John Cruz Buentello v. State

512 S.W.3d 508, 2016 WL 7164021, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 13030
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 8, 2016
DocketNO. 01-15-00834-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 512 S.W.3d 508 (John Cruz Buentello 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
John Cruz Buentello v. State, 512 S.W.3d 508, 2016 WL 7164021, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 13030 (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

Harvey Brown, Justice

John Buentello was convicted of aggravated sexual assault of a child 1 and sentenced to life imprisonment. He argues that there was legally insufficient evidence of a necessary element of the offense: penetration. He also challenges three of the trial court’s rulings during his trial: (1) overruling his objection that the outcry witness’s testimony was inadmissible because the child’s outcry was not reliable and the forensic examiner designated as the outcry witness was not the first adult the child told of the abuse, (2) denying his motion for continuance, and (3) denying his motion for mistrial. We affirm.

Background

Buentello lived out-of-state but would visit his son and his son’s family in the Houston area occasionally. The son had a blended family with fíve children, including Amy, 2 who was Buentello’s son’s stepdaughter.

According to Amy’s mother, Buentello visited only occasionally in the beginning and would spend equal time with all the children. Over time, though, his visits became more frequent — sometimes more than once a month — and he began to spend more of his time focused on Amy. When Amy was 10, she disclosed to her stepfather that Buentello had touched her when she was seven years old.

Amy’s step-father — who is Buentello’s son — described what happened the night that Amy first disclosed that Buentello had touched her. He testified that his oldest daughter woke him late one night, crying. She took him to Amy’s bedroom, where Amy was sitting on the floor and also crying. Amy was reluctant to talk about why she was upset. Eventually she told her step-father that something bad had happened because of Buentello, He immediately woke up Amy’s mom, and Amy told her mom, in general terms, that Buentello had touched her.

The next morning, Amy’s mom called Child Protective Services, which referred Amy to The Children’s Assessment Center to be interviewed by a forensic investigator, Susan Odhiambo. The forensic investigator explained to the jury that she is charged with obtaining facts necessary to investigate accusations of sexual abuse of a child, Odhiambo conducts multiple child interviews each day.

Odhiambo recorded her interview of Amy, In that interview, Amy established that she knew the difference between a truth and a lie, and she promised to tell the truth. Then Amy described specific details about Buentello’s past conduct toward her. Odhiambo testified that Amy was “certain” about her recollection and “consistent” with her description of who had assaulted her, the time frame of the assault, and the location where it occurred.

Two years later, at Buentello’s trial, Amy testified that Buentello assaulted her late one evening while he was visiting from Louisiana. Amy said that it happened in 2010, when she was seven. That night, when everyone else went to bed, she went to her bedroom to watch television. About twenty minutes later, she became thirsty *513 and went to the kitchen for a drink. Buen-tello was lying on the couch in the study. He called her over in a stern voice. When she complied, he told her, again in a stern voice, to sit on the couch. She hesitated, and he told her in a harsher voice to sit down. Then he told her to lie down. He laid behind her, with his arms wrapped around her and a blanket spread over them, in silence, for about five minutes. She felt “uncomfortable” and “awkward” and wanted to leave, so she told him she was hot and stood to go to her room. He said, “No, just take your clothes off.” She told him no.

Buentello stood up, raised her arms above her head, and tried to take her shirt off. Amy resisted, but he took off her shirt and then the rest of her clothes. He then pushed her to the couch. He laid behind her and told her to go to sleep.

Buentello began rubbing Amy’s legs. She testified that he then moved “towards my vagina.” When asked whether he “was touching your vagina on the outside or on the inside,” she testified, “On the inside.” She stated that he began “moving around ... forward and back” and that whatever was touching her was “warm and soft and it hurt.”

When a noise came from the stairs, Buentello told her to go to her room. She did. Buentello stayed with the family the rest of the weekend; Amy did not tell anyone what happened.

Amy testified that what Buentello did to her that night made her feel “scared” and “disgusted.” She testified about additional disturbing events involving Buentello touching her. She said that Buentello would unexpectedly put lotion on his hands and rub her legs. Twice when he did this, he reached far into her shorts. On another occasion, he commented to her that her “butt” and “boobs” were “growing.”

Amy’s mother testified about two more strange events involving Buentello that occurred in 2013, when Amy was 10. During a visit, Buentello asked Amy’s mother if Amy’s younger sister could nap with him in Amy’s bedroom. According to Amy’s mother, Amy insisted to her that Buentello not be allowed to nap with the young girl. Amy said she “was afraid that Grandpa was going to hurt her little sister.”

The second strange event involved Buentello’s asking to take Amy to Louisiana to stay with him. Amy’s mother testified that she offered to let Amy and her brother visit Buentello together, but Buen-tello said no. Buentello became angry with Amy’s mother because she would not allow Amy to stay with him alone.

Although Amy’s mother thought these two events were strange, at the time she trusted Buentello. However, looking back on these two specific events and reflecting on Amy’s behavior during that time, Amy’s mother testified that there were signs that Amy was uncomfortable: she had begun to avoid Buentello during his visits and would stay physically close to her when he was nearby.

Around this same time, when Amy was 10 and Buentello was not in the home, Amy and her older sister were in Amy’s room, laughing and talking. Amy opened her dresser and unexpectedly saw Buentel-lo’s Bible in her dresser drawer. The realization that he had recently been in her bedroom upset her, and she began to cry. Her sister asked why she was upset. When Amy told her about Buentello, her sister was “in shock.” That is when Amy’s sister persuaded her to tell her parents, and they woke her step-father to tell him what Buentello had done.

The Children’s Assessment Center forensic investigator, Susan Odhiambo, testified as the designated outcry witness. Before trial began, Buentello had challenged *514 whether Odhiambo was the proper outcry witness because Amy had spoken to her step-father and her mother first. He did not call any witnesses in support of his challenge. The State responded that Odhi-ambo was the first person to whom Amy disclosed sufficient details of the encounter to qualify it as an aggravated sexual assault. The trial court denied Buentello’s challenge and designated the CAC investigator, Odhiambo, as the outcry witness.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
512 S.W.3d 508, 2016 WL 7164021, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 13030, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-cruz-buentello-v-state-texapp-2016.