Reed v. State

885 S.W.2d 275, 1994 Tex. App. LEXIS 2590, 1994 WL 575766
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 19, 1994
DocketNo. 09-92-312 CV
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 885 S.W.2d 275 (Reed 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
Reed v. State, 885 S.W.2d 275, 1994 Tex. App. LEXIS 2590, 1994 WL 575766 (Tex. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

BROOKSHIRE, Justice.

Appellant, Joseph Reed, was convicted of the offense of sexual assault and was also found to be a repeat felony offender having previously been convicted of the offense of voluntary manslaughter. Appellant pleaded time to the enhancement paragraph. On December 2,1992, after having found the defendant guilty of the offense of sexual assault, the jury assessed his punishment at 40 years imprisonment in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. Sentencing was pronounced and judgment was entered December 3, 1992. Appellant timely filed notice of appeal through his retained attorney on appeal, Hon. Charles Freeman.

Neither of the parties on appeal has favored us with a summary of the facts in this cause; therefore, the Court has examined the record to discover same.

On September 4, 1991, the complainant, Pamela Stewart, was patronizing a night club establishment in Port Arthur, Jefferson County, Texas, with her friend Becky Pinell. She had been drinking and dancing until about 2:00 o’clock a.m. Her girlfriend took her home to her apartment in Port Arthur.

She identified the defendant, Joseph Reed, to be standing next to the door to her apartment. He inquired where she had been but complainant ignored him and entered her apartment locking the door behind her. She partially disrobed; then fell asleep for a few moments. The door bell rang, and, thinking it was her girlfriend, she opened the door. She stated, “[tjhere was this black guy standing there.” He forced his way into the apartment, forced her to the floor, and began disrobing her. Even though she was afraid of him, she pretended to cooperate.

She then told him that someone else was in the apartment so he. got up and went to the door. When she stood up he grabbed her and pulled her out of the apartment to a grassy area behind the building. He threw her on the ground and then got on the ground beside her and forced his hand into her vaginal area causing great pain to the complainant. She managed to escape and ran to her apartment. She left her apartment ten minutes later, got in her car and drove to Becky Pinell’s house. They went to a cafe and complainant found out that Becky had the appellant’s phone number. She confirmed that it was the defendant’s phone number. She later saw the defendant in the apartment area and identified him.

Complainant testified that she was so embarrassed she did not report the incident to the authorities until four days later. The State then passed the witness.

Defense attorney, Fred Carver, then cross-examined the complainant extensively and thoroughly. In fact, his cross-examination was as long as the direct examination. He established her drinking and dancing habits and her state of intoxication on the night in question. He challenged her identification of the appellant based on her intoxication and that other black men lived in that area. Carver gained her admission that she had probably thought and considered the statement, “[t]hat all blacks look alike.” He even elicited an admission that she had repeated that saying. To show the unlikelihood of appellant being the person who committed the assault, she also admitted in response to trial attorney’s questions that a person would have to be awful stupid to give his telephone number to the girlfriend of the person he had allegedly assaulted.

j On re-cross, defense attorney Carver established that the complainant could not specifically describe the appellant except to say that he was black with short ham.

[278]*278Becky Pinell then testified for the State verifying what the complaining witness testified to up until the time of leaving Pamela Stewart at her apartment. She had walked the complainant to her apartment door and then returned to her automobile. The appellant reached her car at the same time and in fact got into her car with her. She pretended to cooperate by telling the appellant to give her his phone number so that she could call him. She got him out of the car on the pretext that she had a jealous boyfriend who would show up at any time. After this, she drove home. Not long thereafter, the complainant came to her apartment in a hysterical condition. She later related these events to a mutual friend, Sharon Tipton, who dialed the number on the piece of paper which the appellant had given to Becky Pinell and had a conversation with the appellant. Appellant gave Ms. Tipton his exact address. The next day the complainant and Becky Pinell went to the police and gave written statements to Officer Bob Whitesel. Defense attorney, Carver, then cross-examined Becky Pinell asking in fact more questions and receiving more answers than on direct-examination by the State. He was able to discredit her testimony by emphasizing her intoxication on the night in question and the fact that she had picked two possible suspects out of a six photograph line-up. He also demonstrated that she had discussed her testimony with the district attorney before testifying. He further was able to discredit her testimony by having her admit that she could not be absolutely sure that the appellant was the person who committed the sexual offense against the complainant.

Sharon Tipton then testified she called the telephone number Becky Pinell had and she talked to the appellant. She pretended to be Becky and asked him if he remembered her and how he got in her car and gave her his phone number to which he answered in the affirmative. She pretended that she was going to meet him but he said he did not have an automobile, so he wanted her to pick him up. He told her to meet him at a McDonald’s restaurant because he lived in a white house across the street. He said he would be on the front porch of the house. She terminated the conversation without setting a time to meet him. She later drove by that particular location and corroborated what the appellant had told her. She later contacted Officer Bob Whitesel who patronized her place of employment and set up a meeting between Whitesel and the complainant.

Detective Robert L. Whitesel, Sr. then testified about having receiving the sexual assault report from Pamela Stewart, the complainant. He identified in court the appellant as the person the complainant identified as the assailant to be “the black gentleman sitting there with the different color shirt next to the defense attorney.” He used the same phone number that Sharon Tipton had and verified the address to be where the appellant Joseph Reed lived. That particular address was across the street from McDonald’s. He then performed the routine police procedures in gathering the statements, making the identifications, and filing the case.

Cross-examination by the trial attorney established . that many routine investigative procedures were not carried out in this particular case because it was reported five days after the incident. Defense attorney was deliberate and persevering in his attack on the testimony by the officer in attempting to cast doubt' on the officer’s reliability. He further established that the appellant was never given the opportunity to exonerate himself during the investigation. In fact his cross-examination was twice as long as the direct examination by the State. The State then rested its case.

The defense then called Christina Queen who lived in apartment 248 in the same complex where the complainant lived. Complainant lived in apartment 146 which would have been downstairs and fairly close to Ms. Queen’s apartment. Ms. Queen testified that she had known the appellant for approximately nine years.

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Bluebook (online)
885 S.W.2d 275, 1994 Tex. App. LEXIS 2590, 1994 WL 575766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-state-texapp-1994.