Roberto Medina Flores v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 2022
Docket01-20-00213-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Roberto Medina Flores v. the State of Texas (Roberto Medina Flores v. the State of Texas) 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
Roberto Medina Flores v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 31, 2022.

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-20-00213-CR ——————————— ROBERTO MEDINA FLORES, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 10th District Court Galveston County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 17CR0756

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted Appellant Roberto Medina Flores of the second-degree

felony offense of sexual assault. Appellant pleaded true to an enhancement

paragraph, and the trial court assessed Appellant’s punishment at fifteen years’

confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division. Appellant raises five points of error. In his first point of error, he contends

the evidence was legally insufficient to support his conviction for sexual assault

because the State failed to prove scienter. In his second point of error, Appellant

argues the trial court abused its discretion in denying his motion for new trial because

the judge’s comments during voir dire violated his Fifth Amendment right not to

testify at trial and to the presumption of innocence. In his third and fourth points of

error, Appellant asserts he was denied effective assistance of counsel during the

guilt-innocence phase of trial because his counsel failed to investigate available

witnesses and seek a forensic examination of the complainant’s video/audio

recorded statement to law enforcement. In his fifth point of error, Appellant asserts

the trial court erred in considering extraneous evidence outside the record in denying

his motion for new trial. We affirm.

Background

In August 2014, the complainant, Megan Beck (“Beck”), left Houston and

moved to Galveston where she began working at one of the shops on The Strand in

Galveston called at Lapalapa. Lapalapa’s owner owned several other nearby shops,

including Bunch A’ Cool Stuff, and his employees typically worked among the

different shops. Appellant worked at Bunch A’ Cool Stuff and Gizmos’s Bar.

Appellant visited the shop where Beck worked on occasion. Beck testified

Appellant was “very flirtatious” and “always acted like he was into me.” Appellant

2 would tell Beck “he wanted to sleep with [her]” and “wanted to go out with her,

different things like that.” Beck repeatedly told Appellant she was not attracted to

him, did not like him, and “wanted nothing to do with that every time.” At the time,

Beck was twenty-one years old and Appellant was thirty-four years old and had a

young child. Beck testified she “had no interest in anybody that much older who

had a child and everything else.”

While working at Lapalapa, Beck met Landers Weakley (“Weakley”), who

worked at a cigar store at The Strand and lived in a loft above Lapalapa. Beck and

Weakley became friends and eventually started dating. Beck testified she and

Weakley saw each other a couple of times a week. She testified she “really didn’t

drink” until she turned twenty-one and did not drink “that often.” She would hang

out with Weakley and they would have a few drinks together, “[m]ostly whiskey.”

On December 21, 2014, Beck planned to meet Weakley after her shift at work

and going home to walk her dog. Weakley got off work first and walked a few

blocks to his loft. Weakley told Beck “he needed to take a nap” and she agreed to

“meet up with him once [she] got back from hanging out with [her] dog.” When

Beck’s shift ended, she ran into Appellant who suggested they get a drink “down the

street” where Appellant’s co-worker, Vlad, was bartending. Appellant and Beck

went to Bobby’s House of Spirits on The Strand. Beck drank a couple of glasses of

whiskey and three shots—a fireball, a liquid marijuana, and a third unknown shot.

3 She testified she went to the bathroom and, upon returning, she saw a third shot

sitting on the bar and she drank it. Beck testified she had never had drinks with

Appellant before that day.

Beck testified Appellant was “very flirtatious” with her at the bar and told her

“to give him a chance.” Beck replied that she “wasn’t interested whatsoever.” At

one point, Appellant touched Beck and “put his hand towards [her] vagina over [her]

jeans.” Beck pushed Appellant away and “told him not to do that.” Beck testified

Appellant complied and “just kind of laughed it off.”

Aware she had had too much to drink, Beck decided to leave the bar and walk

to Weakley’s loft a block and a half away. When she tried to stand up, she nearly

fell over and she stumbled as she walked. Appellant left the bar at the same time as

Beck and “insisted on driving” her to Weakley’s loft. Beck “kept telling him, no”

and that she “was going to walk” because the loft “was right down the street.” Beck

testified that “she was stumbling a lot,” and as she and Appellant walked down the

street, Appellant told her again he wanted to have sex with her. She told him that it

“was never ever, ever going to happen” and she “had no interest in him whatsoever.”

Beck then blacked out. She testified the next thing she remembered was

“waking up in Appellant’s truck.” Beck testified she did not remember where she

was when she blacked out or how she got into Appellant’s truck. When she awoke,

Beck was in the passenger seat of Appellant’s truck. Beck’s pants “were pushed

4 down to mid-thigh,” Appellant was on top of her, facing her, and “his penis was

inside [her] vagina.” When Beck realized what was happening, she pushed

Appellant off with both of her hands, and told him to get off of her. Beck testified

Appellant then moved to the driver’s seat of the truck, “grabbed [her] head and

pulled [her] over to his side to do oral sex on him.” Beck testified that when

Appellant grabbed her head and pulled it down, her mouth contacted his penis. Beck

“pulled back as soon” as she could, pulled her pants up, and “jumped out of the

truck.” She began walking “down the street and tried to go back” to Weakley’s loft.

Beck testified the next thing she remembered was sitting on Weakley’s bed in

his loft. She could not recall how she got to Weakley’s loft. She “just remember[ed]

getting in his apartment and sitting down on his bed.” Beck testified she did not tell

Weakley what had happened because she was “still very messed up and trying to

figure out what had happened” herself. She testified she was still “very intoxicated”

and “could barely walk.” She could not “see straight” and could not process fully

“what had happened.” Her memory of what happened next was “spotty.”

Beck testified Weakley drove her to her “apartment on the west end.” He

dropped her “off at the front of the complex and drove away.” As Weakley left,

Beck realized she did not have her purse or her keys. She assumed they had fallen

in Weakley’s car. She called Weakley to ask him to return to her apartment. Beck

stated that when “[Weakley] arrived, he pointed out that my keys were sticking out

5 of my pocket.” Beck testified she began crying hysterically “[b]ecause at that point,

[she] knew that she was not in control of what was happening.” The next thing Beck

remembered was being in her apartment with her dog. She took a shower and “sat

there with [her] dog” and “just went to sleep.”

Beck testified Weakley picked her up the next day to take her to work because

she had left her car on The Strand the previous day. She testified she “didn’t fully

tell [Weakley] what had happened.

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