Johnathon Christian MacDonald v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 4, 2020
Docket09-18-00399-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Johnathon Christian MacDonald v. State (Johnathon Christian MacDonald 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
Johnathon Christian MacDonald v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-18-00399-CR __________________

JOHNATHON CHRISTIAN MACDONALD, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee __________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 435th District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 17-06-07133-CR __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A grand jury indicted Appellant Johnathon Christian MacDonald for

aggravated sexual assault of his daughter, J.B., who was under the age of six. See

Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.021(a)(1)(B)(i), (a)(2)(b). Specifically, the indictment

alleged that MacDonald “intentionally or knowingly” caused his “sexual organ to

contact and/or penetrate the anus of J.B., a child who was then and there younger

than 6 years of age[.]” The jury convicted MacDonald, and the trial court sentenced

1 him to forty-five years of confinement. In three appellate issues, MacDonald

challenges (1) the sufficiency of the evidence, (2) the trial court’s exclusion of

alternative perpetrator evidence, and (3) the trial court’s admission of certain audio

recordings of the complainant over the defense’s objection. We affirm the trial

court’s judgment.

I. Background

A patrol officer for the Conroe Police Department testified that in May 2017,

he was dispatched to an apartment complex in Montgomery County to investigate a

report of a possible aggravated sexual assault of a child. The officer arrived at the

scene and spoke with T.T., who told him she babysat MacDonald’s daughter, J.B.,

in her apartment along with her own three-year-old son, K.S. She told the officer

that earlier that evening before MacDonald came to pick up J.B., she found her son

naked in the corner of his bedroom with J.B.’s head in his lap.

After the officer interviewed T.T. and took her statement, he then contacted

CPS. The officer told the jury that he took steps to ensure CPS addressed the

situation as soon as possible, because he had concerns about MacDonald’s continued

access to J.B. if the child stayed with MacDonald in his apartment. He testified that

a CPS caseworker met him at MacDonald’s apartment around 4:00 the next morning.

The officer described MacDonald’s demeanor as agitated and defensive when they

2 explained why they were there. The officer stayed in the bedroom of the apartment

with MacDonald while the CPS caseworker spoke with J.B. in the living room. The

officer testified that after speaking with J.B., the caseworker decided to remove her

from the home. MacDonald then called his mother, J.J.M., to pick up J.B. The officer

returned to the station and prepared his report.

A clinical psychologist from the Harris County Children’s Assessment Center

testified for the State. He explained the general reasons why children often make

delayed outcries rather than reporting abuse immediately. He testified that children

are usually abused by people who are around them and have access to them, who

most often are family members. The psychologist also explained that if a child has

been abused by a family member, they may have both positive and negative

emotions about that person; they may love the individual but hate the fact that they

have been abused.

Detective Bret Irvine with the Conroe Police Department also testified. Once

assigned the case, he reviewed the patrol officer’s report. The detective told the jury

he then contacted the CPS caseworker to schedule a forensic interview for J.B.,

which he observed from a separate room. During the interview, he wanted to

corroborate the information T.T. provided and some of J.B.’s statements about her

interactions with MacDonald. Detective Irvine testified that J.B. provided sensory

3 details during the forensic interview, which he viewed as significant in the

investigation. The detective also scheduled an appointment for J.B. to see a sexual

assault nurse examiner (SANE). The detective said that J.B.’s grandmother, J.J.M.,

brought her to these appointments; however, he had concerns that J.J.M. was not

being protective of J.B., did not believe the abuse occurred, and might try to

contaminate J.B.’s recall. Detective Irvine testified that CPS eventually removed

J.B. from J.J.M.’s care.

Detective Irvine testified that he also scheduled and observed a forensic

interview for K.S., T.T.’s son. The detective described T.T. as “concerned” and

“helpful.” Detective Irvine testified that T.T. recorded three conversations with J.B.

on her phone, and he had T.T. bring her phone to the police station so they could

download the files.

Detective Irvine also told the jury he interviewed MacDonald, who denied

sexually abusing his daughter and advised Detective Irvine he believed his daughter

was lying. The detective described MacDonald as “very emotional” during the

interview. At the conclusion of the interview, MacDonald provided a written

statement again denying any inappropriate contact with his daughter. Detective

Irvine explained that the police did not collect any clothing or evidence from the

apartment because they were not provided a timeline for when the last incident of

4 abuse may have occurred and therefore, had no idea what clothing they would need

to seize. The detective testified that when he reviewed the SANE’s report, the history

provided by J.B. was consistent with what she said in the forensic interview, and he

applied for an arrest warrant.

The SANE testified regarding her examination of J.B. She conducted a

medical exam on J.B. a few weeks after the incident was reported. A redacted copy

of her report was admitted as evidence at trial. The SANE testified regarding the

contents of her report, which contained quoted language from J.B. regarding her

father assaulting her anally with his sexual organ. The SANE noted that J.B. had

excellent verbal skills for her age. The SANE testified that she did not find any

evidence of injury or trauma and explained why that is not uncommon. On cross-

examination, the SANE confirmed that the only information she had regarding anal

penetration came from J.B.

The forensic interviewer testified as the outcry witness in this case. 1 She

explained that J.B. could not provide a full event narrative, which was consistent

with the child’s age. The interviewer testified that J.B. could answer some open-

ended questions, knew the difference between the truth and a lie, and promised to

1 Prior to her testimony, the trial court conducted a hearing outside the jury’s presence and determined she was qualified to testify as the outcry witness. 5 tell the truth. She testified that she asked J.B. what she liked about her dad, and J.B.

responded “his lovins.” The interviewer then asked J.B. to tell her about her dad’s

“lovins,” and she responded that he kisses her on the tongue. The forensic

interviewer told the jury how J.B. described her father sexually assaulting her, which

was consistent with the description contained in the SANE’s report. The interviewer

also testified regarding the sensory details J.B. provided.

Following a hearing outside the jury’s presence, the trial judge ruled J.B. was

competent to testify. J.B.

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