In Re the Commitment of George Olivarez v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 5, 2024
Docket13-23-00323-CV
StatusPublished

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In Re the Commitment of George Olivarez v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-23-00323-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

IN RE THE COMMITMENT OF GEORGE OLIVAREZ

ON APPEAL FROM THE 148TH DISTRICT COURT OF NUECES COUNTY, TEXAS

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Chief Justice Contreras and Justices Tijerina and Peña Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Contreras

A Nueces County jury found appellant George Olivarez to be a sexually violent

predator (SVP), and the trial court ordered him indefinitely committed for sex-offender

treatment and supervision. See TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE ANN. ch. 841 (SVP Act). On

appeal, Olivarez argues there was legally and factually insufficient evidence to support

the jury’s finding beyond a reasonable doubt. We affirm. I. BACKGROUND

The State of Texas filed its petition to civilly commit Olivarez on June 21, 2022.

The petition alleged that Olivarez was imprisoned after being convicted on April 26, 2000,

for two separate offenses of indecency with a child by contact. See id. § 841.003(a)(1).

The State further alleged that Olivarez suffers from a behavioral abnormality which makes

him likely to engage in a predatory act of sexual violence. See id. § 841.003(a)(2). The

petition noted that Olivarez was then incarcerated but that he could be released on parole

before his sentence discharge date of January 12, 2025.

Dr. Stephen Thorne, a licensed psychologist, evaluated Olivarez for a behavioral

abnormality as defined by the SVP Act. Dr. Thorne testified that he has twenty years of

experience practicing in the field of forensic psychology and has spent between sixteen

to eighteen years of those years evaluating sex offenders for a behavioral abnormality.

He testified that he has conducted hundreds of these types of evaluations and has

testified at trial in a similar capacity about fifty times. While he has been retained by the

Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) and the State Counsel for Offenders to

make these types of behavior abnormality evaluations, Dr. Thorne said his role is not to

advocate for the State or the defendant, but to “advocat[e] for the data.”

Dr. Thorne explained to the jury his process of evaluating a sex offender for a

behavior abnormality. Typically, he first conducts a psychological examination of the

respondent. In this case, Olivarez was first evaluated by Dr. Darryl Turner of the TDCJ’s

“Multi-Disciplinary Team.” Dr. Thorne said that, after the preliminary psychological exam,

he prepares for an interview with the sex offender by reviewing many of their various

medical, prison, and legal records. For Olivarez, Dr. Thorne reviewed “the previous

2 evaluation by Dr. Turner, official criminal records outlining [Olivarez’s] criminal history, the

legal documents relat[ed] to [Olivarez’s] various offenses, victim statements, [offense

reports related to Olivarez’s] different sexual offenses, . . . medical records, disciplinary

records, academic records, [and] things relat[ed] to his time in prison.”

Dr. Thorne then explained the various factors “that the research shows ha[ve]

some relationship, either positive or negative, to sexually reoffending.” He said the two

main risk factors for reoffending are (1) whether the person “ha[s] a history of sexual

deviancy” and (2) whether the person “ha[s] a history of nonsexual antisocial behavior,”

meaning “they have a pattern over time of rule violation, illegal behavior, [and]

disrespecting the rights and privacy and safety of others.” As to sexual deviancy, Dr.

Thorne explained that research shows there is a higher risk of reoffending for sex

offenders who “select boy victims, as compared to girl victims”; those who select

extrafamilial victims; and those who have “some kind of drug or alcohol related link

between the offenses.” He also stated that the risk of reoffending decreases with age. Dr.

Thorne diagnosed Olivarez with “pedophilic disorder non-exclusive attract[ion],” meaning

someone who is attracted to both boys and girls, and adults; “antisocial personality traits”;

and “alcohol use disorder.”

Dr. Thorne compared the “sexual deviancy” risk factors to Olivarez’s sexual

offenses. 1 Dr. Thorne stated that, according to his review of Olivarez’s legal records,

Olivarez assaulted his six-year-old nephew on March 15, 1987, when he was in his late

1 The defense was granted a limiting instruction “about the disclosure of hearsay facts or data

underlying” Dr. Thorne’s opinion. The trial court instructed the jury to consider the “hearsay evidence” from Dr. Thorne’s testimony only “for the purpose of showing the basis of the expert’s opinion” and not to consider the “evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted. . . . [I]ncluding whether the facts alleged in the records are true.”

3 twenties. At the time, Olivarez was living with his sister and “came home intoxicated, got

into bed with [his nephew,]” “pulled down his [nephew’s] pants,” “fondled [his nephew’s]

penis,” and “put his finger in [his nephew’s] anus.” Dr. Thorne found that some facts

indicated an elevated risk of reoffending—including that the victim was a young boy, that

the victim was asleep, and Olivarez was intoxicated—but also noted that the victim was

in Olivarez’s family, which indicated a lower risk of reoffending. Olivarez was sentenced

to three years’ imprisonment but was released early on parole after serving two or three

months in jail. Dr. Thorne found it significant that, after Olivarez was released on parole,

he proceeded to “violat[e] the terms and conditions of mandatory supervision” when he

was arrested for driving while intoxicated.

Dr. Thorne then described Olivarez’s convictions in 2000. In 1999, Olivarez, then

forty-one or forty-two years old, was living with his girlfriend and her six- and eight-year-

old granddaughters. Dr. Thorne testified that from June to December of that year, Olivarez

touched the girls’ vaginas with “both his hands and his penis” and “fondled their breast[s].”

He testified that both girls were assaulted while sleeping, including once while “in bed

with their grandmother,” which indicated to him “a greater level of [sexual] deviancy.” Dr.

Thorne also found additional risk in that Olivarez was intoxicated and committed “multiple

acts with both victims.”

Dr. Thorne then analyzed Olivarez’s history of nonsexual antisocial behavior.

Olivarez was arrested for burglary when he was a juvenile and again when he was about

twenty-one years old. Dr. Thorne listed Olivarez’s other offenses, including “[p]ossession

of marijuana,” “disorderly conduct, five public intoxications, two D.W.I. arrests,” and “a

theft offense.” Dr. Thorne stated that these arrests show “a pattern of behavior of[] non-

4 sexual rule violation, antisocial behavior, some of which occurred while he was on

supervision for [another offense].” He found the nonsexual offenses significant because

they showed a pattern over time, “seemingly when he was 16, some of it when he was a

young adult, in 1979, and . . . 1989 and 1990.” Dr. Thorne said Olivarez’s rule violations

in prison also indicated a pattern of antisocial behavior. He testified that, in the twenty-

two years Olivarez has been in prison, he had thirty-one “disciplinary cases.” He noted

that most of the disciplinary cases “have been characterized as minor,” none were sexual,

and Olivarez has only received four violations in the past six years. However, Dr. Thorne

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