Latoya Jo Skorich v. the State of Texas

CourtTexas Court of Appeals, 7th District (Amarillo)
DecidedMarch 30, 2026
Docket07-25-00001-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Latoya Jo Skorich v. the State of Texas (Latoya Jo Skorich v. the State of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Court of Appeals, 7th District (Amarillo) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Latoya Jo Skorich v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo

No. 07-25-00001-CR

LATOYA SKORICH, APPELLANT

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, APPELLEE

No. 07-25-00002-CR

JOHN WOODY, APPELLANT

On Appeal from the 222nd District Court Deaf Smith County, Texas Trial Court No. CR-2021B-020, CR-2021B-021 Honorable Roland D. Saul, Presiding

March 30, 2026 OPINION Before PARKER, C.J., and DOSS and YARBROUGH, JJ.

On the evening of September 10, 2020, a seven-year-old boy arrived at a Hereford,

Texas, emergency room unresponsive, severely dehydrated, and covered in bruises. His sodium levels were the highest the treating physicians had ever seen. Medical

professionals did not expect him to survive. His mother, Appellant Latoya Jo Skorich,

and her boyfriend, Appellant John Woody, had been traveling with him for days in an 18-

wheeler immediately before his admission. Both were later charged with injury to a child

causing serious bodily injury and injury to a child causing bodily injury.1

Woody and Skorich were separately indicted but agreed to be tried together. A

jury found both guilty and assessed punishment. Woody received concurrent sentences

of 30 years and 10 years imprisonment with a $10,000 fine. Skorich received concurrent

sentences of 20 years and 10 years imprisonment with a $10,000 fine. We consolidate

these appeals because the facts and legal issues substantially overlap.

Both Appellants challenge the trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction and venue.

Woody separately contends he owed no legal duty to the child. Skorich separately

challenges the legal sufficiency of the evidence supporting her convictions. We hold the

trial court had jurisdiction and venue was proper. We further hold sufficient evidence

supported a finding that Woody assumed a duty of care, custody, and control, and that

Skorich knowingly or recklessly caused the child’s injuries through her omissions. We

affirm the judgments and sentences for both Appellants.

1 See TEX. PENAL CODE § 22.04.

2 BACKGROUND

A. The Family Unit

Woody and Skorich lived together in Arkansas. Skorich considered Woody her

husband and the stepfather to her seven-year-old son, “A.T.”2 Woody made his living as

a long-haul truck driver. Skorich often stayed home with A.T. and helped schedule hauls.

A.T. and Skorich lived either in Woody’s house or with him in the truck. Woody and

Skorich combined Woody’s income with A.T.’s disability checks to pay for the family’s

needs.

During the COVID pandemic, A.T. was enrolled in an online school; this permitted

him and Skorich to spend more time on the road with Woody. For the haul that led to

these charges, Skorich booked a route from Arkansas to California and back. A

substantial part of that road trip passed through Texas.

B. The Road Trip

Although he was age seven, A.T. had developmental delays and was being potty

trained. He used a portable urinal during the day, so the family did not have to stop

driving. During the road trip, Appellants restricted A.T.’s fluid intake to no more than eight

ounces every one to one-and-a-half hours until 2:00 p.m., after which he was not allowed

any fluids at all.

There was no seat or seatbelt for A.T. in the cab of the 18-wheeler. The only place

for him to sit or sleep was a bunk bed that sat six feet from the floor. At times, A.T. sat or

2 We use initials to mask the identity of the minor victim.

3 slept on the floor between the driver and passenger seats. Appellants told law

enforcement that during the trip, A.T. fell off his bunk bed at least once, though their

accounts of when this occurred conflict.3

Also conflicting are the Appellants’ reports of an “outburst” A.T. had while the family

was returning from California.4 According to Appellants, the boy began hitting and kicking

Woody while Woody was driving. Unable to calm A.T., Woody pulled over. Skorich went

into the cab to get something to eat. Woody then allegedly punished A.T. with a belt.

On September 9, 2020, Appellants and the boy reached the Midland-Odessa area

from New Mexico by way of El Paso. A.T. had become lethargic. According to Woody,

A.T. had begun showing signs of lethargy as early as September 7 or 8. Woody told

officer Stewart he instructed Skorich on when to seek medical care, stating that if A.T. did

not get better in a couple of days, they would take him to the hospital. Woody

acknowledged that A.T.’s condition “progressively keeps getting worse.”

On September 10, the family was en route from Midland-Odessa to Hereford.

When they stopped at a truck stop for the night, A.T. was discovered to be unresponsive.

Appellants then took A.T. to the emergency room at Hereford’s local hospital.

3 According to Woody’s interview with officer Tim Stewart, A.T. fell off the bunk bed more than once.

4 Appellants maintained the outburst and punishment occurred near the Arizona-New Mexico

border. Admitted cell phone data shows the family traveling from Arizona to New Mexico mid-afternoon on September 9, entering Texas that evening, and remaining there through A.T.’s hospital admission the following evening. But early on September 11, Skorich twice told Officer Stewart the incident occurred “yesterday,” permitting a factfinder to conclude the outburst and punishment took place after the family entered Texas.

4 C. A.T.’s Medical Condition

Upon arrival at the Hereford emergency room, A.T. was in a borderline comatose

state, exhibiting almost no response to verbal commands or physical stimuli aside from

slight withdrawal from pain. Dr. Caom Hansen observed that the child’s eyes were rolled

back in his head and that he was in severe circulatory distress, characterized by a rapid

heart rate and a pulse that was weak and thready. Clinical signs of profound dehydration

were immediately apparent. A.T.’s mouth was so dry that his saliva had turned into a

paste and crust, and his skin exhibited tenting: it remained peaked when pinched rather

than rebounding. Because the boy’s blood volume was so low, staff could not find a vein

for a standard IV and were forced to drill a metal intraosseous device into a bone to pump

fluids directly into the marrow. The lack of moisture in A.T.’s mucous membranes also

made emergency intubation difficult, as the breathing tube would not slide easily through

his dry larynx.

Laboratory results confirmed a sodium level of nearly 200. Dr. Raphael Mattamal,

a pediatric hospitalist at Northwest Texas Hospital in Amarillo, testified at trial that A.T.’s

lab values were “wildly out of the bounds of what you should have in your body” and that

such a level “would kill most of the people in this room.” The jury heard medical evidence

that due to A.T.’s chronic water deprivation, his body was forced to prioritize available

blood for his brain at the sacrifice of other organs like kidneys. This, in effect, resulted in

A.T. to suffer from uremic encephalopathy caused by toxins building up in his blood. Dr.

Hansen testified that the level of dehydration A.T. had achieved is not possible for

someone to achieve on their own, meaning the human body responds to prevent this from

happening. Dr. Mattamal categorized the dehydration as chronic, not likely caused by a

5 virus: water was likely withheld from A.T. over an extended period until sodium levels

became “astronomically abnormal.”

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