Pavielle Monique Simpson v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 2, 2011
Docket02-10-00248-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Pavielle Monique Simpson v. State (Pavielle Monique Simpson 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
Pavielle Monique Simpson v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

02-10-248-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 02-10-00248-CR

Pavielle Monique Simpson

APPELLANT

V.

The State of Texas

STATE

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FROM Criminal District Court No. 4 OF Tarrant COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

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          A jury found appellant Pavielle Simpson guilty of knowingly causing serious bodily injury to her son, J.F.  Simpson challenges the sufficiency of the evidence and complains of an error in the indictment.  We will affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Background Facts

          Simpson and her boyfriend, Jason Farrington, were living in an apartment with their son J.F. and another couple, Marcus Simpson and Shayla Latham.  On March 26, 2009, one-month-old J.F. was admitted to Cook Children’s Hospital with “orbital eye swelling and a skull fracture.”  Donna Wright, a nurse at the hospital, said the fractures were on both sides of his head and described them as “significant” and the result of “tremendous force.”  Wright identified two separate points of impact necessary to explain the stellate fractures on each side of J.F.’s head.  Simpson believed the injuries were caused by the vacuum extractor used during his birth and claimed she knew of no trauma that he might have suffered.  Doctors at the hospital believed the injuries were not consistent with a vacuum extraction but were the result of intentional abuse.  Child Protective Services (CPS) was notified, and an investigator, Sky Gaeta, arrived at the hospital to take custody of J.F.

Both Gaeta and Wright told Simpson that J.F. had been abused, but Simpson insisted the injuries were from the vacuum extraction.  Gaeta also informed Simpson that CPS was removing J.F. from her custody and was creating a safety plan that Simpson would have to agree to follow in order to have her son returned to her.  Simpson appeared concerned about J.F.’s injuries and interested in his return.

Detective Savage of the Crimes Against Children unit of the Arlington Police Department interviewed Simpson at her apartment the next day.  Simpson reiterated her belief that the injuries were from the vacuum extraction.  Detective Savage told her that they were not from birth, that they were intentional, and that he believed Farrington had caused them.  Simpson told Detective Savage that she would do anything to get J.F. back, even if it meant leaving Farrington, and that she could move to Waco to live with her aunt.

          The CPS safety plan required Simpson to agree that J.F. “will not have contact (physical, verbal, written or other)” with Farrington, Marcus Simpson, or Latham “until notified otherwise.”  Arlington police could not determine which of the three had abused J.F., so Simpson was told that none of them, including Farrington, could be around J.F.  Simpson moved out of the apartment and moved in with Tanesha Benjamin and Benjamin’s boyfriend.  Simpson told Benjamin that the doctors did not know how J.F. received his injuries and that she thought that they happened at his birth.  Both Simpson and Benjamin signed the safety plan.

           The night after J.F. was returned to Simpson, Farrington went to Benjamin’s apartment.  He went to the apartment again the next day and “never left.”  Farrington lived with Simpson and J.F. in the apartment for the next three months.  Simpson told Benjamin that she loved Farrington and could not take care of J.F. without his help.  Farrington would watch J.F. when Simpson was at work, and Simpson never seemed hesitant to leave J.F. with Farrington.

Gaeta, the CPS investigator, called Simpson on April 9, 2009, to get contact information for Farrington.  Simpson told Gaeta that Farrington had moved to New Jersey.  Simpson also refused to provide Farrington’s correct contact information to Detective Savage, who felt she was hampering the investigation.

          Also on April 9, Simpson took J.F. for a follow-up visit at the hospital.  X-rays and CT scans revealed that J.F.’s ribs had also been fractured back in March.  When Wright, the nurse who had attended to J.F., showed Simpson the x-rays and scans, Simpson exclaimed, “He could have killed my baby.”  Wright felt that Simpson adequately understood the danger the child would be in if he were further exposed to the individual who inflicted the previous injuries.

          In May 2009, Gaeta had to close her investigation (which was legally only allowed to continue for sixty days) and transferred the case to Family Based Safety Services (FBSS), which assigned it to John Whitfield.  Whitfield called Simpson five or six times before she returned his phone call.  She told Whitfield that she did not know where Farrington was, but she believed he had moved in with his mother.  FBSS gave Simpson a new safety plan, which also included the condition that J.F. have no contact with Farrington until Farrington had completed services and had met with CPS.[2]

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Pavielle Monique Simpson v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pavielle-monique-simpson-v-state-texapp-2011.