Reynaldo Garcia v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 20, 2013
Docket04-12-00012-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Reynaldo Garcia v. State (Reynaldo Garcia 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
Reynaldo Garcia v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Fourth Court of Appeals San Antonio, Texas MEMORANDUM OPINION No. 04-12-00012-CR

Reynaldo GARCIA, Appellant

v.

The STATE of Texas, Appellee

From the 379th Judicial District Court, Bexar County, Texas Trial Court No. 2010-CR-7744 Honorable Ron Rangel, Judge Presiding

Opinion by: Rebeca C. Martinez, Justice

Sitting: Catherine Stone, Chief Justice Sandee Bryan Marion, Justice Rebeca C. Martinez, Justice

Delivered and Filed: March 20, 2013

AFFIRMED

Reynaldo Garcia appeals his convictions for aggravated sexual assault of a child, alleging

his attorney rendered ineffective assistance. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

Garcia was indicted in a fifteen-count indictment charging the offenses of aggravated

sexual assault of a child. The complainant was Garcia’s stepdaughter, A.H. Garcia pled not

guilty and proceeded to a jury trial. A.H. testified that Garcia assaulted her multiple times both

anally and vaginally beginning in June 2008 when she was ten years old. After the assaults were 04-12-00012-CR

reported to the police in July 2009, A.H. underwent a sexual assault exam, which revealed that

she was infected with vaginal chlamydia. No evidence was admitted at trial showing that Garcia

was or had been infected with chlamydia.

At the close of the evidence, the State abandoned six counts. The jury found Garcia

guilty of the remaining nine counts and Garcia was sentenced to ninety-nine years on each count,

to be served concurrently. Thereafter, Garcia retained new counsel who filed a motion for new

trial alleging newly discovered evidence and actual innocence. Counsel later filed an untimely

amended motion for new trial alleging ineffective assistance of trial counsel in addition to the

two previous grounds. Three days into the hearing on the motion for new trial, the State objected

to testimony regarding ineffective assistance of counsel, arguing that the defense was limited to

the grounds raised in its original motion for new trial. The trial court permitted the testimony,

but ultimately refused to consider the untimely amended motion for new trial. The trial court

denied the motion for new trial. On appeal, Garcia now complains that he received ineffective

assistance of counsel at trial.

EVIDENCE AT TRIAL

A.H., who was thirteen years old at the time of trial, testified that Garcia married her

mother, Stephanie Garcia, when she was three or four years old. She rarely saw her biological

father, who lived out of state. In June 2008, when A.H. was ten, she got into an argument with

her mother and “ran away” to the corner store across the street. She called her “Grandma Bea”

from a pay phone. Bea called Stephanie, who told Garcia to pick up A.H. from the store and

spank her. A.H. and Garcia were alone when they returned to their mobile home. Garcia asked

A.H. if she wanted the spanking or something that would not hurt as much, but it “would still be

punishment.” A.H. chose the less painful option, and Garcia told her to go to her room and pull

down her pants and underwear like she normally did when he spanked her. A.H. bent over on -2- 04-12-00012-CR

her bed and buried her head in her arms and felt Garcia stick something inside her anus. It hurt

and lasted a few minutes. Afterward, Garcia took her underwear and wiped something off with

his shirt; he also wiped around her butt. Later on, he came in and sternly told her that if she told

anybody what happened, “there would be consequences.”

Garcia assaulted A.H. a second time about a week later. A.H. was lying in bed facing her

window and wearing shorts. Stephanie was asleep in her bedroom on the other side of the

mobile home. Garcia came in and tugged at her shorts but did not take them down. Again, A.H.

felt something go into her butt. It lasted a few minutes and then Garcia left and went to his

bedroom. On another occasion, A.H. was in her bed facing the door. Garcia came in and tried to

pull her shorts down in the front. This time something went into her “vagina instead of my butt

and it was the same thing that went in my butt the other two times or more.” A.H. eventually

figured out what Garcia was putting in her vagina and anus because one time she saw both of his

hands and figured he was not putting his hands inside her. A.H. was very scared during these

encounters and pretended to be asleep.

After the first or second incident, A.H. and her mother began arguing after A.H. refused

to rub Garcia’s feet or back. A.H. tried to tell her mother about what Garcia had done to her, but

Stephanie cut her off and told her not to say anything, and that she was a liar. A.H. stated that

Garcia came into the bedroom where she was talking to Stephanie and said, “I haven’t been

doing anything, who are you going to believe, . . . this liar or me?” Stephanie did not say

anything. That was the last time A.H. tried to talk to her mother about the abuse because A.H.

assumed her mother would not believe her. A.H. testified that Garcia was usually the one to

discipline her, but that her mother sometimes made her kneel on rice, grabbed her hair, punched

her, or kicked her.

-3- 04-12-00012-CR

A.H. testified that Garcia assaulted her between ten and twenty times. On re-cross, A.H.

testified that she did not have sexual contact with anyone else between the ages of ten and

eleven, and in fact, had never had sexual contact with any other person at any time besides

Garcia.

Several witnesses testified that A.H. told them about Garcia assaulting her. A.H.’s

cousin, Lauren Peterson, testified that in the spring of 2009, A.H. told her something that

alarmed her. Lauren then told her mother, Elizabeth Galvan, who reported the abuse to A.H.’s

maternal grandmother, Bea, with whom A.H. was living at the time. Bea did not act on the

information given to her. On cross-examination, Lauren stated that A.H. had told “kids’ lies” in

the past, meaning that she lied about her grades or other inconsequential matters. Lauren

emphasized that she believed A.H. regarding the allegations against Garcia because, “I don’t

think any child would lie about anything like that, nor put it in such detail as she did.”

In the summer of 2009, A.H. took a vacation to Corpus Christi with her biological

father’s family. A.H.’s half-sisters, Tiara and Tircah Vidaurri-Hammonds, who lived in

Colorado, testified that A.H. told them her “biggest secret” and that she was scared to return

home with Stephanie and Garcia. A few days later, A.H. told her paternal grandmother, Anita

Crawford, that Garcia assaulted her. The half-sisters had only known A.H. to fib about small

matters, such as her grades.

Anita Crawford testified that Tircah prompted A.H. to tell Anita what she had told Tircah

and Tiara. The next day, Anita took A.H. to the police station so she could give a statement.

Since that time, A.H. has lived with Anita and her husband.

Daniel Gibbons is A.H.’s maternal grandfather and was married to Bea. A.H. and her

parents lived with Bea and Daniel for a few months in 2008. Daniel observed that Stephanie was

very cold towards her daughter, and there were times when they had heated arguments. -4- 04-12-00012-CR

Stephanie used the “F” word often—“pretty much every other word” when speaking to A.H.

Daniel believed that Stephanie’s and Garcia’s disciplining of A.H. went too far and was abusive.

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