Deon Anthony Quinn v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 7, 2007
Docket03-05-00753-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Deon Anthony Quinn v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-05-00753-CR

Deon Anthony Quinn, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 147TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. D-1-DC-05-301431, HONORABLE WILFORD FLOWERS, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted appellant Deon Anthony Quinn of the offenses of indecency with

a child by contact and indecency with a child by exposure. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 21.11 (West

2003). The jury assessed punishment at 99 years’ confinement for indecency with a child by contact

and 20 years’ confinement for indecency with a child by exposure. In three issues on appeal, Quinn

contests the factual sufficiency of the evidence and asserts that the district court abused its discretion

in denying his motion for new trial. We will affirm.

BACKGROUND

The jury heard evidence that, beginning in January 2005, Quinn sexually abused K.Q.,

his 13-year-old daughter, on more than one occasion. K.Q. testified about one incident of abuse in particular, occurring in early May 2005, in which Quinn touched her breasts, pulled his pants

down and exposed his genitals to her, and forced her to watch a pornographic movie with him.

K.Q. further testified that, approximately one or two weeks after that incident, Quinn went out

for the evening and left a note for K.Q. The note, which was admitted into evidence for the

jury’s consideration, contained the following:1

[K.Q.],

Don’t do like last weekend and go to sleep with [A.Q.] . . . I Know you woke up when I came in there so lets not go through that again . . . We can do it your way or my way!!!

You can play on the computer while im gone chat or what ever [A.Q.] to . . . Later on tonight I want you to make my Bed please and fold the clothes ok . . .

also I want you to fall asleep in MY Bed!!! get you a VCR tape movie watch it in my Room and fall asleep while I go win you some money Im giving you this $20 for now so yall can order Pizza or something or just eat something here . . . Don’t try anything slick or I will come in there and wake you and [A.Q.] both up you understand . . .

Love you!!!

K.Q. testified that she was scared after reading the note and decided to talk about it with her 16-year-

old sister, A.Q.

A.Q. also testified. A.Q. explained that when K.Q. told her about the note, she was

angry and decided to leave Quinn’s apartment, together with K.Q., and go to a neighbor’s house.

1 With the exception of abbreviating the names of the children, we have reprinted the note exactly as it appears in the record.

2 Once there, the girls called Quinn’s girlfriend, Tracy “Pinkie” Arnot, a woman whom the girls

trusted and sometimes lived with, to tell her about what happened.2 Arnot called the police.

The jury next heard from Officer William Dupree, who investigated the complaint.

Dupree testified that he searched Quinn’s apartment, found pornographic videos that corroborated

portions of K.Q.’s statement to the police, and arrested Quinn.

The State’s final witness was psychologist William Carter, who testified as an expert

regarding child sexual abuse. Carter explained to the jury the dynamics involved in situations in

which the perpetrator of the abuse is a family member and how Carter typically evaluated whether

an accusation of abuse is true or false. Carter’s testimony was limited to “hypothetical” situations,

and he made no direct reference to the circumstances and allegations in this particular case.

The defense presented no evidence.

The jury convicted Quinn of one count of indecency with a child by

contact and one count of indecency with a child by exposure. After hearing evidence during

sentencing, including evidence of Quinn’s prior felony convictions, the jury assessed punishment

at 99 years’ confinement for indecency with a child by contact and 20 years’ confinement for

indecency with a child by exposure.

2 The record reflects that A.Q. told both Arnot and the police that Quinn had, in the past, also abused her, which was why A.Q. was angry about what happened to her sister. However, this evidence was not heard by the jury and Quinn’s alleged abuse of A.Q. did not become an issue until the hearing on the motion for new trial.

3 Approximately one month later, Quinn filed a motion for new trial alleging the

discovery of new evidence—K.Q. and A.Q. were recanting their trial testimony. The hearing on the

motion for new trial, which lasted longer than the actual trial and involved more witnesses, was

presided over by the same judge who presided over the trial.

Before testimony began in the new trial hearing, the State offered into evidence

recordings of several phone calls made by Quinn from jail. At various points during the hearing, the

court listened to the following:

• A conversation on May 28, 2005 between Quinn and his mother, Sheila Lucky, in which Lucky complained that Arnot should have come to Lucky before reporting the incident to the police.

• A conversation on May 29 between Quinn and Arnot in which Quinn admits that he knows “where [he] went wrong” and “what [he] did wrong” and explains that Arnot should say that she went to the police because she was angry that Quinn had cheated on her.

• A conversation on May 30 between Quinn and Arnot in which Quinn explains why he treated the girls the way he did and Arnot states that she told the girls about “forgiveness.”

• A conversation on June 7 between Quinn and Arnot in which Arnot reports that she told the girls that “they do not have to say anything” and that there was a likelihood that their father “will never get out [of prison] again” if they testified.

• A conversation on June 8 between Quinn and Arnot in which Arnot insists that the girls will not testify and will recant their accusation.

• A conversation on June 14 between Quinn and Arnot in which Arnot devises a plan to explain the note Quinn left for K.Q. as referring to a surprise visit by the girls’ mother.

• A conversation on October 24, after Quinn’s conviction, between Quinn and his mother in which Quinn states that Arnot and the girls are the ones who got him into trouble and that they are the ones who can get him out of trouble.

4 The first witness to testify on Quinn’s behalf at the hearing was Sheila Lucky,

Quinn’s mother and K.Q. and A.Q.’s grandmother. The girls had lived with Lucky after Quinn was

arrested. Lucky testified that shortly after Quinn was sentenced, K.Q. and A.Q. told Lucky that

“they had no idea that’s what the sentence would be” and that they were very upset about it.

Lucky further testified that the girls then told her that they had lied. Lucky denied doing or

saying anything to encourage the girls to change or recant their testimony.

The district court next heard testimony from A.Q. and K.Q. A.Q. testified that

she lied to the police about Quinn’s abuse because she was mad at her father for dating another

woman, someone by the name of “Laura.” A.Q. explained that she liked living with Arnot and

that she was afraid that if Quinn continued seeing Laura, she would not be able to live with

Arnot anymore. A.Q. claimed that she got the idea to lie about the abuse from a movie or a

television show, possibly an episode of “CSI.” A.Q. denied that anyone told her to recant or

change her testimony. On cross-examination, A.Q. testified that she loved her father and did

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