Jones v. State

119 S.W.3d 412, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 7534, 2003 WL 22026348
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 28, 2003
Docket2-01-529-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by127 cases

This text of 119 S.W.3d 412 (Jones 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
Jones v. State, 119 S.W.3d 412, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 7534, 2003 WL 22026348 (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

SUE WALKER, Justice.

I. Introduction

A jury convicted Appellant David Leon Jones (“Jones”) of indecency with a child and assessed his punishment at forty years’ confinement after he pleaded “true” to an enhancement paragraph in the indictment. In five issues on appeal, Jones contends that the trial court: (1) abused its discretion by admitting extraneous offense/bad acts evidence over objection; (2) erred by refusing to give the jury a limiting instruction each time extraneous offense/bad acts evidence was presented to the jury; (3) erred by giving improper limiting instructions on the use of extraneous offense/bad acts evidence; (4) erred by overruling his objection to the State’s closing argument; and (5) erred by instructing the jury on the definition of “reasonable doubt” at the guilt-innocence phase of trial. We will affirm.

II. Factual Background

When G.V. was in the seventh grade, she was introduced to Jones through her friend, K.W., who dated Jones’s son. Jones brought G.V., K.W., and their friends lunch at school once or twice a week and took them to his son’s baseball games, to the movies, and horseback riding. During the summer, Jones took G.V. and her friends to the lake and to swim at Clearwater Pool, and he continued to take them to see movies almost every weekend. Jones asked G.V. to call him by his first name because he said that being called “Mr. Jones” made him feel old.

Eventually, Jones made sexual comments to G.V. He told her that she looked good in a swimsuit, that he preferred shaved girls because it was better “when he would eat them out,” and that he did not have a great marriage or “get much sex”. Jones also told G.V. and her friends that they could ask him sexual questions and that he would explain everything to them.

On Saturday, July 15, 2000, Jones took G.V., K.W., and M.E. to see a movie. After the movie, Jones told the girls that an actress in the movie had a nice body that “turned him on” and that G.V. looked like the actress. On the way home from the movie, Jones took K.W. and M.E. “doorbell ditching.” K.W. and M.E. would ring someone’s doorbell and then run. G.V. could not participate in this activity because she had recently had stitches removed from her leg, so she was left alone with Jones in the truck.

While Jones was alone with G.V., he asked her how far she had gotten with her boyfriend and whether she had ever given him a blow job. G.V. answered that she did not know how to give a blow job. Jones said that he would show her; he took two of G.V.’s fingers, placed them in his mouth, and moved them back and *417 forth. Shortly after this incident, K.W. and M.E. returned from “doorbell ditching,” and Jones dropped both of them off at M.E.’s house, leaving G.V. alone with Jones again.

Jones told G.V. that he had something to show her at his house. When they went inside Jones’s house, G.V. noticed that it was dark and asked where Jones’s wife and children were. He responded that they were in Wichita Falls. Jones then told G.V. that he had something to show her in his daughter’s room. Once in his daughter’s room, Jones sat next to G.V. on the bed and played a videotape of a couple having sex. Jones placed his hand on G.V.’s leg and asked if the tape “turned her on.” G.V. responded, “No, not really.” Jones told G.V. that it excited him, and he got in front of G.V., straddled her, and pushed her down on her back on the bed. Jones put his hands down G.V.’s pants, touched her, and “spread her.” G.V. started to cry, and Jones stopped. G.V. sat up, and Jones again touched and rubbed G.V.’s private part on the outside of her shorts while telling her that she was warm and wet. Afterwards, Jones told G.V. that he did not mean to do it and that she should not tell anyone or else he would not be able to take the girls places and have fun. G.V. initially agreed not to tell anyone, but approximately three weeks later, G.V. told K.W. and A.W. and their father. K.W. and AW.’s father then called G.V.’s mother.

On August 9, 2000, Jones spoke “off the record” with Corey Blount (hereinafter “Blount”), a police officer with the Highland Village Police Department who was also Jones’s friend. Jones told Blount that he was suspected of inappropriately touching a girl, that touching did occur, but that it was accidental. On August 12, 2000, at a back-to-school party, Jones took G.V. upstairs by herself and told her that what had happened was a joke. On August 16, 2000, Officers Jerry Hull and Terry Barn-hart, investigators with the Highland Village Police Department, searched Jones’s house for the sexual videotape that Jones showed G.V. However, they were unable to locate the videotape.

III. Admissibility of Extraneous Offenses and Bad Acts

During the direct examination of G.V., the State sought to introduce extraneous offenses/bad acts committed by Jones. The trial court held a hearing outside the presence of the jury to determine the evidence’s admissibility. The bad acts by Jones involving G.V. included Jones paying money to G.V. and other underage girls to remove part or all of their swimsuits, providing alcohol to G.V. and other underage girls, offering underage girls money to run naked down the beach, and attempting to untie the swimsuits of G.V. and her friends. Jones asserted objections to the extraneous bad acts evidence pursuant to Rules 401, 404(b), and 403, and the court initially sustained his objections. Later, however, the court admitted this evidence, granting Jones a running objection.

The State also offered extraneous offense/bad acts evidence on rebuttal, following Jones’s ease in chief. The State called four girls as rebuttal witnesses, and they testified to other offenses and bad acts by Jones on occasions when G.V. was not present. Jones objected to the testimony concerning each of the incidents, but the court admitted the testimony over his objection for the purposes of showing motive, plan, and opportunity, and to rebut a defensive theory. Thus, the extraneous offense/bad acts evidence admitted at the guilt-innocence phase of trial falls into two *418 categories: acts involving G.V. 1 admitted during the State’s case-in-chief and acts not involving G.V. admitted during the State’s rebuttal.

The extraneous offense/bad acts evidence involving G.V. included the following conduct by Jones. G.V. testified that once when she and a number of other girls were at Clearwater Pool with Jones, he offered them fifty dollars to take off their swimsuits. G.V. and Jones’s daughter, C.J., accepted the offer. Jones told his daughter not to tell anyone about what happened. K.W., A.W., T.B., and M.E. confirmed this incident. G.V. also testified that on another occasion, when Jones took her and other girls out on his boat, he offered K.W. two hundred dollars to run naked on the beach, and she accepted. K.W. and M.E. also testified about this incident. K.W. said that Jones paid her in cash. G.V. testified that several times at the lake and twice at Clearwater Pool, Jones gave her and the other girls wine coolers disguised in Gatorade bottles. K.W., M.E., and A.W. also testified that Jones gave them alcohol. G.V. said that while the girls were with Jones at the lake, he would try to untie their swimsuits in the water. G.V.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 S.W.3d 412, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 7534, 2003 WL 22026348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-state-texapp-2003.