in the Matter of K. K. D.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 12, 2004
Docket03-03-00702-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Matter of K. K. D. (in the Matter of K. K. D.) 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 the Matter of K. K. D., (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-03-00702-CV

In the Matter of K. K. D.



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 126TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. J-23,402, HONORABLE W. JEANNE MEURER, JUDGE PRESIDING

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


K.K.D., a juvenile, was adjudicated delinquent for raping the nine-year-old daughter of his father's girlfriend. He appeals the trial court's assessment of a forty-year determinate sentence in the Texas Youth Commission (TYC), claiming that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the court's finding that "reasonable efforts" had been made to prevent the need to remove him from his home. Because we find the evidence legally and factually sufficient, and because the trial court did not abuse its discretion, we affirm the order of disposition.



BACKGROUND

Fourteen-year-old K.K.D. was accused in a multi-paragraph petition of engaging in delinquent conduct by committing two counts of aggravated sexual assault and two counts of indecency with a child by contact. See Tex. Pen. Code Ann. §§ 22.021, 21.11(a)(1) (West 2003 & Supp. 2004). He entered a plea of true to paragraph III of the petition, which alleged the offense of aggravated sexual assault against the nine-year-old daughter of his father's girlfriend at their shared home on May 8, 2003. During his adjudication hearing on June 26, 2003, K.K.D. admitted to raping the girl. The trial court found that K.K.D. had engaged in delinquent conduct.

On July 23, the trial court held a disposition hearing. The nurse who examined the nine-year-old victim shortly after the alleged offense testified that, as a result of the rape, the girl suffered a three centimeter tear to the tissue of her labia and perineum that required suturing and was very painful. The girl also had bruising and abrasions around her vagina and bruising on her head around her ears. Detectives found blood from the girl's injuries throughout the home and on her clothing. The trial court took judicial notice of the girl's medical records and admitted photographs of her injuries.

Sarah Cortez, a licensed professional counselor and registered sex-offender treatment provider, testified that she performed an assessment on K.K.D. to determine his supervision needs. Cortez testified that although K.K.D. admitted committing the offense, he did not take full responsibility for it but instead blamed the victim, saying she wanted him to do it. Cortez noted there was a complete inconsistency between K.K.D.'s version of the event and the victim's. Although the evidence showed the offense to have been violent and to have caused the victim severe physical injury, K.K.D. insisted that he did not realize she was in pain. Cortez described K.K.D. as being very suspicious of her and theorized that this suspicion would carry over to the treatment setting, and thus he would not do well in treatment. Cortez described K.K.D. as "concealing" the details of the offense, rather than merely "minimizing" the event. She noted that K.K.D.'s history shows a potential for inflicting violence against women.

Cortez concluded that K.K.D. was at high risk for re-offending in foster care or a minimum security setting such as a residential treatment center. She recommended that he be placed at the TYC "for as long as the law would allow" and receive treatment there. She based this recommendation on the age of the victim, the level of violence, the physical damage inflicted on the child, and the results of her assessment of K.K.D., including his concealment of evidence and failure to take responsibility for his actions. She described K.K.D. as a "power rapist." She stated that it would take at least a year of treatment for K.K.D. to "break through" the very first step of recovery, which is to overcome denial and accept that he intended to commit the offense. Cortez stated that K.K.D. needs anger-management treatment and a sex-offender treatment program with twenty-four-hour supervision.

K.K.D.'s probation officer, Emilio Perez, testified that at the time of the disposition hearing, both of K.K.D.'s parents were incarcerated. At the time of the offense, K.K.D. had been living with his father, the father's girlfriend, and the victim in Leander for about five months. Before that, and for most of his life, he had been living with his grandmother in Del Valle. At the time of the hearing, his grandmother was on a three-year probation for manufacturing and delivering cocaine, and she had been convicted of gambling in 1979, serving a two-year probation for that offense. Perez testified that if K.K.D. were given outpatient sex-offender treatment, he would have to live with a relative and that he would not recommend that K.K.D. be placed with either parent or the grandmother. The probation officer testified that an inpatient residential treatment center would also not be appropriate because the Travis County Juvenile Probation Department (the Department) did not know where K.K.D. would go for aftercare and which family members, if any, would be participating in the family portion of the treatment plan.

Records from child protective services (CPS) showed a long history of involvement of that agency with K.K.D.'s family and much documented abuse. For instance, K.K.D.'s grandmother had been referred to CPS on several occasions for neglectful care and supervision of K.K.D.'s siblings and using crack cocaine "on a daily basis." According to CPS records, the grandmother sent K.K.D. to live with his father about five months before the offense because "she could no longer handle his behaviors." K.K.D.'s mother and father had been referred to CPS for abuse of their children, as well as for drug use and neglectful supervision. Perez's court report indicated that the following treatment options for K.K.D. were considered by the Department: (1) outpatient sex-offender treatment, if accepted; (2) placement at a residential treatment center (although K.K.D. was deemed an appropriate candidate for such placement, funding was not available, and placement had not yet been approved); and (3) sex-offender treatment at the TYC.

K.K.D.'s psychologist, John King, testified that he believed K.K.D. should be sent to a "treatment program not unlike Pegasus's treatment program for sexual offenders." He described the Pegasus program as highly structured, with a well-experienced staff that is able to move a youngster though the program and back into the community in about eight to twelve months. Cortez had earlier described residential treatment facilities such as Pegasus as providing twenty-four-hour supervision.

After hearing evidence and reviewing the documentary records, the trial court committed K.K.D. to the TYC for a forty-year determinate sentence. K.K.D. asserts that the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support the disposition because there was no evidence of "reasonable efforts" taken to prevent the need to remove him from his home. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 54.04(i)(1) (West Supp. 2004).

DISCUSSION

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