Noe Jose Cervantes v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 10, 2016
Docket01-14-00875-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Noe Jose Cervantes v. State (Noe Jose Cervantes 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
Noe Jose Cervantes v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 10, 2016

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-14-00875-CR ——————————— NOE JOSE CERVANTES, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 263rd District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 1388906

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Noe Cervantes was convicted of aggravated sexual assault of his 11-year old

sister-in-law.1 In a single issue, he contends that insufficient evidence exists to

support his conviction. We affirm.

1 TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 22.021(a)(1)(B) (West Supp. 2015). Background

Cervantes and his wife married young and were living with her mother and

her younger siblings, who were between the ages of four and 16. One of the

siblings is an 11-year old girl named Leslie.2 When Cervantes’s mother-in-law

worked, he and his wife would babysit the younger children, including Leslie. At

one point, Cervantes had an argument with his mother-in-law and became so

aggressive that she called the police to intervene. Cervantes was arrested and, from

that point forward, stopped living in the home.

A few days after the confrontation, Leslie’s mother found a letter addressed

to “babe” in Leslie’s room. She recognized the writing as Cervantes’s. According

to Leslie’s mother, the letter “seemed inappropriate to be coming from a grown

man to a child.” Leslie’s mother showed the letter to Leslie’s sister (Cervantes’s

wife), who threw it away. A few days later, Leslie’s mother found a second letter

from Cervantes in Leslie’s dresser, which the mother kept. It read, in its entirety, as

follows:3

I missed you babe I slept with your plow. I hope you had fun and missed me, but I think that

2 To protect her privacy and for ease of reading, we use a pseudonym in discussing the complainant. 3 The text of the letter is written verbatim, without corrections. 2 you didn’t miss me at all, which sicks, my heart hurts when we are not together. You know I will do anything for you. You know I wouldn’t lie so I think we should be open & [illegible, struck through words] we shouldn’t hide anything from each other. Most people don’t like different age being with each other. I think that if the two love each other and know what love means. Please talk and be more open with me. When we can’t talk write, read everything remember what you read and answer back ask questions. Read, Reply, Throw Away note.

After discovering this second letter, Leslie’s mother confronted Leslie and

“asked her did they have sex.” Leslie “put her head down and cried.” Leslie’s

mother asked her, “Where did he put his penis?” She testified that Leslie “said in

her butt.” Leslie said it happened while the mother was out of town and the

siblings were in other rooms “playing video games” and “watching TV.” Leslie

told her mother that she did not disclose what had occurred because she was afraid

of Cervantes.

3 Leslie’s mother notified the police and took Leslie to Texas Children’s

Hospital for an examination. The doctor did not find evidence of physical injury;

however, he testified that it is “very uncommon to see . . . much trauma” in the

anal-genital area because “that area actually heals very . . . quickly” and there is

often a delay in reporting a sexual assault. The doctor testified that Leslie reported

“threats” regarding the abuse, but the doctor could not recall, while testifying,

exactly what Leslie had said.

A forensic interviewer at the Children’s Assessment Center testified about

her interview of Leslie. The interviewer said that Leslie was “very consistent” and

“very descriptive” in disclosing the alleged sexual abuse. Leslie described with

specificity “exactly what she was wearing, the room that the incident happened

[in], how she was forced to the room, her body position, the defendant’s body

position, how the defendant was moving, what her body could feel, what the

defendant told her before it ended, and how he had stopped.” Leslie told her that

Cervantes touched “just [her] butt” and put his “private part . . . inside the hole

where the poop comes out.”

At some points during the interview, Leslie wrote what had occurred instead

of discussing it verbally. She wrote as follows: “After he slammed me on the bed

he raped me. First he put a towel around my mouth so I couldn’t scream or talk,

then he pulled down my pants and put his private part in my butt.”

4 The State also proffered an audio file of Cervantes’s police interview in

which he admitted to having sexual thoughts about the eleven-year-old Leslie. He

said he feels “guilty” that he “touched her in mind.” He also disclosed that both of

them had seen each other naked “by accident” and that he was considering the

possibility that he might “pursue” her once she became “legal.”

Leslie’s mother described the impact that the sexual assault allegations had

on Leslie’s relationship with her sister (Cervantes’s wife). The two would avoid

each other at first. But, over time, Leslie’s sister began to talk to her “often” about

her allegations. Leslie’s mother felt that the sister’s conduct was not appropriate.

This led Leslie’s mother to feel that she needed to protect Leslie from her sister.

Eventually, Leslie recanted her allegations. She wrote a letter that read: “It

did not happen and I am afraid of my sister and what she would do if I say it did

happen.” Leslie’s mother took her to the district attorney’s office to deliver the

letter. While there, and without her mother present, Leslie told the prosecutor that

she was scared of her sister and wanted the prosecutor to talk to her mother about

the sister threatening her. Leslie explained that her sister made her write the letter.

There was evidence that Cervantes was communicating with Leslie’s sister

and mother around this time. A second audiotape was admitted into evidence of a

phone call between Cervantes and his mother-in-law, in which he explained that

Leslie’s letter would not be enough for the judge and she, instead, needed to give a

5 sworn affidavit. He also told his mother-in–law to bring Leslie along because it

would help him to get released sooner.

Leslie wrote two more letters recanting her original allegations. The first one

said, “I have lied. I am sorry. I shouldn’t have lied. I should have told the truth. I’m

sorry.” The second read, “Noe did not rape me. I lied because I was mad when he

got into a fight with my mom and broke her phone.”

At Cervantes’s trial, Leslie testified that her initial allegations were not true

and that Cervantes did not assault her. But her trial testimony was not consistent.

Between her denials, Leslie agreed that Cervantes began showing her “special

attention” at age 11. She testified that he had kissed her before, come to her

bedroom window at night to talk to her, shown her pornography, and made her feel

“uncomfortable” when he touched her. She also testified that the therapy sessions

she attended for a brief time after her initial allegations helped her deal with the

feelings she was experiencing at the time, which she described as feelings of

“powerlessness,” “embarrassment,” “mood swings,” “confusion about sex,” and

“re-triggering . . . what happened.” She testified that it was difficult to express

those feelings in her home. She also admitted that she earlier said that she was

scared for her little sister if Cervantes ever returned to their home.

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