Keeshunar Michelle Cantley v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 19, 2009
Docket01-09-00048-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Keeshunar Michelle Cantley v. State (Keeshunar Michelle Cantley 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
Keeshunar Michelle Cantley v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion to: SJR TGT TJ EVK ERA GCH LCH JB JS

Opinion issued November 19, 2009

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


NO. 01-09-00048-CR


KeeshAunar Michelle Cantley, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee


On Appeal from the 338th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1094552   


MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Appellant, Keeshaunar Michelle Cantley, was indicted for injury to a child by omission resulting in serious bodily injury.[1] After a plea of guilty to the court without an agreed punishment recommendation, appellant was found guilty and the court assessed her punishment at thirty years confinement.  In a single issue, appellant asserts that the sentence imposed violates her Eighth Amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment.  We determine whether this issue was preserved for review on appeal.  Finding that it was not, we affirm.

Facts

When Ms. Cantley discovered her 21-month-old daughter, Aanya, cold and unresponsive at home in bed early one morning, she called 911, and the child was taken to a nearby hospital where she was pronounced dead.  The cause of death was undetermined.  One of the police officers who responded to the 911 call noticed bruising on the child’s right eyelid and both sides of the child’s stomach and back. 

According to Ms. Cantley’s account to the police at the hospital, she and Aanya had fallen asleep watching television in Ms. Cantley’s bedroom.  Ms. Cantley awoke, noted the child asleep, carried her to the child’s own bed, and returned to sleep.  Ms. Cantley later awoke to her alarm at 4:35 a.m., went to change the child’s diaper, and noted that the girl’s leg was cold.  Ms. Cantley tried to revive the child and then called 911.  The only event that Ms. Cantley speculated could have caused the child’s injury was a fall from a dining room chair, but, according to Ms. Cantley, Aanya got up after the fall, did not cry, and then climbed into another chair.

After an autopsy, the cause of death was determined to be multiple blunt traumas to the abdomen, resulting in a lacerated liver and pancreas.  When informed of the cause of death, Ms. Cantley maintained that the complainant’s injuries were from the fall from the chair.  Child Protective Services (“CPS”) had previously investigated two prior incidents involving appellant’s children, including alleged physical abuse of Aanya by Carl Robinson, appellant’s live-in boyfriend, when Aanya was 18 months old.  Although asked if Robinson was present that night, Ms. Cantley never­­­ admitted that he had been present. 

The following day, after being told that capital murder charges against her had been accepted, Ms. Cantley admitted that Robinson had been at the house the night of Aanya’s injuries and she advised officers to speak to Robinson about Aanya’s death.  Ms. Cantley explained that she had been afraid to mention this earlier because there had been a “CPS order” not to have Robinson near her children.[2]

A few months later, Ms. Cantley gave a recorded interview to police, in which she related that Robinson was awake when she awoke that morning, that the cover seemed oddly neat over the child, and that when she called for Robinson about Aanya’s condition, he hesitated, and then yelled at appellant before he performed cardio-pulmonary resuscitation on the child.  She also explained that, after she called 911, she remembered that Robinson was not supposed to be there and feared that her son would be taken from her, and that Robinson had told her that he was going to get help, but drove off, and never returned.

Ms. Cantley was subsequently indicted for intentionally and knowingly causing injury to a child by omission resulting in serious bodily injury.  The indictment contained seven paragraphs alleging six different manners and means and the use or display of a deadly weapon.  The State abandoned two of the paragraphs charging alternate manners and means as well as the deadly weapon paragraph.  The remaining paragraphs, to which Ms. Cantley pleaded guilty, charged her with the omissions of (1) failing to seek proper medical care for the complainant; (2) failing to provide a safe environment for the complainant; (3) failing to protect the complainant from physical abuse; and (4) violating a court order that prohibited Carl Robinson from contact with the complainant. 

           Ms. Cantley pleaded guilty without an agreed punishment recommendation.  After admonishing Ms. Cantley, the court accepted her plea and admitted State’s exhibit 1, which consisted of Ms. Cantley’s waiver of constitutional rights, her agreement to stipulate, and her judicial confession.  The trial court then found that there was sufficient evidence to find Ms. Cantley guilty, but withheld a finding of guilt, and reset the case pending a “presentence investigation hearing.” 

Eight months later, the case was reconvened, and the trial court considered the presentence investigation report and heard arguments from the State and Ms. Cantley.  The State asked for forty years in prison and the defense asked for community supervision.  Ms. Cantley also pleaded true to a separate motion to adjudicate an unrelated forgery offense[3] and the trial court adjudicated Ms. Cantley guilty of the forgery case and found Ms. Cantley guilty of injury to a child.

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Bluebook (online)
Keeshunar Michelle Cantley v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keeshunar-michelle-cantley-v-state-texapp-2009.