David Camarillo v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 2004
Docket08-02-00318-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
David Camarillo v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS

DAVID CAMARILLO,

                            Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS,

                            Appellee.

'

No. 08-02-00318-CR

Appeal from the

383rd District Court

of El Paso County, Texas

(TC#20000D05463)

MEMORANDUM OPINION

David Camarillo was convicted of indecency with a child following a jury trial.  He raises eight issues on appeal.  We affirm.

Facts


In April of 2000, the complainant, V.S., alleged that Camarillo had forced her to touch his penis seven years earlier, when she was in the second grade.  Camarillo is V.S.=s uncle through marriage to her mother=s sister.  V.S. said she was at Camarillo=s apartment when he came out of the shower wearing only a towel, picked her up and placed her on a clothes hamper in his walk-in closet, and forced her to touch his penis.  She said after about five minutes, Camarillo=s wife, Dianne, came in, questioned Camarillo, they argued, and then Dianne left the room.  Both V.S. and her mother testified that as a result of the incident, V.S.=s grades dropped and she failed the second grade.  However, school records indicate V.S. never failed any grade, and she made B=s in second grade.  She did spend two years in kindergarten, but her class evaluations were satisfactory.  V.S. made her outcry to a therapist, who did not testify at trial.


V.S. also alleged that when she was 12 years old, she was sleeping at Camarillo=s home when she awoke to the sound of the clicking of a camera.  She said her underwear was pulled down, and Camarillo was touching her buttocks.  She said she then saw him looking at photos, and while she never saw the photos, she was sure they were of her.  Camarillo was not charged in connection with this second alleged incident.  In addition, V.S. said that when she was 12, she spent the night with Camarillo=s niece, Marie Camarillo, and that appellant inappropriately touched Marie=s Achest@ during the night.  Marie, who was 20 at the time of trial, testified the incident never occurred, Camarillo never acted inappropriately with her, and that she trusts him with her own child.  Camarillo=s wife also testified and denied that she ever saw her husband act inappropriately with V.S.  Camarillo testified that he did not commit the alleged act.  Three character witnesses testified that Camarillo was good with children and a law-abiding man.  Four character witnesses testified that V.S. is an untruthful person.  Two of the witnesses testified V.S. has a reputation for being untruthful.  Camarillo also presented evidence that at the time of the alleged incident, he had undergone surgery for carpal-tunnel syndrome in his arm, and that he could not lift anything heavier than ten pounds.

In the course of the trial, Camarillo=s counsel objected four times that the prosecutor was improperly commenting on the veracity of the State=s witnesses.  During opening statements, the prosecutor attempted to assert that a police officer would testify that he believed V.S. was telling the truth when she made her outcry.  The court sustained Camarillo=s timely objection, and denied a mistrial.  The State then attempted to imply that the detective in charge of the case only made arrests when a complainant was truthful.  Again, an objection was sustained, and mistrial denied.  During the State=s closing argument, Camarillo=s counsel objected eleven times; the court sustained eight, gave six instructions to the jury to disregard, and denied three motions for mistrial.  One of those objections came when the prosecutor pointed to the consistency of V.S.=s statements:

I mean, she told a story to her therapist.  And from there she told the police.  From the police, she=s told me and she=s told you.  And every time, it=s all been consistent. 

The judge sustained the objection and instructed the jury to disregard.  Two more objections quickly followed:

Prosecutor:  You had heard Detective Bolick testify that she told him the story.  She told him what had happened.  If--and that he--and that he put it in that report.  If there had been--

Defense counsel:  Object as to arguing outside the record, Judge.


The Court:  Sustained.

Prosecutor:  He told--she told him what had happened.  If there hadn=t been an indecency, don

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