Emory Leon Bitterman v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 28, 2007
Docket03-06-00386-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Emory Leon Bitterman v. State (Emory Leon Bitterman 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
Emory Leon Bitterman v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-06-00386-CR

Emory Leon Bitterman, Appellant



v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BELL COUNTY, 27TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 59101, HONORABLE JOE CARROLL, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



A Bell County jury convicted appellant Emory Leon Bitterman of sexual assault, a second-degree felony. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.011(a)(2)(C), (c)(1), (f) (West Supp. 2006). The jury sentenced him to the maximum penalty: twenty years' imprisonment with a fine of $10,000. Bitterman seeks reversal of the judgment, arguing that the trial court erred in admitting certain evidence during sentencing, and seeks modification of the judgment, arguing that the trial court did not have the power to order parole conditions. We will modify the judgment and affirm it as modified.



BACKGROUND

In late June 2005, the complainant, M.E., who was sixteen years old, enrolled at the American Preparatory Institute at Central Texas College in Killeen in order to earn extra high school credits for early graduation. His instructor at the institute was Bitterman, who took an interest in M.E. and attempted to befriend M.E. He obtained M.E.'s phone number from school records and began to call him repeatedly. Two weeks after meeting M.E., Bitterman began engaging in sexual conversations with M.E., including conversations about M.E.'s sexual orientation and whether he had ever watched "gay porn." On July 21, the two went to a local Denny's for lunch. M.E. testified that on the drive back to school, Bitterman touched his leg and asked him to masturbate in his presence, providing M.E. with a roll of paper towels already in the car, and M.E. complied. Exactly one week later, Bitterman took M.E. to his home after class. M.E. testified that Bitterman was going to show him the answers to an upcoming test. Bitterman retrieved and displayed the answers on his computer and then, M.E. testified, displayed homoerotic pornography on his computer to M.E. According to M.E., Bitterman then became aggressively "overly sexual" and proceeded to perform oral sex on M.E. three times. M.E. testified that he and Bitterman engaged in further similar encounters, resulting in Bitterman performing oral sex five more times on M.E., including one time on August 11. Around October 3, Bitterman gave M.E. a compact disc and a floppy diskette of pornography for his upcoming seventeenth birthday. M.E. testified that on this occasion Bitterman again performed oral sex on him.

After the last sexual episode, M.E. testified that he told Bitterman to leave him alone in no uncertain terms. Shortly thereafter, two of Bitterman's other students accused him of attempting to sexually assault them; he was incarcerated for two months awaiting trial. Upon release after receiving deferred adjudication, he resumed contact with M.E. over the phone. Each time, M.E. testified, he told Bitterman to leave him alone. Bitterman, however, visited the grocery store where M.E. worked in Salado in December 2005, bought a single slice of ham, and waited around for M.E. until M.E. told him to leave. M.E. later called Bitterman and, in an attempt to get Bitterman to finally leave him alone, said that he used drugs--an activity reprehensible to Bitterman--and was going to marry his girlfriend. Bitterman responded that M.E. should run off with him to Canada and marry him instead. M.E. declined.

Around December 18, 2005, M.E.'s mother began receiving phone calls from an individual claiming to be an army recruiter who informed her that M.E. was doing drugs. M.E. learned of the phone calls in January when his mother began checking his breath upon his return home from work. Suspecting that the army recruiter was really Bitterman, M.E. contacted Bitterman by phone and again asked to be left alone. Bitterman denied being the army recruiter but expressed concern for M.E. and informed him that a letter had been sent to his house.

On January 6, 2006, M.E.'s mother found a Christmas card in the mail addressed to M.E. containing a handwritten letter signed by Bitterman. The contents of the letter were of such a nature that she became worried that M.E. had been sexually assaulted. She first contacted the cell phone number listed on the handwritten letter and spoke to Bitterman. At trial, she testified that Bitterman's voice sounded exactly the same as the supposed army recruiter. She then contacted local law enforcement, who interviewed M.E. M.E. was initially very reluctant to mention anything regarding his relationship with Bitterman, but after meeting privately with a police officer, finally related to the officer the details of the August 11 encounter and signed a conforming written statement. Bitterman was then indicted.

Bitterman testified at trial and his story corroborated M.E.'s testimony concerning the dates of the meetings and the non-sexual activities that occurred during those meetings. Bitterman denied both calling M.E.'s house posing as an army recruiter and performing oral sex on M.E. Bitterman further testified that he did not ask M.E. to masturbate on July 21. Bitterman's version of the July 28 incident differed considerably from M.E.'s. He testified that M.E. asked him to have sex and that he refused because M.E. was under-age. Additionally, Bitterman testified that M.E., after asking to use the Internet, accessed the homoerotic web sites on his own and, after viewing them, asked Bitterman for permission to masturbate in his house. Bitterman testified that he gave permission but left the room so M.E. could have privacy. In Bitterman's version of the early October incident, M.E., after telling Bitterman about his engagement, again asked Bitterman to have sex with him, which Bitterman again refused, though Bitterman did admit to providing the pornographic computer disks. Bitterman also testified to a visit on October 12 in which M.E. came over to his house to browse the Internet for pornography and to masturbate. At this visit, Bitterman claims that he again gave M.E. permission but left the room so M.E. could have privacy.

During the punishment phase of the trial, the State introduced several items of pornography retrieved from Bitterman's home in connection with the investigation. The items introduced contained naked pictures of clearly underage males, including prepubescent boys. The officer who executed the search warrant corroborated that the pictures came from Bitterman's immense pornographic collection.

DISCUSSION

Irrelevant/Unfairly Prejudicial Evidence

We first address Bitterman's arguments concerning the admission of the child pornography photographs during the sentencing phase of the trial. Bitterman argues that the evidence of his possession of child pornography at sentencing was irrelevant and should have been excluded. See Tex. R. Evid. 401. Bitterman further argues that even if the evidence were relevant, the unfair prejudice it could cause substantially outweighed its probative value and thus it should have been excluded. See Tex. R. Evid. 403.

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