Ricky Lee Murray v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 27, 2020
Docket03-18-00567-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Ricky Lee Murray v. State (Ricky Lee Murray 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
Ricky Lee Murray v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-18-00567-CR

Ricky Lee Murray, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE 20TH DISTRICT COURT OF MILAM COUNTY NO. CR25,509, THE HONORABLE JOHN YOUNGBLOOD, JUDGE PRESIDING

OPINION

Ricky Lee Murray was convicted by a jury of sexual assault for intentionally or

knowingly causing the penetration of the complainant’s female sexual organ without her consent.

See Tex. Penal Code § 22.011(a)(1)(A). The trial court sentenced Murray to twelve years in prison

and entered a conforming judgment. In four issues, Murray contends that the trial court should

have excluded testimony from two Sexual Assault Nurse Examiners (“SANE”s). We affirm.

BACKGROUND

Murray was indicted for sexual assault for digitally penetrating Samantha

Tolleson’s sexual organ without her consent. Tolleson died before the trial. At trial, the State

presented testimony from several witnesses at the RV park in Rockdale, where the charged conduct

took place; the lead investigator in the case; and two SANEs.

The evidence at trial established that on March 17, 2017, Samantha Tolleson was

living in the RV park, and Murray was one of her neighbors. During the day she borrowed a phone from Murray and was coherent, could form words, and did not seem intoxicated. Later that

afternoon, Murray went by himself to retrieve his phone. That evening, Rockdale police responded

to a call from the RV park and arrived at Tolleson’s RV. The manager of the RV park, Billie

LeFevre, also arrived at the scene. According to LeFevre’s testimony, Murray had called her and

told her that Tolleson had fallen on the floor in her RV. As LeFevre and Murray entered the RV,

Tolleson remained inside and looked scared. LeFevre testified that she and Murray helped

Tolleson to the couch, that Tolleson was not saying “any words that [LeFevre] could recognize”

and was speaking in “gibberish,” that she noticed water on the floor and a pill bottle on a table

next to Tolleson, and that Tolleson was wearing a long white t-shirt and no pants. LeFevre

retrieved some pants for Tolleson, but she grabbed LeFevre, mumbled some more at her, and

would not let LeFevre help her put on the pants. Tolleson was taken to the hospital for a suspected

Benadryl overdose.

Tolleson stayed in the hospital for several days. Two days after she was admitted,

ER nurse and certified SANE Jennifer Midgette conducted a SANE exam. At trial, Midgette told

the jury that when she examined Tolleson, she first took a patient history, as she would do with any

other patient. This included asking Tolleson about her allergies, medications, and last menstrual

cycle. Midgette testified that she needed the history “for diagnosis and treatment”—it was her

“map” for what she “need[ed] to look for and . . . address.” According to Midgette’s examination

notes, which were admitted over Murray’s Confrontation Clause objection, Tolleson told Midgette

that Murray had sexually assaulted her. In addition, the examination notes said:

[Nurse] asked [patient] what was her concern today? [Patient] states “I was raped” . . . “[Murray] was knocking on the door” . . . “He comes in the house” . . . “He made me a drink with a foil pack.[”] [Patient] continues “I said I need to go to the bathroom so I can throw up” . . . “He said [‘]no stay here.[’] He was holding me

2 back.” . . . He was sitting on the love seat and said [“]sit next to me”. [Patient] states “He said [‘]aww Sam[,’] and he kisses me and starts rubbing me on the outside of my clothes.” [Patient] clarifies “he used the three fingers (held up her index finger, middle finger, and ring finger) to touch my clit area in a circular[-]type motion.” [Patient] states “I pushed him away[,] and he did it again inside my panties” . . . “I hit him on his right cheek.” . . . “He gave me this really mad look.” [Nurse] asks “Then what happened?” [Patient] states “It kinda blacks out” . . . [Murray] was at my house from between 1 & 2 and 6:30pm” . . . “my jeans and panties were around my ankles when [LeFevre] got there.” [Patient] states [“]He took my knife[,] and he checked the guns.”

(Ellipses in original.) Tolleson also explained to Midgette that what Murray did hurt her. Midgette

considered what Tolleson relayed to her to be an instance of “digital penetration.”

After taking the history, Midgette then did a head-to-toe assessment, looking over

Tolleson’s entire body and documenting any injuries. Midgette did so “to know what kind of trauma

to address as a nurse[,] and also there may be forensic evidence.” Midgette noted 12 injuries: a

painful, purple, “fairly new” bruise to Tolleson’s head; a couple of bruises on her arm; and many

more “fairly recent” bruises “at the knee or below.” These injuries, according to Midgette’s

testimony at trial, were consistent with Tolleson’s account of trying to get up and go to the

bathroom but Murray “pull[ing] her back.”

Midgette did not see any genital injuries, but she did collect two pairs of underwear

from Tolleson that both had similar blood staining. One pair was what Tolleson came to the

hospital with, and the other was gauze underwear that the hospital issued to her. Midgette said

that the blood could have resulted from either Tolleson’s menstrual cycle or genital trauma.

Tolleson told Midgette, however, that her last cycle was during the first of March. The assault

and the SANE exam happened on March 17 and 19, respectively, suggesting to Midgette that the

blood resulted from trauma. Midgette testified that injuries like Tolleson’s could suggest either

consensual sexual contact or non-consensual sexual contact.

3 Another SANE, Deborah Kleypas, reviewed the records of Midgette’s work and

testified at trial about her review, over another defense Confrontation Clause objection. Like

Midgette, Kleypas testified that the blood in the gauze underwear suggested that there was an

injury that was bleeding, rather than menstruation. Kleypas also told the jury that Tolleson’s

injuries were consistent with both consensual sexual contact and non-consensual sexual contact.

Before speaking with law enforcement, Murray called a friend and told him that

she “was hollering . . . when she came into the hospital” about having been raped. Murray denied

sexually assaulting Tolleson and said that he went to check on her and that, when he saw that

she was unresponsive, he “kind of panicked[,] and that’s when he went and got” LeFevre.

Subsequently, Sergeant Jody Tillery of the Rockdale Police Department investigated the March 17

incident in Tolleson’s RV. Sergeant Tillery spoke with Tolleson, contacted hospital personnel,

and reviewed the SANE exam records. Then Sergeant Tillery contacted Murray and took his

statement. Murray said several times that he never had any sort of physical contact with Tolleson,

admitting to only one “side hug” ever with her. Murray also gave Sergeant Tillery conflicting

accounts of going to Tolleson’s RV on the day of the assault: “he had said first he only went one

time,” but “[t]he next time it was more than once.”

A Department of Public Safety (“DPS”) investigator conducted a second,

video-recorded interview of Murray, entered in evidence at trial. During the second interview,

Murray first told the investigator that “nothing ever happened between” him and Tolleson but later

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