Roman Lee Walker v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 11, 2012
Docket08-10-00317-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Roman Lee Walker v. State (Roman Lee Walker 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
Roman Lee Walker v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS

ROMAN LEE WALKER,

                            Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS,

                            Appellee.

  '

                  No. 08-10-00317-CR

Appeal from the

226th District Court

of Bexar County, Texas

(TC#2008CR11690)

                                                                  O P I N I O N

A jury convicted Roman Lee Walker, Appellant, of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and attempted aggravated sexual assault.  He was sentenced to two concurrent twenty-year periods of confinement.  In two issues, Appellant challenges the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction for attempted aggravated sexual assault.  We affirm.

                                                               BACKGROUND


The evidence at trial showed that on April 11, 1998, Joan Campion was working at Paesano’s restaurant.  After speaking briefly with her manager, Jerhald Harrington, Campion proceeded to the restroom area.  When Campion exited the ladies’ restroom, Appellant was at the payphone in the corridor, holding the receiver, and looking at the ladies’ restroom door.  Appellant hung up the receiver and turned toward Campion and stared at her.  Campion looked at Appellant as she walked down the corridor.  Appellant then asked very loudly, “Where the F[---] do you think you’re going?,” tackled Campion, and dragged her into the men’s restroom.  Appellant covered Campion’s mouth and nose while holding her in a headlock as Campion attempted to scream and fought Appellant by kicking and biting him.  When Appellant loosened the choke hold and allowed Campion to breathe, she screamed as loudly as she could.  Appellant repeatedly told Campion to “Shut the F[---] up,” as she continued fighting against him, and slammed Campion’s head and face into a concrete wall no less than three times, leaving her bloodied and unable to balance herself.  Grabbing Campion by the throat, Appellant pushed her against the concrete wall and asked if she had had enough.  Campion was able to see that the same person speaking to her was the same person she had seen in the corridor but was unable to answer him.  Appellant turned her around with her back to his chest and believed he hit her as she felt a very sharp pain in her lower back.  Campion felt Appellant’s hand slide down between her legs while holding her throat with his other hand and saying, “I think you need to be F[-----].”  Appellant began aggressively touching Campion’s genitals over her clothing and, while keeping one hand to her throat, attempted to drag Campion backwards into a stall toward the back of the men’s restroom.  Campion believed that if Appellant took her into a stall, he could keep her in there all night and rape her, as the stalls were made of concrete walls from floor to ceiling with a solid door that shut completely.  Campion used all her strength to grab the frame of the door to prevent Appellant from taking her into the stall and shutting the door.  She last remembered reaching out to grab onto something and remembered her hands sliding along the concrete walls.  Campion was unable to grab onto anything because her hands were covered in blood, which was everywhere.  Campion lost consciousness.

Campion’s next memory consisted of being curled up behind a toilet, with a waiter trying to wake her up.  Campion suffered damage to the top of her head and required stitches on the left side of her forehead, left eye, and within the left side of her mouth where she had bitten off a piece of her inner cheek during the assault.  Approximately one week after being released from the hospital, the swelling on the left side of Campion’s face subsided sufficiently for her to open her left eye only to realize that she could not see out of it.  Campion’s ophthalmologist, Dr. Kristen Story Held, readmitted her to the hospital.  Dr. Held testified that it was evident that Campion had suffered severe head trauma as there was evidence of retinal hemorrhages around the optic nerve, indicating that the severe force to her eye had nearly pulled the optic nerve from the back of the eye.  Campion not only lost approximately 75 percent of her visual field, she also lost her ability to see color and suffered a loss of depth perception.  Although Campion eventually regained her depth perception after four months, Dr. Held testified that the loss of vision was sufficient to render Campion legally blind.  Dr. Held explained that Campion “had permanent severe loss of vision after her injury of being thrown against the concrete wall, on the left side of her head, with great force.”  Campion’s remaining visual impairments are permanent and limit her abilities to drive and focus.  Campion also suffered and was treated for injuries to and pain in her neck and upper back.  Campion identified Appellant as the person who assaulted her, both in a photo line-up and at trial.

DISCUSSION

In Issue One, Appellant contends that the evidence is legally insufficient to support his conviction of attempted aggravated sexual assault because the State failed to show that Appellant caused Campion serious bodily injury with the requisite specific intent to penetrate “her female sexual organ.”  Appellant also contends that the evidence did not tend to show that he attempted to penetrate Campion’s genitals when he touched her and suggests that acts such as kissing or fondling Campion would have provided a strong indication that he actually intended to commit a sexual assault rather than a physically-injurious assault.

In Issue Two, Appellant challenges the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction of attempted aggravated sexual assault asserting that the State failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he committed an act that amounted to more than mere preparation but failed to effect the commission of the offense.  Appellant specifically contends that the State was required to prove that he attempted to penetrate Campion and that the evidence does not show that Appellant attempted to do anything more than he actually did.  We disagree with Appellant’s analyses.

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Roman Lee Walker v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roman-lee-walker-v-state-texapp-2012.