Joe Richard Jasso v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 6, 2011
Docket13-09-00554-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Joe Richard Jasso v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-09-00554-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

JOE RICHARD JASSO, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee,

On appeal from the 156th District Court of Bee County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Rodriguez and Benavides Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Valdez

Appellant, Joe Richard Jasso, was convicted of six counts of aggravated sexual

assault, a first-degree felony, and pleaded guilty to one count of sexual assault, a

second-degree felony. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. §§ 22.011(a)(2), (f),

22.021(a)(1)(B)(i), (2)(A)(ii), (e) (Vernon Supp. 2010). Jasso was sentenced to ninety-

nine years‘ incarceration plus a $10,000 fine for each count of aggravated sexual

assault and twenty years‘ incarceration plus a $10,000 fine for the sexual assault count. The trial court ordered that the sentences for four of the aggravated sexual assault

convictions (counts 1, 4, 8, and 9) be served concurrently after the completion of a prior

sentence in an unrelated case and that the remaining convictions (counts 7, 10, and 11)

be served consecutively upon the completion of the concurrent sentences in counts 1,

4, 8, and 9.1 By six issues, Jasso contends that: (1) the evidence is legally and

factually insufficient ―to support the conclusion that appellant is the ‗Joe Richard‘ the

subject of the jury‘s verdict of guilt in counts [1 and 4]‖; (2) the evidence is legally and

factually insufficient ―to support the jury‘s verdict of guilt regarding counts [1 and 4]‖; (3)

the trial court‘s cumulation of the sentences imposed for counts 7, 10, and 11

constitutes cruel and unusual punishment; and (4) the trial court erred in cumulating the

sentences with a prior sentence. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

In this case, the State alleged that Jasso sexually assaulted three girls: A.L.,

S.K., and S.S. At the time of the alleged incidents, the girls were four, thirteen, and

fourteen years old, respectively. The investigation into Jasso‘s involvement began

when Leo Campos, the stepfather of A.L., wrote the Bee County District Attorney‘s

Office (the ―District Attorney‘s Office‖) describing a conversation he had with A.L. when

she visited him in jail.2 In several letters written to the District Attorney‘s Office, Campos

1 The trial court ordered:

This sentence shall begin upon the completion of sentence in Bee County, Texas cause no. B-04-2061-CR-B. The sentences in Counts 1, 4, 8 & 9 shall run concurrently. The sentences in Counts 7, 10 & 11 shall run consecutively—with the sentence in Count 11 to begin upon the completion of the concurrent sentences in Counts 1, 4, 8 & 9. The sentence in Count 7 shall begin upon the completion of the sentence in Count 11. The sentences in Count 10 shall begin upon the completion of the sentence in Count 7 . . . . 2 Campos is currently serving a thirty-five year prison sentence for what he described as ―a cocaine charge.‖

2 stated that A.L. had told him that ―Joe‖ had touched her private parts and that ―Joe‖ told

her that he would hurt her if she told anyone. At trial, Campos testified that when A.L.

told him what had happened with ―Joe,‖ he noticed ―that something was wrong with her‖

and that she appeared to be upset.

After receiving the letters from Campos, the District Attorney‘s Office forwarded

the letters to the police, and the police began investigating A.L.‘s living situation. The

police later discovered that A.L. lived with several other individuals in a house in Bee

County, Texas. Among those living with A.L. was S.S., a girl whom A.L. refers to as her

sister even though the girls are not related. S.S. testified that she was fourteen years

old when she first began dating Jasso in May 2004. Jasso was twenty-two years old at

the time he and S.S. began their relationship. S.S. had recently attempted to commit

suicide by ingesting numerous medications found in the house, and she admitted that

she had low self-esteem and enjoyed smoking marihuana. Jasso provided S.S. with

marihuana regularly, and the two began having sexual intercourse shortly after meeting

one another in a park. S.S. and Jasso admitted at trial that Jasso penetrated S.S.‘s

sexual organ with his fingers and penis two or three times each day that they were

dating.

S.S. noted that she had problems with her mother; that her mother had ―stopped

paying attention to [her]‖; and that her mother, D.S., did not initially approve of her

dating Jasso. Despite D.S.‘s disapproval of Jasso, he regularly stayed overnight with

S.S. and woke in the morning to make A.L. breakfast. S.S. slept in very late each day,

not waking until 3:00 or 4:00 in the afternoon. S.S. also recalled that A.L. would often

accompany S.S. and Jasso when they would run errands for S.S.‘s mother. S.S.

3 admitted to smoking marihuana with Jasso while in front of A.L. and that she and Jasso

would buy A.L. candy and make her promise to keep S.S. and Jasso‘s smoking habits a

secret. S.S. testified that A.L. and Jasso ―always played together‖; however, S.S.

testified that shortly after she and Jasso broke up, A.L. told her mother that Jasso had

molested her. S.S. noticed that A.L. would masturbate when her mother was asleep

and that she would play ―dirty‖ with her dolls.3 S.S. recounted that her relationship with

Jasso ended when he began dating S.K., a girl who was several years younger than

S.S. S.S. stated that at the time A.L. described the alleged molestation incident to

Campos in September 2008, S.S. was dating Joe Richard Estrada and that A.L. was not

living with them.

D.S., S.S.‘s mother and the foster mother of A.L., testified that she was aware of

Jasso sneaking into the house to have sex with S.S. and that she allowed it because

she ―didn‘t want to lose [S.S. after her suicide attempt] so I just let her do it.‖ D.S.

stated that A.L. always slept in D.S.‘s bedroom and that she did not suspect that

anything had happened to A.L. until A.L. made her outcry. D.S. recalled that A.L. first

told her about the molestation incident after S.S. had told A.L. that she had seen Jasso

at the jail. A.L. told D.S. that she did not say anything about the incident for several

years because Jasso had threatened to hurt A.L. or her family if she said anything. D.S.

then testified to the following:

After [S.S.] had said that she seen [sic] Joe [at the jail], a few days later [A.L.] said that when she was living in Navy housing Joe Jasso had touched her or touched her private area. She said that he made her breakfast and took her to the garage and told her to lay [sic] down and

3 S.S. explained that playing ―dirty‖ with the dolls meant getting ―them naked, and there were times when she [A.L.] would put their heads between their legs . . . [b]etween—the male doll‘s head between the girl‘s legs.‖

4 take her pants down. Then he started touching her around her vagina area. Another time she said that he put his fingers inside her vagina.

After telling D.S. about the incident, A.L. became very afraid. A.L. did not want to go to

the bathroom by herself or sleep by herself. She also began to have nightmares about

Jasso. D.S. stated that she was very upset about the incident but that she did not have

an opportunity to file a complaint with police before Campos did.

S.K., a young girl who also had previously attempted to commit suicide, testified

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