Dedra Lynn Crider v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 30, 2018
Docket11-16-00302-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Dedra Lynn Crider v. State (Dedra Lynn Crider 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
Dedra Lynn Crider v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Opinion filed March 30, 2018

In The

Eleventh Court of Appeals __________

No. 11-16-00302-CR __________

DEDRA LYNN CRIDER, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 35th District Court Brown County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. CR23427

MEMORANDUM OPINION The trial court found Appellant guilty of the first-degree felony offense of injury to a child1 and assessed punishment at confinement for twenty years. On appeal, Appellant presents three issues. We affirm. I. The Charged Offense The grand jury indicted Appellant for the offense of injury to a child. The grand jury alleged in its indictment that Appellant “intentionally or knowingly cause[d] serious bodily injury to [T.G.], a child of [fourteen] years of age or younger,

1 TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 22.04 (West Supp. 2017). by” shaking, throwing, or causing blunt force trauma. A person commits the offense of injury to a child if he intentionally or knowingly, by act or omission, causes serious bodily injury to a person of fourteen years of age or younger. PENAL § 22.04(a)(1), (c)(1). II. Evidence at Trial T.G., the victim in this case, is Appellant’s son. At trial, T.G. was described as “medically-fragile.” He was born in March 2014 with “DiGeorge syndrome.” He also had a congenital heart defect, which required heart surgery three days after he was born. Because of his heart surgery, T.G. did not live with his parents at their home in Brownwood until he was about three weeks old. T.G. was taken to the emergency room for breathing issues on two occasions: once on May 7, 2014, and once on August 21, 2014. A. Emergency medical and fire services respond to distress call at Appellant’s home. Upon arrival at Appellant’s home on the morning of August 21, EMS observed T.G., Appellant, and a bystander outside the home. T.G., who was four and one-half months old at the time, lay on a bench, “unresponsive” and “pale,” and his limbs were “flaccid off to the side.” EMS transported T.G. to the emergency room at Brownwood Regional Hospital. EMS personnel administered oxygen to him en route to the hospital, and as a result, his respiratory rate increased and he became more responsive. T.G. had suffered from a seizure and had stopped breathing at Appellant’s home. A CT scan revealed that T.G. had a “mixed subdural hematoma” on the left side of his brain, which T.G.’s pediatrician described as “very large.” The CT scan of T.G.’s brain also showed both “old” and “new” blood. The old blood suggested that a previous incident had caused bleeding, although doctors who testified at trial could not specify an exact date when the bleeding would have occurred. Because of

2 T.G.’s need for a higher level of care, he was airlifted by helicopter to University Hospital in San Antonio. At University Hospital, an MRI revealed that blood had accumulated in T.G.’s spinal cord, although there was nothing on the vertebra to indicate direct injury. Medical personnel did not find any fractures on T.G.’s skull or any bruises on his body, except a small bruise on his foot.2 T.G. also had no bumps, abrasions, or lacerations. An eye examination revealed that T.G. had numerous retinal hemorrhages in both eyes. During the two or three months that he was hospitalized in San Antonio, T.G. developed amblyopia3 and began losing vision in one of his eyes, but it was successfully treated. B. Police interview Appellant about T.G.’s injuries. After T.G.’s injuries were discovered, investigators from Child Protective Services, the Department of Public Safety, and Brownwood Police Department interviewed Appellant about the August 21 incident. During the interviews, Appellant admitted that she was alone with T.G. that morning and that T.G.’s father, Bryan Gleason, woke up around 6:00 a.m. and went to work. Appellant also explained to two investigators that, the night before, T.G. had woken up several times crying. Appellant explained that, on the morning of August 21, she attempted to give T.G. his medicine around 8:00 a.m., but when she tried to wake him up, T.G. would not respond. Appellant said that, when she tried to put the medicine in T.G.’s mouth, the medicine just “rolled out” or “drained out” of his mouth. Appellant explained that T.G.’s breathing was labored, that he was very stiff, and that his eyes were half- open and glazed over. Appellant said she panicked and called 9-1-1.

2 Testimony indicated that the bruise on his foot was likely caused by an IV. 3 Amblyopia is commonly referred to as “lazy eye.” 3 To one investigator, Appellant gave conflicting statements. To another investigator, she had no explanation for what had happened. To other investigators, she said that, sometime prior to the incident, she had tripped over a cat and hit T.G.’s head on a door. Investigators who went to Appellant’s home, however, saw no evidence of cats living there, but they did notice that Appellant had a dog. Appellant also said that T.G. could have been suffering from a seizure. C. The State alleged that T.G. suffered from “Abusive Head Trauma.”4 The State presented three experts at trial who opined that T.G.’s injuries were the result of “acceleration-deceleration force[s]” and “nonaccidental trauma.” All three experts considered T.G.’s preexisting medical conditions when they formed their opinions. Kathleen Buckley, the State’s expert registered nurse, testified that T.G.’s injuries were non-accidental. First, Buckley testified that, at T.G.’s age, he would not have been ambulatory enough to self inflict a subdural hemorrhage because it takes “significant force to cause bleeding in the brain of a child who is not ambulatory.” Second, Buckley testified that T.G. had no fractures and that no fractures combined with hemorrhaging in the brain in a small child raises a concern that there was a forceful “movement that caused the child’s brain to move back and forth in the skull.” Third, Buckley testified that no history was provided that explained T.G.’s hemorrhaging and that the absence of a history raises suspicions of inflicted injury. Fourth, Buckley testified that T.G. had “a lot of retinal hemorrhaging” and that, when retinal hemorrhaging is seen with brain hemorrhaging in a patient, it “really puts the concern for abuse of inflicted trauma much higher.” Dr. Scot Richard Morris, the State’s expert medical doctor and pediatrician, testified that he was “[e]xtremely confident” T.G.’s injuries were caused by

4 Such trauma is also known as “shaken baby syndrome,” “nonaccidental head trauma,” or “inflicted head trauma.” 4 acceleration and deceleration forces, specifically by “violent shaking.” Dr. Morris testified that there are three major findings of non-accidental head trauma: (1) retinal hemorrhages, (2) brain injury, and (3) subdural hemorrhages. If two of these findings are present, “it is very likely to be nonaccidental head trauma.” Dr. Morris testified that a majority of the children that he has seen in the past fifteen years, with accidental head injuries, had a bump or an abrasion or even a laceration and that none of them had subdural hemorrhages, except for two victims of shaken baby syndrome. Dr. Frank Scribbick III, the State’s expert ophthalmologist, testified he was “pretty comfortable” stating that T.G.’s injuries were caused by non-accidental trauma. Dr. Scribbick testified that retinal hemorrhages are “very highly suggestive of nonaccidental trauma.” Dr. Scribbick thought that the hemorrhaging in T.G.’s eyes was not consistent with just a simple accident because of the amount of hemorrhaging and the presence of large preretinal hemorrhages. According to Dr. Scribbick, in cases of children with accidental trauma, such as from a car accident or falling out of a tree, ninety-nine percent of the time there is no retinal hemorrhaging. III.

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Dedra Lynn Crider v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dedra-lynn-crider-v-state-texapp-2018.