Fuentes, Samuel Ray v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 30, 2003
Docket14-02-00902-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Fuentes, Samuel Ray v. State (Fuentes, Samuel Ray 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
Fuentes, Samuel Ray v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed October 30, 2003

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed October 30, 2003.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-02-00902-CR

SAMUEL RAY FUENTES, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

____________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 232nd District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 886,255

M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N

            Appellant entered a plea of not guilty to the offense of indecency with a child.  After a jury trial, he was convicted and the jury assessed punishment at fifty years’ confinement in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.  In three issues, appellant contends (1) the trial court violated the Confrontation Clauses of the Texas and United States Constitutions in limiting the cross-examination of a State’s witness, Dr. Sheela Lahoti; and (2) he received ineffective assistance of counsel.  We affirm.

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Background

            While living with the complainant’s mother, appellant repeatedly sexually abused complainant over a period of several months.  On July 26, 2001, Detective James Johnson with the Harris County Sheriff’s Office received a report that the complainant had sexually abused a younger child.  When questioned by his mother about this allegation, the complainant told her that appellant had repeatedly touched “his private parts.”  The complainant was later taken to the Children’s Assessment Center where he was interviewed by Monique Gadson and given a physical examination by Dr. Sheela Lahoti.

            At trial, Dr. Lahoti testified that the physical examination of the complainant was normal.  She further testified that a normal examination is to be expected in a case where the allegation of abuse is touching or anal penetration because with anal penetration, there is seldom an outward manifestation of trauma.  She also testified that some children who have been sexually abused may initiate sex with their peers at a very young age.  On cross-examination, appellant attempted, through the use of hypothetical scenarios, to question the doctor regarding a child who initiated sex with a peer prior to the outcry of sexual abuse.  The prosecutor objected to counsel’s hypotheticals because there was no evidence the complainant abused another child prior to being abused by appellant.

            Appellant proffered a bill of exception in which he asked the following questions:

[Defense counsel]:  My question is this:  If testimony came out and I asked you this question where Child A is alleged to have molested Child B.  Okay.  Child A says or the evidence shows that it happened at a certain time approximately a year ahead of time.  All right.  A year, year and a half.  Okay.  Whatever the reasons, that’s when it’s said to have happened.  Okay.  Child B then says, “I’ve been sexually molested,” but the date that he gives for that child – that molestation happens before this could have happened.  All right.  This is alleged to have happened, I’m sorry, the first molestation of the Child A.  All right.  That’s not – that doesn’t fit your scenario, does it?

DR. LAHOTI:  Well, actually I have to agree with exactly what the Judge said that it would make you worry whether this child had been abused before.

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[Defense counsel]:  That might be, but this is the person that’s accused and he’s accused on a certain date or it’s alleged to have started on a certain date.  Okay.  And that date is before the child is alleged to have said he was molesting another child.  Okay.  It doesn’t fit your scenario, does it?

DR. LAHOTI:  It makes me worry the child was abused before the date that he acted out.  And I don’t know, I don’t have the specifics on the date that he acted out because I don’t know how clearly of a time frame that you can get that this child sexually acted out on another child.  And I don’t, I just –

            I mean, I don’t know how clearly you can get that type of time frame; but that’s not the question.  The question is:  I worry that he had been exposed to sexualized – sexual behavior or that he had been sexually abused before he acted out.

* * * * *

[Defense counsel]:  Let’s assume the child has been abused before he starts acting out.  Okay.  Would it also be something that you would see that the child would give a different name to the person that actually molested them?  Is that something that you see in your course of years having worked in child abuse?

DR. LAHOTI:  A little child perhaps, not a child who is 12, 13, 14.  At this age they know who is who.  If you’re talking about four-year-olds and they’re a little confused as to different people, yeah, that would be much more likely?

[Defense counsel]:  But the last question, then: 

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