Robert Ronald Cast v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 21, 2013
Docket01-12-00060-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Robert Ronald Cast v. State (Robert Ronald Cast 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
Robert Ronald Cast v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 21, 2013

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-12-00060-CR ——————————— ROBERT RONALD CAST, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 405th District Court Galveston County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 10CR3294

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found appellant, Robert Ronald Cast, guilty of the offense of burglary

of a habitation with intent to commit aggravated sexual assault of a child 1 and

1 See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 30.02 (Vernon 2011). assessed his punishment at confinement for life. In two issues, appellant contends

that he received ineffective assistance of counsel and his punishment is

disproportionate to the crime in violation of the Eighth Amendment of the United

States Constitution.

We affirm.

Background

The complainant, the father of a six-year-old girl and three-year-old boy,

testified that he and this wife were watching television in their living room on the

night of October 26, 2010 when they heard a loud noise from another part of their

house. They ran to the room that their two children shared and found appellant in

the room. The complainant explained that as he rushed to the bedroom door,

appellant shut the door and held it closed. The complainant tried to force the door

open, but was unable to because appellant blocked it from the other side, so he

started talking to appellant until he opened the door. After the complainant

checked on his sleeping children, he put himself between appellant and the

children. Appellant then pointed to the six-year-old girl and said, “You can’t

possibly understand how badly I want that right now.” Appellant told the

complainant that he had “wanted” his daughter for two years and he could kill him

and take the girl, but he could not bring himself to hurt another human being. In

2 the meantime, the complainant’s wife had called for emergency assistance and ran

to a neighbor’s house for help. Appellant made no attempt to run away.

League City Police Department (“LCPD”) Officer K. Williamson testified

that when he arrived at the complainant’s home, he found appellant bleeding and

the complainant standing behind him. Williamson saw blood on the floor, the

window in the children’s bedroom broken, and glass on one of the beds. LCPD

Officer S. Arena testified that he arrived on the scene as Williamson was running

into the house. Arena explained that he handcuffed appellant, took him outside,

and telephoned for paramedics after he realized that the cut on appellant’s hand

would require stitches.

LCPD Detective M. Grant testified that he was dispatched to the

complainant’s house after LCPD Detective R. Tisdale, who was at the home,

realized that appellant “targeted” a child. Grant saw a large amount of blood on

the bedroom floor, swabbed a sample of it, and obtained a saliva sample from

appellant. Grant also saw a twelve-pack of beer and a receipt outside the broken

window through which appellant had entered the children’s bedroom. Grant later

spoke with appellant who had been brought to a hospital, told him that he was “in

custody,” and asked if he wanted to talk about what had happened. Later at a

police station, Grant advised appellant of his legal rights, and he and Tisdale

interviewed appellant.

3 In his first video-recorded statement, appellant told Detectives Grant and

Tisdale that he had been thinking about the girl in the complainant’s house, he had

seen her before, and thinking about her “turn[ed] him on.” He stated that he had

masturbated and ejaculated while he thought about the girl and he wanted to touch

her. Appellant noted that he wanted to use his mouth and penis on her, put his

penis into her vagina and his mouth on her vagina, and he would have done so if he

had not been caught. Prior to the incident, appellant purchased the twelve-pack of

beer, and, although it took him forty-five minutes, he walked to the complainant’s

home with the beer. He explained that he saw the girl lying in her bedroom and

watched her for ten minutes. Although he knew that there were other people in the

house, appellant swung the beer through the window and jumped inside. He would

have gotten into bed with the girl, done whatever he could “with his mouth and

hands,” and had intercourse with her had her parents not been there. Appellant

explained that although he would have used force against the girl if she had

resisted him, he would not have taken the girl or killed her. He noted that if he had

gotten away, he would have picked another girl, “moved on,” and, next time, he

would take a child to his apartment. Appellant explained that he had been attracted

to children his “whole life,” he would choose a girl over a woman, and the perfect

age of the girl would be between seven and ten years old.

4 Detectives Grant and Tisdale later searched appellant’s apartment and found

printed photographs of young girls in suggestive poses and also found a belt that

appellant later told them he had used to try to commit suicide earlier that evening.

Grant noted that appellant had no marks on his neck and opined, based on his

training on suicide and suicide attempts, that appellant had not attempted to

commit suicide.

Several hours later, appellant gave to Detectives Grant and Tisdale a second

video-recorded statement in which he told them that he had tried to commit suicide

because he “knew he was about to go hurt a child.” Appellant explained that

although he had planned to sexually assault the girl, he “chickened out and

couldn’t do it” and “wanted” to be caught.

In trial, appellant testified that although he had seen the complainant’s house

before the incident because it was near his parents’ house, he had not seen children

there. And he had never seen or thought about the complainant’s daughter. He

explained that he is not attracted to children and would choose to have sex with a

“full-grown” woman. Appellant noted that he had tried unsuccessfully to hang

himself with a belt on the night of October 26 and later, while walking to his

parents’ house, he saw a police car. He then decided to go inside the

complainant’s house so that a police officer would shoot him. Appellant explained

5 that he only went into the house so that he could commit suicide by pretending to

attack a police officer with a weapon and have the officer shoot him.

On cross-examination, appellant admitted that he recognized the

photographs of young girls that Detectives Grant and Tisdale had found in his

apartment, but stated that he was “not attracted” to young girls. After he identified

a book found in his apartment that contained photographs of nude adults and

children, appellant explained that he was “not attracted” to the children in the

photographs. Appellant also admitted that when Officer Williamson had him “at

gunpoint” inside the complainant’s home, he did nothing to try to get Williamson

to shoot him as a way to commit suicide.

Allison Heard, a Texas Department of Public Safety Crime Laboratory

forensic scientist testified that the blood sample obtained from the bedroom of the

complainant’s home was consistent with appellant’s DNA profile and the

probability of selecting an unrelated person at random was one in 291.5 quintillion

for Caucasians.

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