Christopher M. Wong v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 27, 2020
Docket03-19-00211-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Christopher M. Wong v. State (Christopher M. Wong 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
Christopher M. Wong v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-19-00211-CR

Christopher M. Wong, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE 167TH DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY NO. D-1-DC-15-302712, THE HONORABLE P. DAVID WAHLBERG, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Christopher M. Wong was charged with two counts of aggravated sexual assault

of a child. See Tex. Penal Code § 22.021.1 The jury found Wong guilty of the second count, and

Wong was sentenced to fifteen years’ imprisonment. See id. § 12.32. In two issues on appeal,

Wong challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction and argues that the

district court erred by admitting testimony from an outcry witness. We will affirm the district

court’s judgment of conviction.

BACKGROUND

Wong was charged with alternative counts of aggravated sexual assault of a child

allegedly occurring on the same day. See Tex. Penal Code § 22.021. The first count alleged that

1 The indictment also alleged two counts of indecency with a child by contact and two counts of indecency with a child by exposure. See Tex. Penal Code § 21.11. However, the State abandoned those counts before voir dire. Wong penetrated Child’s female sexual organ with his sexual organ, and the second count

alleged that Wong contacted Child’s female sexual organ with his sexual organ. At the time of

the alleged misconduct, Wong was 24 years old, and Child was eleven years old. The following

summary comes from the testimony and other evidence presented at trial.

In the months leading up to the night in question, Child was living with her

mother, her adult sister, and her infant brother. Child’s cousin would sometimes spend the night

with the family after finishing work. On those occasions, Cousin would either sleep downstairs

on the couch or sleep in Child’s room. Prior to the night in question, Mother had been working

at a laundromat where she met Wong. Mother allowed Wong, then homeless, to stay inside the

laundromat while she worked. When her children came to her work one day, Mother introduced

her children to Wong. After the two met, Wong and Sister began dating, and Wong would

regularly spend the night at the family’s home.

On the night in question, Mother and Sister wanted to go out to eat, but Child

wanted to stay home and finish playing a video game with Wong in her bedroom. Mother agreed

to allow Child to stay with Wong while the rest of the family went out to eat. After Mother,

Sister, and Brother left, Cousin arrived at the home after finishing her work shift. When she

arrived, Cousin did not think anyone was home because no one was downstairs, and she headed

upstairs toward the bedrooms and heard a female’s voice. After hearing that, Cousin peaked into

Child’s bedroom, realized that Child was the person whose voice she heard, saw Wong’s naked

butt moving up and down while he was on top of Child, and saw one of Child’s legs wrapped

around Wong’s leg. At trial, Cousin testified that it appeared as though Wong was having sex

with Child.

2 After seeing Wong and Child in the bedroom, Cousin repeatedly called Mother

and Sister on their cell phones and told them to come home. When Mother and Sister returned

home, Cousin told Mother what she saw. Upon hearing this, Mother became upset, did not want

to believe that it happened, and asked Child and Wong what happened. Both Child and Wong

denied that anything happened, and Mother told Wong to leave the house. After Wong left,

Mother took Child to the hospital. Mother testified that she told the treating medical personnel

that she was worried that Child had been assaulted, but Child testified that she did not tell the

hospital personnel what happened. At trial, Child related that a doctor examined her vagina and

said that everything was fine, and Mother explained that the hospital personnel stated that

Child’s vagina was irritated but that nothing had been forced inside her vagina.

Later the next day, Mother asked Child again if something happened, and Child

stated that Wong kissed her on her neck, that he “forced his thing in” her, that she “tried to tell

him to stop,” that he “wouldn’t stop,” and that he told her that he would hurt Mother and her if

Child told anyone. After Child told Mother what happened, Mother called the police. When the

police arrived, they questioned Child and then transported her and Mother to the hospital so that

a sexual-assault-forensic exam could be performed.

During the exam, Child informed the sexual-assault-nurse examiner that Wong

“put his thing inside of me, and it hurt. While he was inside me, he tried to kiss my lips and my

neck.” Further, Child pointed to her genitals when asked to clarify what she meant by Wong’s

“thing” and told the nurse examiner that it felt like she “popped [her] cherry.” In addition, the

nurse examiner found that there was a transection or laceration to Child’s hymen and explained

that although she could not state what caused the transection, the injury was consistent with

Child’s description of what occurred the previous night. The nurse examiner did not see any

3 trauma to Child’s vagina, perineum, or anus. When discussing Child’s first visit to the hospital,

the nurse examiner testified that the records indicated that Child did not make an outcry of sexual

abuse and instead complained about itchiness on her vagina. Additionally, the nurse examiner

obtained swabs from Child’s neck and other body parts. Testing performed on the swab from

Child’s neck revealed the presence of male DNA, showed the presence of a mixture of DNA

from three people, did not exclude Wong as a potential contributor, and established that it was

“135 trillion times more likely that the DNA came from [Child], . . . Wong, and one unknown

individual than if the DNA came from [Child] and two unrelated unknown individuals.”

When the exam was over, Mother and Child went home, and Mother called Wong

on the phone and placed the call on speakerphone so that Child could hear and participate in the

conversation. During the phone call, Wong repeatedly said that he was sorry and “didn’t mean

to do it.”

At trial, Child testified that Wong touched her leg on the night in question after

Mother and Sister left the house, that her clothes were removed, that he got on top of her, that his

penis touched her vagina, and that he was moving while he was on top of her. Further, although

Child explained that she was not paying attention when asked if Wong’s penis went inside her

vagina, Child testified that Wong’s actions were physically hurting her vagina, that she had never

experienced anything like that before, that “the sex” is what caused her to feel pain, that sex

involves body parts from a man and a woman, and that what happened was rape.

In his case in chief, Wong called Dr. Carrie Edwards to the stand. Dr. Edwards

testified that the sexual-assault-exam records showed that there was a complete transection of

Child’s hymen likely caused by blunt force trauma. However, she also stated that she would

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