Courtney Marie Cheek v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 30, 2003
Docket08-02-00453-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Courtney Marie Cheek v. State (Courtney Marie Cheek 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
Courtney Marie Cheek v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS

COURTNEY MARIE CHEEK,

                            Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS,

                            Appellee.

'

No. 08-02-00453-CR

Appeal from the

385th District Court

of Midland County, Texas

(TC#CR27429)

O P I N I O N

A jury convicted Courtney Marie Cheek of knowingly or intentionally causing bodily injury to her fourteen-month-old daughter, Alixandra.  The court sentenced her to ten years in prison, suspended for ten years.  On appeal, Cheek raises three points of error concerning a videotaped interview of her other daughter, three-year-old Britiny.  Finding no error, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background


At trial, Cheek claimed that her boyfriend, David Prater, was responsible for Alixandra=s injuries.  She testified that when she woke up on October 27, 2001, she found that Alixandra had gotten into her makeup and had covered herself in lipstick Afrom head to toe.@  Cheek decided to walk to a neighbor=s house to ask if the neighbor could babysit that night.  She left Alixandra and Britiny with Prater, who said that he would wipe the lipstick off of Alixandra.  After Cheek left, the only people in the house were Prater, Alixandra, and Britiny.  Cheek testified that when she returned, she noticed that the lipstick had been wiped off, but that Alixandra=s Acheeks were reddened [a]nd she looked like she had been squeezed.@  Cheek asked Prater what had happened, and he said that Alixandra would not hold still while he was trying to clean her face.  He squeezed Cheek=s face really hard to demonstrate what he had done to Alixandra.  Prater left the house about five or ten minutes later.

After the red marks on Alixandra=s face began to turn to bruises, Cheek called the sheriff=s office.  Some deputies arrived and escorted Cheek and Alixandra to a hospital.   At the hospital, Cheek met Sergeant Terry Cowin of the Midland County Sheriff=s Office.   She told him that Prater caused Alixandra=s injuries.  Two days later, she gave Cowin a written statement in which she again claimed that Prater caused the injuries.


In December, Cheek gave Cowin an oral statement, admitting that she caused Alixandra=s injuries.  In January, she gave Cowin a written statement in which she admitted that after Prater left the house, she Alost [her] cool@ with Alixandra while cleaning the lipstick off of her face.  She stated that she held Alixandra=s face too hard and knocked her down to the floor.  Cheek testified at trial that her December and January statements were not true.  She claimed that Cowin promised her that if she confessed she would only be charged with a misdemeanor, she would not have to spend any time in jail, and she would be able to keep her children.  Cowin denied making any promises or threats to obtain Cheek=s confession.

Prater admitted that he watched the children while Cheek went to the neighbor=s house.  But he testified that he did not wipe the lipstick off of Alixandra=s face, he did not cause her injuries, and she was not injured when he left the house.

On October 29, 2001, the same day that Cheek made her written statement blaming Prater for Alixandra=s injuries and two days after those injuries occurred, Cowin took Cheek and Britiny to the Children=s Advocacy Center.  A forensic interviewer employed by the Center conducted a videotaped interview with Britiny.  In the interview, Britiny indicated that Prater caused Alixandra=s injuries.  Cowin did not mention the videotaped interview in his reports.  At trial, he claimed that he Aflat forgot about it.@


On the Friday before trial was to begin, Cheek=s counsel learned about the videotape through discussions with her client.[1]  At the commencement of trial the following Monday morning, defense counsel asked for a continuance to allow her to procure and view the tape and to make additional trial preparations based on the tape.   The trial court delayed the voir dire until the afternoon and the commencement of testimony until the next morning.  Later in the day, defense counsel filed a written motion seeking either a dismissal or a ten-day continuance because of the State=s failure to disclose the videotape.  The court denied the motion, but recessed court at 2 p.m.

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Courtney Marie Cheek v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/courtney-marie-cheek-v-state-texapp-2003.