William Brady Roe v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 9, 2023
Docket11-21-00157-CR
StatusPublished

This text of William Brady Roe v. the State of Texas (William Brady Roe 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
William Brady Roe v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Opinion filed February 9, 2023

In The

Eleventh Court of Appeals __________

No. 11-21-00157-CR __________

WILLIAM BRADY ROE, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 220th District Court Comanche County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. CR04494

OPINION The jury convicted William Brady Roe of indecency with a child by contact, and it assessed his punishment at confinement for a term of twenty years in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 21.11(a)(1) (West 2019). Appellant challenges his conviction in three issues. We affirm. Background Facts The alleged victim in this case is S.R., Appellant’s daughter. She was eighteen at the time of trial. The indictment alleged that Appellant, with the intent to arouse or gratify his sexual desire, engaged in sexual contact with S.R. by touching her genitals “with a manufactured sexual device” when she was a child younger than seventeen. Linda McGinnis is the technology director at the high school that S.R. attended. The school district has a software program known as “Bark” that monitors students’ computer activities on school computers. McGinnis receives a weekly report from the Bark program that alerts her to student computer activities that may be of concern to school officials. On October 18, 2019, the Bark report detected a document written by S.R. that it labeled with a “severe” level of concern. The document was titled “What I will never say,” and it contained eight pages that detailed disturbing allegations made by S.R. about Appellant. After McGinnis read the document, she provided it to the school counselor, Laura Hermesmeyer. Hermesmeyer then alerted the principals at the school and the school resource officer, Officer Elda McDonald of the Comanche Police Department, of the document. Hermesmeyer, Officer McDonald, and the school principals met with S.R. that afternoon. Officer McDonald testified that the purpose of the meeting was to ask S.R. if the allegations in the document were true. After S.R. indicated that the matters in the document were true, Officer McDonald continued the investigation further by alerting other officers and S.R.’s mother. S.R. testified that she began living with Appellant when she was thirteen when he moved out of the house that he shared with her mother. She testified that he routinely provided her with alcohol that they would drink together to the point that

2 S.R. would become drunk. She described an incident when he had her try to perform a handstand while she was only wearing panties and a large t-shirt. She testified about another incident when she and Appellant were sitting on the back porch of her mother’s house drinking alcohol and smoking cigarettes. Appellant told her to take off her shirt, which she did, stripping to her panties, at which point she performed a lap dance for Appellant. Appellant asked S.R. to touch her breast, but she refused. She and Appellant also walked on a side road while she was partially clothed. She estimated that she was thirteen or fourteen when this event occurred. S.R. testified that Appellant was a truck driver and that she would sometimes accompany him in his truck. S.R. and Appellant would sleep together in the truck, and sometimes they would sleep together in his bed at his house—during which times they would cuddle. S.R. testified that most of the episodes involving Appellant occurred at night after he had been drinking. Sometimes Appellant would provide S.R. with marihuana that they would use together. S.R. also testified that sometimes she and Appellant would go to “XXX shops.” The incident giving rise to the offense for which Appellant was convicted occurred after S.R. and Appellant went to a Spencer’s store and purchased a vibrator. S.R. testified as follows: And on our way back, he asked me to use it. And I told him no. So he opened it and he put it between my thighs and he like turned it on and he was using it on me, but it wasn’t in me. So it was just next to my thighs.

She further testified that he put the vibrator against her genitalia for “a few seconds.” S.R. stated that Appellant asked her if she enjoyed it, to which she replied, “no, it hurt.” S.R. also testified that Appellant handed the vibrator to her and told her to use it, but that she declined.

3 S.R. also testified about other times that Appellant purchased other sex toys for her, including a whip, other vibrators, as well as sex magazines. She testified that they whipped each other with the whip and looked at the magazines, which she described as “bondage, whips, ropes, chains, like hardcore.” S.R. also testified that she watched porn with Appellant, doing so while topless. Appellant also offered to pleasure S.R. for money, and he drove her around one evening when she performed oral sex on a boy. S.R. testified that she did not know why she wrote the document found by the Bark program and that she just started writing it one day. She did not intend for anyone to find it. S.R. also testified that she had not told anyone else about the matters covered in it other than the drinking with Appellant. Assistant Principal Angela Askew and Hermesmeyer testified that S.R. was sad and upset at the initial meeting when they talked to her about the document. S.R. testified that she “shut down” at the meeting. Investigator Ernest Hastings of the Comanche Police Department met with Appellant on the afternoon of the meeting with S.R. Investigator Hastings’s recorded interview of Appellant was played at trial. During the interview, Appellant denied doing anything with S.R. that was “a sexual thing.” He also indicated that he provided S.R. with alcohol, marihuana, and vibrators because he preferred that she learn about those things from him. Investigator Hastings also obtained consent from Appellant to search his home and his cell phones. Officers found a whip, handcuffs, several vibrators, and two “fetish” magazines in S.R.’s bedroom inside Appellant’s home. A search of one of Appellant’s cell phones revealed that Appellant had viewed materials described as “incest porn” and “daddy/daughter porn.”

4 Analysis Sexual Contact Can Occur Through the Use of an Object to Touch a Minor Appellant presents three issues on appeal. His first two issues are related because they are based on the same argument—that touching a minor’s genitals with an object cannot constitute indecency with a child by contact. As noted previously, the indictment alleged that Appellant engaged in sexual contact with S.R. by touching her genitals “with a manufactured sexual device” when she was a child younger than seventeen. In his first issue, Appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction. In his second issue, Appellant contends that the indictment was void because it failed to allege an offense. We first address Appellant’s second issue because it was not preserved for appellate review. “If the defendant does not object to a defect, error, or irregularity of form or substance in an indictment or information before the date on which the trial on the merits commences, he waives and forfeits the right to object to the defect, error, or irregularity and he may not raise the objection on appeal or in any other postconviction proceeding.” TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 1.14(b) (West 2005); see Jenkins v. State, 592 S.W.3d 894, 902 (Tex. Crim. App. 2018). This has been the law in Texas since 1985, when Article 1.14(b) was amended to require a defendant to object to substantive defects in the indictment prior to trial. Studer v. State, 799 S.W.2d 263, 266–72 (Tex. Crim. App. 1990) (discussing legislative history of amendment); see also Walker v. State, 594 S.W.3d 330, 339 (Tex. Crim. App.

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William Brady Roe v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-brady-roe-v-the-state-of-texas-texapp-2023.