Jimi Hofmann v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 8, 2005
Docket03-04-00132-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jimi Hofmann v. State (Jimi Hofmann 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
Jimi Hofmann v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-04-00132-CR

Jimi Hofmann, Appellant



v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 147TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 9034177, HONORABLE WILFORD FLOWERS, JUDGE PRESIDING

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



In January 2004, a jury found Jimi Hofmann guilty of the aggravated sexual assault of a child. Tex. Pen. Code Ann. § 22.021 (West Supp. 2004-05). Because Hofmann was HIV-positive, the jury found that his penis and bodily fluids were a deadly weapon used in the commission of sexual assault, an aggravating circumstance under the penal code. Id. § 22.021(a)(2)(A)(iv). Jimi Hoffman appeals the factual sufficiency of the State's evidence, contends that his penis and bodily fluids do not qualify under the law as a deadly weapon, and argues that the trial court improperly dismissed a juror that the State challenged for cause. We affirm the judgment of the district court.



BACKGROUND



A.K. was born in Germany on November 22, 1987, the daughter of Jimi Hofmann and Maria Pope. A.K. had a half-brother, C.H., the son of Jimi Hofmann and Monika Slauson. Jimi Hofmann's mother, Ruth Hofmann, lived in Texas, and his grandmother, Mary Kearns, lived in New Jersey. At the beginning of 2002, A.K., her mother Pope, and Pope's new husband were living in Georgia; C.H. and his mother Slauson were living in Germany; Ruth Hofmann was living in Austin; and Jimi Hofmann was living in Missouri with his terminally ill wife Patricia, whom he married in 1996. In 1992, Jimi Hofmann learned that he was infected with Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV); he testified that Patricia suffered from a number of medical problems, but was not HIV-positive. (1)

The events at the center of this case took place in 2002. That February, A.K. moved to Austin to live with her paternal grandmother, Ruth Hofmann, in her mobile home; in May, Jimi Hofmann and Patricia moved in as well. A.K. testified that at first, she was glad to see her father, since prior contact had been sporadic. She thought it was "cool" that he would share alcohol and marihuana with her. She became uncomfortable, though, as his hugs became more frequent; she also noticed him staring at her when she went swimming with her cousins.

At trial, A.K. described a camping trip with her father to Lake Travis where she said their first sexual encounter took place; Jimi Hofmann denied everything about her story except that they went camping. A.K. testified that after a day of swimming and fishing, her father gave her wine coolers and marihuana and began kissing her on the neck and mouth. Inside their tent, he began removing her clothes. She said that Jimi Hofmann told her that he was not her real father and, because they were not related, anything that happened would be okay. She testified that once she was naked, her father gave her a "popper," which she described as "a chemical or something . . . that gives you a head rush when you inhale it." She further testified that he asked if she wanted to have sex, and she said yes; they then had unprotected sexual intercourse. The next day, they returned to Austin; A.K. told no one what happened.

Patricia died sometime after the camping trip; after that A.K. began occasionally spending the night in Jimi Hofmann's bedroom at Ruth Hofmann's house. Jimi Hofmann does not deny sharing a bed with his daughter "half a dozen times." A.K. accused Jimi Hofmann of having unprotected sex with her twice at her grandmother's and once more at a Travis County hotel after he gave her lingerie.

That October, A.K. and Jimi Hofman went to New Jersey to visit her paternal great-grandmother, Mary Kearns, and to see A.K.'s half-brother C.H. The family had planned for Jimi Hofmann and his two children to stay with Kearns; on their first night, he instead took his son and daughter to a hotel room. A.K. told the jury that she remembered the three of them drinking alcohol in the hotel room and playing a game, but could not recall what kind of game it was. She described a "flashback" memory of all three of them having sex, including the positions they assumed. She also testified that Jimi Hofmann again told her that he was not her father.

C.H. testified in greater detail about the incident in the New Jersey hotel. He described how the game they played--"truth or dare"--devolved into instances of escalating sexuality, including A.K.'s revelation that she and her father had "been together," and Jimi Hofmann's daring C.H. to expose himself, which C.H. did. He said that his father and sister started "making out" and eventually asked him more than once to join them. C.H. testified that after initially resisting, he did attempt to have sex with A.K., but did not penetrate her. His description was consistent with A.K.'s account of the evening. (2)

Jimi Hofmann acknowledged taking his children to a hotel room their first night together in New Jersey; he testified that they went there because he didn't want to expose his grandmother to C.H.'s vulgar language and, because he thought they would be talking well into the night, his grandmother wouldn't be able to sleep. He testified that he bought alcohol, but only for himself and C.H. They discussed parentage once during the evening, Jimi Hofmann said; he told A.K. that a DNA test had established that C.H. was Jimi Hofmann's son, but that no test had ever established that he was A.K.'s father. As they were watching television and talking, Jimi Hofmann said that he fell asleep, only to be awakened later by C.H. and A.K. having sex. He says he immediately pulled his daughter off his son and put her in the shower to clean up.

Jimi Hofmann, A.K. and C.H. returned to Kearns's house the next morning. After their visit with her, A.K. and Jimi Hofmann returned to Texas; C.H. went home to Germany. The night C.H. returned, he told his grandparents about the New Jersey incident; together they told his mother Slauson. In November, A.K. and her mother Pope went to Germany to celebrate A.K.'s fifteenth birthday. On that trip, Slauson informed Pope about the New Jersey incident. Pope confronted her daughter; after initially denying that anything had happened, A.K. told her mother about the incidents in New Jersey and on the camping trip and about the sexual encounters at Ruth Hofmann's house and at the hotel in Texas. After they returned from Germany, A.K. moved back to her mother's home in Alabama.

Pope notified the police, including the Travis County Sheriff's Office. That December, Jimi Hofmann was arrested and charged with aggravated sexual assault for the events that took place at the Travis County campground. He was convicted by a jury and sentenced to eighteen years in prison. He appeals that verdict.



DISCUSSION



Factual Sufficiency of the Evidence



Jimi Hofmann contends that the jury's verdict is contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence and therefore clearly unjust and wrong. When there is a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain a criminal conviction, the question presented is whether a rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.

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