officer explained that in some of the images, the face of the individual is not visible, only body parts; however, they all appeared to be the same person. Exhibit 4 contained the child pornography, and Exhibit 5 contained the child erotica, while Exhibit 6 contained images of the suspect. 4 resided in Unit 11 from April 20, 2012 to July 31, 2012. After Hawkins moved, one

other tenant leased the unit between September 9, 2012 and May 16, 2013. When

the detective ran the driver’s license photos of those individuals and compared them

to the self-portraits on the SD2 card, Hawkins looked familiar.

The detective explained that after the preview, he conducted a “true forensic

examination” of the SD2 card, which is when he extracted the images of child

pornography, child erotica, and the “selfie-type photographs”. He said that he

assumed the dates and times of the images on the SD2 card were correct, and by

assuming such, he testified that the images of Hawkins appeared on the SD cards

before the child pornography appeared.

The detective said the relevant time period during which images were put on

the card and accessed was two years. He testified that the images contained creation

dates beginning in January 2010 and were last accessed on July 26, 2012. After July

26, 2012, the cards were not accessed again until June 5, 2013, when the flooring

company’s employees attempted to see what they contained. The detective testified

that Hawkins lived in the apartment on the date the cards were last accessed.

The detective defined possession as “a person who has care, custody, control,

or management of an item.” He explained that the material was physically possessed

during the dates and times the files were created and put onto the cards between 2010

5 and 2012. He also looked at who last had custody or control of the cards. The

detective explained that he was focused on an approximate two-year time span and

who had access to the cards during that time. He testified that the person responsible

for putting the child pornography on the card had around the clock access to it for

two years.

The detective testified that based on his experience, the dates and timestamps

are generally accurate. He indicated that the child pornography started appearing on

the SD card on January 27, 2010.

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