Orlando Robles v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2015
Docket13-14-00609-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Orlando Robles v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-14-00609-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

ORLANDO ROBLES, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 28th District Court of Nueces County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Rodriguez, Garza, and Longoria Memorandum Opinion by Justice Garza

A Nueces County jury convicted appellant, Orlando Robles, of sexual assault, a

second-degree felony, and sentenced him to twenty years’ imprisonment. See TEX.

PENAL CODE ANN. § 22.011 (West, Westlaw through Ch. 46, 2015 R.S.). On appeal, he

contends that the trial court erred: (1) by denying his motion for mistrial when the State

introduced evidence of an unrelated sexual assault, and (2) by admitting evidence of prior convictions at the punishment phase. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Robles was charged by indictment with having intentionally or knowingly

penetrated the sexual organ of S.A.,1 the complainant, with his finger and without the

consent of the complainant. See id.

At trial, S.A., who was twenty years old at the time of her testimony, testified that

she was driving her car in Corpus Christi at around 4:00 a.m. on or about September 29,

2013. She was going to Cole Park to meet a friend and “[j]ust to think, get my head clear.”

Because the friend did not respond to her texts, S.A. left the park and headed to her

home. As a precaution, she checked to make sure no one was following her.

S.A. stated that, when she stopped at an intersection, a man walked up to the

driver’s side of her car and told her she was “dragging something.” The man instructed

her to pull over to the right, and she did. The man also pulled over to the right in his truck.

The man exited the truck and touched the tire of S.A.’s car. At that point, sensing

“something was off,” S.A. got back in the car and retrieved her car keys. She then

returned to the back of the car. According to S.A., the man asked “about like three times”

where her spare tire was. S.A. stated she grabbed her keys around her hand and “h[e]ld

them like if something was going to happen.” S.A. stated that the man then attacked her,

causing her to fall to the ground. S.A. begged the man to stop and told him to take the

money that was in the car. S.A. testified the man “slam[med]” the side of her head against

the ground, pulled her shorts off, and “stuck his fingers inside of [her].” She stated that

1 Although the complainant's identity was not concealed at trial, we will use only her initials here, given the nature of the case. See, e.g., Sledge v. State, 953 S.W.2d 253, 258 n. 1 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997) (Overstreet, J., dissenting).

2 she was trying to fight back against the man and that she struck him repeatedly with her

keys on the back of his neck. She pressed the panic button on her keys, which caused

the car to start honking. After four honks, she ran to get inside her car and she “t[oo]k

off.” According to S.A., she initially attempted to “run him down” but she then got “real

dizzy,” and “he took off.”

S.A. drove to a nearby Stripes store and called her boyfriend. When he did not

answer, she called her mother. When her mother did not answer, she called her brother,

and her brother came to the scene with her mother. S.A. did not call the police, but the

police eventually arrived. S.A. was “scared, shook up, [and] angry” when answering

questions posed by police. S.A., her brother, and her mother picked up one of S.A.’s

friends and went home.

At the scene, S.A. could not give a description of the assailant. When she spoke

to detectives the next day, S.A. was unable to identify her assailant from “two or three”

photo lineups. At trial, she testified that the assailant was “Mexican, not built but stocky,”

and about 40 to 50 years old.

According to S.A., the police officer at the scene initially told her that an ambulance

would come to take her to the hospital, but “after everything was done, he told me to go

home and take a shower.” S.A. did not think that was a good idea. She stated that she

went home, smoked marihuana, and later went to the hospital because she “wanted to

get checked out.” She was later transported by ambulance to a different hospital for a

sexual assault nurse examination (“SANE exam”). When S.A. gave a urine sample at the

request of hospital staff, she noticed that she had been “nicked” inside her sexual organ,

causing a small amount of bleeding. S.A. testified that the assailant also caused minor

3 injuries to her face, knees, hands, neck, and lips.

Police officer Alyssa Hernandez testified that she was on patrol on the date and

time in question when she saw S.A. “waving me down” and crying in front of the Stripes

store. S.A. “kept saying, ‘He tried to rape me, he tried to rape me.’” S.A. had blood on

her legs and looked “disorganized and disarrayed.” Hernandez stated that S.A. was

cooperative with police; however, when S.A.’s brother arrived, he “was so upset at the

situation that I had to threaten him a couple of times, ‘If you don’t stop interfering, I’m

going to arrest you for interference.’” Hernandez stated that she “understood where he

was coming from because I would be upset too.” Hernandez denied telling S.A. to go

home and take a shower.

Officer Eric Smith testified that he was Hernandez’s field training officer on the date

and time in question. According to Smith, S.A. said “I stabbed him” multiple times. Smith

testified that he allowed S.A. to go to the hospital with her family because “I didn’t want

to traumatize her more by taking her in an ambulance, or have us transport her.” When

the prosecutor asked whether he advised S.A. to go home and take a shower, Smith

replied: “No, that’s a huge don’t, for the SANE Exam, there’s several policies and we

need them not to take a shower, not to wash, not to change clothes because we need

that as evidence.”

A DNA sample was obtained from S.A.’s car key. A forensic scientist testified that,

“to a reasonable degree of scientific certainty,” Robles or an identical twin was the source

of the DNA on the car keys. DNA obtained from S.A.’s underwear was consistent with

S.A.’s DNA profile. Another sample taken from S.A.’s underwear was consistent with a

mixture, and neither S.A. nor Robles could be excluded as contributors. Robles was

4 excluded, however, as a contributor to a DNA sample obtained from S.A.’s vaginal swab

taken as part of the SANE exam.

Nurse Carol McLaughlin testified that she performed S.A.’s SANE exam thirteen

hours after the assault allegedly occurred. According to McLaughlin, the exam revealed

“23 separate areas of injury” on S.A.’s body, including a one-centimeter “linear bruising

abrasion” to the labia minora of her vagina that looked “pretty new.” McLaughlin agreed

with the prosecutor that the injury was consistent with the insertion of a finger “in a violent

rough manner.”

The jury found Robles guilty. At the punishment phase, the State presented the

testimony of G.G., who stated that, in October 2013, Robles assaulted her by grabbing

her breasts. The jury assessed punishment at the maximum twenty years’ imprisonment,

see id. § 12.33(a) (West, Westlaw through Ch. 46, 2015 R.S.), and this appeal followed.

II. DISCUSSION

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