Natasha Rashenet Johnson v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 19, 2011
Docket14-10-00462-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Natasha Rashenet Johnson v. State (Natasha Rashenet Johnson 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
Natasha Rashenet Johnson v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed May 19, 2011.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

___________________

NO. 14-10-00462-CR

Natasha Rashenet Johnson, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 263rd District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1224590

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found appellant Natasha Rashenet Johnson guilty of serious bodily injury to a child and sentenced her to fifty years’ imprisonment.  Johnson brings this appeal, contending that (1) the evidence is legally insufficient to support her conviction; (2) the evidence is factually insufficient to support her conviction; (3) the trial court erred in admitting letters Johnson had written from jail because the letters were seized without a warrant and in violation of her Miranda rights; (4) the trial court erred in admitting duplicative and unfairly prejudicial photos of the complainant’s injury; and (5) she received ineffective assistance of counsel.  We affirm. 

I

            Natasha Rashanet Johnson was charged with serious bodily injury to a child following the discovery that her daughter, 15-month-old G.P., had sustained second-degree burns to her hand.  On March 6, 2007, Tyiesha Woods, Johnson’s niece, was at Johnson’s apartment when she noticed G.P. had a sock over her hand that was secured at the wrist by what appeared to be a hair band.  Woods asked Johnson about the sock, and Johnson explained she had put it on G.P.’s hand to prevent her from sucking her thumb. 

            The next morning, Johnson asked Woods to babysit her children while she went fishing with her boyfriend, Terrance Smith, who was referred to throughout the trial as “Boo.”  The children were dropped off between 10:00 and 10:30 a.m., and G.P. still had the sock fastened to her hand.  Woods testified G.P. was “fussy” and could not be consoled, so Woods removed the sock and saw that G.P.’s hand was “swollen” and “messed up.”  Woods immediately called a neighbor, Cynthia Walter, for assistance.  Walter testified that upon arriving at the apartment, Woods was “crying and shaking.”  G.P.’s hand, Walter testified, was “black, blue, [and] purple” and “looked horrible.”  Walter retrieved medicine from her apartment and applied Neosporin, Vaseline, and an ice pack to G.P.’s hand.            

Walter suggested they immediately call the police about G.P.’s injury, but Woods demurred because she was afraid the authorities would think she injured the child.  Woods instead called Johnson and asked her to return and take G.P. to the hospital.  Woods testified Johnson “just said okay and hung up” but that she “sounded concerned.”  When Johnson did not immediately return, Woods called her again and proceeded to call her several times throughout the day urging her to return and take G.P. to the hospital.  During one conversation, Woods testified Johnson asked why Woods had removed the sock and to whom she had shown G.P.’s hand.  Johnson did not return until approximately 11:00 p.m. that night.  Woods testified that Johnson did not come inside the apartment to retrieve her children, but that the children left the apartment on their own to meet Johnson and Smith in their car, with Johnson’s oldest son carrying G.P. 

            After picking up the children, Johnson and Smith drove to Smith’s house.  Smith called 911 at 11:04 p.m., and Houston firefighter and EMT Sergio Buentello testified he and other first responders were dispatched to the house in reference to a “bite call.”  Upon arriving at the scene, Buentello found Johnson holding G.P.  First responders began tending to G.P., whose hand Buentello testified was swollen and blistering.  Buentello testified G.P.’s injuries were inconsistent with a bite injury.  Johnson told Buentello she did not know how G.P.’s hand had been injured, and did not mention anything about G.P. sucking her thumb.  Buentello testified G.P.’s injury appeared to be a burn, and that the injury showed signs of child abuse.  When asked why he suspected child abuse, Buentello testified:

Goes back to the symmetrical line that goes around the wrist.  Usually with accidents there will be some type of splashing on the arm, just put her hand on something hot.  And how deep the burn was, how far up her arm was.  Usually when you dip your hand in hot water or something, you sort of react to it.  So for her to get her arm that far in the water was . . . [w]as a red flag.

Buentello also testified parents of injured children are “usually hard to control,” but that Johnson did not cry or seem excessively worried.

Both G.P. and Johnson were taken by ambulance to the emergency room at Lyndon B. Johnson General Hospital, but G.P. was transferred to Children’s Memorial Hospital shortly afterward.  She was examined the following day by Dr. Rebecca Girardet, a physician board certified in general pediatrics and child-abuse pediatrics.  Dr. Girardet diagnosed G.P.’s injury as a second-degree burn, and also observed scarring on G.P.’s abdomen that Johnson said resulted from injuries incurred when G.P. “was trying to walk outside.”  Dr. Girardet observed a clear line of demarcation and no splash patterns, which she testified was consistent with her hand being immersed in a hot liquid.  Dr. Girardet further opined that G.P.’s injuries were not consistent with Johnson’s statements that G.P.’s thumb had been red and swollen for three days after she developed a small cut on the side of her thumb, or that G.P. had been sucking her thumb and had a sock put over her hand with a band wrapped around her wrist.  Dr. Girardet described the injury as serious and painful with the possibility of scarring, loss of function, and infection.  Dr. Girardet further observed G.P. was “a little malnourished” and small for her age, with both her weight and length below the norm for an average 15-month-old.  G.P. was hospitalized until March 16, 2007, after which she was placed in foster care.  A member of G.P.’s foster family described how G.P.’s hand had to be cleaned, medicated, and wrapped, and testified a nurse came to their home daily for weeks to change the dressing.

The State also offered into evidence several letters Johnson wrote from jail, pointing the jury to several excerpts, including:

“tell him [Johnson’s attorney] that I did do what thay saying”

“Its fuck[ed] up that I have to do this time I did do it”

“Let him [k]now that I did do that to my baby”

“Let him know that I did do what thay saying”

“Let me know I did do what thay saying. Let him now”

Johnson testified that in some instances she accidentally wrote did

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Natasha Rashenet Johnson v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/natasha-rashenet-johnson-v-state-texapp-2011.