Daizjion Deveil Demerson v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 16, 2019
Docket07-18-00020-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Daizjion Deveil Demerson v. State (Daizjion Deveil Demerson 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
Daizjion Deveil Demerson v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo ________________________

No. 07-18-00020-CR ________________________

DAIZJION DEVEIL DEMERSON, APPELLANT

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, APPELLEE

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court Number 3 Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 1445293D; Honorable Robb Catalano, Presiding

April 16, 2019

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before QUINN, CJ., and CAMPBELL and PIRTLE, JJ.

Appellant, Daizjion Deveil Demerson, was convicted following a jury trial of the

offense of aggravated sexual assault with a deadly weapon, a knife,1 and assessed a

1 See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 22.021(a)(1)(A)(i-ii), (a)(2)(A)(iv), (e) (West Supp. 2018) (a felony of the first degree). sentence of thirty-three years confinement. In a single issue, Appellant asserts the

State’s evidence was insufficient to prove that he committed the crime.2 We affirm.

BACKGROUND

In April 2016, a two-count indictment was filed alleging that on or about November

4, 2014, Appellant intentionally and knowingly caused the penetration of the (1) mouth

and (2) sexual organ of E.N.3 with Appellant’s sexual organ without her consent, by

compelling her to submit or participate by threatening to use force or violence against her,

and she believed Appellant had the present ability to execute the threat. The indictment

also contained a deadly-weapon notice alleging that Appellant used or exhibited a deadly

weapon, a knife, in the course of the same criminal episode. In November 2017, a jury

trial was held.

The State’s evidence at trial established that during the night of November 4, 2014,

E.N. was awakened by an intruder wearing a bandana to cover his lower face. The

intruder was on top of her and brandishing a large, chopping knife. He told her that if she

screamed, he would cut her throat and then forced her to have intercourse. He then

moved E.N. to her bedroom where he put the knife to her throat and forced her to perform

oral sex. Afterwards, he told her that he wanted her phone, laptop, game console, and

2 Originally appealed to the Second Court of Appeals, this appeal was transferred to this court by the Texas Supreme Court pursuant to its docket equalization efforts. TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 73.001 (West 2013). Should a conflict exist between the precedent of the Second Court of Appeals and this court on any relevant issue, this appeal will be decided in accordance with the precedent of the transferor court. TEX. R. APP. P. 41.3.

3 To protect the privacy of the victim, we refer to her by her initials.

2 two hundred dollars. She told him that she could obtain the money if he allowed her to

go to an ATM.

In route to the ATM, she discovered she had left her wallet at her apartment and

so informed the intruder. When they arrived at her apartment to retrieve her wallet, she

attempted to slam the front door of her apartment on the intruder. Nevertheless, he was

able to push the door open and reacted by repeatedly hitting her in the face and then

stabbing her. She began screaming and he bolted out the door.

Her neighbor, an off-duty police officer, came to her aid and radioed for backup.

She subsequently described her assailant as an African-American male having “milk

coffee-colored skin” with dark brown eyes that were wide-set. She also told the officers

that he was approximately five feet six inches to six feet tall, was wearing black, and

appeared thin. At the hospital, swabs for later DNA testing were taken from her mouth,

vulva, and face.

In November 2014, the swabs were sent to a Fort Worth crime lab for preliminary

testing and then to the University of North Texas Health Science Center for Human

Identification for final DNA testing. In December 2014, the final DNA results were entered

into the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS), a statewide/nationwide database that

stores unknown DNA profiles from crime scenes. In December 2015, when Appellant’s

DNA profile was added to the CODIS database, he was identified as the person whose

DNA profile was entered more than a year earlier in connection with E.N.’s assault.4 After

Appellant’s DNA was matched in CODIS, law enforcement officers obtained DNA

4 CODIS searches the entire database for DNA matches on a weekly basis.

3 evidence from Appellant based on the CODIS match and information indicating Appellant

was in the Fort Worth area when the aggravated sexual assault occurred. In addition, to

being in the Fort Worth area in 2014, he was also a named suspect in six separate

burglaries that occurred October 1, 14, 17, 26, November 4, and then in December 2014.5

After obtaining Appellant’s DNA sample from law enforcement in January 2016,

the laboratory at the University of North Texas Health Science Center for Human

Identification compared Appellant’s DNA to the perpetrator’s DNA recovered from E.N.

Comparing E.N.’s oral swab to Appellant’s oral swab, the State’s expert determined that

Appellant’s DNA on the oral swab had an estimated frequency of occurrence of

approximately one in sixty-eight million African-American individuals with the last census

data for the United States indicating there were forty-five million African-Americans in the

United States including women (making up roughly fifty percent of that number).

When E.N.’s vulva swab was compared to Appellant’s DNA, the laboratory

obtained a positive Y-STR profile, e.g., Appellant or any of his patrilineal relatives could

not be excluded as a contributor of the Y chromosome DNA from E.N.’s vulva swab. The

same result was reached when her chin swab was compared to Appellant’s DNA. Based

on these test results and their comparisons, the State’s expert testified with a reasonable

degree of scientific certainty that Appellant was the perpetrator.

5 During direct examination, Appellant admitted to committing three burglaries in the Fort Worth area during October 2014. He also testified that he was familiar with the particular area of Fort Worth where the aggravated sexual assault was committed because he had several girlfriends that lived in the area in addition to two cousins and the mother of his child. Moreover, he agreed on cross-examination that the skin-tone description given by E.N. to law enforcement officers matched his own and he was skinny at the time.

4 In his defense, Appellant testified that he did not commit the aggravated sexual

assault because he was attending a party when the assault occurred. Appellant’s DNA

expert testified that unless you have a full profile, single donor with an estimated

frequency of a figure in the billions or trillions, you cannot say without a doubt or within a

reasonable degree of scientific certainty that Appellant was the assailant and that no one

else could have committed the assault.

Thereafter, the jury rendered its verdict of guilty on both counts in the indictment

as well as the deadly-weapon finding. On appeal, Appellant challenges whether the State

presented sufficient evidence at trial to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Appellant

was the person who committed the aggravated sexual assault against E.N. See

Roberson v. State, 16 S.W.3d 156, 167 (Tex. App.—Austin 2000, pet. ref’d) (citing Rice

v. State, 801 S.W.2d 16, 17 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 1990, pet. ref’d)) (state has the

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