Timothy Earl Wesley v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 29, 2016
Docket08-14-00121-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Timothy Earl Wesley v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

TIMOTHY EARL WESLEY, § No. 08-14-00121-CR Appellant, § Appeal from the v. § 213th District Court § THE STATE OF TEXAS, of Tarrant County, Texas § Appellee. (TC#1290302D) §

OPINION

Appellant Timothy Earl Wesley was convicted of continuous sexual abuse of a child

under TEX.PENAL CODE ANN. § 21.02 (West Supp. 2015). His appeal challenges the trial court’s

adverse ruling on a motion to suppress. Finding no error in that ruling, we affirm.1

FACTUAL SUMMARY

We recite only so much of the underlying facts as are necessary to decide the limited

issues before us.

Underlying Facts

Appellant was charged with continuous sexual abuse of a child. The child, whom we

refer to R.K., was his stepdaughter. She was eleven to twelve years of age during the events

1 This case was transferred from our sister court in Fort Worth pursuant to the Texas Supreme Court’s docket equalization efforts. See TEX.GOV’T CODE ANN. § 73.001 (West 2013). We follow the precedents of the Fort Worth Court to the extent they might conflict with our own. See TEX.R.APP. P. 41.3. described here, and Appellant was in his late 40s. R.K.’s mother married Appellant when R.K.

was eleven. Appellant moved in with R.K.’s mother, R.K., and her two siblings, all children

from a previous marriage. Sometime after he moved in, Appellant initiated sexual contact with

R.K. The contact progressed to frequent sexual intercourse.

While being examined at a local hospital for complaints of pain, R.K. confided to a nurse

about her sexual contact with Appellant. The police became involved, leading to Appellant’s

arrest, but the charges were dropped after R.K. recanted the allegation. Appellant lived apart

from R.K.’s mother after the arrest, but he later moved back in. When he did so, his sexual

relationship with R.K. resumed as well. Appellant and R.K.’s mother then permanently

separated and Appellant moved out. But R.K. and Appellant kept in contact and they soon

resumed their sexual relationship. Appellant would pick her up on a weekly basis and drive to a

nearby wooded area, or sometimes she would sneak him into the house.

The Samsung Cell Phone

During this time, Appellant gave R.K. a Samsung cell phone. He told her that she could

only use the phone to contact him and one of her friends. He also told her not to tell anyone

about the phone. R.K.’s mother discovered the cell phone and viewed explicit text messages and

photographs on it, leading the mother to again contact the police. A responding officer seized

the phone and stored it in an evidence locker. Based on statements made by the mother, R.K.,

and a physical exam of R.K., the Grand Prairie police obtained a search warrant for the Samsung

phone to be executed at the evidence locker room.

The Recorded Phone Call

Following the issuance of the search warrant, R.K. accompanied her mother to the Grand

Prairie police station where they met with Sergeants Alan Frizzell and Christie Martinez. R.K.

2 was twelve by this time.

The meeting is reflected on State Exhibit One which is a DVD video and audio recording

of a conference room at the police station. The video is approximately fifty minutes long and

begins with R.K., her mother, and Sergeants Alan Frizzell and Martinez seated in the room.

R.K. acknowledged that the Samsung phone was given to her by Appellant. The officers then

began reading the text messages on the Samsung phone. The mother, the officers, and R.K.

discussed how to respond to a recent text message from Appellant. The discussion turned to

having Appellant engage in a phone call whereby he would admit to the sexual relationship with

R.K. Officer Martinez left the room to retrieve her recording equipment. When she returned,

R.K.’s mother, by agreement, left the room. The officers explained to R.K. how the recording

device worked, and she initiated the first of two calls to Appellant. In the first call, they

discussed meeting later that afternoon and she asked him to send a photograph as the call

concluded. Several minutes later he sent a photo of an erect penis. The second call included

R.K. and Appellant graphically discussing sexual acts they will engage in when they meet.

Appellant also stated in the recording that the two had had thirty to forty sexual encounters over

the past several months.

When Appellant was arrested that same day, the police seized his cell phone. Pursuant to

a warrant, the contents of that phone were examined, and it contained some of the same photos

as had been sent or received on the Samsung phone. The police also found a video of Appellant

and R.K. apparently having sexual intercourse.

The Motion to Suppress and Suppression Hearing

Appellant filed a motion to suppress which sought to exclude the Samsung cell phone and

its contents, Appellant’s phone and its contents, and the recorded conversation. Only the issues

3 of the Samsung cell phone and the recorded conversations are challenged on appeal. Appellant

contended below that the warrant to seize the Samsung cell phone lacked probable cause and

only extended to the phone itself, not its contents. The only evidence that Appellant offered at

the suppression hearing with regard to the Samsung cell phone was the search warrant which

contains a supporting affidavit from an investigating officer. The affidavit stated that appellant

gave R.K. the phone as their means of communication and he told her not to tell anyone about

the phone. Appellant’s counsel conceded at the hearing that Appellant had bought the phone for

R.K. to use. The trial court denied that portion of the motion because Appellant had no standing

to raise a Fourth Amendment challenge to a phone that he had given to R.K.

Appellant also challenged the recorded phone conversation. Noting that the State is

precluded from using evidence that is illegally obtained, he claimed that the call was illegally

recorded under TEX.PENAL CODE ANN. § 16.02 (West Supp. 2015). That statute prohibits the

interception of a wire communication unless (as is relevant here) one of the participants

intercepts the call, or consents in advance to the interception. Id. at § 16.02(c)(3)(A)(B) and

(c)(4)(A)(B). Appellant argued below that R.K. as a minor cannot consent, and the mother never

did consent.

Officer Martinez testified at the suppression hearing that both R.K. and her mother

cooperated in the phone call and consented to the recording. She agreed, however, that all the

discussions regarding consent and the call are contained on the DVD (State’s Exhibit One) which

is a part of our record. The term “consent” was never directly used in the conversations reflected

on the DVD. The trial court overruled the motion to suppress, finding there was consent by both

R.K. and her mother.

The Trial

4 Appellant re-urged the illegality of the State’s evidence at trial. Appellant sought and

obtained an instruction in the jury charge which would allow the jury to disregard any evidence

illegally obtained. Appellant cross-examined Sergeant Martinez at trial, again pressing his

contention that the mother never consented to the recorded phone call, and that R.K. was too

young to consent. R.K. testified at trial that both she and her mother were aware of and

consented to recording the call. Appellant’s counsel pressed the illegality defense in closing

argument.

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