Kennie Lewis Cook, Jr. v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 10, 2023
Docket06-20-00001-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Kennie Lewis Cook, Jr. v. the State of Texas (Kennie Lewis Cook, Jr. v. the State of Texas) 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
Kennie Lewis Cook, Jr. v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana

No. 06-20-00001-CR

KENNIE LEWIS COOK, JR., Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 5th District Court Cass County, Texas Trial Court No. 2019F00062

Before Stevens, C.J., van Cleef and Rambin, JJ. Memorandum Opinion on Remand by Justice van Cleef MEMORANUM OPINION ON REMAND

A Cass County jury convicted Kennie Lewis Cook, Jr., of aggravated sexual assault of a

child. The trial court sentenced Cook to forty years’ imprisonment and ordered him to pay a

$1,000.00 fine. In a prior opinion, we reversed the trial court’s judgment and remanded the case

for a new trial after sustaining Cook’s complaint that the trial court erred by allowing an officer

to testify that he believed the child victim. Cook v. State, 636 S.W.3d 35, 37 (Tex. App.—

Texarkana 2021), rev’d, Nos. PD-0850-21, PD-0853-21, PD-0854-21, 2023 WL 152984 (Tex.

Crim. App. Jan. 11, 2023). The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals declined to address whether

the admission of the officer’s testimony was error, but nevertheless found that Cook was

unharmed by the officer’s testimony. Cook, 2023 WL 152984, at *3. As a result, it reversed our

opinion and remanded the case to us to “reach the merits of [Cook’s] remaining grounds.” Id. at

*6.

Cook argues in his remaining grounds (1) that the jury’s verdict is not supported by

legally sufficient evidence,1 (2) that the trial court should have ruled on his Batson2 challenge,

(3) that his counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to preserve his Batson challenge,

and (4) that the trial court erred by permitting a witness to testify in violation of Rule 614, the

witness sequestration rule.

We find (1) that legally sufficient evidence supported the jury’s verdict of guilt, (2) that,

while Cook’s counsel waived his Batson challenge, harm from the alleged ineffective assistance

1 In companion cause numbers 06-20-00002-CR and 06-20-00003-CR, Cook also appeals from two other convictions for aggravated sexual assault of the same child. 2 Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79 (1986). 2 of counsel is not shown, and (3) that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in overruling

Cook’s Rule 614 objection. As a result, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

I. Legally Sufficient Evidence Supports the Jury’s Verdict of Guilt

A. The Evidence at Trial

The State’s first witness was the victim, Chance Scallion,3 who was seven when he made

an outcry of sexual abuse against Cook. According to Chance, Cook sexually abused him at his

great-grandmother’s home after a church service at Hendrix Temple Institutional Church of God

and Christ, where Cook served in various capacities, including as an organist and music director.

The evidence at trial established that Chance often went to church with his great-

grandmother and church superintendent, Laura. Laura lived two blocks from the church and,

after church concluded at 1:30 p.m., would always return to her home to prepare and serve a

meal for the bishop and her grandson, Darrius, who attended church almost every Sunday. Cook

ate with the group every other Sunday. Chance alleged that Cook abused him when he and Cook

were alone in the living room of Laura’s house after church “when Granny went to the

bathroom.”

According to Chance, Cook directed him to retrieve the television remote and “cut off the

TV, [and] then . . . pulled [his] pants down,” followed by his underwear. Chance said that Cook

“put his finger in [his] butt,” and “sucked [his] little thing.” The child identified his “little thing”

as “what [he] use[d] to go to the bathroom . . . number one.” Chance said that his little thing was

“[h]ard” and that Cook said that “[i]t taste[d] good.” The child also testified that Cook “made

[him] suck his little thing” with his mouth and that Cook’s “little thing” was soft and looked like 3 We use pseudonyms for the child victim and his family to protect the identity of the child. See TEX. R. APP. P. 9.10. 3 a crayon. Chance testified that the acts made him feel sad and that he felt “[m]ad” when he saw

Cook because of what he did. Cook stopped when they heard Laura coming out of the bathroom

and made “[Chance] pull back up [his] pants.”

Chance’s mother, Fiona, testified that she found Chance sucking the head of a yellow

rubber duck during bath time and later caught him sucking his brother’s penis. When she asked

Chance about his behavior, Fiona said Chance pointed to his penis and alleged that Cook had

sucked it. Fiona also said that Chance “put his hands in two girls’ tops, in their shirt tops, and

was touching their bottom[s].” Chance testified that he “[s]ucked his [four-year-old brother’s]

little thing” because he was thinking about Cook.

Fiona testified that she grew up with Cook, that their families had close ties, and that she

allowed Chance to be around Cook and accept gifts from him. According to Fiona and Laura,

Cook gave Laura money for Chance and bought Chance everything he asked for, including

clothes, a backpack, school supplies, and toys. Cook also took Chance to the movies, would

drop the child off at school, and took him to band practice at another school where Cook was

employed as the band director. Testimony from both Chance and Cook showed that Chance was

also allowed to spend two nights at Cook’s apartment, unsupervised, where he slept with Cook in

Cook’s bed. Laura testified that Cook lived alone and did not have a wife or girlfriend.

After Chance’s outcry to Fiona, Fiona went to the church with Chance and asked him to

tell Darrius about his allegations against Cook. Chance testified that he denied the allegations in

front of Darrius “[b]ecause somebody else was outside that day” who did not “need to know”

about the abuse and said instead that Cook only “whooped [him].” Both Fiona and Laura

testified that Cook spanked Chance. According to Laura, with her permission, Cook hit Chance

4 with a belt for “showing out” in church by playing with other boys during a class. Darrius

testified that he told Cook about his conversation with Fiona and Chance. According to Chance,

Cook never touched him again after Fiona went to the church to speak to Darrius.

In spite of the allegations, the evidence showed that Cook was a trusted family friend and

that few believed Chance. Laura testified that she did not believe Chance’s allegations because

she knew Cook well and that it was “not his character” and because the incidents allegedly

occurred at her home. Darrius’s sister, Dolly, who had known Cook since she was a little girl,

described Cook as an honest, church-going man. Chance’s great-aunt, Lucille, who knew Cook

for fifteen years, also testified that Cook was an upstanding gentleman and that he never told a

lie. Theodus Luckett, III, director of fine arts at the school where Cook worked, testified that he

knew Cook for fourteen years, testified that he supervised him at work, and described him as a

phenomenal worker who had professional relationships with his students.

Laura, Darrius, and Lucille also believed that Cook lacked an opportunity to abuse

Chance at Laura’s home. They testified (1) that Cook was never left alone with Chance because

there was always someone else at Laura’s home after church, (2) that there was a clear line of

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