John Lee Basey v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 10, 2011
Docket14-10-00134-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
John Lee Basey v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed March 10, 2011.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

___________________

NO. 14-10-00134-CR

John Lee Basey, Appellant

V.

THE State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 174th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1132602

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, John Lee Basey, was convicted of aggravated sexual assault of a child and sentenced to life in prison.  He raises three points of error:  (1) the trial court inappropriately commented on appellant’s guilt during voir dire, (2) the trial court was not an impartial judge, and (3) appellant’s trial counsel was ineffective.  We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

I.                    The Offense

Appellant does not appeal based upon the facts of the crime, so we provide a brief recitation.  The complainant, C.L., testified that the sexual assault occurred during 1993 when she was twelve years old.  She stated she was walking to school when appellant drove behind her, stopped, and engaged her in a conversation about arriving for school on time.  C.L. informed the jury appellant wore Houston Independent School District police officer jacket. 

C.L. testified she entered appellant’s vehicle because he explained he needed to take her to juvenile detention because she was tardy.   She stated he then stopped at a pay telephone and told C.L. he was “call[ing] it in.”  C.L. told the jury that after returning to the car, appellant asked C.L. for a kiss, threatening he would inform the people in juvenile detention she had drugs and a gun in her possession if she refused.  C.L. testified that appellant then drove his automobile to a location underneath Interstate 10, stopped his vehicle, and pulled down her pants.  She stated appellant required her to perform oral sex on him and then physically forced her to submit to sexual intercourse.  C.L. stated that appellant said he would shoot her if she screamed, but she could not remember if she saw a gun. 

After appellant completed intercourse, C.L. testified that appellant drove her close to school.  C.L. went directly to the school nurse and informed her she had been raped.  C.L. eventually gave a statement to the police and went to Texas Children’s Hospital, where an evidence kit was performed.  That kit apparently remained in the Houston Police Department (“HPD”) property room, untested, from 1993 to 2007.[1] 

Officer Julie Anderson of HPD testified that in 2007, she was informed that the DNA from C.L.’s evidence kit matched appellant’s DNA.  Officer Anderson contacted C.L. and performed a photo spread of six individuals, including appellant, with C.L.  C.L. identified appellant from the photo spread.   

Appellant was later arrested and charged with sexual assault against C.L.  The jury convicted appellant of sexually assaulting C.L.  See Tex. Penal Code § 22.0011 (West 2010).

II.                The Punishment Phase of Trial

During the punishment phase of the trial, the State called several witnesses.  A woman named L.T. testified appellant raped her when she was 16.  Appellant was not tried for this alleged sexual assault.

Appellant also stipulated to three convictions: two counts of impersonating a police officer, and one of sexual assault.  He was convicted of the offenses in 2004, and received ten years’ deferred adjudication for the crimes. 

Officer Gilbert Brillon of the Major Offenders division of HPD investigated the stipulated offenses and testified to the facts of the cases.  He stated in both cases of impersonating a police officer, appellant approached prostitutes and negotiated payment for sex.  Officer Brillon explained that after the women agreed to exchange money for sex, appellant claimed to be a police officer and threatened the women with incarceration unless they each agreed to perform sexual favors.  Appellant held one of the prostitutes, D.L., in his custody for two to three hours while he exposed himself to her.  Prostitute T.B. had intercourse with appellant to earn release from his custody.  All of Officer Brillon’s testimony occurred without objection from defense counsel. 

Appellant chose to testify in the punishment phase.  He confessed to raping C.L. and L.T.  He also testified that after he entered deferred adjudication in 2004, he entered sex offender therapy and became a registered sex offender.  Defense counsel asked appellant if he was the same “John Basey as in 1993” or “the same John Basey that committed the acts in 2004.”  Appellant answered in the negative to both questions. 

Defense counsel began his closing argument with the following statement: 

Mr. Basey was a monster.  He raped a 12-year-old girl in 1993.  And in 2002, you heard from a young lady yesterday that he raped, a young lady of 16.  And then he had occasion to rape prostitutes in . . . 2002.  He was arrested for those crimes and placed on community supervision, deferred adjudication. He was not convicted, so he's eligible for probation in this case.

Defense counsel then described his personal views on rehabilitation and discussed appellant’s actions in his sex offender classes.  He also described the family appellant testified he endured as a child.  Defense counsel then addressed the “benefit [appellant] would be to the community as a convicted sex offender ministering to other sex offenders to change their ways . . .” and noted a prison sentence would not change the fact that the rapes occurred.  Defense counsel argued, “[Appellant] got on the stand and told you what he has done.  He told you he was a monster.  He lied about it in the past, sure . . . I’m asking you to keep him on community supervision so he can continue to go[] to those classes, he can be monitored by the State, and he can continue to support his children.  I’m asking you not to lock him in a cage . . .” 

I.                    Did the Trial Judge’s Comment, during Voir Dire, Adversely Affect Appellant’s Presumption of Innocence or Affect the Trial Court’s Impartiality?

Appellant’s first and second issues appeal a statement made by the trial judge during voir dire. 

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