Valentine v. Castillo, Jr. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 5, 2019
Docket01-18-00284-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Valentine v. Castillo, Jr. v. State (Valentine v. Castillo, Jr. 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
Valentine v. Castillo, Jr. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 5, 2019

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-18-00284-CR ——————————— VALENTINE V. CASTILLO, JR., Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 396th District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 1468009D

 Pursuant to the Texas Supreme Court’s docket equalization powers, this appeal was transferred from the Second Court of Appeals to this court on April 11, 2018. See TEX. GOV’T CODE § 73.001; Order Regarding Transfer of Cases From Courts of Appeals, Misc. Docket No. 18-9049 (Tex. Mar. 27, 2018). We are unaware of any conflict between precedent from the Second Court of Appeals and that of this court on any relevant issue. See TEX. R. APP. P. 41.3. O P I N I O N

Valentine V. Castillo, Jr. appeals from his judgment of conviction for the

offense of aggravated sexual assault of a child, contending that the trial court’s:

(1) application of mandatory-minimum and parole-ineligibility statutes violated his constitutional guarantees against conviction for ex post facto crimes;

(2) admission into evidence of a recording of the complainant’s forensic interview and the testimony of the complainant’s stepsister that he also sexually abused her was an abuse of discretion; and

(3) exclusion from evidence of letters written to him by the complainant’s stepsister after she reported that he had sexually abused her was an abuse of discretion.

Finding no error, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

A grand jury indicted Castillo for one count of continuous sexual abuse of a

young child, two counts of aggravated sexual assault, and two counts of indecency

with a child. See TEX. PENAL CODE §§ 21.02(b), 21.11(a), 22.021(a)(1)(B), (a)(2)(B).

All counts concerned the same child complainant, the daughter of a woman whom

Castillo dated and with whom he intermittently resided. The indictment also alleged

that the complainant was younger than six years of age at the time of the offenses

and that Castillo was a habitual offender.

Castillo pleaded not guilty and the charges were tried to a jury.

2 The complainant was thirteen years old at trial. She testified that Castillo

touched her vagina with his hand on many occasions. One night, when she was one

or two years old, she awoke in her mother’s bedroom while her mother was at work,

and a pornographic film was on the television. She was lying on the bed and her

pants had been pulled down to her knees. Castillo was touching her vagina with his

hand. He penetrated her with his finger and it hurt. Castillo warned the complainant

to keep his actions a secret or else he would hurt her mom.

She testified that he did the same thing to her on multiple other occasions in

her mother’s bedroom, in the car, and once at Castillo’s apartment. She recounted

said that these additional instances likewise took place when she was one or two

years old, except for the incident at his apartment, which happened when she was

three years old. She did not recall him ever sexually abusing her in any way other

than touching her.

The complainant did not tell anyone what had happened until she was eleven

years old because she did not think anyone would believe her. At age eleven, she

asked her mother why the complainant’s father, Louis Maldonado, was in prison.

Her mother told her that Maldonado had been convicted of sexually abusing the

complainant’s older stepsister, who is Castillo’s daughter. The complainant then

disclosed that Castillo had sexually abused her.

3 Defense counsel cross-examined the complainant about inconsistencies in her

allegations over time, including during her interview with a forensic interviewer,

Lindsey Dula, that took place after the complainant made the outcry to her mother.

For example, defense counsel questioned the complainant about inconsistent

representations as to her age when the alleged abuse occurred:

Q. [Y]ou told us here this morning that you believed you were one or two years old when most everything happened? A. Yes, sir. Q. Okay. And that you might have been around three years old when you were over at [Castillo’s] apartment; is that correct? A. Yes, sir. Q. Okay. So do you remember telling people different ages? A. No. Q. Do you remember telling your mom you were three or four? A. No. Q. Do you remember telling Lindsey Dula—Ms. Dula, she’s the lady that you talked to in the small room with the camera? A. No. Q. Do you remember telling her you were three or four? A. No. Q. Do you remember then telling Ms. Dula you might have been two? A. I don’t know.

Defense counsel also asked the complainant about inconsistencies in her allegations

over time concerning where the sexual abuse occurred as well as other details,

4 including the first time Castillo abused her, whether he threatened to hurt her mother,

and the particular sex acts involved.

Over the defense’s objection that her testimony was not admissible under

article 38.37 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, the complainant’s stepsister also

took the stand to testify about an incident when Castillo molested her, which

occurred when she was eleven years old. Early one morning, while the stepsister was

asleep on the couch at home, Castillo put his hands inside her pajama pants and

underwear and touched her vagina. When she realized what was happening, she

rolled over, turning away from him. Castillo then put his hand in the back of her

pajamas and touched her buttocks. He stopped shortly afterward because her mother

returned from work.

On cross-examination, defense counsel tried to question the complainant’s

stepsister about letters she had written to Castillo after the incident on the couch.

The State objected on hearsay and relevancy grounds. The defense argued that the

stepsister’s testimony on this issue would show her state of mind—specifically, that

she maintained a friendly relationship with Castillo after the incident, thereby calling

into question whether it had happened. The trial court sustained the State’s relevancy

objection.

When the complainant’s mother testified, she told the jury that she had dated

Castillo on and off for a decade and he had lived with her and her children during

5 some of this time. She demanded that Castillo leave her home after she learned that

he had inappropriately touched her other daughter, the complainant’s stepsister.

The complainant’s mother testified that the complainant revealed that Castillo

had sexually abused her after they had a conversation about Maldonado’s abuse of

her stepsister. The complainant told her mother that Castillo had her with him in the

mother’s bedroom with pornography playing on the television when he touched her

in “her private area,” and that he made her touch his genitals.

The next morning, the mother contacted the police. The complainant

subsequently underwent a sexual assault examination and was interviewed by Dula.

The complainant’s mother testified that she and Castillo had not yet started their

dating relationship when the complainant was one or two years old.

The Fort Worth Police Department assigned Detective E. Buchanan to this

case. He scheduled the complainant to sit for a forensic interview with Dula, which

he observed by closed-circuit television. Next, he interviewed and took a statement

from the complainant’s mother. He referred the complainant for exam by a sexual

assault nurse.

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