Oscar Alexander Gomez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 19, 2020
Docket01-19-00066-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Oscar Alexander Gomez v. State (Oscar Alexander Gomez 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
Oscar Alexander Gomez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 19, 2020

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-19-00066-CR ——————————— OSCAR ALEXANDER GOMEZ, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 338th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 1397023

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Oscar Alexander Gomez pleaded guilty to the first-degree offense

of possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance, weighing at least 200

grams but less than 399 grams. Gomez was placed on 10 years’ deferred-

adjudication community supervision. Three years later, the State filed a motion to adjudicate guilt. Based on evidence admitted at the adjudication hearing, the trial

court found that Gomez had violated conditions of his community supervision,

including that Gomez had committed the offenses of sexual assault and burglary.

The trial court adjudged Gomez guilty and sentenced him to 25 years in prison. In

two issues, Gomez challenges the adjudication of his guilt.

We affirm.

Background

In March 2014, the trial court placed Gomez on deferred-adjudication

community supervision after he pleaded guilty to the first-degree offense of

possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance. The terms and conditions of

his community supervision included that he would not commit any new offenses

while on community supervision. The conditions also required Gomez to have

suitable employment and to make monthly payments for certain fines, fees, and

costs.

In December 2017, the State filed a motion to adjudicate Gomez’s guilt. The

State asserted that Gomez had violated six of the conditions of his community

supervision. Among these, the State alleged that Gomez had committed a new

criminal offense. Specifically, the State averred that Gomez had committed the

offense of sexual assault in February 2017 against an adult woman, B.D. The State

alleged that Gomez had “unlawfully, intentionally and knowingly cause[d] the

2 penetration of the anus and sexual organ of [B.D.] . . . by placing [his] sexual organ

in the anus and sexual organ of [B.D.], without [her] consent.” The State further

alleged that Gomez compelled B.D. “to submit and participate” in the sexual assault

by using “physical force and violence.” The State alleged that B.D. had “not

consented” and that Gomez knew that B.D. “was unconscious and physically unable

to resist” and “was unaware that the sexual assault was occurring.”

In September 2018, the State amended its motion to adjudicate guilt, alleging

that Gomez had committed another violation of the law. Specifically, the State

alleged that Gomez had committed the offense of burglary.

In January 2019, the trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing on the

motion to adjudicate. The State presented evidence to prove that, since being placed

on deferred-adjudication community supervision, Gomez had committed the

offenses of burglary and sexual assault.

Regarding the sexual-assault offense, the State presented the testimony of

B.D., the complainant. B.D. testified that, on February 11, 2017, she went to a

downtown Houston club to meet some friends. While there, she met Gomez, and he

bought her drinks. She said that she had never met Gomez before that night. B.D.

testified that the next memory she has from that night was waking up in Gomez’s

bedroom. She was completely nude, and Gomez was penetrating her vaginally and

anally with his penis. B.D. said that she asked Gomez to stop, but he would not. B.D.

3 testified that, during the sexual assault, Gomez had his hands around her throat, and

she could barely breath. B.D. tried to leave the bedroom, but Gomez blocked the

door, and pushed B.D. back.

B.D. testified that she waited until Gomez fell asleep and then ran from the

house. She stated that she was barefoot and wearing only a shirt belonging to Gomez

as she ran down the street to get away. An off-duty police officer saw B.D. and

stopped to help her. She was taken to the hospital where she underwent a sexual-

assault examination. As part of the examination, vaginal and anal swabs were taken

and placed in a sexual assault kit.

Sergeant D. Wareham with the Harris County Sheriff’s Office spoke with

B.D. at the hospital about the sexual assault. Sergeant Wareham testified that the

evidence in B.D.’s sexual-assault kit was submitted for DNA analysis. The analysis

showed that the DNA profile from evidence in the sexual assault kit matched

Gomez’s DNA profile, which was in CODIS, a law-enforcement DNA database.

Gomez testified in his own defense. He acknowledged that he had intercourse

with B.D. but claimed it had been consensual.

When asked, Gomez denied several times that he had anal sex with B.D. He

claimed that they only had vaginal intercourse. To rebut Gomez’s claim, the State

offered the testimony of DNA analyst, T. Taylors. She testified that sperm fractions

were found on the anal and vaginal swabs from B.D.’s sexual-assault kit. She

4 compared Gomez’s DNA profile with the DNA profiles obtained from sperm

fractions on the swabs. Taylor testified that Gomez could not be excluded as the

source of the DNA found on the anal and vaginal swabs. She said that, statistically,

she would expect to test “another 59 septillion individuals” before she would see the

same DNA profile again.

At the end of the adjudication phase, the trial court stated on the record that

“all of the paragraphs in the motion to adjudicate are true by a preponderance of the

evidence,” which necessarily included the allegations that Gomez had committed

the offenses of burglary and sexual assault.

The trial court then conducted the punishment phase. The State presented

evidence showing that other women had been assaulted by Gomez. At the end of the

punishment phase, the trial court adjudicated Gomez’s guilt and sentenced him to 25

years in prison.

Gomez now appeals. In two issues, Gomez contends that (1) the evidence

admitted at the adjudication hearing was insufficient to support the trial court’s

finding that he had committed the offense of burglary, and (2) the trial court abused

its discretion when it admitted hearsay testimony related to the sexual-assault

offense and the burglary offense.

Adjudication of Guilt

5 We review the decision to adjudicate guilt in the same manner as a community

supervision revocation in which an adjudication of guilt was not deferred. See TEX.

CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 42A.108(b); Leonard v. State, 385 S.W.3d 570, 572 n.1 (Tex.

Crim. App. 2012). Proof by a preponderance of the evidence of a single violation of

a condition of community supervision is sufficient to support revocation. See Smith

v. State, 286 S.W.3d 333, 342 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) (“We have long held that ‘one

sufficient ground for revocation would support the trial court’s order revoking’

community supervision.”) (quoting Jones v. State, 571 S.W.2d 191, 193 (Tex. Crim.

App. 1978)). Thus, any one of Gomez’s community-supervision violations found by

the trial court will support the adjudication of Gomez’s guilt.

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