In Re RDB

20 S.W.3d 255, 2000 WL 633013
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 18, 2000
Docket06-99-00077-CV
StatusPublished

This text of 20 S.W.3d 255 (In Re RDB) 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 RDB, 20 S.W.3d 255, 2000 WL 633013 (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

20 S.W.3d 255 (2000)

In The Matter of R.D.B., a Juvenile.

No. 06-99-00077-CV.

Court of Appeals of Texas, Texarkana.

Submitted May 17, 2000.
Decided May 18, 2000.

*256 Jack Riley, Jackson, Riley & Walker, for appellant.

William L. Pattillo, Asst. County Atty., Frank H. Bass, Jr., Montgomery County Atty., Erik P. Berglund, Asst. County Atty., Conroe, for appellee.

Before CORNELIUS, C.J., GRANT and ROSS, JJ.

OPINION

Opinion by Justice ROSS.

In October 1996, R.D.B., age sixteen, was adjudicated by the juvenile court as having engaged in delinquent conduct by committing the felony offenses of aggravated assault, aggravated robbery, burglary of a habitation, and theft. The court then rendered a fifteen-year determinate sentence and ordered R.D.B. committed to the Texas Youth Commission, with possible transfer at age eighteen to the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ). In April 1999, after R.D.B. attained the age of eighteen, he was returned to juvenile court for a release or transfer hearing pursuant to Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 54.11 (Vernon 1996). At this hearing, the court ordered R.D.B. transferred from the Texas Youth Commission to the Institutional Division of the TDCJ to serve the completion of his fifteen-year determinate sentence. See Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 54.11(i)(2).

R.D.B. appeals from this order of transfer and states his sole contention of error as follows:

Where the record is saturated with testimony from State's witnesses concerning the psychological condition of Juvenile-Appellant, where the record shows the Juvenile-Appellant suffered from a serious frontal lobe brain injury which may have affected his psychological condition, where counsel nevertheless failed to seek an independent psychiatric examination of the Juvenile-Appellant, and where said failure was not reasonably effective assistance, the Appellant was denied his constitutionally guaranteed right to effective assistance of counsel at a "Release or Transfer Hearing."

The State's only witness at this hearing was Leonard Cucolo, the program administrator for the Texas Youth Commission, Giddings Unit. Cucolo's qualifications, educational background, and professional experience do not appear in the record. Cucolo described some of the programs in which R.D.B. participated, but further testified that, despite all efforts, R.D.B. continued to be disruptive and assaultive, which precipitated this request for an early transfer to the Institutional Division of the TDCJ. The witness acknowledged that R.D.B. "has a brain injury as a result of a self-inflicted gunshot wound." He further stated that R.D.B. had been given medication *257 to control his seizure activity[1] and that a psychological evaluation conducted by Larry Reue (no qualifications, title, experience, or occupation were given) indicated that the brain injury may be contributing to R.D.B.'s delinquent behavior. Cucolo further testified, however, that it was Reue's conclusion that most of R.D.B.'s behavior was the result of anti-social values and characteristics rather than the result of an organic disorder. Cucolo said that it was Reue's opinion that R.D.B. is at a high risk to reoffend and that his amenability to further treatment is poor. On cross-examination, Cucolo stated that he was not aware of any connection between frontal lobe brain injuries and tendencies toward violence. He said that the only individuals at the Texas Youth Commission who addressed R.D.B.'s brain injury problems were Barbara Jones, the head nurse at the Giddings Unit, and several unnamed contract physicians. Cucolo further testified as follows on cross-examination:

This is an E-mail message that I received from Barbara Jones, who is the head nurse in our infirmary at Giddings. She indicated that she spoke to the neurologist on Friday, April 23rd, 1999. She stated that (R.D.B.'s) neurological exam was within normal limits. He did not recommend a repeat MRI. His EEG showed spikes which show brain irritability. However, they were not organized, thus he does not have the seizure activity that would occur should they be organized.

He further stated that he was not aware that R.D.B. had had a grand mal seizure and that he did not know the kind of treatment that would be provided by the TDCJ. Cucolo acknowledged that R.D.B. had an IQ of seventy-nine, admittedly "[b]orderline range of intelligence." He further admitted that the Crockett Unit of the Texas Youth Commission had programs for emotionally disturbed youth, but contended that R.D.B. was a "violent offender," and apparently was not eligible for that unit.

R.D.B.'s only witness was his mother, who testified regarding his brain injury and post-operative treatment. R.D.B. had to learn to speak again. He was placed in a rehabilitation program at a hospital for three months, as well as in other rehabilitation programs. She was dissatisfied with the Texas Youth Commission's handling of his problems. She testified that R.D.B. had had a grand mal seizure and several petit mal seizures[2] and was left with short-term memory loss, thought process dysfunction, and a loss of balance. She stated that R.D.B. was suffering from a seizure disorder from the brain injury. R.D.B. had been seen by a psychiatrist on the panel to treat children at the Texas Youth Commission, but was not permitted to be taken to that doctor's office. He was seen by a neurologist twenty months after his grand mal seizure, on April 15, 1999, just ten days before the release or transfer hearing. This neurologist increased R.D.B.'s dosage of Dilantin. She asked several times to have him transferred to other programs, but the Texas Youth Commission did not do so.

State's Exhibit 1 contains the report of Larry Reue, identified as an "M.Ed." The report states that R.D.B.'s frequent and deliberate anti-social behavior is more indicative of anti-social values than the result *258 of an organic disorder. The report does, however, acknowledge that R.D.B.'s difficulty in implementing cognitive skills into daily behavior may be affected by his traumatic head injury. The details and findings of this voluminous exhibit were discussed only very generally by the witness.

In presenting his argument regarding his alleged ineffective assistance of counsel, R.D.B. utilizes the wrong standard of review. He states in his brief that the release or transfer hearing is analogous to the punishment phase of a criminal trial, and that in reviewing an ineffective assistance claim at punishment, the appellate court is required to examine the totality of the representation received to determine whether it was "counsel reasonably likely to render and rendering reasonably effective assistance," citing Ex parte Williams, 753 S.W.2d 695, 698 (Tex.Crim. App.1988). In Williams, the court held that in claims of ineffective assistance of counsel at punishment in a noncapital case, the two-part standard of Strickland v. Washington[3] was not applicable, but rather whether the accused received counsel reasonably likely to render and rendering reasonably effective assistance, whose services are gauged by the totality of the representation afforded. Williams,

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.W.3d 255, 2000 WL 633013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rdb-texapp-2000.