Patrick Calvin Reilley v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 4, 2025
Docket09-23-00213-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Patrick Calvin Reilley v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

________________ NO. 09-23-00213-CR ________________

PATRICK CALVIN REILLEY, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee ________________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 9th District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 22-01-00051-CR ________________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, Patrick Calvin Reilley, appeals his conviction for Indecency with

a Child, who we refer to as “Ann,” by Contact. 1 See Tex. Penal Code Ann. §

21.11(a)(2). A jury found Reilley guilty and assessed punishment at fifteen years

and six months of incarceration in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. In a

1We use initials to refer to the alleged victim, a minor child, and pseudonyms

to refer to the child’s family members. See Tex. Const. art. 1, § 30(a)(1) (granting crime victims “the right to be treated with fairness and with respect for the victim’s dignity and privacy throughout the criminal judicial process”). 1 single issue, Reilley complains that the evidence is insufficient to support the trial

court’s judgment. As discussed below, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Background Kai Henderson

Kai Henderson testified that she is the school counselor at Oak Ridge

Elementary and has been a school counselor for nine years. In November 2020, Ann

went to Henderson’s office, “upset…[and] emotional.” After speaking with Ann,

Henderson filed a report with CPS regarding “suspect[ed] abuse[.]”

Ann

Ann testified that in November 2020, she was eleven years old, and that she

lived with her mother, her older sister, and Reilley in an apartment in Spring.

According to Ann, that month she and Reilley were watching a “scary movie” in her

mother’s room alone. Ann was lying on her side at the foot of the bed and Reilley

was “closer to the headboard.” Her mother and her older sister were in the apartment

in different rooms. Ann testified that while watching the movie, Reilley touched her

breasts and vagina under her clothes with his fingers. Ann recalled what outfit she

was wearing that day, the noises of the television during the assault, and the noise of

the shifting comforter as Reilley moved across the bed. Ann testified that she felt

“scared” during the assault and that she was afraid of Reilley.

2 At some point, her mother walked into the room and Reilley “scooted back on

the bed and started acting like nothing was happening.” Her mother stayed in the

bathroom for about five minutes, Ann went directly into her room and stayed in her

room for the rest of the night. According to Ann, she stayed in her room because she

was “terrified” of Reilley.

A week later Ann went to school and wrote a note to a friend, who convinced

her to speak to Henderson. That same day, Ann went with her mother to have a

forensic interview and a Sexual Assault Nurse Examination (“SANE examination”).

According to Ann, the November 2020 incident was not the only time Reilley

touched her. She recalled a time when she was around eight years old, and her family

was living in a different house. Reilley had told Ann to tell her mother that she did

not feel good so she could stay home from school. Ann followed Reilley’s

instructions and stayed home with Reilley. After eating lunch, Reilley told Ann to

come sit with him in a brown recliner, started to “roughhous[e]” with her, touching

her breasts.” Ann testified she believed the touching when she was eight years old

was accidental. During cross-examination, Ann stated there were times Reilley

would wrestle with her and her sister, and Reilley would accidentally touch her. Ann

denied that she wanted her mother and father to “get back together[.]” Ann also

admitted that she gave inconsistent statements about pain she experienced during the

assault in her forensic interview and SANE examination.

3 Audrey Terrell

Audrey Terrell testified she is a thirteen-year detective with the Montgomery

County Sheriff’s Department in the special victims unit with Children’s Safe Harbor.

In November 2020, Terrell was assigned to Ann’s case, where she reviewed the

initial file written by the patrol deputy and began her investigation. Terrell contacted

Ann’s mother and determined where the assault happened. Photographs of the

apartment where Ann lived at the time of the assault were admitted into evidence.

Terrell also reviewed Ann’s forensic interview. Terrell reviewed the SANE

examination and findings, which she testified did not produce any DNA. She

explained this was not unusual because the assault had happened a week before the

examination. Terrell then interviewed Reilley. According to Terrell, Reilley

admitted to touching Ann, but stated it was “accidental.” Reilly told her “that he

would play wrestle with [Ann] and her sister. And sometimes he would pick them

up and throw them in play wrestling, and he would accidentally touch their private

areas.” Reilley also told Terrell about another time when he touched Ann’s private

area while helping her climb into his lap, and that he was “freaked out about it.”

According to Terrell, Reilley told her that each time he would accidently touch Ann,

he would tell his wife and apologize to Ann. At no time did Reilley tell Terrell that

he stopped accidently touching Ann. Terrell found Reilley’s statement about

apologizing to Ann’s mother to be “odd[,]…[because] it continues to happen.”

4 During cross-examination Terrell admitted she did not interview Ann, but

later explained, “We try not to make them continue to tell their stories and to relive

that trauma over and over. So that’s why we conduct the forensic interviews[,] so

they only have to do it once.” Terrell did not believe Ann’s mother was protective

of her. Terrell testified that Ann’s mother did not believe the allegations and that

“she was -- she wasn’t supportive of [Ann]. She was disappointed that Mr. Reilley

had to move out of the home because of the allegations. She didn’t appear to be

surprised about the allegations.”

Casey Crosby

Casey Crosby testified she worked as a forensic interviewer at Children’s Safe

Harbor from 2018 to 2021. She detailed her educational and professional

background and stated that she conducted the forensic interview with Ann on

November 10, 2020. She explained that the purpose of Children’s Safe Harbor is “to

reduce trauma in children and families and reduce the amount of times the child has

to speak about an experience.” She described a forensic interview as “a fact-finding

neutral interview to gather information on details a child may or may not have

experienced or witnessed.” Crosby then explained how she conducts a forensic

interview with a child and stated that during her career, she has conducted

approximately 1,500 forensic interviews.

5 In Ann’s interview, Crosby and Ann discussed the difference between a truth

and a lie, and Crosby observed Ann’s demeanor change when she began to discuss

the sexual abuse. She described Ann as very quiet and softspoken, but that when she

discussed the sexual abuse, she became more “fidgety.” During the interview, Ann

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