Jose DeJesus Cuevas v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 9, 2009
Docket03-08-00542-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jose DeJesus Cuevas v. State (Jose DeJesus Cuevas 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
Jose DeJesus Cuevas v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-08-00542-CR

Jose DeJesus Cuevas, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BASTROP COUNTY, 21ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 12402, HONORABLE CHARLOTTE HINDS, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted Jose DeJesus Cuevas of the offense of indecency with a child

by contact. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 21.11(a)(1) (West 2003). Punishment was assessed at

ten years’ imprisonment and a $2,500 fine, but the district court suspended imposition of

the sentence and placed Cuevas on probation for ten years. In a single issue on appeal, Cuevas

challenges the admissibility of certain statements he allegedly made to the police. We will affirm

the judgment of conviction.

BACKGROUND

The complainant in this case was M.B., an 11-year-old girl. The jury heard evidence

that on July 20, 2006, M.B.’s grandmother, apartment manager Elena Bosley of San Marcos, traveled

to Smithville to train Mary Trinidad, the new manager of an affiliated apartment complex. M.B.

accompanied Bosley on the trip. Bosley testified that when they arrived, she worked with Trinidad in the office area while M.B. watched television in a living-room area down the hall. According

to Bosley, she eventually heard “a lot of laughter” and M.B. “being quite loud.” Trinidad went to the

other room and asked M.B. to be quiet. When Trinidad returned to the office, she reported to Bosley

that M.B. was “playing tag” with Cuevas, the property’s maintenance man. Bosley testified that she

and Trinidad continued working while Cuevas and M.B. continued playing “for a couple of hours.”

Later that day, Bosley explained, M.B. came into the office upset and indicated

that Cuevas had been “kissing her and grabbing her privates.” Trinidad called Cuevas into the office

and confronted him with the accusations. According to Bosley, Trinidad and Cuevas spoke to each

other in Spanish. Bosley testified that Cuevas denied the accusations and left the room. The next

day, Bosley reported M.B.’s accusation to the police.

Detective Lonny Richardson of the Smithville Police Department decided to interview

Cuevas. When Richardson learned that Cuevas was not fluent in English, he contacted Trinidad

and “requested that she have [Cuevas] come over at a specific time for the interview.” The interview

was scheduled for August 4, 2006. Because Richardson was not fluent in Spanish, he arranged to

have Officer Noe Martinez, a Spanish-speaking investigator from the Bastrop County Sheriff’s

Department, present during the interview. According to Richardson, Cuevas arrived at the police

department at the pre-arranged time. Richardson met Cuevas in the lobby and directed him to the

interview room. Richardson testified that Martinez conducted the interview while Richardson

primarily observed.

Martinez testified at trial about the interview. According to Martinez, after he advised

Cuevas of his rights, and Cuevas indicated that he understood those rights, he questioned Cuevas

2 about the incident. Martinez testified that Cuevas repeatedly denied kissing or touching M.B., except

on the back of her shoulder while they were “playing tag.” Martinez recalled that the interview

with Cuevas lasted approximately 30 to 35 minutes. At the end of the interview, Martinez asked

Cuevas if he would consent to a second interview. According to Martinez, Cuevas agreed. Cuevas

then left the police department. Martinez then advised Richardson that, in his opinion, Cuevas was

not being truthful.

Richardson scheduled the second interview for August 31, 2006. When Cuevas

arrived at the police department that day, he was again directed to an interview room. This time,

Cuevas was interviewed by Sergeant Sabino Martinez, a Spanish-speaking officer with the

Department of Public Safety Criminal Intelligence Service.1 During this interview, Sabino testified,

Cuevas admitted to kissing and touching M.B.:

Q: So over the course of this interview, did you in fact talk to him about the allegations made by [M.B.] from July 20 of 2006?

A: Yes, I did.

....

Q: And as you are confronting the defendant with the evidence that you have gathered from the Smithville Police Department, does he make an admission to you?

A: Yes, he does.

Q: And what admission?

1 To avoid confusing Sergeant Sabino Martinez with Officer Noe Martinez, we will refer to Sabino Martinez using his first name.

3 A: He said he touched the victim’s [sexual organ], which is [M.B.], over his clothes—over her clothing—I’m sorry—and had kissed her, as she alleged.

Q: So after he makes that statement to you, do you request him to move to another room?

A: Yes, that’s correct.

Q: And do you inform Lieutenant Richardson that something has happened?

A: Yes. I informed him that Cuevas had admitted to the allegations from the victim. And I told him that we were going to move to another room so we can go ahead and tape the interview, and so I could translate to Lieutenant Richardson what Cuevas had admitted.

Q: And while y’all are still in the first room, you know, after he admits to touching the victim’s [sexual organ] over her clothes and kissing her, do you talk about the sexuality of this contact?

A: I asked him if the touching was for a sexual impulse—that he felt some type of impulse, and then touched the victim, and he admitted that he had.

After obtaining the above admissions, which were not recorded, Sabino moved Cuevas to the other

interview room, brought in Richardson, and, after again advising Cuevas of his rights, proceeded to

interview him. During this interview—which was recorded—apparently Cuevas again admitted to

4 committing the offense.2 At the conclusion of the interview, Cuevas was again released. He was

arrested several days later, on September 5, 2006.

At Cuevas’s trial, in addition to the above evidence, the jury heard testimony from

M.B., who testified about her recollection of what happened on the day of the incident. M.B.

testified that, while she and Cuevas were taking a break from playing tag, Cuevas “tried to French-

kiss me” and “grabbed my private” “with his hands.” Cuevas testified in his defense and denied the

allegations against him. On cross-examination, when Cuevas was confronted with his admissions

during the recorded interview, he claimed that he did not understand the questions that were being

asked. Several other witnesses, primarily Cuevas’s relatives, also testified on Cuevas’s behalf.

The jury found Cuevas guilty of committing the offense of indecency with a child by

contact, and he was placed on probation. This appeal followed.

ISSUE PRESENTED

In his sole issue on appeal, Cuevas asserts that the district court abused its discretion

in denying his motion to suppress the unrecorded statements that he made to Sabino during the

second interview. He claims that he was in custody when he made these statements and, therefore,

the unrecorded statements were inadmissible. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 38.22, § 3

2 A DVD recording of the interview, conducted in Spanish, was played for the jury while a courtroom interpreter translated what was being said. Although there is no English translation included in the record before us, we have nevertheless reviewed the DVD.

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