Gregory John Mayhue, A/K/A Farrell v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 7, 1998
Docket03-96-00444-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Gregory John Mayhue, A/K/A Farrell v. State (Gregory John Mayhue, A/K/A Farrell 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
Gregory John Mayhue, A/K/A Farrell v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-96-00444-CR

NO. 03-96-00445-CR

Gregory John Mayhue, a/k/a Farrell, Appellant


v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF WILLIAMSON COUNTY, 368TH JUDICIAL
DISTRICT

NOS. 95-699-K368 & 95-700-K368, HONORABLE BURT CARNES, JUDGE PRESIDING

Appellant Gregory John Mayhue appeals his convictions for aggravated sexual assault of one child and sexual assault of another child. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 22.011, .021 (West Supp. 1998). (1) A jury convicted Mayhue and assessed his punishment at fifty years' imprisonment and a $10,000 fine, and twenty years' imprisonment and a $10,000 fine, for the offenses respectively. The sentences run concurrently. We will affirm the convictions.

BACKGROUND

The events forming the basis of Mayhue's convictions occurred on two separate occasions and involved two different victims. (2) One victim in this case is J.M., who was thirteen years old at the time of the alleged offense against her. J.M. is the biological daughter of Mayhue's brother, Michael. After J.M. was born, her mother married Michael. The couple divorced after a short time. While J.M. was still an infant, J.M.'s mother became involved with Mayhue. The two eventually became husband and wife at common law. Thereafter, Mayhue referred to J.M. as his own daughter, and J.M. apparently referred to Mayhue as her father. Mayhue and J.M.'s mother eventually separated, but the couple had not divorced at the time of trial. They both lived in the same city during the periods of time relevant to this case. J.M. sometimes lived with her mother and at other times lived with Mayhue.

The other victim in this case is M.S., who was J.M.'s friend and was in the same grade at school as J.M.

According to M.S., she and J.M. planned on September 3, 1995 to meet their boyfriends at a hotel room. M.S. told her mother she would be spending the night with J.M. at Mayhue's apartment. The girls departed Mayhue's apartment with their boyfriends in the early evening. Soon thereafter, M.S.'s mother came to the apartment looking for M.S. Mayhue did not disclose that he knew where the girls were. When M.S.'s mother left, Mayhue called the girls and told them they should return to the apartment. When they returned, the girls and Mayhue contrived a story to tell M.S.'s mother about where the girls had been when she came looking for them. After she called her mother, M.S. alleges, J.M. approached her and told her the only way Mayhue would allow the girls to return to the hotel would be if M.S. had sex with him. According to M.S., she and Mayhue smoked marijuana in his bedroom and then had sexual intercourse. Afterwards, M.S. alleges, Mayhue told her to take a shower so she would be "clean and fresh" for her boyfriend. Mayhue then allowed the girls to return to the hotel room with their boyfriends. M.S. was fourteen years old at the time of this incident.

Several weeks after the encounter, M.S. told the police about the incident. The police investigated by questioning the girls' boyfriends. Both men confirmed M.S.'s story with regard to the plan to spend the evening at the hotel and the fact that the girls had returned to Mayhue's apartment for part of the evening. Moreover, M.S.'s boyfriend told officers M.S. confided in him at the hotel that she had had intercourse with Mayhue when the girls returned to Mayhue's apartment that evening.

During their investigation, officers asked M.S. to call Mayhue on the telephone from the police station; they recorded the conversation. During the course of the conversation, Mayhue made several comments that can be construed as incriminating. For example, when M.S. told him her mother suspected something about the night the girls went to the hotel, Mayhue offered to lie to M.S.'s mother and say the girls were at his apartment all night. He repeatedly suggested that M.S. would get several men or boys in trouble, including himself, if she continued to allow her mother to receive information. He referenced another older man M.S. purportedly slept with, noted that the man was only a "couple years" younger, and suggested it would be "unfair" to get in trouble if that man did not. Furthermore, Mayhue chastised M.S. that "guys who are older than [her] trust [her] to be a woman, not a little kid." In general, Mayhue's tone and comments on the recording reveal a strong desire to cover up the events of the evening. Furthermore, the conversation sometimes included references to M.S.'s prior sexual experiences with others, suggesting Mayhue may have been concerned about being accused of some sexual offense involving M.S.

During the course of their investigation of the offense against M.S., officers questioned J.M.'s boyfriend. He told investigators that the evening M.S. called Mayhue on the phone, Mayhue summoned J.M. and him to meet with Mayhue and "get their stories straight" about the evening the girls went to the hotel. In addition, the boyfriend told the investigators facts that suggested Mayhue had also assaulted J.M. on a different occasion. The boyfriend, who was nineteen years of age, admittedly maintained a sexual relationship with J.M. himself during the period of time the events between Mayhue and J.M. came to light.

Upon receiving this information from J.M.'s boyfriend, law enforcement officers went to J.M.'s school to speak with her. One of the officers, Lieutenant Mary Ryle, testified J.M. initially denied that Mayhue had ever had sexual contact with her. However, upon further questioning, J.M. told Ryle that Mayhue had in fact made her fellate him.

The day after J.M. first spoke with the police, Lieutenant (now Captain) Dan Lemay went to speak with Mayhue. Lemay recorded his conversation with Mayhue on an audio cassette. Lemay made it clear that Mayhue could speak with an attorney if he wanted to, but that Mayhue was not yet under arrest. When Mayhue told Lemay he was scared, Lemay told Mayhue he should be scared, that this was a serious matter, and that it was a "done deal." Lemay also told Mayhue he already had evidence Mayhue had abused J.M. and M.S.; he urged Mayhue to explain his side of the story. Mayhue complied, making several incriminating statements over the course of the conversation. After the conversation, Lemay asked Mayhue to come to the police station within fifteen minutes. Mayhue agreed, but fled after Lemay left the immediate area. Lemay followed Mayhue for some distance, but was unable to apprehend him that day.

J.M.'s mother assisted the police in locating Mayhue, and the police arrested him. Several weeks later, J.M., her boyfriend, and her mother each wrote letters to the district attorney's office in an attempt to withdraw their earlier cooperation in the case.

Nevertheless, the State prosecuted Mayhue for committing aggravated sexual assault against J.M. by penetrating her mouth with his penis. See id. § 22.021. The State also prosecuted him for committing sexual assault against M.S. by causing his penis to contact her vagina. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.011. The State called as witnesses both victims' boyfriends, Mary Ryle, Dan Lemay, the two victims, and J.M.'s mother. J.M.

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