George Michael Bargas, Jr. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 13, 2008
Docket14-06-00797-CR
StatusPublished

This text of George Michael Bargas, Jr. v. State (George Michael Bargas, Jr. 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
George Michael Bargas, Jr. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion filed May 13, 2008

Affirmed and Opinion filed May 13, 2008.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NOS. 14-06-00795-CR, 14-06-00797-CR

GEORGE MICHAEL BARGAS, JR. Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 177th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause Nos. 1045925, 1045924

O P I N I O N

Appellant George Michael Bargas, Jr. challenges his convictions for two consolidated counts of aggravated sexual assault of a child, asserting in ten issues legal and factual insufficiency and a host of other complaints.  We affirm.


I.  Factual and Procedural Background

The complainant, Tina,[1] is appellant=s daughter, who lived with appellant when she was between the ages of five and nine years old.  The father and daughter lived in several different homes, residing first in a home in the Highlands and then moving to Baytown when Tina was seven or eight years old.

Tina last saw appellant in the fall of 2003, before going to live with her maternal grandmother, Gloria Wilson.  In May 2005, after watching a video at school on sexual abuse, Tina told a classmate that Asomething had happened to her.@  School officials met with Wilson and explained that Tina needed counseling.  Though school officials did not specifically mention sexual abuse, Wilson suspected that Tina=s bed-wetting, cowering, and fear of the dark resulted from Tina=s having been sexually abused.  To learn more from Tina, Wilson confronted Tina by telling Tina that she knew Tina had been sexually abused; although, in reality, Wilson knew nothing about any sexual abuse.  When Wilson asked if anyone had touched Tina=s Aprivate parts,@ Tina responded that appellant had touched her in those places.  Wilson tried to find out more information, but Tina did not want to talk about it.  Wilson did not learn of the details of Tina=s sexual abuse until later when she spoke with Tina=s therapist, Priscilla Kleinpeter.

After Wilson reported the sexual abuse, Child Protective Services referred then ten-year-old Tina to the Children=s Advocacy Center, where she was interviewed on videotape by forensic interviewer Shelly Bohannon.  In that interview, Tina described the incidents of appellant=s sexual abuse in specific detail.


Sexual assault nurse examiner Danielle Livermore examined Tina in the fall of 2005.  Though she could not determine when the abuse took place and found no evidence of physical trauma, Livermore explained that the absence of medical evidence in examinations of sexually abused child victims is common.

Appellant was charged in two indictments with aggravated sexual assault, and he pleaded Anot guilty@ to both indictments.  The cases were consolidated for trial.  In her testimony at trial, Tina identified incidents of appellant=s sexual abuse by indicating which home she lived in with appellant at the time of the incidents.  She described in detail how appellant first touched her Aprivate areas@ when she was five years old in the Highlands home.  According to Tina, he touched her Afront private parts@ with his hands between ten and twenty times at that home.  Tina testified that more than twenty times in the Highlands home, appellant put his Aprivate spot@ on her Aprivate spot@ as he got on top of her, Ashaking up and down@ with his Aprivate part@ and making Agrunting@ noises.

When Tina was seven or eight years old, she and appellant moved to Baytown.  One time, while living in Baytown, appellant came home from drinking and touched Tina under her clothing in her Afront private area@[2] with his hands, which hurt her.  In another Baytown incident, appellant came into Tina=s room and removed her clothing and his clothing.  He Amoved his body up and down@ behind her, touching his sexual organ to her behind.  Describing an incident at another person=s Baytown home, Tina testified that appellant touched her Aprivate parts@ with his hand and scratched her there with his jagged fingernail.  On that occasion, appellant then put his Aprivate part@ in Tina=s mouth and moved her head up and down; she vomited afterwards.


Facts are disputed as to whether Tina saw appellant during the summer of 2003, the time period in which the State (in the indictment) alleged the offenses occurred.  Appellant testified that he had no contact with Tina at that time because he had sent Tina to live with a relative, Josephine Avalos, while appellant worked out of town over the summer.  Appellant=s long-time friend and co-worker testified that appellant had no contact with Tina during that summer.  Tina=s two cousins and paternal aunt testified that Tina lived with them that summer, noting that Tina made an outcry statement about sexual abuse by an AUncle Alex,@ who lived with Avalos; however, the cousins and aunt indicated that Tina had no contact with appellant.  Tina recalled living with the cousins at some point and testified that her paternal aunt took her to and from appellant=

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