Hermosillo, Michelle Barriga v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 8, 2013
Docket05-11-01156-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Hermosillo, Michelle Barriga v. State (Hermosillo, Michelle Barriga 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
Hermosillo, Michelle Barriga v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

AFFIRM in part, REVERSE and REMAND in part; Opinion Filed April 8, 2013.

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-11-01156-CR

MICHELLE BARRIGA-HERMOSILLO, Appellant V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 296th Judicial District Court Collin County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 429-82368-10

OPINION Before Justices Bridges, O’Neill, and Murphy Opinion by Justice Murphy

Michelle Barriga-Hermosillo appeals her convictions on one count of injury to her three-

month-old child by omission and three counts of child endangerment. See TEX. PENAL CODE

ANN. § 22.04(a)(1) (West Supp. 2012); id. § 22.041(c) (West 2011). Appellant complains in her

first two points of error, and the State agrees, that she was sentenced outside the range of

punishment on two counts of child endangerment. She also challenges the sufficiency of the

evidence to support her conviction for knowingly causing serious bodily injury to a child by

omission and contends the court’s charge for counts four and five (child endangerment by

allowing the child to be in the presence of the father), and count six (child endangerment by not providing medical personnel with accurate medical history) violated her Fifth Amendment

protection against double jeopardy because those counts punish the same offense multiple times.

We reverse and remand for a new punishment hearing on counts four and five and affirm the trial

court’s judgments on all other grounds.

Background

Appellant called 911 at 2:47 a.m. on July 23, 2010 because she believed her three-month-

old son had a broken arm. She and the child were taken by ambulance to Plano Medical Center.

The father, who was living with appellant at the time, remained at home. After initial tests at the

hospital, the child was transferred to Children’s Medical Center in Dallas because of suspected

abuse.

Following an investigation, appellant was arrested a few days later and charged with six

counts that included both reckless and intentional injury to a child, injury to a child by failing to

seek medical attention, and endangering a child by allowing the father supervised and

unsupervised access and by not giving doctors an accurate medical history for the child.

Appellant, who was nineteen years old at the time of trial, received a “not guilty” jury verdict on

the first two counts of reckless and intentional injury to a child and findings of “guilty” on the

remaining counts. Seven witnesses, including appellant, testified at trial. Because appellant’s

points of error include a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, the testimony of the

relevant witnesses is detailed below.

Detective Chris Jones

Plano Police Detective Chris Jones testified that CPS investigator Michelle Neely

contacted him on July 23 regarding a three-month-old infant that was at Children’s Medical

Center in Dallas. Jones was assigned to the Crimes Against Children Unit and was responsible

-2- for investigating offenses involving children, including injury and sex abuse cases, “anything

that has to do with any of the victims being inside the home that reside with family members at

that time.”

Jones testified he met with Neely at the hospital. Appellant was with the child at the

time. Appellant explained to him that the child had an arm injury. She said she had attempted to

place the child’s arm in a blanket to swaddle him and when she did this, she heard a “pop,” knew

something was wrong, and called 911. Jones asked appellant follow-up questions and then met

with hospital staff and Neely.

The hospital staff told Jones and Neely the child had suffered multiple injuries, including

a brain bleed, a spiral fracture of the left humerus, a sub-acute (healing) fracture of the left

clavicle, a nondisplaced fracture of the occipital bone (cracked skull), healing fractures of three

ribs on the left side, suspicion of healing fractures of three ribs on the right side, and torn and

healed frenums of the upper and lower lips. The injuries described indicated they were non-

accidental.

Jones then conducted a recorded interview of appellant to ask her what had happened at

the residence that night. When he told appellant that her description of the arm injury was not

consistent with the medical findings, she became upset and started to cry. She explained that on

the night the child’s arm was broken, she and the child’s father “woke up” and the father went to

the kitchen to prepare a bottle. She said she was attempting to tuck the child’s arm into the

blanket when she heard a popping noise. In response to Jones’s questions, she said the father

had never displayed any kind of anger problems or temper around the child. She also said she

had never witnessed the father “do anything to the child.”

-3- In response to further questions, appellant described an incident two weeks earlier when

the child was taken to the hospital due to continuous vomiting. She said the father had been

walking with the child. He tripped and fell, and the baby fell onto the bed. Jones testified

appellant said she made the hospital staff aware of that fall. But the medical records obtained

from Children’s Medical Center of Plano, where the child was taken for the vomiting incident,

did not reflect that appellant made them aware of the fall. Jones opined that if the hospital staff

had known of a fall, the staff would have taken x-rays; instead, they were led to believe the

vomiting was a symptom of a virus, not a fall.

Jones testified that in his experience, abusers sometimes give false, misleading, or no

information to medical personnel to avoid getting caught. He agreed appellant’s behavior of not

providing full information to medical personnel could be indicative of her trying to cover up

abuse that was taking place in her home.

When Jones completed his interview with appellant, he conducted the same type of

interview with the father. The father corroborated appellant’s statement of how the child’s arm

was hurt and that he was making a bottle while appellant was with the baby. Regarding the prior

fall, the father said he had been walking with the child, tripped on a cord, and the child fell from

his arms. The father said appellant was “very angry” with him and that she “kicked” him out of

the residence as a result of the incident. Conversely, appellant told Jones she made the father

leave for reasons other than the child being injured.

Jones testified that as he and Neely were on their way to see the child, the father flagged

them down. The father told them he wanted to “make things right” and indicated that his family

thought he had anger issues. Jones and Neely took the father to a room, where he began to cry

and said his mom was going to be angry with him because of his anger problem; he also said he

-4- had not been honest with them when he talked to Jones the first time. He changed his story

about the child’s previous fall and said “the baby’s head hit the wood frame of the bed.” The

father did not change his story about the injury to the child’s arm.

Jones and Neely went to the residence later that evening and took pictures of the bed

where the father said the head injury occurred. Jones also obtained an affidavit from doctor

Cathleen Lang from Children’s documenting the injuries reported to him earlier.

Three days later, which was the Monday following the Friday hospital visit, Jones

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