Desmond Rushad Darnes v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 22, 2025
Docket07-24-00116-CR
StatusPublished

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Desmond Rushad Darnes v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo

No. 07-24-00116-CR

DESMOND RUSHAD DARNES, APPELLANT

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, APPELLEE

On Appeal from the 47th District Court Potter County, Texas Trial Court No. 084547-A-CR, Honorable Dee Johnson, Presiding

July 22, 2025 MEMORANDUM OPINION Before QUINN, C.J., and DOSS and YARBROUGH, JJ.

Appellant Desmond Rushad Darnes appeals his conviction for continuous sexual

abuse of a child1 under fourteen years and his resulting life sentence. In two issues, he

challenges the sufficiency of the evidence and the admission of allegedly prejudicial

testimony. We overrule both issues and affirm.

1 TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 21.02. BACKGROUND

In November 2013, eleven-year-old B.D. told her teaching assistant and teacher

that her father, Darnes, had sexually abused her. She said, “she was being forced to

have sex at home.” The teacher testified that B.D. reported the abuse began about one

year earlier and occurred most recently “just a few days ago.” School personnel reported

this to Child Protective Services, which notified Sergeant Kevin Anderson of the Amarillo

Police Department.

B.D. underwent a forensic interview and sexual assault examination at the Bridge

children’s advocacy center. CPS investigator Mandy Griffin secured Appellant’s

agreement to leave the family home pending an investigation.

During her Bridge interview, B.D. did not disclose sexual abuse. She told Bridge

officials her conversation with the teacher had been “just to say—I think it was bye at the

end of the day.”

Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Becky O’Neal examined B.D. at an area hospital.

Her medical-forensic exam record, which was admitted into evidence at trial without

objection, documented a statement B.D. made to her:

Patient states, “My Dad Desmond, he made me have sex with him. He puts his thingy, (points to front genitalia) in my thingy, my private (points to female sexual organ). He puts his thingy in my butt too. It hurts when he does it and it bled one time. It[‘]s at night, he tells me to go to bed but he takes me to his room while my mom is gone. He told me not to ever tell or he’d have mom send me away. It started when I was about 10 and he’s done it two times since school started this year.”

2 O’Neal also noted a healed tear to B.D.’s hymen, which she explained could only have

been caused by some sort of penetration.

Sergeant Anderson interviewed Appellant, who denied the allegations but made

statements Anderson considered significant. Appellant said that if he shot himself in the

head, he would never touch her again; if he moved away and the girls were kept from

him, they would be safe; and if there were supervised visitation for life, the girls would

have protection from him. Anderson explained that while most suspects deny

wrongdoing, Appellant’s statements were unusual. Appellant also said he did not have

time to offend because he was always playing video games.

CPS concluded its investigation with a disposition of “reason to believe” that

Appellant sexually abused B.D. Criminal charges were delayed, however, likely due to

B.D.’s denial during her Bridge interview and an ongoing desire not to discuss abuse.2

Appellant was indicted in September 2023, two months shy of 10 years after the

allegations were initially made to law enforcement. The case proceeded to jury trial in

March 2024. At trial, B.D., now twenty-one, provided extensive testimony describing an

escalating pattern of sexual abuse. B.D. testified that her family3 lived in three locations:

a house on Forest Street for two years (when she was in third and fourth grades), an

Amarillo hotel for two years, and an Amarillo apartment.

2 Jennifer Laurich, a licensed professional counselor who saw B.D. for several months in 2015,

testified that B.D. told her that Appellant sexually abused her in 2013 and that “it had been ongoing for an extended period of time,” but that B.D. did not want to talk about or think about the past.

3 Evidence showed B.D. has two older brothers, two younger brothers, and a younger sister.

3 At the Forest Street house, Appellant would touch B.D. during family “movie night,”

putting his hand between her legs and resting it against her vagina while they sat on a

recliner. Appellant told her nobody but him was allowed to do that—that it was a “daddy-

daughter bonding moment.”

When the family moved to the hotel (when B.D. was in the fourth grade), the

contacts intensified. Appellant would take off his clothes and instruct B.D. to “grind on

him.” He rubbed B.D.’s vagina in an “aggressive,” “painful” manner. Appellant placed his

penis between her legs and would “grind from there.” At times, his penis touched her

vagina.

After moving to the apartment, B.D. testified the sexual abuse paused for about

five months, but physical abuse became more frequent and severe. Appellant had

previously punished the children with “belts, wooden spoons, metal spoons, anything in

the vicinity,” but at the apartment, Appellant’s discipline became “a lot more painful.”

When Appellant had severely punished B.D.’s brother and B.D. saw her younger sister

next in line, B.D., who was in the fifth grade at the time, offered Appellant her body instead:

“I offered to take her whooping first, and he said he didn’t want that, so I offered him me

and my coochie.” After touching B.D.’s vaginal area with a bed board, Appellant then took

B.D. into his bedroom where he penetrated her vagina with his hand and mouth. B.D.

described the experience as painful but said she did not scream for help from her brothers

“Because they were the people I was trying to save.”

4 According to B.D., such events were recurring. In her estimation, Appellant

performed oral sex on her more than five times and tried putting his finger in her vagina

more than ten times.

B.D. testified that Appellant ultimately had sexual intercourse with her. This first

occurred in the kitchen, where Appellant placed her on the stove, and later in the

bedroom. The events caused bleeding and extreme pain. She testified Appellant had

vaginal intercourse with her more than once but fewer than ten times. She also testified

that she performed oral sex on Appellant and that he attempted anal intercourse.

At trial, B.D. explained why she initially denied the abuse to CPS and during her

Bridge interview. Her family had extensive CPS interactions, and she was placed in foster

care at age two. Appellant regularly threatened to send her back to foster care, which

frightened her because she did not want to be separated from her mother. B.D. also

viewed the Bridge as “government people” and had been trained not to cooperate with

them. After B.D.’s November 2013 outcry, her mother called her a “whore” and

“prostitute,” as did her brother. B.D. testified: “I felt that I couldn’t be okay if I kept having

to relive the situation over and over again, more than I already have to. It was easier to

say I lied than to sit there and continue to tell my story to people who had deaf ears.”

ANALYSIS

Sufficiency of the Evidence

By his first issue, Appellant argues the evidence was insufficient to support his

conviction, largely claiming the witness testimony was unreliable and DNA evidence was

absent. He urges us to apply the reasonable-hypothesis analysis from Hodges v. State,

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Related

Jackson v. Virginia
443 U.S. 307 (Supreme Court, 1979)
Clayton v. State
235 S.W.3d 772 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2007)
Geesa v. State
820 S.W.2d 154 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1991)
Saldano v. State
70 S.W.3d 873 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2002)
Paulson v. State
28 S.W.3d 570 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2000)
Granados v. State
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Garcia, Aima Lorena
367 S.W.3d 683 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2012)
David Blake Turner v. State
573 S.W.3d 455 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2019)
Hodges v. State
321 S.W.2d 307 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1959)
Jenkins v. State
493 S.W.3d 583 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2016)
Queeman v. State
520 S.W.3d 616 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2017)

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