Rocka, Angela v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 2, 2002
Docket14-01-00427-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Rocka, Angela v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion filed May 2, 2002

Affirmed and Opinion filed May 2, 2002.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NOS. 14-01-00426-CR and 14-01-00427-CR

ANGELA ROCKA, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 338th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause Nos. 867,827 and 867,828

O P I N I O N


Appellant, Angela Rocka, was charged by indictment in cause number 867,827 with the offense of aggravated sexual assault.  She was separately indicted in cause number 867,828 for the offense of aggravated robbery.  Appellant was convicted by a jury of both offenses and sentenced to sixty years= imprisonment in each cause of action.  On appeal, appellant contends: (1) the evidence was factually insufficient to support her convictions; (2) the trial court erred in refusing to admit the complainant=s pretrial statement in its entirety; (3) the trial court erred in admitting evidence of a substantially dissimilar extraneous bad act; and (4) the trial court erred in admitting evidence of her post-arrest silence.  We affirm.

Factual Background

On the night of May 28, 2000, the complainant, a twenty-one year old student who lived alone, responded to a knock on her apartment door.  When she opened the door, the complainant discovered appellant, another female resident of the same apartment complex, was seeking to use her telephone.  The complainant consented and allowed appellant to enter her apartment.  Moments later, as the complainant was escorting appellant to the study, she was startled by the sound of her front door being opened again.  The complainant turned and saw appellant=s co-defendant, Harold Umanzor, entering the apartment with a handgun.  Umanzor then announced to the complainant, ASurprise.@  Umanzor proceeded, with the aid of appellant, to choke, restrain, bind, blindfold, and gag the complainant.

Umanzor and appellant then took turns sexually assaulting the victim throughout the night by inserting objects into both her anus and vagina.  Thereafter, appellant beat the complainant about the head and face with a clothes iron, retrieved a telephone cord so that Umanzor might strangle her, and, when a question arose as to whether the complainant was still alive, twice jumped on her neck.  The bound and seemingly lifeless victim was then placed in a closet.  After her assailants had departed, the complainant managed to attract the attention of a neighbor by banging and kicking on an adjoining wall.  Subsequent investigation by authorities revealed that, in addition to brutalizing the complainant, Umanzor and appellant had stolen approximately $1,750 in cash and a gold sapphire necklace.


Officers of the Harris County Sheriff=s Department suspected appellant and Umanzor and included their likenesses in a photospread.  The complainant, however, was unable to distinguish them, as she had suffered hemorrhaging in her eyes as a result of the assault.  Nonetheless, the complainant was able to offer a written statement regarding the crimes.

Appellant was arrested on May 31, 2000, for outstanding traffic warrants.  After being given the statutory warnings, she gave a written statement in which she confessed to going to the victim=s apartment with a man named AH@ to use the telephone, that AH@ hit the complainant and dragged her into the bedroom, that appellant believed AH@ was going to rape the complainant, and that appellant then returned to her own apartment and locked the door.  Thereafter, Umanzor offered his own self-serving written statement. Umanzor confessed that appellant let him into the victim=s apartment, told him to choke the complainant, bashed her skull four or five times with a clothes iron, took approximately $70 from the complainant=s purse, jumped on the complainant=s neck in an apparent attempt to break it, and told him to put the complainant in the closet.  Neither statement, however, mentioned the use or exhibition of a firearm.

Factual Sufficiency

Appellant first contends the State=s evidence was factually insufficient for the jury to conclude that she committed aggravated sexual assault and aggravated robbery.  Specifically, appellant complains that, while a robbery admittedly occurred, there was factually insufficient evidence (1) the victim was sexually assaulted, and (2) that appellant or her companion wielded a firearm so as to aggravate the offenses.  We disagree.


When conducting a factual sufficiency review, we consider all the evidence without regard to whether it favored the verdict.  Under such a review, we set aside the verdict Aonly if it is so contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence as to be clearly wrong and unjust.@  Clewis v. State, 922 S.W.2d 126, 129 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996).  To do this, A[t]he court reviews the evidence weighed by the jury that tends to prove the existence of the elemental fact in dispute and compares it with the evidence that tends to disprove that fact.@

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Rocka, Angela v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rocka-angela-v-state-texapp-2002.