Dralon Duran Patterson v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 29, 2024
Docket05-21-01024-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Dralon Duran Patterson v. the State of Texas (Dralon Duran Patterson v. the State of Texas) 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
Dralon Duran Patterson v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

AFFIRMED as MODIFIED and Opinion Filed February 29, 2024

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-21-01024-CR

DRALON DURAN PATTERSON, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court No. 5 Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F-1975183-L

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Carlyle, Goldstein, and Kennedy Opinion by Justice Goldstein Dralon Duran Patterson appeals his aggravated sexual assault conviction. A

jury convicted appellant and sentenced him to confinement for life. In three issues,

appellant complains 1) the jury charge failed to include “mandatory legislative

language;” 2) his right to an impartial jury was violated when the prosecutors struck

every black person from the venire panel; and 3) he received ineffective assistance

of counsel.1 In a single cross-point, the State asks that the judgment be modified to

1 While appellant’s brief identifies three issues presented, the 60 pages of argument are parsed into six sections, with issue three, ineffective assistance of counsel, comprised of eleven discrete purported failures. We have endeavored to address the arguments under the appropriate issue presented. reflect that appellant is required to register as a sex offender. As modified, we affirm

the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND2

In April 2019, appellant was charged by indictment with aggravated sexual

assault. The indictment alleged that, on or about February 1, 2019, appellant

intentionally and knowingly caused the contact of the complainant’s female sexual

organ with appellant’s sexual organ without the consent of the complainant, and

appellant “did then and there by acts and words threaten to cause and place said

complainant in fear that death and serious bodily injury and kidnapping would be

imminently inflicted” on complainant.

At trial in October 2021, the complainant, testifying under the pseudonym

Alicia Holmes, stated she was twenty-nine years old at the time of trial. Holmes

lived in an apartment in Uptown Dallas. On the “day and night leading into January

31st, 2019,” Holmes worked at her office in Irving and got home around 6:30 p.m.

Holmes changed into leggings and a t-shirt, worked out at the apartment complex

gym, and went from the gym to her friend Kelly’s apartment to help take down

Kelly’s Christmas tree. Between 11:15 and 11:30 p.m., Holmes returned to her

apartment complex and pulled into the parking garage. Holmes had a clicker that

2 The facts are based on the record, exhibits admitted during the trial, and testimony and evidence adduced during the trial. While we have set forth in great detail the facts of the case, we do so solely to provide the context for the procedural challenges, analysis of egregious harm and asserted ineffective assistance of counsel. –2– opened a gate to go down to the bottom floors, which were for residents only.

Holmes “always parked on the very bottom floor” near the elevator, and she “drove

immediately down there to park.”

Holmes got out of her car and grabbed her winter coat and “a bunch of shirts

and dresses that [she] was carrying on hangers.” When she got up to the elevator,

appellant walked down “the ramp you drive down to get to that level of the garage.”

Holmes had never seen appellant before, but she “exchanged a quick small talk”

with appellant and kept walking. Holmes had almost reached the elevator when she

felt a pull on the back of her jacket and turned to find appellant pointing a gun at her.

Holmes offered appellant everything she had in her pockets and said he could take

her car. Appellant told Holmes they were going back to her car and demanded her

keys and her phone. Holmes did not feel that she could run away because appellant

had his finger on the trigger of the gun. Holmes had taken gun safety courses, and

she knew “You’re supposed to have your finger out, and it’s resting on the barrel of

the gun” to avoid an accidental misfire.

Appellant put the gun against the middle of Holmes’ back right against her

spine and told her to walk to her car. Holmes was “pretty silent” until she got

halfway to the car, and then she started asking appellant not to shoot her and asking

him “What can I do?” Appellant kept telling Holmes to “shut up.” When they

reached the car, appellant told Holmes to open the back driver’s side door, turn

around, and sit on the backseat. Holmes asked if she could put down the clothes she

–3– was carrying. Appellant said she could “and to not do anything stupid.” Holmes

put all her things in the back seat, pushed them toward the passenger side, and sat

down. Appellant told Holmes to take off her leggings. As she complied, she kept

saying “Please don’t shoot me. I’m not going to do anything stupid.” Appellant

kept telling Holmes to “shut up and stop talking.” Appellant told Holmes she was

“taking too long,” so he started to pull her leggings down. When Holmes was taking

her leggings off, appellant had the gun pointed at her face, and when he “reached

over,” appellant “had the gun at his side and he had his other hand pushing” the

leggings down. Holmes’ “only thought” was to “not panic and to humanize

[herself],” which she did by saying “We don’t need to do this. I’m not going to do

anything stupid.” Holmes kept her voice “really low so that it wouldn’t come across

as aggressive,” and appellant started lowering his voice so they were “both talking

to each other very calmly.”

After her leggings were removed, appellant told Holmes to lie down on her

back. Holmes was still wearing her underwear, and “there were a bunch of the

hangers, like, poking.” Holmes thought she “was going to die,” and appellant moved

her underwear to the side and placed his mouth on her vagina for approximately

fifteen seconds. Holmes was crying and shaking her head and said “Please don’t

shoot me. We don’t need to do this.” Appellant said, “I’m not going to hurt you,

but shut up,” and then he pulled her underwear down. Appellant penetrated Holmes’

vagina with his penis while she was on her back “[v]ery briefly” and “then it wasn’t

–4– really working.” Appellant told Holmes to turn over, and she turned and lay on her

stomach with her hips on the edge of the seat and her legs “still sitting outside the

car.” Holmes could feel her “toes on the parking garage floor.” Appellant’s penis

penetrated Holmes’ vagina from behind, and she “closed [her] eyes and just tried to

count and breathe.” Holmes testified the assault lasted between fifteen to thirty

seconds. Appellant “was having issues staying fully erect,” so “he pulled out of

[Holmes] from behind and told [her] to turn around.” Every time he told Holmes to

do something, he told her “not to do anything stupid and to be quiet.”

Holmes turned around and she could see the gun that was now in his pocket.

Holmes could also clearly see appellant’s face, and she later identified him in court.

Appellant made Holmes put her mouth on his penis, and he eventually told her to

stick out her tongue and ejaculated on her tongue. During the course of this assault,

appellant told Holmes to “get on [her] knees in front of him.” Appellant told Holmes

to “spit it out,” and she spit to her left-hand side “right in front of the tire for the

backseat.” Holmes looked up at appellant and asked if she could stand up because

the gravel of the parking garage floor was digging into her knees. Appellant said

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