Quentin Washington v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 5, 2015
Docket02-13-00526-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Quentin Washington v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 02-13-00526-CR

QUENTIN WASHINGTON APPELLANT

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS STATE

----------

FROM THE 211TH DISTRICT COURT OF DENTON COUNTY TRIAL COURT NO. F-2012-2475-C

MEMORANDUM OPINION 1

Appellant Quentin Washington appeals his convictions for five counts of

aggravated sexual assault. 2 In two points, he contends that the trial court erred

by admitting printouts generated by a cell-phone extraction device and by

1 See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. 2 See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.021(a)(1)(B)(iii), (2)(B) (West Supp. 2014). admitting urine-test results showing that he had a sexually-transmitted disease.

We affirm.

Background Facts

A.H. (Mother) moved with her children, including her daughter R.A. (Rita),

to Lewisville in 2010. 3 Upon arriving there, Mother met appellant. At first, Mother

believed that appellant was a “great guy”; she and the children were living on

tight finances, and he helped her pay for food and transportation. Later,

appellant allowed Mother and the children to move in with him. He drove a tow

truck to make money, and Mother and the children sometimes went with him on

jobs. Mother believed that Rita considered appellant to be a father figure.

In 2012, appellant occasionally stayed at his house with the children when

Mother, who was a nurse, went to work. One day in August 2012, when Rita was

thirteen years old, appellant spoke with Mother about a “new little girl” that Rita

knew. Concerned that Rita was having a sexual relationship with the girl, Mother

spoke to Rita but “wasn’t convinced” about Rita’s explanation of the relationship.

Thus, Mother took Rita’s cell phone (which appellant had bought for her) and

began to read text messages that it contained. Upon doing so, Mother saw

graphic text messages between appellant and Rita that indicated they were

having sex.

3 To protect the complainant’s anonymity, we will use initials and aliases to refer to her and to her mother. See Daggett v. State, 187 S.W.3d 444, 446 n.3 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005); McClendon v. State, 643 S.W.2d 936, 936 n.1 (Tex. Crim. App. [Panel Op.] 1982).

2 When Mother confronted appellant through a text message about having

sex with Rita, he texted back to Mother that he was sorry and asked for

forgiveness. Appellant never denied in his subsequent text messages that he

had engaged in a sexual relationship with Rita; instead, he repeatedly

apologized, expressed his desire to “fix it,” and implored Mother to not call the

police. Appellant also stated in a text message that if Mother “call[ed] the laws,”

he would turn himself in. He recognized in a text message that he “might get like

20 years.”

In response to Mother’s questioning, Rita initially denied having sex with

appellant because she did not want him to go to jail. Later, she admitted to

having sex with him twice. Mother did not believe Rita’s statement that the sex

had only occurred twice. Mother called the police about the sexual assaults.

By appellant’s prompting, Rita told the police that she had been a willing

participant in having sex with appellant and asked the police not to “take him.”

Mother believed that Rita was trying to protect appellant. Eventually, Rita

participated in a forensic interview. She also saw a sexual assault nurse

examiner. She told the nurse examiner that multiple sexual assaults had

occurred. Appellant went to Port Arthur, and Mother and the children continued

to stay in his house for several months.

The police arrested appellant while he was living near Houston. A grand

jury indicted him with five counts of aggravated sexual assault against Rita.

Before trial, the State notified appellant of its intent to present evidence of

3 “multiple inappropriate and sexual” text messages that he had sent to Rita.

Appellant pled not guilty to all counts.

At trial, Rita testified that beginning in April 2012, appellant had touched

her inappropriately and had made her touch him inappropriately. Specifically,

she testified that the touching had first occurred over clothes and that later, on

five occasions, she and appellant had sexual intercourse. Rita testified that she

was scared while having sex with appellant and that the sex had hurt her. The

State introduced evidence of text-message exchanges between appellant and

Mother and between appellant and Rita. These exchanges appeared to

corroborate Rita’s testimony about appellant’s sexual relationship with her.

After the parties finished presenting evidence and arguments, a jury

convicted appellant of all five counts. The trial court set his sentences at forty

years on each count, running concurrently. 4 Appellant brought this appeal.

Admissibility of Cell-Phone Extractions

In his first point, appellant argues that the trial court erred by admitting

printouts from the extractions of Mother’s and Rita’s cell phones without receiving

evidence that established the reliability of the scientific theory underlying the

extraction device, proof that the particular devices at issue were working correctly

on the date they were used, and the qualifications and competency of the

devices’ operators. We review a trial court’s admission of evidence over a

4 During the punishment phase, the State presented evidence of appellant’s prior crimes, including murder.

4 defendant’s objection for an abuse of discretion. Sanders v. State, 422 S.W.3d

809, 812 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2014, pet. ref’d). An abuse of discretion occurs

when a trial court’s decision is so clearly wrong as to lie outside the zone of

reasonable disagreement. Id. at 812–13.

Near the beginning of the trial, outside of the presence of the jury, the trial

court held an evidentiary hearing on the admissibility of records from the

extraction of Mother’s cell phone. Shawn Dority, a detective with the Lewisville

Police Department (LPD), testified that he performs approximately two cell phone

extractions per month, had been doing so for about a year and a half, and had

received training in extractions through a twenty-hour course. He testified that he

had extracted Mother’s cell phone in August 2012 by connecting the phone to a

“piece of computer equipment that [took] the data on the cell phone and copie[d]

it over to another location.”

Specifically, Detective Dority testified that the LPD uses a “UFED

Cellebrite” device to extract data from cell phones. This device comes with “a

large amount of different cables for each . . . kind of cell phone,” and the person

extracting data selects the model of phone on a list after connecting the device.

Detective Dority explained that he knew the phone in question had been

successfully extracted because the UFED Cellebrite stated that extraction had

occurred and output a report to a memory stick. He also testified that the UFED

Cellebrite does not allow a user to alter extracted information from the phone.

Detective Dority identified State’s Exhibit 1—a printout of text messages

5 exchanged between two phone numbers—as the data extracted from Mother’s

phone.

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Quentin Washington v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quentin-washington-v-state-texapp-2015.