Raymond Sanchez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 14, 2012
Docket08-10-00321-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Raymond Sanchez v. State (Raymond Sanchez 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
Raymond Sanchez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

§ RAYMOND SANCHEZ, No. 08-10-00321-CR § Appellant, Appeal from the § v. 175th Judicial District Court § THE STATE OF TEXAS, of Bexar County, Texas § Appellee. (TC# 2008CR5899) §

OPINION

Raymond Sanchez was convicted of aggravated assault of a child and indecency with a

child by contact. He was sentenced to twenty (20) years’ in prison for the assault and ten (10)

years’ of probation for indecency, to be executed concurrently. On appeal, he contends that the

State withheld Brady material and that his trial attorneys were ineffective. We affirm.

BACKGROUND Trial Evidence

The evidence at the guilt-phase of trial consisted solely of the victim’s testimony. On

direct examination, Renessa Segura testified that she was born in March 1983 and that she was

twenty-seven-years-old at the time of trial. Her mother was married to Sanchez when Segura was

a child. The events giving rise to the charges against Sanchez occurred when Segura was in the

first or second grade. Sanchez and Segura’s mother have a son, also named Raymond, who was

born in November 1988. Raymond and Segura’s younger sister shared a bedroom, while Segura

had her own bedroom. Their mother worked the graveyard shift, so the children were often left

alone with Sanchez at night.

On one of those nights, Segura and her siblings were asleep on the living room floor.

Segura was awakened when Sanchez stuck his finger inside her vagina. That was the first time that Sanchez assaulted her. When asked if this was the only time that something like this

happened, she answered, “No. It was a lot of times.” It happened “maybe more than 10 times.”

After the first incident on the living room floor, the remaining incidents occurred mostly on

the bed in her bedroom, while her siblings were asleep beside her. Sanchez would bring the other

children into the room, and they would all sleep in the same bed. During this time, her brother

was perhaps one- or two-years’ old, was not an infant, and was old enough to sleep in a bed.

When asked how many times it happened in her bed, she estimated, “five, six, seven times.

Maybe seven times.” In all of these incidents, Sanchez put his finger in her vagina.

Segura also testified about two other specific incidents. On one occasion, Sanchez took

her from her bed and carried her downstairs to the master bedroom. Segura claimed, “I remember

him making me take off my clothes and getting on top of him.” He then penetrated her with his

penis. That was the only time that this occurred.

The other specific incident happened in December 1991, after her mother gave birth to a

stillborn child. Sanchez retrieved Segura and her siblings from her grandmother’s house, and

Segura believed he was going to drive them to the hospital. While driving, Sanchez said that her

mother “had lost her baby and he seemed kind of upset and crying. He was mad.” Instead of

going to the hospital they “ended up parking somewhere like at a park kind of. I remember he

was already trying to put his hands in my underwear again. He told me . . . to take off my

underwear. . . . And while I was doing that, he was unbuckling his pants and his belt. And at

that time, I guess he wanted me to . . . get on him, and a car pulled up.” She and Sanchez were in

the front seat, and the other children were asleep in the back.

After this incident, Sanchez touched her inappropriately “maybe two or three times.” The

abuse ended because she went to live with her grandmother. 2 Initially, Segura did not tell anyone about the abuse because she thought that no one would

believe her. Later, Sanchez advised her not to tell anyone or else CPS would take her away from

her mother and she would never see her mother again.

The first person she told about the abuse was her mother-in-law. This happened in 2006

or 2007, when Segura was twenty-three or twenty-four years’ old. To explain why she told her

mother-in-law at that time, Segura testified: “I had an episode where I was just crying and was

frustrated . . . my life . . . was a big wreck because of what happened to me. It was controlling me.

And I felt like I needed to say it. I needed to tell somebody. I needed to release it.” About two

months later, she told her mother, but she did not report the abuse to the police until a confrontation

occurred between Sanchez, her mother, and her brother Raymond on Thanksgiving 2007.

Segura is estranged from Raymond. He has two children who were in Segura’s mother’s

custody at the time of trial because Raymond had “problems with CPS” and “was on drugs.” On

Thanksgiving 2007, Raymond and Sanchez went to Segura’s mother’s house to pick up the

children, but her mother refused to give them up. Afterwards, Sanchez called Segura’s mother on

the phone, “cussing her out, calling her a bitch and that he was going to kill her and was going to

mess her up . . . .” Segura then decided to make a police report regarding his abuse of her when

she was a child. She was worried that the same things that happened to her could happen to

Raymond’s children.

On cross-examination, Segura acknowledged that Sanchez was granted custody of

Raymond upon his divorce from her mother. She also admitted that Raymond and Sanchez had

obtained a police escort to her mother’s house on Thanksgiving 2007 “to make sure everything

was okay.”

Defense counsel challenged Segura’s recollection about the time when the abuse occurred. 3 She believed that she was five- or six-years’ old when the living-room-floor incident happened and

when the penetration occurred, and that all of the incidents occurred between the ages of five and

seven. This would mean that her brother Raymond was “either a year or two maybe.” Yet he

was sleeping upstairs in a bunk bed. Counsel noted that when she was five, Raymond had not

been born. Counsel also pointed out that the stillborn birth occurred in December 1991, and

Segura agreed that she would have been eight, “going on nine” then.

Much of the cross-examination focused on the statement that Segura had given to the

police after the Thanksgiving 2007 incident. Defense counsel got Segura to admit that several

allegations in the statement were incorrect. Although her statement said that she was four or five

when Sanchez married her mother, she admitted that she did not know when they married. She

acknowledged that her statement was incorrect in saying that Sanchez began touching her while

her mother was pregnant. The statement was internally inconsistent in that it first says that

Sanchez never asked her to touch him, but later says that he made her touch his penis.

In addition, there were inconsistencies between the statement and Segura’s direct

examination testimony. In the statement, unlike at trial, Segura said that Raymond was an infant

when the abuse occurred and that Raymond was still sleeping in his parents’ bedroom during the

period when the penetration occurred. Also contrary to her trial testimony, her statement said that

the assaults occurred every night. Segura attempted to explain this discrepancy by saying that

“[i]t seemed like every night.” Segura also admitted that there was a discrepancy between her

description of the penetration incident in the statement and at trial.

Segura testified that she told her mother-in-law about the abuse in 2006 and that she told

her mother a few months later.

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