Luke Stanton v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 7, 2014
Docket08-12-00294-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Luke Stanton v. State (Luke Stanton 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
Luke Stanton v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

LUKE STANTON, § No. 08-12-00294-CR Appellant § Appeal from the v. § 211th District Court THE STATE OF TEXAS, § of Denton County, Texas Appellee. § (TC# F-2011-1912-C) §

OPINION

Luke Stanton is appealing his convictions of continuous sexual abuse of a young child

(Count I) and indecency with a child (Counts II - IV), enhanced by a prior felony conviction. A

jury found Appellant guilty, found the enhancement paragraph true, and assessed his punishment

at imprisonment for forty years on Count I and fifteen years on Counts II, III, and IV. The trial

court included in the judgment an order that the sentences shall run consecutively. We affirm.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

A jury found Appellant guilty of multiple sex-based offenses committed against K.B.,

R.B., and A.A. in three cases tried together: cause numbers F-2011-1911-C (Counts I - IV

committed against K.B.)(cause number 08-12-00293-CR), F-2011-1912-C (Counts I - IV

committed against R.B.)(cause number 08-12-00294-CR), and cause number F-2011-1913-C involving a single offense committed against A.A. (cause number 08-12-00295-CR). This

appeal concerns only the continuous sexual abuse of a child and indecency with a child

convictions related to R.B. Appellant has not challenged the sufficiency of the evidence

supporting his convictions and the issues presented on appeal are related to the exclusion of

evidence that he passed a polygraph. We will summarize the evidence related to all three cases

in order to place the issues raised on appeal in context.

R.B. and K.B. were Appellant’s stepdaughters at the time these offenses were committed.

R.B., who was sixteen years of age when this case was tried in August 2012, testified that

Appellant touched her vagina “almost daily” both before and after she turned fourteen years of

age. The first incident occurred when she was 10 or 11 years of age. Appellant rubbed ointment

on mosquito bites on her legs and he gradually moved his hand until he was touching her vagina

over her clothes. R.B. reported the incident to her mother, K.S., and K.S. replied that she would

talk to Appellant. When K.S. asked Appellant about R.B.’s statement, Appellant denied any

wrongdoing. Appellant continued to assault R.B. by touching her genitals both on top of and

under her clothing on many other occasions. She explained that he often began by rubbing her

feet and legs, but he eventually moved his hand so that he was touching her vagina. R.B. also

testified that Appellant touched and squeezed her breast with his hand. R.B. told her mother

what Appellant was doing to her, but K.S. did not believe her.

K.B. was twenty years old at the time of trial. K.B. testified that when she was in the

fourth grade, Appellant came into her bedroom at night, reached under the covers, and squeezed

her vagina with his hand. K.B. kicked him and pulled away from him. Appellant then left the

room. On another occasion when K.B. was about to enter the fifth grade, she and R.B. were

having a water gun fight in the pool. Appellant was also in the pool and he got behind K.B. and

-2- pulled her onto his lap. Appellant moved K.B.’s hands under the water and made her touch his

penis. He also moved her swimsuit bottom and tried to penetrate her with his penis. She tried to

pull away because it hurt but he would not let go of her. K.B. did not cry out because she did not

want to scare R.B. who was only five or six years of age at the time. Appellant finally let her go

and she got out of the pool. In another incident, Appellant pulled down K.B.’s pants and

underwear and touched her genitals with his mouth and tongue. K.B. tried to kick him and get

away but he held her down. K.B. testified that Appellant continued to touch her genitals with his

hands and mouth on many other occasions when her mother was at work. These incidents

occurred at least twice a week for six years or, in the words of K.B., “[t]oo many times to count.”

K.B. recalled that whenever she rejected Appellant’s advances completely, he would be mean to

her and R.B. When K.B. was in elementary school, she tried to tell her mother that Appellant

had touched her genitals, but K.S. responded by questioning whether K.B. was confused or

mistaken about what had happened. K.B. insisted she was not mistaken and her mother talked to

Appellant about it. He denied it.

In 2008, R.B. told her school counselor what Appellant had done to her. K.S. took both

R.B. and K.B. to the Children’s Advocacy Center in Lewisville. Prior to the interview, K.S.

asked R.B. if she could be mistaken or if it could have been an accident. K.B. described her

mother as being “panicky” prior to the interviews and she told K.B. that they could be taken

away from her and they might never see one another again. R.B. and K.B. did not tell the truth

during their interviews because they were scared. Appellant continued to touch both of them

inappropriately. In 2009, they were interviewed again but this time reported what Appellant had

been doing to them. Nothing happened and Appellant returned home. He also continued to

molest them.

-3- In May of 2011, thirteen-year-old A.A. visited at R.B.’s home. Appellant got onto the

bed where R.B. and A.A. were watching television and began rubbing A.A.’s feet. A.A. thought

it was weird but she trusted him. Appellant moved from A.A.’s feet to her legs and he gradually

moved his hand higher until he was touching her butt and vagina. He suddenly stopped when

R.B.’s mother got home from work and walked into the room. A.A. told R.B. what had

happened when they went to A.A.’s house. A.A. reported the assault to a school counselor a

week later.

On June 1, 2011, R.B. used her cellphone to secretly record Appellant touching her

inappropriately. After K.B. saw the video, she took R.B. to the Sheriff’s Office rather than

telling their mother because she was afraid that her mother or Appellant would delete the videos.

Law enforcement conducted an investigation and a grand jury returned three indictments against

Appellant.

EXCLUSION OF POLYGRAPH EVIDENCE

In Issues One and Two, Appellant contends that the trial court abused its discretion by

excluding evidence that he had taken and passed a polygraph examination in 2009. Toby Crow

is an investigator with the Denton County Sheriff’s Office. Investigator Crow was assigned to

investigate R.B.’s and K.B.’s allegations against Appellant. Investigator Crow observed the

interviews of K.B. and R.B. at the Child Advocacy Center through a one-way glass, but he did

not actively participate in those interviews. He interviewed Appellant on November 13, 2009.

During a two-minute portion of the interview, Crow asked Appellant whether he would take a

polygraph and Appellant agreed. At trial, the State sought to introduce the interview, but the

prosecutor requested a hearing outside of the jury’s presence to address the State’s contention

that the polygraph portion of the interview should be redacted. Appellant’s attorney argued that

-4- the video should not be redacted to remove the discussion about a polygraph examination and he

specifically stated that he did not want to introduce the results of the polygraph. The State

responded that polygraph evidence is inadmissible. The trial court ruled that the video would be

admitted without the polygraph portion.

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