Jeremy Antawin Jackson v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 9, 2019
Docket09-18-00048-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jeremy Antawin Jackson v. State (Jeremy Antawin Jackson 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
Jeremy Antawin Jackson v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont ____________________ NO. 09-18-00047-CR NO. 09-18-00048-CR _______________________

JEREMY ANTAWIN JACKSON, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 411th District Court Polk County, Texas Trial Cause Nos. 22211 & 25636

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In appellate cause number 09-18-00047-CR, Appellant Jeremy Antawin

Jackson appeals the trial court’s order revoking his community supervision in trial

cause number 22211. In appellate cause number 09-18-00048-CR, Jackson appeals

his conviction for aggravated sexual assault of a child in trial cause number 25636.

We affirm.

1 Background

In January 2012, Jackson was indicted for evading arrest or detention,

enhanced to a felony as a result of a prior state jail felony conviction. In July 2012,

a jury found Jackson guilty of evading arrest or detention. The trial court sentenced

Jackson to ten years of confinement but suspended the sentence and placed Jackson

on community supervision for ten years.

On August 7, 2017, the State filed its Second Amended Motion to Revoke

Probation and alleged that Jackson violated a condition of his community

supervision

which required that he “Neither commit nor be convicted of any offense against the laws of the State of Texas, any other State or of the United States;” in that Defendant violated this condition by committing the offense of Felon in Possession of a Firearm on or about July 12, 2015, in Harris County, Texas and Assault Causes Bodily Injury on or about December 25, 2015, in Polk County, Texas; [and] Sexual Assault Of A Child on or about June 22, 2017, in Polk County, Texas.

Jackson pleaded “not true” to the allegations, and it was agreed that the motion to

revoke would be carried along with the jury trial in the aggravated sexual assault of

a child case in trial cause number 25636. The indictment in cause number 25636

alleged that Jackson “on or about May 29th, 2015, . . . intentionally or knowingly

2 cause[d] the penetration of the mouth of Chloe Doe,[1] a pseudonym, a child younger

than 14 years of age with the sexual organ of said Defendant[.]”

The jury found Jackson guilty of aggravated sexual assault of a child in trial

cause number 25636. On the same day, the trial court proceeded to punishment and

held a hearing on the motion to revoke in trial cause number 22211.

In his hearing on the motion to revoke, Jackson pleaded “true” to a prior

felony conviction alleged in the indictment, the State reintroduced the evidence from

the guilt-innocence portion of trial cause number 25636, and the State introduced

judgments for six prior felony convictions. All the evidence was admitted. The trial

court found Jackson violated the condition of his community supervision that

required that he should not commit or be convicted of any offense against the laws

of the State of Texas, any other State, or of the United States. Jackson was sentenced

to life in prison in trial cause number 25636 and ten years of confinement in trial

cause number 22211, with the sentences to run concurrently.

1 We use pseudonyms to refer to the alleged victim and family members. See Tex. Const. art. I, § 30 (granting crime victims “the right to be treated with fairness and with respect for the victim’s dignity and privacy throughout the criminal justice process.”). Because the indictment in trial cause number 25636 uses the pseudonym “Chloe Doe” for the victim, we will use the same pseudonym when referring to the victim. 3 Jackson filed a notice of appeal in both cases. On March 2, 2018, Jackson filed

a motion for new trial in trial cause number 25636, but he did not file a motion for

new trial in trial cause number 22211. The trial court held a hearing on the motion

for new trial and denied the motion.

Appeal of Conviction for Aggravated Sexual Assault of a Child

In appellate cause number 09-18-00048-CR, Jackson raises three issues in his

appeal of his conviction for aggravated sexual assault of a child in trial cause number

25636. He challenges his trial counsel’s effectiveness, the legal sufficiency of the

evidence supporting his conviction, and the denial of his motion for new trial.

Evidence Presented at Aggravated Sexual Assault Trial

Dallas Early, a patrol officer with the Livingston Police Department, testified

that on June 22, 2017, Jackson made a call to the dispatcher and Officer Early was

dispatched to an apartment complex in Polk County. While en route, Officer Early

learned that there was also a woman in the lobby of the police department who

wanted to speak to him. Upon his arrival, he spoke with Jackson outside of an

apartment and learned that Jackson wanted to talk to him about Jackson’s girlfriend

“taking their kids.” Around the same time, dispatch informed Officer Early that

Jackson’s girlfriend was at the police station wanting to talk to an officer. Officer

Early testified that the couple lived in the apartment, had previously been involved

4 in an altercation, and a window was broken. According to Officer Early, Jackson

told him that Jackson’s girlfriend “would probably try to blame the broken window

and the argument on him. He said he never put his hands on her and also he said that

she was probably going to try to accuse him of molesting her female child.”

Officer Early testified he went back to the police department to speak with

Jackson’s girlfriend, Christy, who was Chloe’s mother. According to Officer Early,

Christy told him about the argument, admitted she broke the window, stated she was

worried about protecting her daughter, and provided a voluntary written statement.

Officer Early testified that after Christy completed her statement, Officer Early read

the statement, had Christy sign the statement, he signed the statement as a witness,

and he “turn[ed] the report over for the outcry[]” and for a detective to investigate

further.

Kirsti Reese, a clinical therapist with Childrenz Haven, a local child advocacy

center, testified that she “originally met [Chloe] for an intake” in August 2017, and

she has had thirteen therapy sessions with Chloe. According to Reese, Chloe’s

grandmother brought her to all the sessions, and Chloe was six years old at the time

of trial. Reese testified that Chloe has made progress accepting what happened but

that it has been difficult for Chloe because Jackson was her “father figure,” and that

adds trauma to a child who has been the victim of sexual abuse. According to Reese,

5 it is the norm for a child to have a delayed outcry when the child is traumatized, and

that “usually the closer the person who has hurt [the child] is usually the more

traumatized the child will be.” Reese testified that during the sessions Chloe has

always been consistent about the trauma she suffered and that during the January 2,

2018 session, Chloe drew a picture to show what happened.

Six-year-old Chloe agreed at trial that she used to live with her mother and a

person named Jeremy, whom she identified at trial as the defendant. She testified

that once her mother left her with Jeremy when her mother went to the store and

something happened to Chloe that Chloe did not like. According to Chloe, she and

Jeremy were in the bathroom in the apartment, Jeremy told her, “Suck my dick[,]”

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