Paul Briones v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 19, 2016
Docket01-14-00121-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Paul Briones v. State (Paul Briones 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
Paul Briones v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Opinion issued May 19, 2016

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-14-00121-CR ——————————— PAUL BRIONES, Appellant V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 178th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 1268863

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found appellant, Paul Briones, guilty of the offense of indecency with

a child1 and assessed his punishment at confinement for twenty years.2 In three

1 See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 21.11(a) (Vernon 2011). issues, appellant contends that his trial counsel provided him with ineffective

assistance during both the guilt and punishment phases of trial.

We affirm.

Background

The complainant testified that during the summers of 2004, 2005, and 2006,

she and her older sister spent many weekends visiting the home of appellant, their

uncle; Joanna Briones, their aunt; and their three cousins. Appellant was then a

law enforcement officer who worked often and was “never home.” One night,

during a weekend visit in 2004, when the complainant was ten years old, she, her

sister, and one of her cousins watched a movie while lying on the living room

floor. Joanna instructed the three girls to be asleep by the time appellant came

home from work. Although the complainant’s sister and cousin fell asleep, the

complainant stayed awake and continued to watch the movie. However, when she

saw the headlights of appellant’s truck as it approached the house in the driveway,

she pretended to be asleep. The complainant noted that at this time, Joanna was

2 Although another jury previously found appellant guilty of the offenses of aggravated sexual assault of a child and indecency with a child, the trial court granted a new trial because items not admitted into evidence had been erroneously submitted to the jury during its deliberations. See State v. Briones, Nos. 1268861, 1268863 (248th Dist. Ct., Harris Cty., Tex., June 30, 2011). Here, in appellant’s second trial, although the jury found appellant guilty of the offense of indecency with a child, it acquitted him of the offense of aggravated sexual assault of a child.

2 asleep in her bedroom, but the complainant could not recall whether her other two

cousins were in the house.

Appellant came into the house through the back door, walked into the living

room, turned off the television, hung up his jacket and belt, and adjusted the

blanket that was covering the girls on the living room floor. He then went into the

kitchen, and the complainant heard him “taking out jars” from the refrigerator and

opening containers. Appellant then walked into his bedroom, which adjoined the

living room, and returned to the kitchen.

When appellant emerged from the kitchen, he walked over to where the

complainant was lying on the floor in the living room. He removed the blanket

that was covering her, got down onto “[h]is hands and knees” on the floor at her

feet, “pull[ed] down” her athletic shorts “almost to [her] knees,” and then “pull[ed]

down her underwear” “the same distance as [her] shorts.” Appellant then “place[d]

his hand . . . [o]n [her] vagina” and “mov[ed]” his “fingers.” The complainant,

who was lying on her back, moved, “act[ing] like [she] was waking up.” Appellant

then pulled up her shorts and underwear, placed the blanket back over her, got up,

and went back into the kitchen.

“Maybe less than a minute” later, appellant returned, “remove[d] [the

complainant’s] shorts and underwear,” lowering them down to her knees, and put

his “mouth . . . down there,” “on [her] vagina,” for a “few seconds.” She could

3 “feel his moustache and . . . his tongue down there,” “moving.” The complainant,

still pretending to sleep, moved again, “more than [she] had the first time,” and

turned over to her side. Appellant again pulled up her shorts and underwear,

replaced the blanket, and went back into the kitchen.

“[L]ess than a minute later,” appellant returned to the complainant a third

time. He “pushe[d]” her “back [on]to her back,” causing the blanket to fall away.

He once again “removed” her shorts and underwear “to [her] knees” and placed

“his mouth and his hands” “down there” for “a few seconds.” The complainant

moved quickly, and appellant again pulled up her shorts and underwear, placed the

blanket back over her, and went into his bedroom. At that point, she got up and

moved in between her sister and cousin, who were both still asleep. Shortly

thereafter, appellant emerged from his bedroom, “stood by the fireplace,” and “just

stared” at her. He then went into the kitchen, “grabbed his sandwich,” and went

back into his bedroom.

In the morning, the “minute [her] aunt got up,” the complainant told her that

she wanted to go home. Joanna then drove the complainant and her sister home.

The complainant did not tell anyone about appellant’s abuse because she was

“scared.” And she felt that reporting the matter to law enforcement “just wasn’t an

option for [her]” because appellant “was a police officer.” She continued to stay

over at appellant’s house that summer, and again during the summers of 2005 and

4 2006, because her sisters were still going over there and she felt a need “to protect

them” from appellant. During the summer of 2007, appellant began coming over

to the complainant’s house to talk with her mother. “The fact that [appellant] was

coming over made [her] feel unsafe,” so she then told another aunt, Katrina Pena,

about the abuse.

Pena, who is a sister-in-law of both Joanna and the complainant’s mother,

testified that on a Sunday during the summer of 2007, while she was driving the

complainant home from church, the complainant asked whether she could tell Pena

something without Pena requiring her to tell her parents. The complainant, who

was “upset,” “began to cry” and said, “My uncle touched me.” Pena then told the

complainant that she would have to tell her parents about the incident, but she

would give the complainant some time to tell them herself. Later, on December

31, 2007, the complainant telephoned Pena and told her that she was ready to tell

her parents.

The complainant’s mother testified that one day in January 2008, while she

was driving the complainant to school, the complainant started crying, stated that

she needed to talk with her, and asked her to telephone Pena. They then went to

Pena’s house, where Pena stated that the complainant had told her “about five or

six months ago” that appellant “had touched her.” The complainant began nodding

and crying, went into one of the bedrooms, and screamed and buried her head into

5 a pillow. The complainant then told her mother how one night, while she was

lying on the floor in the living room at the Brioneses’ house and everyone else was

asleep, appellant came home from work, pulled off her shorts and panties, and

“started kissing [her] down there,” pointing to her “genital area.” When she

moved, he stopped and hurriedly pulled up her panties and shorts. Appellant then

went into the kitchen and made a sandwich. He came back, “took her panties and

her shorts back off,” and “kissed and licked her two more times.” After hearing

the allegations, the complainant’s mother telephoned her husband and asked that

he come to Pena’s house.

The complainant’s father testified that after he arrived at the Pena’s house,

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