Jason Burrows v. State

492 S.W.3d 398, 2016 WL 1470187, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 3920
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 14, 2016
DocketNO. 01-15-00302-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 492 S.W.3d 398 (Jason Burrows v. State) 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
Jason Burrows v. State, 492 S.W.3d 398, 2016 WL 1470187, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 3920 (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

Sherry Radack, Chief Justice

Appellant, Sheriff Deputy Jason Burrows, appeals his conviction for official oppression stemming from allegations that he inappropriately touched a woman’s breasts during a traffic stop. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

A. Trial Testimony

1. The State’s Case

M. Martinez, the complainant, testified that she is married with one child and lives in Pearland with her husband. In 2012, she worked at restaurant called Taco.com. J. Mendieta, a friend of her' husband’s family, was her boss. Her shift generally started at 5:00 a.m. to prepare food for the restaurant’s 5:30 a.m. opening.

On June 10, 2012, she got up at 4:00 a.m. and left for work about 4:30 wearing a loose-fitting red shirt with a Taco.com insignia. Martinez testified to the route she drove — from her street, she would start on County Road 128, then she would take a right turn at the four-way stop onto Highway 99., On the morning of June 10, when she approached the four-way stop at Highway 99, there was a police car at the stop sign in the oncoming lane of County Road 128. She stopped at her stop sign to wait for the police car, which had arrived .at the intersection before her, to go first.

• After Martinez turned right on Highway 99, the police car began to follow her. At one point, she swerved to avoid a dog that had run into the road in front of her. After she continued driving for a while, the police car activated his overhead lights, and she pulled over. Highway 99 is bordered by a ditch at that point, so her car was partially in the road, and partway into the grass beside the ditch.

*400 A male officer, appellant, wearing a brown police uniform and a badge, approached and told Martinez that he pulled her over because she had swerved into the oncoming lane at one point. After she admitted not having a driver’s license, he told her to get out of her car. He asked where she was going, and she told him where she worked and that she was on the way there. He never asked her name, and he did not return to his car to run her name or plates. Instead, he told her to get back into her car and drive to a particular gas station.

Appellant followed her to the gas station with his overhead lights off, but with a spotlight shining into her car. The gas station was closed, and she parked on the side of the building waiting for the officer to approach, who she assumed would write her a ticket. It was still dark outside, and the only light on at the gas station was the one by the gas pumps. Appellant approached Martinez and again told her to get out of her car. They stood between their two cars, and he asked why she was driving without a license. She responded that she needed to work to support her young daughter. He asked her name and to spell it, but she was unable to, given the language barrier. Appellant then gave her his tablet and asked her to write her name, which she did.

Appellant- then questioned her about who her boss was, and she responded “J. Mendieta.” He then asked who her car belonged to. She responded that it belonged to her husband. He asked if her husband had a driver’s license, and she responded, “yes.” Appellant then asked Martinez whether she had a green card, and she responded, “no.” 1

Appellant asked Martinez what she had underneath her shirt, to which she responded “nothing.” He told her to put her “hands on top of the car and that he was going to check me out.” She put her hands on top of her car and he stood behind her, patting her body down. He inquired again about what was underneath her shirt, and she again insisted “nothing.”

Appellant walked around and turned off the headlights and interior light of Martinez’s car. In an aggressive voice, he then instructed her to walk over towards a dark grove of trees. Martinez got the impression he was trying to scare her, and she was scared. She told him she wanted to stay by the car and asked him why she needed to go into the dark trees. He just responded with repeated orders to “walk and to walk, He said go, go.”- Appellant eventually complied because she was scared and did not think she should ignore a police officer’s orders.

After appellant followed her, he continued to ask what was under her shirt. Then he got very close to her and told her to lift up her shirt. Because “he was looking at me ugly” and “talking to me rough” she thought she did not have a choice but to comply. After she lifted her shirt, appellant was still standing very close and then asked what she had under her bra. She again insisted nothing, and testified that it would have been very clear to appellant that there was nothing under her bra. He asked her several times to lift her bra, which she eventually did. She testified again that she complied because she was scared and he was ordering her aggressively.

After Martinez lifted her bra, appellant looked at her and then touched her breasts with both his hands. After he told her to *401 put her bra back down, he told her to leave. She told him she was going home, and he responded, “you don’t have any problems. Go on to your work.” As appellant was leaving, he asked Martinez if her husband had a green card, and she did not respond. Martinez took down appellant’s license plate number on her phone.

When appellant left, he took Highway 99 towards County Road 128. Martinez did not feel safe driving the same direction towards her house because she was worried that appellant might think she was following him and might do something to her. So she instead drove towards her work. Before she left the parking lot, she tried to call her husband twice, but he did not answer. She then called her boss, Mendieta, as she was leaving the gas station. He met her at the restaurant, and she told him what happened. She was crying and very upset.

Mendieta insisted that she report the incident, but she argued with him, stating that no one was going to believe her over a police officer. Mendieta called G. Mendez, the crime victim liaison for the Pearland Police Department. Martinez talked with Mendez and told her what happened that same day. Martinez also talked to investigators Gamboa and Duearte either that same day or the next day, and she provided a written statement to them.

Duearte showed Martinez a photo lineup on June 29, 2012. She identified appellant in that line-up, initialing his picture. She also identified appellant in the courtroom as the police officer who stopped her and touched her breasts.

Finally, she testified that the police never asked her for DNA or attempted to lift fingerprints from her vehicle.

J. Mendieta testified on June 10, 2012, he received a call from Martinez around 4:50 or 5:00 a.m. Martinez was scared and excited trying to tell him that she was stopped by a sheriff and he touched her and took off her shirt. When Martinez tried to tell Mendieta more details after arriving at work, he told her to wait and so they could find someone to help them. He then called Mendez with the Pearland Police Department. Mendieta is the godfather of Mendez’s oldest son, and he understood Mendez’s job to involve helping victims of crimes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
492 S.W.3d 398, 2016 WL 1470187, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 3920, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jason-burrows-v-state-texapp-2016.