in Re Tirone Clemons

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 14, 2010
Docket03-08-00714-CR
StatusPublished

This text of in Re Tirone Clemons (in Re Tirone Clemons) 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 Tirone Clemons, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-08-00714-CR

In re Tirone Clemons



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 331ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 104,673, HONORABLE BOB PERKINS, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



In 1991, a jury convicted Tirone Clemons of aggravated sexual assault of a child, a first-degree felony, and sentenced him to fifty years' imprisonment. In 2003, Clemons filed a motion for post-conviction DNA testing, and the trial court granted the motion and ordered the Texas Department of Public Safety to conduct testing. In 2006, Clemons filed a motion requesting a hearing regarding the results of the DNA testing pursuant to chapter 64 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. The trial court held a hearing and concluded that the results of post-conviction DNA testing were "not exculpatory" and that if the results had been available during Clemons's trial, it was "reasonably probable that [he] would have been convicted." We affirm the trial court's order.



BACKGROUND At trial, the thirteen-year-old victim, W.S., testified that on the morning of April 25, 1990, when she was twelve years old, she was walking to school with a female friend when a man spoke to them from a car and offered them a ride. When they refused, the man got out of the car and began chasing them. The man grabbed W.S.'s friend by the hand, but she broke away from him and continued running. He then grabbed W.S. by her arm and dragged her to his car. After forcing W.S. into the car, he got into the car and began driving. W.S. testified that she was "crying and screaming" and that the man grabbed her by the neck when she tried to get out of the car.

She testified that the man eventually stopped the car at a place where there were no houses. The man got out of the car, walked around to the side where W.S. was seated, and opened the door next to her. W.S. testified that she did not have her clothes on because the man "made [her] pull them off when he grabbed [her] by [her] neck." The man pulled his pants down, got on top of W.S., and attempted to put his "private" inside of her "private." He then stood up and told her that "it wouldn't go in." He took a red condom out of a package and put it on. He got back on top of W.S. and again attempted to penetrate her. After telling her that "it still wouldn't go in," the man got off of her, took the condom off, and threw it on the ground. He then "got on his knees and licked [her] privates." W.S. testified that the man then pulled up his pants, told her to pull up her pants, and drove her near her school, where he released her. She ran home.

Meanwhile, W.S.'s friend had run home and reported W.S.'s abduction to police. By the time W.S. arrived at her home, Officer Frederick Simpson was already there. He testified that W.S.'s friend had reported the abduction sometime between 7:00 a.m. and 8:00 a.m. that morning. Simpson interviewed W.S. and her friend and asked them to show him where W.S. had been abducted, which they did. Simpson then traveled with W.S. to the hospital.

While Simpson was driving with W.S. in the car, W.S. pointed to a Buick Riviera and said that the abductor's car looked similar to that car. At the hospital, W.S. provided Simpson with a description of the man who abducted her, describing him as a black male with a thin build, a light complexion, and a moustache and beard. She also described him as being about five-feet-nine- or five-feet-ten-inches tall and wearing a blue work shirt and blue pants. (1) Also on the day of the crime, W.S. and her friend spoke with Officer John Hardesty and described the assailant's car as being a gray Buick Riviera.

Dr. Beth Nauert, a pediatrician, examined W.S. at the hospital. Nauert observed bruises and scratches in several areas of W.S.'s body. Nauert also observed an acute vaginal injury and testified that the injury was consistent with recent vaginal penetration. As part of her examination, Nauert also swabbed W.S.'s pubic area and combed it for foreign hairs.

Later that day, Officer Hardesty and other officers attempted to locate a car matching the description provided by W.S. and her friend. A few blocks from W.S.'s home, they found a gray Buick Riviera matching the girls' description. They determined that the car was registered to one of three brothers who lived together and all had access to the car. Police contacted the brothers and made arrangements for them to go to the police station the following morning. In the meantime, Officer Hardesty drove W.S. past the brothers' car to see if she recognized it. W.S. indicated that the car was not the same one driven by her assailant. She explained that her assailant's car was cleaner, shinier, and newer-looking than the Riviera. The following morning, the three brothers arrived at the police station, and officers took their photographs. At trial, W.S. testified that she was "absolutely sure" that none of the men was her assailant.

In the days after the assault, Sergeant Michael Shane obtained more details from W.S. about where the assault occurred, and he drove W.S. on roads matching her description near where she was abducted. W.S. remembered that her assailant had driven her to a certain point on Ed Bluestein Boulevard, but she could not remember where he had turned after that. When Shane drove her to a nearby area, she recognized the area, saying, "This is where it happened." W.S. had previously described seeing a gate near the location of the assault, and at the location she identified, Shane observed a gate that was opened and propped against the trees on the side of the road. Shane testified that the gate would have been visible from the road if it had been closed. Once at the scene, Shane found a used red condom on the side of the road and collected it as evidence.

At some point, Clemons became a suspect in W.S.'s assault. (2) Approximately two days after the assault, police officers asked W.S. to go to the police station to attempt to identify her assailant among groupings of photos. Officers first gave W.S. books containing photos of possible suspects. W.S. looked at the photos but determined that her assailant was not among them. Officers then gave W.S. a six-person photo line-up that included Clemons's photo. W.S. identified Clemons as her assailant. At trial, W.S. again identified Clemons as her assailant. Also at trial, W.S. identified Clemons's Oldsmobile Toronado as the car driven by her assailant.

During the trial, the State presented evidence that later in the morning of W.S.'s assault, Clemons abducted a young woman from a bus stop and attempted to assault her in the same location where he assaulted W.S. The woman, T.S., who was twenty-one years old at the time of trial, testified that she was waiting at a bus stop at approximately 9:30 a.m. on April 25, 1990, when a man pulled his car to the side of the road in front of her and began talking to her. The man told her that she "looked good" and asked her if she wanted a ride. She told him she did not want a ride, but he continued asking. Eventually, he got out of the car, picked up T.S.'s purse and umbrella, and threw them into his car. He then grabbed her wrists and pulled her to his car while she pulled back, and he got behind her and pushed her in front of him into the car.

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in Re Tirone Clemons, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-tirone-clemons-texapp-2010.