Curtis Roscoe Stafford v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 13, 2014
Docket02-13-00060-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Curtis Roscoe Stafford v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 02-13-00060-CR

CURTIS ROSCOE STAFFORD APPELLANT

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS STATE

----------

FROM THE 432ND DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY TRIAL COURT NO. 1276266D

MEMORANDUM OPINION1

A jury convicted Appellant Curtis Roscoe Stafford of aggravated sexual

assault and assessed his punishment at twenty-two years’ confinement. The trial

court sentenced him accordingly and ordered that he serve the sentence

concurrently with a prior 1985 conviction to the date of sentencing but

consecutively thereafter. Appellant brings a single issue on appeal, arguing that

1 See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. the trial court abused its discretion and reversibly erred by admitting during the

guilt phase of his trial not only evidence of the fact of the 1985 aggravated

robbery conviction but also details of the underlying facts that include evidence of

an aggravated sexual assault that did not result in conviction. We affirm.

Background

The evidence in this case is essentially a swearing match.

The Complainant’s Version

The complainant testified that she walked to a convenience store on the

January night of the alleged offense and that she asked Appellant for a ride

home. Instead of taking her home, he took her to a road that ended at an iron

gate with a horseshoe and longhorn design. He stopped the car and got out,

saying he had to “go to the bathroom.” Instead, he came around to the

passenger seat, got into the car, and grabbed her arm. The complainant testified

that Appellant ordered her to perform fellatio and pulled out a black .380 Kel-Tec

handgun. She complied with his orders. Then he ordered her to pull down her

pants and get on top of him. When she complied with that order, he penetrated

her vagina with his penis.

The complainant testified that while he assaulted her, Appellant told her

that he ought to kill her. She asked him if she could pray. After the assault, he

instructed her to clean him up and not to get anything on his clothes. He wanted

her to use her mouth, but instead, she used her underwear, pink panties. When

she finished cleaning up, she threw the panties out the car window. Appellant

2 drove her to a church and told her to get out and walk in front of the car. Instead,

when she got out of the car, she ran until she arrived at home. Her boyfriend

was waiting for her, and when he saw her, he asked her what had happened.

The complainant took a shower and went to bed, although her boyfriend

told her that she should call the police and go to the hospital. The next morning,

she went to the hospital, where medical personnel performed a rape exam. She

also spoke with the police.

Appellant’s Version

Appellant testified that at around 9:00 p.m. on a January night, he got off

work at a car lot in Arlington where he had been employed for about a year and a

half. He drove down Riverside Drive, saw a convenience store, and stopped to

get some cigarettes. When he got out of the car, the complainant smiled at him.

After buying cigarettes, he got back in his car, lit a cigarette, and took a drink of

beer. The complainant was still standing there. Appellant rolled down the

window and asked her what she was doing. She replied that she wanted to have

some fun. He asked her what kind of fun she wanted to have. She did not reply

but got into the car. Appellant started driving south on Riverside. The

complainant told him to make a right and then a left, and he followed her

directions. Appellant stopped the car, and he and the complainant talked for a

few minutes. Then, he got out of the car to use the restroom, got back in the car

on the driver’s side, and pulled a pipe out. The complainant asked him why he

was getting in on the driver’s side, and he asked her what she meant. She said,

3 “We fixing to take care of business.” He got out and got back in the car on the

passenger’s side. The complainant suggested using crack. She had her own

crack pipe, and they both smoked crack. He also offered her some beer, but she

said that she did not like beer.

Appellant testified that the complainant got completely naked, he pulled his

pants down, and they started having consensual sex. When she was pulling her

pants down, he heard something fall but did not pay any attention at that time.

While they were having sex, the complainant reached back and tried to pick it up.

That was when he saw that it was a small gun. She grabbed it as though she

was going to pull it around and point it at him. He pulled her hand back, held her

wrist with his right hand, and clutched the gun in his left hand. He threw it under

the driver’s seat and asked her what she was doing with the gun. He asked if

she was trying to rob him. The complainant replied that she was not. At that

time, they were finished having sex, and he told her to put on her clothes.

The complainant used her panties to clean up, threw the panties out the

car window, and pulled her pants on. She said that she threw her panties away

because she did not want her boyfriend to know that she had been out having

sex. Appellant paid her $20 before she left. He put it on the dashboard on the

passenger side, and she picked it up. The complainant told Appellant that she

wanted to be dropped off at a nearby church, and he took her there and left her.

Appellant testified that he made no threats to the complainant at all. He

said that he did not remember her crying at all and that she had no reason to cry.

4 He insisted that they had both agreed to have sex and to use drugs. He denied

that he had raped her. He threw the gun away in a field across from a motel at

an old wrecking yard, Aztec Wrecking Service.

Extraneous Offense

During the State’s case in chief, and prior to Appellant testifying, the State

called B.C. to testify over Appellant’s objection. The trial court gave him a

running objection. In the presence of the jury, B.C. testified that on April 3, 1985,

she was working at a convenience store as a cashier from 10:00 p.m. until 7:00

a.m. Appellant came into the store about 3:00 a.m., and after talking a bit, he

pulled a knife and said that he was going to rob her. He told B.C. to hand him

the money from the cash register, and she did. But instead of leaving, he stayed.

When a customer came in, Appellant acted like he was her boyfriend. After the

customer left, Appellant threatened to kill her with the knife. He made B.C. lie

down on the floor behind the counter and sexually assaulted her.

When another customer came in about an issue with the gas pump, B.C.

had to go outside, and Appellant went with her. At the first opportunity, B.C. ran

across the street to the closest place she could find that was open and asked

them to call the police.

This incident occurred almost twenty-eight years before the trial in the

instant case and resulted in a judgment of guilt to a charge of aggravated

robbery. Appellant was released from the penitentiary on July 9, 2009. The trial

court instructed the jury to consider the evidence of the extraneous offense for

5 “motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of

mistake or accident” only.

Analysis

In his sole issue, Appellant challenges the trial court’s admission of

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