in Re Commitment of Timothy Ray Ramsey

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 26, 2015
Docket09-14-00304-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in Re Commitment of Timothy Ray Ramsey (in Re Commitment of Timothy Ray Ramsey) 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
in Re Commitment of Timothy Ray Ramsey, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont ____________________ NO. 09-14-00304-CV ____________________

IN RE COMMITMENT OF TIMOTHY RAY RAMSEY

_______________________________________________________ ______________

On Appeal from the 435th District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 14-01-00379 CV ________________________________________________________ _____________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

The State of Texas filed a petition to commit Timothy Ray Ramsey

(Ramsey) as a sexually violent predator. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. §§

841.001-.151 (West 2010 & Supp. 2014) (SVP Statute). A jury found that Ramsey

is a sexually violent predator, and the trial court rendered a final judgment and an

order of civil commitment. Ramsey filed an appeal.

In his first appellate issue, Ramsey argues the trial court erred in denying

Ramsey’s request that his expert evaluation be videotaped. In issues two and three,

Ramsey challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence supporting the

jury’s finding that he has serious difficulty controlling his behavior. In his fourth

issue, Ramsey contends he was “unduly prejudice[ed]” by Dr. Clayton’s testimony

because Dr. Clayton relied on “hearsay evidence[.]” In his fifth and final issue,

Ramsey argues the trial court erred in limiting his attorney’s cross-examination of

Dr. Clayton. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

THE EVIDENCE

The jury heard Ramsey’s admissions to the State’s requests for admissions

wherein Ramsey admitted to being convicted of touching a child for lustful

purposes in Mississippi in 1995, to being convicted of indecency with a child in

2003, and to being convicted for failure to comply with sex offender registration in

2003. He admitted that he received a ten-year sentence for his conviction for

touching a child for lustful purposes (with one year to be served in prison and nine

suspended), that he received a fifteen-year sentence for the conviction for

indecency with a child, and that he received a ten-year sentence for the conviction

for failure to comply with sex offender registration. Ramsey admitted that one of

his victims was a six-year-old girl and that the other victim was a six- or seven-

year-old child. Ramsey also admitted that he has a problem with alcohol, that he

has not completed the Sex Offender Treatment Program, that he has received major

disciplinaries while in prison, that he believes he is a sex offender, and that he has

fantasized about his victims.

At trial, Ramsey testified that his stepfather sexually abused him from age

eight to eighteen. Ramsey explained that as to his conviction for touching a child

with lustful purposes, he offended against the six-year-old child over a two-and-a-

half-year period. Ramsey stated that he was like “a warring lion after a piece of

meat, is like you got to have it. If I don’t have it, I want - - I’m hungry, you know. .

. . It’s like an addiction, a drug addiction. . . .[I]f I didn’t get it, I’d do anything to

get it[.]” He testified that before he went to prison for the 1995 conviction, he shot

himself in the head after his uncle died and “[m]y conscience was eating at me.

Why? Because I told myself, I would never do this to a child because I was done

the same way, but what I did, I did.”

Ramsey stated that after he served the one year in prison in Mississippi, he

was released, and, as a requirement of moving to Texas, he participated in a Sex

Offender Treatment Program (SOTP) in Texas. According to Ramsey he did not

learn “that much” because he “only did . . . about four weeks” in that program.

About seven years later, Ramsey offended against a six year old child in his

neighborhood. Ramsey testified that after he offended against that child he gave

her ice cream and told her that “she needs to tell her mother about what happened

because this will not happen again and I guarantee it, because I will be in prison at

the time.” He testified he received a fifteen-year sentence for that offense and a

ten-year sentence for failing to register as a sex offender.

According to Ramsey, his disciplinaries while incarcerated included

tampering with a locking mechanism, threatening an officer, possession of

contraband, slicing his wrists with a razor blade, spitting in an officer’s face, and

assaulting an officer. Ramsey was sent to the Persistently Aggressive Mentally Ill

Offenders Program (PAMIO), where he received a disciplinary for getting into a

fight while in the program. Ramsey explained that he completed the Sex Offender

Education Program (SOEP) because he was told to complete it as part of his parole

plan and if “[he] didn’t do it, [he] wouldn’t get [his] parole.” At the time of trial,

Ramsey was on parole. Ramsey admitted that he has “a problem[,]” that he told a

doctor the year before the trial that he is sexually attracted to children, and that he

“probably will” reoffend. He explained the “[b]ottom line . . . I can’t be around

children[,]” and he said that if he found himself in a situation, like at a mall, where

children were around and he could not “figure out a way to go, then I’m in

trouble.” He testified that if he is going to the mall, for example, in order for him to

control himself he would not use the main entrance where children usually are, but

would instead use a side-entrance “where it’s no traffic and . . . there’s no

children.”

Dr. Lisa Clayton, a medical doctor specializing in psychiatry, with a

subspecialty in forensic psychiatry, testified for the State. Dr. Clayton is board-

certified in general and forensic psychiatry. Based on her training, her experience,

the records she reviewed, and her interview with Ramsey, Dr. Clayton testified she

believes Ramsey suffers from a behavioral abnormality that makes him likely to

engage in a predatory act of sexual violence. Dr. Clayton explained her

methodology for assessing a behavioral abnormality, which she testified is

consistent with the accepted standards in her field. She testified that the records she

reviewed and relied upon in making her assessment are the type of records

typically used by experts who do this type of evaluation.

Dr. Clayton diagnosed Ramsey with pedophilic disorder, antisocial

personality disorder, and alcohol disorder. She explained that pedophilic disorder

is a chronic condition that involves primitive urges that are “lifelong[.]” According

to Dr. Clayton, Ramsey abused both of the victims many more times than the

instances for which he was convicted.

Dr. Clayton acknowledged that Ramsey became tearful during his testimony

at trial, but she questioned his genuineness because, according to Clayton, Ramsey

did not exhibit remorse when he discussed the offenses with her. Dr. Clayton

further testified that

[Ramsey] has a severe sexual deviancy and pedophilia, as he described it, a hunger, that he can’t control. He even said an addiction at one point, that -- but I think the hunger that he can’t control, that he’d do anything to get it, is true about the way he feels about children. I think his attempts -- yes, he doesn’t need to be around children. . . . But I think, when he . . . is out in the community for any length of time . . . there’s going to be the stimulation, and he’s going 5

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