Cory Shane Harris v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 26, 2009
Docket03-08-00313-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Cory Shane Harris v. State (Cory Shane Harris 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
Cory Shane Harris v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-08-00313-CR

Cory Shane Harris, Appellant



v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 331ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. D-1-DC-08-900015, HONORABLE BOB PERKINS, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



A jury found appellant Cory Shane Harris guilty of sexual assault, see Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.011 (West Supp. 2008), and assessed punishment at seven years' imprisonment. Harris had previously rejected a plea bargain offer of five years' probation. On appeal, Harris argues that his decision to reject that offer and proceed to trial was involuntary because the trial court and trial counsel provided erroneous advice regarding his parole eligibility and because trial counsel gave him erroneous advice about the admissibility of extraneous-offense evidence. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.



BACKGROUND

The Events of November 21-22, 2007

On the evening of November 21, 2007, Harris and C.B. went out together to several bars in Austin, Texas. Both Harris and C.B. drank alcoholic beverages throughout the evening. Early in the morning on November 22, C.B. drove them back to the duplex where Harris was staying. They went inside to watch a movie together. During the movie, they began making out. Harris and C.B. got undressed, Harris put on a condom, and the two began having sexual intercourse.

It is uncontested that the intercourse started out as consensual. However, C.B. testified that, after about five or ten minutes, Harris took his condom off. At that point, according to C.B., she told Harris that she did not want to continue having sex:



The State: So when you saw him taking the condom off, what did you do? Did you say anything?



C.B.: I told him I didn't want to anymore.



The State: And did you tell him--how did he respond to that?



C.B.: He said, I'll put it back on, I'll put it back on.



The State: And did he?



C.B.: I have no idea.



The State: Did you want to continue at that point?



C.B.: No.



The State: Did you tell him that?



C.B.: Yes.



C.B. testified that she was crying and told him to stop several times but that Harris "didn't care. He just kept going." According to C.B., she was unable to make Harris stop because he was significantly larger than her. Harris turned C.B. over and held her down and continued to penetrate her. When he turned her back over and again resumed penetrating her, C.B. tried to get him to stop by telling him she needed to go to the bathroom: "When nothing else was working, I told him that I had to go to the bathroom about four times. And so the fifth time I hit him in the chest and yelled it really loud, and then he stopped." According to C.B., she went into the bathroom and locked the door and "tried to think of the best way to get out of there." When C.B. came out of the bathroom, she put her clothes on and told Harris that she had to leave. Harris became angry with her, picked her up and moved her to the living room. He then picked up C.B.'s shoes, picked her up again, put her outside the apartment, and threw her shoes at her.

Harris contradicted C.B.'s version of events. According to Harris, the entire encounter was consensual. Harris testified that C.B. never asked him to stop, complained that he was being too rough, or otherwise indicated that she did not wish to continue having sex with him. Harris acknowledged that his condom broke while they were having sexual intercourse. He stated that, when C.B. brought this to his attention, he took off the broken condom and put on a new one, and they continued to have intercourse. At some point, C.B. told Harris that she had to go to the bathroom, and then repeated it again within a few seconds. Harris then rolled over, and C.B. got up and went to the bathroom. According to Harris, there was no indication that C.B. was upset until she returned from the bathroom. Harris stated that C.B. began gathering her clothes and getting dressed, and he asked her what was wrong, but "[s]he said absolutely nothing. She just acted very shy." Harris became frustrated with C.B. because she wouldn't respond to his questions: "And I was like, you know, well, if you are going to act weird and, you know, you are making me feel uncomfortable, you can just get your shit and go, basically. Like I said, she still didn't respond." Harris then picked C.B. up by the waist and carried her into the living room. He asked her again why she was acting upset and when she did not respond, "I picked her up again and I opened the door and I basically sat her outside the door. And I said, you know, something derogatory like, you can just get the fuck out, you bitch, or something like that. I closed the door and locked it, not thinking that she was leaving or anything." Harris stated that he regretted kicking her out, but that he did so because she was not responding to his questions and he "was just looking for any kind of response."

After C.B. left Harris's place, she called her ex-girlfriend, Megan McGuffee. McGuffee testified that when C.B. called she was crying and sounded "very distraught." At first, McGuffee had a hard time understanding C.B.:



I would say we were on the phone for approximately ten minutes before she had calmed down enough and got enough of a deep breath to start--to actually speak. And then she said she had been raped and then she started crying again, and I had to get her calmed down again.



C.B. then went to where McGuffee was working. When C.B. arrived, "[s]he was very upset. She seemed really scared. She was shaking." McGuffee and her supervisor attempted to calm C.B. and then called the police.

Two officers from the Austin Police Department arrived at McGuffee's office and interviewed C.B. The officers testified that C.B. appeared upset and was crying. Officer Becky Briegel testified that C.B. was reluctant to talk to them at first, so Briegel "just kept talking to her, making small talk with her trying to get her to open up to me to tell me what had happened." After C.B. told them about the events of the evening, they took C.B. to St. David's hospital to be examined by a Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner ("SANE nurse"). According to the SANE nurse, C.B. had injuries that are indicative of non-consensual sex. The SANE nurse testified that sexual assault victims often have no visible injuries and that "when you do see injury, it is a significant finding."

That night and over the next couple of days, Harris sent several derogatory messages to C.B.--via text message, voicemail, and the website MySpace. In one message, Harris told C.B., "Wat [sic] a slut ... I'm calling you [sic] family tomorrow .. You are nasty .. I'm telling everyone if you don't call me." (Ellipses in original.) Harris testified that the messages were another effort to get C.B. to tell him why she was upset with him.



The Plea Offers

Harris was charged with sexually assaulting C.B.

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