Ralph William Gallagher v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 26, 2023
Docket09-21-00308-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Ralph William Gallagher v. the State of Texas (Ralph William Gallagher 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
Ralph William Gallagher v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

________________ NO. 09-21-00307-CR NO. 09-21-00308-CR NO. 09-21-00309-CR NO. 09-21-00310-CR _______________

RALPH WILLIAM GALLAGHER, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee ________________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 221st District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause Nos. 20-07-08653-CR, 20-07-08704-CR, 21-08-10997-CR, 21-08-10998-CR ________________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted Ralph William Gallagher of two counts of indecency with a

child, M.C. 1 The jury also convicted Gallagher of one count of possession of child

1We use initials to refer to the alleged victims, minor children, 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 pornography and one count of sexual performance by a child, both offenses against,

L.C. The indecency with a child indictments each included an enhancement for a

prior out-of-state sexual exploitation of a minor conviction. The jury found the

enhancements true and assessed punishment of life on each indecency with a child

count, life for the sexual performance of a child offense, and ten years for the

possession of child pornography offense. The State moved to cumulate the

sentences, which the trial court granted. In one issue, Gallagher complains the trial

court erred by denying his Motion to Suppress the seizure of his cell phone. As

discussed below, we will affirm the trial court’s judgments.

PERTINENT BACKGROUND

Bonnie Crump and Gallagher began interacting online for their work

reviewing books. In 2014, they met in person at a book convention. Following a

serious injury to her leg which left Bonnie bedridden in 2015, they became friends.

In the summer of 2016, Bonnie and her husband decided they needed help around

the house with their three children, M.C., L.C., and E.C.

Over the next several years, although Gallagher’s primary residence was in

South Carolina, he would stay with the Crump family intermittently to assist with

the children for extended periods. He had a designated bedroom in the Crumps’

home and vacationed and spent holidays with them. Bonnie testified that Gallagher

2 helped with the children and became especially close to L.C., who was on the autism

spectrum and did not have many friends.

In December 2019, their oldest daughter, M.C., outcried to a counselor at

school that Gallagher had been touching her inappropriately. The school

immediately called law enforcement officers. The Crumps met with school officials

and law enforcement officers. Ultimately, through the investigation, law

enforcement learned that Gallagher had also sexually abused L.C.

Investigators seized Gallagher’s cell phone without a warrant and then

searched it after obtaining a search warrant. During the search, officers found

evidence relevant to proving the claims in the four-counts of Gallagher’s indictment.

Police also obtained records and data from Google and Dropbox after obtaining other

search warrants requiring Google and Dropbox to allow police to search files tied to

Gallagher from those services. The Dropbox materials included a naked video of

Gallagher addressing L.C., a photograph of M.C. in her underwear, and other

evidence relevant to proving Gallagher guilty of the offenses of sexual indecency

and sexual performance with a child, L.C. At trial, Gallagher moved to suppress the

seizure and search of his phone, Google records, and Dropbox records. On appeal,

Gallagher raises one issue, challenging the seizure of his phone, arguing it was seized

without a warrant violating the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Article 38.23 and

the Fourth Amendment.

3 The trial court did not conduct the evidentiary hearing on the defendant’s

motion to suppress until after the trial began. Before the trial court conducted the

suppression hearing outside the jury’s presence, the jury heard Detective Jason

Buckner, an employee of the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office, testify that on

December 6, 2019, he received a call from Patrol Sergeant Johnson who gave him

“some details” about M.C.’s outcry. According to the detective, Sergeant Johnson

said Gallagher’s primary residence was in South Carolina, which Gallagher

confirmed. Detective Buckner testified that he told Sergeant Johnson that he would

go to the scene immediately to start his investigation since “we had a defendant that

was going to be leaving the state very soon[.]” Detective Buckner added that while

en route to the scene, he spoke with Sergeant Johnson again. Sergeant Johnson then

gave him additional details as to M.C.’s outcry. Detective Buckner explained that

after arriving on the scene, he spoke with Deputy Fry. Deputy Fry, already on the

scene before Detective Buckner arrived, advised Detective Buckner of the “full

outcry from everybody.” Detective Buckner explained that when he “pulled up to

the scene,” he saw Gallagher “appearing very nervous, pacing the driveway, walking

back and forth really fast.”

At that point, the prosecutor approached the bench and advised the trial court

that he was “about to get into the seizure of the phone.” The trial court recessed the

4 trial, allowed the jury to leave the courtroom, and went on to conduct a hearing on

Gallagher’s Motion to Suppress.

Motion to Suppress Hearing

During the suppression hearing, Detective Buckner testified about the seizure

and subsequent search of Gallagher’s phone. Detective Buckner said that he seized

Gallagher’s phone without detaining Gallagher, and without his consent or the

benefit of a search warrant. When Detective Buckner seized the phone, he already

knew Gallagher was a registered sex offender in South Carolina. And Detective

Buckner knew the offense in South Carolina involved “a sexting incident where

electronic devices were used to message and send pictures underage children.”

According to Detective Buckner, when he seized the phone it was his understanding

that M.C.’s account, based on her outcry, involved Gallagher touching her on top of

and under her clothes, the sexual acts involving the two had occurred over a period

of two to three years, and they all had occurred at the Crumps’ home. Buckner

explained that he seized Gallagher’s phone because he knew that 1) Gallagher was

leaving the state, 2) the cell phone contained geolocation data, which could be used

to corroborate M.C.’s outcry based on Gallagher’s location when the incidents

occurred, and 3) he was concerned that the case in South Carolina also involved

Gallagher’s use of electronic communications. Detective Buckner testified that after

5 seizing Gallagher’s phone, he took it to the sheriff’s crime lab division where he

submitted it as evidence.

Detective Buckner told the trial court he was officially assigned to Gallagher’s

case on December 9, 2019. A magistrate issued a search warrant for Gallagher’s

phone on January 13, 2020. The detective explained that between December 6 and

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