Clarke v. State

305 S.W.3d 841, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 794, 2010 WL 374513
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 4, 2010
Docket14-06-00390-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 305 S.W.3d 841 (Clarke 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
Clarke v. State, 305 S.W.3d 841, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 794, 2010 WL 374513 (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION ON REMAND

KEM THOMPSON FROST, Justice.

Appellant asserts that the trial court abused its discretion by denying his motion for new trial based on appellant’s contention that the prosecutor violated the United States and Texas Constitutions by deliberately deceiving the trial court during the punishment phase. Appellant alleges the prosecutor allowed evidence concerning an extraneous offense to remain in the pre-sentence investigation report, even though the prosecutor allegedly knew that this evidence was false. We affirm.

I. Factual and PROCEDURAL Background

In December 2004, appellant moved to Texas from New York to live with the family of the child complainant, T.M., a fourteen-year old girl. Appellant is the nephew of T.M.’s step-father. T.M.’s mother and step-father had agreed to help appellant improve his life by allowing him an opportunity to move in with their family and work in their family business.

While living in his uncle’s home, appellant shared a bedroom with T.M.’s brother. One day, T.M. walked into her brother’s bedroom, where appellant was playing a video game. Appellant got up, closed the bedroom door, and began to wrestle with T.M. After a few moments, appellant pushed T.M. onto a mattress that was on the floor. While holding T.M. down, appellant removed their clothing, and forced T.M. to engage in sexual intercourse. When he was finished, appellant stood up, got dressed, and shrugged at T.M. T.M. *843 immediately ran to her own bedroom. Too scared to tell her mother or step-father about the incident, T.M. decided that she would handle the matter by herself. Approximately five days later, T.M. attempted to confront appellant and tell him that he could not engage in sexual intercourse with her, but he again sexually assaulted her. After the second assault, T.M. again remained silent, and tried her best to avoid appellant.

On Super Bowl Sunday of 2005, T.M. was watching television in her bedroom, while the rest of the family watched the game in the family room. Appellant walked into T.M.’s bedroom, closed the door, and locked it. Appellant laid down on the floor and told T.M. that he wanted to watch the game with her. T.M. told him, “no,” and tried to get him to leave. Appellant, who was much stronger than T.M., forced her against the wall, and again forced her to engage in sexual intercourse. When he was finished, appellant got up and left the room. T.M. closed her bedroom door and locked it.

Several days later, T.M. went looking for her brother in his bedroom. Appellant was there, and her brother left the room. Appellant closed the door, sat T.M. down on the mattress, and began to whisper to her. T.M. got up and tried to open the bedroom door to leave. T.M.’s step-father was standing outside the door, and he asked T.M. what they were whispering about. T.M. finally told her step-father about the incidents. T.M.’s step-father called T.M.’s mother, who immediately came home. Initially, T.M. had a difficult time telling her mother about the incidents. Eventually, however, T.M. recounted some of the things that appellant had been doing to her. T.M.’s mother was furious and confronted appellant. Appellant told her that the sexual intercourse was consensual. T.M. was taken to a hospital to be examined.

Appellant was arrested and charged with the felony offense of sexual assault of a child. He pleaded “guilty” without an agreed recommendation from the State. The trial court found appellant guilty of the charged offense and ordered a pre-sentence investigation (“PSI”) report. At the beginning of the sentencing hearing, the trial court asked appellant if he had reviewed the PSI report and gone over it •with his attorney. Appellant stated that he had done so. The trial court asked appellant’s counsel if he knew of any errors in the PSI report. Counsel stated that he and his client had “no problems” with the PSI report, except for the “conjecture on behalf of the victim’s mother.” Counsel was referring to the following part of the victim impact statement in the PSI report:

[The complainant’s mother] reported her niece, sister of the defendant, called her the day she took the complainant to the hospital. She reported her niece lives with her grandmother in New York, not with her mother. She stated her niece was very apologetic about her brother and stated she hated him for what he had done to the complainant. [The complainant’s mother] stated she had an intuition that perhaps the defendant’s sister had a similar experience with her brother, but was afraid to relate the experience to anyone.

The trial court accepted the PSI report as submitted and then heard testimony. The complainant testified that appellant came from Brooklyn to live with her family in 2004 to help her step-father and her mother with them business. She said that he sexually assaulted her three times: the first two incidents were in her brother’s room, and the third was in her own room. Her step-father, who had overheard appellant and the complainant whispering, asked about the whispering, and the complainant told him what had been happen *844 ing. Appellant told the parents that the sex was consensual, but they believed the complainant, who said that it was not.

The complainant’s mother testified that she let appellant live with them because she had “heard that he had gotten into some trouble.” But “it wasn’t something he did and I guess the case was dismissed. And he needed to get out of New York to have a new chance.” She was prepared to let him stay there until he could “get himself back on his feet.” She trusted him because he was family. When she found out about the assaults, she took the complainant to the emergency room and contacted the police.

The complainant’s step-father testified that, when he found out about the assaults, he literally threw appellant out of the house. Nevertheless, he thought probation would be appropriate, in part because his nephew was “still a young man beginning his life.”

Appellant’s step-father, Ricardo Buchanan, testified for appellant. He said that he learned about the assaults when appellant came back to New York. Appellant admitted that he had had sex with a minor; he never denied it. Buchanan thought that appellant could comply with probation conditions.

Appellant testified that he was back living in Brooklyn. He acknowledged that he’d “made a big mistake” by having “sex with a minor.” He apologized. He said he told the PSI report writer that his mother was initially worried about him being around his little sister because of the case, but that he still baby-sat his little sisters and brother. Appellant testified that he did not force himself on the complainant and that he had sex with the complainant twice rather than three times. Appellant stated that each time that he had sex with the complainant it was because she approached him. According to appellant, the complainant asked him to have sex with her. Appellant said that he smokes marijuana about every two days, and continued to do so following his arrest in this ease.

Defense counsel then asked for probation, and the State asked for imprisonment. The trial court then stated the following:

I’ve reviewed the presentence investigation report and all the submissions as well as heard the testimony from both the State and the defense.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
305 S.W.3d 841, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 794, 2010 WL 374513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarke-v-state-texapp-2010.