Ex Parte Roger Pace

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 25, 2021
Docket03-20-00430-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Ex Parte Roger Pace (Ex Parte Roger Pace) 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
Ex Parte Roger Pace, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-20-00430-CR

Ex parte Roger Pace

FROM THE 33RD DISTRICT COURT OF BURNET COUNTY NO. 50465, THE HONORABLE J. ALLAN GARRETT, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Roger Pace is jailed pending trial on ten counts of the second-degree felony

offense of prohibited sexual conduct, committed against his biological daughter and resulting in

the birth of two children. See Tex. Penal Code § 25.02(a)(1), (c). Pace appeals the district

court’s order denying his pretrial application for writ of habeas corpus seeking a bail reduction.

See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. arts. 11.08, .24. He contends that: (1) the amount of his bail is

excessive and is being used as an instrument of oppression and (2) he is entitled to release on

bond under article 17.151 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure because of the district

court’s inability to conduct jury trials under the terms of the COVID-19 disaster declaration and

emergency orders. See id. art. 17.151, § 1(1) (requiring release of defendant accused of felony

offense and detained pending trial, either on personal bond or by bail reduction if State is not

ready for trial within 90 days after defendant’s detention began). We will affirm the district

court’s order denying habeas relief. BACKGROUND

Pace was arrested, charged with prohibited sexual conduct, and jailed October 29,

2019. See Tex. Penal Code § 25.02(a)(1), (c). He was found indigent December 26, 2019, and

had counsel appointed to represent him. A grand jury issued a ten-count felony indictment

against him January 7, 2020, and he remains jailed. Originally, a magistrate set Pace’s bond at

$100,000 but it was increased to $200,000—$20,000 for each count in the indictment—when he

was indicted.

Pace filed a motion to reduce bond March 30, 2020, which the court heard June

15, 2020, via Zoom. Pace testified at the hearing, and defense counsel made a proffer of

testimony from Pace’s son. Pace testified that he had $400 but no property that he could sell and

that he could borrow money only from his son. Pace stated that he had not had “a day-to-day

8:00 to 5:00 job” for some time but that he had a GED and was a skilled handyman—with the

ability to do painting, yardwork, and general repairs—and a musician. He also stated that he

receives “supplemental income” and “social security disability” in two monthly checks totaling

$803; that he uses that money to help support his wife, son, and “whomever else”; and that those

checks were still available to his family while he was in jail. But he acknowledged that his son

had been paying “the bills for [Pace’s] home” for quite some time before Pace’s arrest and that

his wife received “food stamps.” Pace testified that he had physical ailments including

inflammatory arthritis, degenerative disk disease, irritable bowel syndrome, and chronic pain.

He opined that his health problems made him more susceptible to coronavirus1 but admitted

receiving medication at the jail for those problems. On cross-examination, Pace testified that he

has been diagnosed as bipolar and suffers from depression. Pace also testified that he was

1 In his brief, Pace states that he “has suffered COVID-19 in the Burnet County Jail.” 2 convicted of burglary of a habitation in 1978, driving with a suspended license in 1997, and

driving while intoxicated in 2004 and that he has had “multiple arrests.”

Pace testified that if his bond were reduced and he were released, he could live at

a residence with his wife in Kingsland, Texas. He denied knowing whether that was the same

home where his wife cared for the children involved in the case—the grandsons that the State

alleged were also his sons by his daughter—but he stated that he would comply with an order to

stay away from the children and his daughter. Pace stated that if his wife took care of the

children, he would “probably be at work while they’re there.” If he were ordered not to go to the

house while his wife cared for the children, Pace said he would “have to rent an apartment.”

Defense counsel proffered to the court without objection that Pace’s son would

testify that he had known Pace all his life, that Pace had only $400, and that Pace was unable to

sell anything or borrow any money to make bond. Pace’s son would also testify that if granted

bond, Pace would “show up in court”; that Pace posed no flight risk or danger to the community;

and that Pace could stay with him “in any apartment that he has.”

During closing argument, defense counsel noted that because of the coronavirus,

it was unclear “when the court is going to start hearing jury trials again” and requested that the

district court reduce the amount of the bond so that Pace could help support his family. The

State proffered that Pace’s offense involved allegations of long-term sexual abuse of his

daughter, beginning when she was sixteen, and that there were two children from that sexual

abuse. The State also proffered that Pace attempted to contact his daughter from jail in violation

of a protective order, that he was charged with the offense of improper contact of a victim under

3 section 38.111 of the Texas Penal Code,2 and that Pace’s daughter was “very nervous” because

Pace told her “something to the effect of that he was capable of murder if he had ever found her

with another man.” The State noted that Pace faced up to twenty years’ imprisonment on each of

the ten counts charged and because the offenses are stackable, “he’s looking at a combined total

of 200 years.” Lastly, the State announced that it was “perfectly fine with this getting set

number one out of the gate when trials resume.”

At the conclusion of the bond-reduction hearing, the district court noted that

“[t]he bonds are already set on the lower end of the spectrum for second degree felonies, so

there’s not much wiggle room generally speaking in my mind when it comes to that even with

circumstances.” After considering the cumulative amount, the district court reduced Pace’s total

bond to $175,000 by lowering the bond amounts on Counts 6 through 10 to $15,000 per count

but leaving unchanged the $20,000 per count bond amounts on Counts 1 through 5. The district

court stated that it wanted Pace’s case “to be one of the first to be tried after the pandemic.”

Pace filed a pretrial application for writ of habeas corpus July 29, 2020,

contending that he could not make the $175,000 bond and that he was entitled to release under

article 17.151 of the Code of Criminal Procedure because of the district court’s inability to

conduct jury trials under the terms of the COVID-19 disaster declaration and emergency orders

and because the State “did not have DNA tests back” and “can’t say that [it] is ready for trial.”

See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 17.151, § 1(1) (requiring release of defendant accused of felony

offense and detained pending trial, either on personal bond or by bail reduction, if State is not

ready for trial within 90 days after defendant’s detention began). The district court heard Pace’s

habeas application August 13, 2020, via Zoom and took judicial notice of the record from the

2 Defense counsel was also appointed to represent Pace on this charge.

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