Nkrumah Lamumba Valier v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 10, 2011
Docket01-08-00975-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Nkrumah Lamumba Valier v. State (Nkrumah Lamumba Valier 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
Nkrumah Lamumba Valier v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued November 10, 2011

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-08-00975-CR

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Nkrumah Lamumba Valier, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 183rd District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 1150625

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found appellant, Nkrumah Lamumba Valier, guilty of the offense of aggravated sexual assault[1] and assessed his punishment at confinement for forty years and a $10,000 fine.  In two issues, appellant contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction and the “trial court constructively denied [him] his right to testify in his own behalf by ruling that the State could impeach” him with another sexual assault conviction.

We affirm.

Background

          Tiffany Rogers, the complainant, testified that on the evening of May 15, 2005, after leaving a bar, she drove her car to a nearby gas station to use a pay telephone.  While making her call, a young, “nice-looking black man” driving a four-door car pulled up to her and asked her if she was “working.”  The complainant said “no” and then asked the man if he was a police officer.  She explained that she understood that the man was asking her if she was “prostituting,” and the two engaged in a conversation for five minutes during which the complainant agreed to have sex with the man for $100.  After driving her car back to the parking lot at the bar, the complainant got into the passenger seat of the man’s car, and he drove the car away from the lot.  

While driving, the man reached behind his seat, pulled out a gun, pointed it at the complainant’s head, and told her that he was going to have sex with her.  The complainant, who was afraid that the man was going to shoot her, told the man that she was married, had children, and did not “even do this.”   He drove his car to the back of the driveway of an abandoned building, where he told the complainant to remove her pants. The complainant complied, and the man reclined her seat and got on top of her and engaged in sexual intercourse with her.  The man continued to point the gun at the complainant during the assault, and she remained afraid for her life throughout the assault.  After two or three minutes, the man was “done,” and he told her to get out of his car.  The complainant jumped out of the car and hid in some bushes.  The man kept the complainant’s purse, but he threw her keys to her.  After five or ten minutes, the complainant walked to a nearby house and asked the homeowner to call for emergency assistance. 

          After an ambulance and police officers arrived, the complainant told the officers that she had been raped.  She did not tell the officers that she had been “prostituting” or, prior to the assault, the man who had assaulted her had offered her money for sex.  The complainant explained that she did not provide this information because she was embarrassed, she knew one of the officers, and she was concerned about getting into trouble.  The complainant then went to a hospital for a sexual assault examination. 

Approximately five or six months later, a police officer called the complainant and asked her to explain what had happened.  In response to the officer’s questioning, she agreed that it had been “an act of prostitution gone wrong.”  In January 2008, Houston Police Department (“HPD”) Detective K. McMurtry contacted the complainant to tell her that HPD “had a positive match on the DNA” obtained during her sexual assault examination, and he asked her to come to a police station to look at some photographs for a possible identification of the assailant.  She looked at a photo spread containing six photographs of different men, but the complainant did not recognize any of the men as the assailant.  The complainant noted that the lighting at both the gas station and the bar was “not good” and the man never got out of the car.  She also explained that the area in which she was sexually assaulted was dark.

On cross-examination, the complainant initially denied that she went to the gas station as a prostitute, but, when she was asked to review a sworn statement that she had given in January 2008, she agreed that she had stated that she was at the gas station at around midnight “looking to make some money.”  When asked if she had previously engaged in prostitution, she agreed that she had previously “dated” a man who paid her $100 for meeting with him on two occasions.   On the first occasion, she and the man “hung around,” and, on the second occasion she performed oral sex on him.   In regard to her review of the photo spread, the complainant agreed that she had not identified anyone in it as her assailant.  She also agreed that although Detective McMurtry showed her a photograph of appellant “all by himself,” she did not recognize him as her assailant.  The complainant explained that after the assault, she had described the assailant as a black man, between 30 and 40 years of age, and between five feet ten inches tall to six feet tall.  

Registered Nurse T. Dusang, a certified sexual assault examiner, testified that she examined the complainant on May 16, 2005.  Although she did not find any evidence of trauma during her physical exam of the complainant, she did find evidence of a “tear” during her genital exam.  Dusang explained that she took oral, vaginal, anal, saliva, and fingernail swabs from the complainant, and she also combed the complainant’s hair and obtained pubic hair. 

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