Paul Cody Teague v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 24, 2021
Docket07-20-00074-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Paul Cody Teague v. the State of Texas (Paul Cody Teague v. the State of Texas) 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 Cody Teague v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo

No. 07-20-00074-CR

PAUL CODY TEAGUE, APPELLANT

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, APPELLEE

On Appeal from the 181st District Court Randall County, Texas Trial Court No. 28,243-B, Honorable John B. Board, Presiding

June 24, 2021 OPINION Before QUINN, C.J., and PARKER and DOSS, JJ.

Appellant, Paul Cody Teague, appeals from a jury verdict finding him guilty of

aggravated sexual assault, two counts of sexual assault, and one count of aggravated

kidnapping. After appellant pled true to an enhancement allegation regarding a prior

conviction for aggravated sexual assault, the trial court sentenced appellant to life

imprisonment on all counts. Appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence

supporting his convictions for aggravated sexual assault and one of the sexual assault

counts. We affirm the trial court’s judgment. Factual and Procedural Background

The victim1 in this case was informed by a friend that a “Dean Winters” might be

able to help her obtain steady income and stable housing. Victim reached out to Winters

online, informing him of her current circumstances. Winters offered Victim a place to stay

in exchange for sex, but Victim declined. A couple of weeks later, Winters contacted

Victim and offered to provide her a place to stay if she would work for a call service he

operated out of his home. Victim agreed to this arrangement and Winters sent a cohort

to pick up Victim. At some point, Victim became aware that “Winters” was actually

appellant.

Appellant’s cohort took Victim to appellant’s trailer home located outside of Canyon

on Sunday, October 15, 2017. Upon entering appellant’s home, the driver immediately

stripped naked and began smoking methamphetamine in front of appellant, Victim, and

another associate of appellant. Feeling that the entire situation was “very weird,” Victim

walked out of appellant’s house, intending to leave, but appellant followed her out and

convinced her to stay the night.

Over the course of the following day, appellant had Victim assist him with the call

service, as she expected. However, soon thereafter, appellant accused Victim of

breaking his headphones and demanded that she replace them. Victim replaced the

headphones, but appellant insisted that this was not sufficient. He claimed that, by

breaking his headphones, Victim had caused appellant to lose his job. To repay him,

1 To protect the privacy of the victim in this case, we will refer to her as “Victim.” 2 appellant demanded that Victim have sex with him. When Victim refused, appellant

repeatedly shoved her to a back bedroom where he told her that she could not leave until

she had sex with him. Victim succumbed to appellant’s demand. Even though appellant

told Victim that he would take her home after she had sex with him, after she complied,

he continued to refuse to let her leave.

Appellant confined Victim in a bedroom where he stripped her naked and told her

that she was going to have sex with people appellant brought to the house in order to

repay him for breaking his headphones and costing him his job. Appellant restricted

Victim to this single room for a day, even posting “guards” at the door to the room.

Appellant also instigated a fight between Victim and another woman that resulted in the

other woman biting Victim’s ear. Victim, fearing that appellant intended to make good on

his promise to force her into prostitution, attempted to escape by running out of the back

door of the trailer. However, she was recaptured while running through an open field.

Appellant choked Victim unconscious and dragged her back to the trailer. Once inside

the trailer, appellant chained Victim to a toilet.

Over the next few days, Victim was sexually assaulted multiple times in varying

ways. In one such incident, appellant hit Victim with his fists until she lost consciousness.

Just before she lost consciousness, Victim saw another man, James Washburn, pull a

phallic sex toy, commonly known as a dildo, from his backpack. Whenever Victim would

regain consciousness during this period, appellant hit her until she would again lose

consciousness. When she was finally allowed to awaken, Victim discovered that she was

again chained by the neck and she felt like her “insides were just wounded, very

3 wounded.” Appellant informed Victim that Washburn had penetrated her anus with the

dildo. When he informed Victim of this, appellant also told Victim that “You’re a fighter,

aren’t you?”

Later, appellant sexually assaulted Victim in the living room of the trailer in front of

others. One of the other people at appellant’s trailer recognized that Victim needed

medical attention and tried to convince appellant to take her to the hospital, but he

refused. Victim lay on the floor barely able to move. Regardless, appellant forced Victim

to have sex even though she was throwing up bile and told him that she could not have

sex.

Finally, one of the people that had been at appellant’s trailer informed law

enforcement that a woman had been kidnapped and was being held inside appellant’s

trailer. As a result, an officer knocked on appellant’s door, but no one answered. At that

time, Victim was locked in a closet and was barely able to move.

Following the visit by the police, appellant told Victim that she needed to leave but

that she needed to be quiet because the police had just been by the trailer. Appellant

suggested that Victim be dropped off at her grandmother’s house in Pampa. Victim,

knowing that she needed immediate medical attention, convinced appellant to drop her

off at the Pavilion in Amarillo. She told appellant that she would say that she was “crazy”

and that she had made up the abduction. Appellant eventually agreed but made clear to

Victim that she needed to “keep her mouth shut.” Victim was dropped off at the Pavilion

at 6:33 p.m. on Thursday, October 19.

4 Victim was transferred to the hospital. While being evaluated, Victim told a sexual

assault nurse examiner that, “I was grabbed and chained around the neck and left in a

dirty bathtub. I was raped multiple times by three people. The men put their penises in

my mouth, my anus[,] and my vagina.” She further explained that, “They beat me many

times. One of the males used a dildo in my anus a lot. It hurt so much.”

The results of Victim’s medical evaluation revealed that her colon was beyond six

inches from her sphincter, which means that the object that caused the injury had to have

penetrated at least that far. Any object that penetrates that deeply can cause the injury

sustained by Victim. The penetration caused a hole in Victim’s colon. This is a

significantly dangerous injury because the hole can allow air and stool to leak out, which

can cause infection and sepsis. The pain level that is expected from this injury would

prevent most people from walking, let alone having sex.

Police officers returned to appellant’s trailer and, based on the information

provided by Victim, placed appellant under arrest. Appellant was subsequently indicted

for three counts of aggravated sexual assault and one count of aggravated kidnapping.

The indictment included an enhancement allegation that appellant had previously been

convicted of the felony offense of aggravated sexual assault. After a jury trial, appellant

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