Tariq Mustafaa Miller v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 24, 2023
Docket05-22-00307-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Tariq Mustafaa Miller v. the State of Texas (Tariq Mustafaa Miller 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
Tariq Mustafaa Miller v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

AFFIRMED and Opinion Filed July 24, 2023

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-22-00307-CR

TARIQ MUSTAFAA MILLER, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 416th Judicial District Court Collin County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 416-82170-2021

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Pedersen, III, Garcia, and Kennedy Opinion by Justice Garcia Appellant was convicted of two counts of aggravated sexual assault of a child

and three counts of indecency with a child by contact. The trial court assessed

punishment at thirty years in prison for each of the aggravated sexual assault charges

and ten years in prison for each of the indecency charges, with the sentences to run

concurrently. In a single issue, appellant now argues the trial court’s denial of his

motion for continuance deprived him of due process and the right to effective

assistance of counsel. Concluding appellant’s arguments are without merit, we

affirm the trial court’s judgment. I. Background

When the complaining witness MT was fourteen years old, she made a

delayed outcry against appellant for sexually assaulting her when she was three, four,

or five years old. Appellant was arrested for aggravated sexual assault of a child and

indecency with a child. He confessed to some of the actions underlying the charges.1

In June 2021, the State provided defense counsel with discovery consisting of

about ninety-one pages. Four or five of those pages referred to an outcry MJ made

in 2010 against an eleven-year-old juvenile respondent, RJ, when she was three years

old.

On January 21, 2022, defense counsel asked the prosecutor for more

information about the RJ case. Specifically, counsel asked how the RJ case was

handled and investigated and what the outcome had been. The prosecutor said she

did not believe RJ was ever prosecuted but would follow up after she met with MT.

On March 17, 2022, four days before the scheduled trial, defense counsel sent

the prosecutor an email stating:

One of the reports references [MT] outcried an aggravated sexual assault on 4/11/2010 that resulted in a juvenile arrest. There is a Plano offense report number 10-66432. I see call notes in the main offense report that an offense occurred right around that time, but there are no notes that it led to an arrest. I don’t believe I received any information on how that case was disposed.

1 Appellant admitted that he touched MT’s vagina for about two minutes when he was intoxicated and had rubbed her vagina with his hand. He also said that MT often touched his penis and laughed about it. In addition to his custodial confession, appellant also wrote MT a letter apologizing and saying he didn’t mean to cause her problems by touching her. –2– The next day, the prosecutor responded:

Got these records released. This is the juvenile case. Our prosecutor remembered it as well. [MT], who was 3, got on the stand and would not testify, she froze. They tried to do it via closed circuit TV but she would not speak. [RJ], the 11 year old defendant in the case, gave a statement admitting to touching his penis to her vagina, but he stated it was an accident and his pants were on. The court found the victim to be not competent to testify because she couldn’t testify, so the court found the allegation not true. See attached records.

There were 372 pages of records attached to the email, but many pages were

duplicative, and only about 190 pages were unique. The documents included a

summary of MT’s forensic interview, copies of the SANE exam, offense reports,

witness statements, and notes from an interview with MT.

On Monday morning, the parties convened for a hearing on a motion to

suppress appellant’s confession and to select a jury. Defense counsel informed the

court that he was “going to need some guidance from the court and maybe some

creative problem solving” in connection with the recently produced records. After

explaining the situation, defense counsel told the judge, “The bottom line is I don’t

have a copy of the order finding the allegation [against RJ] was found to be not true.”

Counsel for both parties informed the court that they had been working on a

stipulation but could not agree. Defense counsel had requested that the State stipulate

that MT made an allegation against RJ when she was three, and after a hearing, the

allegation was found not true. The State agreed, as long as the defense would also

stipulate that RJ admitted to touching his penis to MT’s vagina, and the reason the

allegation was found not true was because MT was found not competent to testify. –3– Defense counsel would not agree to these additional facts because he did not think

the State could prove them.

The prosecutor advised the court that the State’s file included docket entries

stating MT was not competent to testify and the allegation was found not true. The

court told the prosecutor to provide copies of the docket sheet to defense counsel

and the court and told defense counsel, “I would love for you to have the certified

copy . . . but it appears that’s not going to happen today.”

The court then conducted a hearing on the motion to suppress appellant’s

custodial statements and denied the motion. After conferring with his client, defense

counsel made an oral motion for continuance.

The first part of the motion was based on appellant’s health. Appellant

testified about a poisonous spider bite he suffered in jail and his treatment for that

injury, including prescription pain killers. The court denied the motion based on

appellant’s health.

Defense counsel then urged that the case be continued because of the late

production of the additional records. Counsel admitted that he had reviewed the

records, but argued he did not have time to investigate. He further argued that the

late production impeded his ability to cross-examine MT’s mother “to let the jury

know there’s other allegations that have been made and found not true.”

The judge questioned counsel extensively about what he would do if he had

more time, noting “we’re not going to try an ancillary case . . . in the middle of this.”

–4– Counsel said he could not specify what he would do because he had not had time to

investigate. The oral motion for continuance was denied.

But when appellant was arraigned, he did not enter a plea, and the court took

a recess. The court expressed concern about appellant’s injury and his ability to

understand the proceedings and assist in his defense and noted that the defense

wanted more time for discovery on the RJ case. As a result, the judge dismissed the

potential jurors and told them to come back the next day.

Appellant was feeling better when the parties returned the next day. Defense

counsel advised the court that he had reviewed the records, issued a number of

subpoenas, moved to unseal a portion of the juvenile record in the RJ case, and

obtained an order from the juvenile court partially releasing the contents of the file.

Nonetheless, counsel advised that he had filed a sworn, written motion for

continuance based on the RJ issue. Noting that the juvenile case was “pretty much

an ancillary issue” the judge denied the motion.

The parties selected a jury and proceeded to trial. When the State announced

that it would call MT and her mother to testify, the judge told defense counsel she

was going to allow him ask “pretty much anything you want” and give him as much

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