Jeffrey Leon Barrett v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 28, 2023
Docket05-22-00219-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jeffrey Leon Barrett v. the State of Texas (Jeffrey Leon Barrett v. the State of Texas) 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
Jeffrey Leon Barrett v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Affirm and Opinion Filed April 28, 2023

In the Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-22-00219-CR

JEFFERY LEON BARRETT, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 354th Judicial District Court Hunt County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 32470CR

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Molberg, Carlyle, and Smith Opinion by Justice Carlyle

A jury convicted appellant Jeffery Leon Barrett1 of continuous trafficking of

persons and sentenced him to life imprisonment and a $10,000.00 fine. He contends

(1) the trafficking of persons statute is unconstitutional as applied to him, (2) the

evidence is insufficient to support his conviction under that statute, and (3) the trial

court erred by denying his requested jury instruction regarding “the law on labor

trafficking” in the Texas Administrative Code. We affirm.

1 Though the indictment and numerous other documents in the record show Mr. Barrett’s first name as “Jeffery,” his appellate brief and other portions of the record use the spellings “Jeffry” and “Jeffrey.” During pretrial proceedings, Mr. Barrett stated the spelling on the indictment is correct. Background

The indictment in this case alleged that on two or more occasions from about

February 11, 2012, to September 23, 2017, Mr. Barrett engaged in conduct that

constituted an offense under Texas Penal Code section 20A.02, titled “Trafficking of

Persons.” Specifically, the indictment charged he (1) “knowingly traffic[ked]” three

of his children under eighteen years old and “through force, fraud, or coercion”

caused them “to engage in forced labor or services” and (2) “knowingly receive[d]

a benefit from participating in a venture that involved trafficking [those children]

and through force, fraud or coercion caused [those children] to engage in forced

labor or services.”

Mr. Barrett’s wife, Barbara Barrett, was indicted simultaneously on identical

charges in a separate case and represented by separate counsel. The trial court jointly

heard and denied the couple’s identical (1) pretrial motions to quash the indictments

because it is “legally impossible for a parent to submit their own child to forced labor

or service,” (2) pretrial applications for writ of habeas corpus based on “the exact

same argument” as the motions to quash, and (3) additional pretrial applications for

writ of habeas corpus asserting facial constitutional challenges to penal code

subsections 20A.02(a)(5) and 20A.02(a)(6). The Barretts appealed the trial court’s

rulings on the facial constitutional challenges and this Court affirmed. See Ex parte

–2– Barrett, 608 S.W.3d 80, 97 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2020, pet. ref’d). Then, the Barretts’

cases were tried separately.2

At trial, T.B.1 testified he was born in 2000 and was adopted by the Barretts

when he was about four years old. The Barrett family moved to Texas when T.B.1

was about nine or ten. At that time, the Barretts also had four younger adopted

children: daughters T.B.2 and A.B. and sons T.B.3 and J.B.3

In 2012, the Barretts and their five children lived in a house on a country road

in Greenville, Texas. They had two or three dogs. T.B.1 and T.B.2 attended public

school. T.B.1 testified he never saw the Barretts work outside the home in Texas and

did not “have any reason to think they did.” He stated the Barretts got “checks in the

mail” that “had all of the kids’ names on them” and “made plans based on those

checks coming in every month.”

T.B.1 testified that during fifth grade, he was called to the school’s office and

“there was a CPS case worker in there asking, you know, how is home life.”4 The

Barretts removed him and his siblings from school before the end of that school year.

T.B.1 and T.B.2 “did home schooling” online for a few months until Ms. Barrett

2 Ms. Barrett was also convicted by a jury and appealed to this Court in cause number 05-21-00912- CR. This Court’s opinions in both cases are being issued simultaneously. 3 Additionally, the Barretts have two older biological children, who were not living with them at the time of these events. T.B.3, J.B., and the Barretts’ biological children are not involved in this case. 4 The record shows the term “CPS” refers to the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services. –3– stopped paying for the online program. None of the children received any formal

schooling after that.

About a month later, “some other dogs came” and a “structure” was built onto

the garage comprising a kennel with cages. According to T.B.1, after the structure

was finished, “more and more” dogs arrived. The Barretts obtained a license and

began “breeding them for money.” There were sometimes more than 100 dogs on

the property, mostly yorkies, poodles, and cavaliers.

After the children were withdrawn from school, they were not allowed off the

property without Mr. Barrett or Ms. Barrett. Though they sometimes had access to a

computer, the children could not see friends and did not receive an allowance. T.B.1

and his sisters were required to perform unpaid work pertaining to the Barretts’ dog-

selling business, which T.B.1 testified consumed “90 percent” of his time.

T.B.1 stated the kennel was an uninsulated metal and plywood structure that

was “real hot in the summer.” It was “mainly dark” inside and smelled “horrible”

inside and outside. The noise was terrible because the dogs’ barking “echoed off the

building.” To talk with someone inside the building, “you would have to be

screaming.” There also “was a bunch of dogs in the house” that were uncaged.

Seven days a week, Mr. Barrett would awaken T.B.1 by shaking him and tell

him to go feed the dogs and quiet them. T.B.1 had to use a 5-gallon bucket to bring

water from a bathtub in the house to the kennel. Watering the dogs took about fifteen

trips. T.B.1 and his sisters had to clean the dogs’ cages without gloves or coverings

–4– for their clothing and got dog feces on them “pretty often.” The work each morning

took about five to six hours. In the evening, the three children fed and watered the

dogs again. Additionally, the children were required to administer the dogs’ vaccine

injections, keep vaccine records, and photograph the dogs for the business’s website.

If the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation was coming for an inspection,

the children had to groom the dogs and do additional cleaning so “the license could

get renewed.” On those occasions, the three children worked “morning to night”

until after dark.

T.B.1 stated that though he and his sisters were “out there every day” cleaning

the kennel building, it was not always clean because “you can only do so much with

a broom with that many dogs or, you know, people.” Though Ms. Barrett rarely

entered the kennel building, Mr. Barrett went in “maybe every week or so,”

sometimes at Ms. Barrett’s direction. According to T.B.1, Mr. Barrett was the

“muscle” and did what Ms. Barrett wanted done. If Ms. Barrett “found out” the

structure was not clean, she would “start screaming” and T.B.1 and his sisters would

“get hit because of that.” Usually, Mr. Barrett “did the hitting.” T.B.1 testified Mr.

Barrett never said to Ms. Barrett that “the beatings should stop” or that the children

“shouldn’t get hit.”

T.B.1 also testified “physical abuse happen[ed]” when “somebody wasn’t

doing something they were supposed to,” including “someone not working in the

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