William Drumwright v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 6, 2006
Docket14-05-00616-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
William Drumwright v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion filed June 6, 2006

Affirmed and Opinion filed June 6, 2006.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-05-00616-CR

WILLIAM DRUMWRIGHT, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 122nd District Court

Galveston County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 04CR1302

O P I N I O N

A jury found appellant William Drumwright guilty of indecency with a child and assessed a punishment of six years= incarceration.  In two points of error, appellant contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to sustain his conviction.  We affirm.

Background

Appellant is the ex-husband of Virginia Drumwright, who is the mother of the complainant, S.P.[1]  Virginia testified that on May 13, 2004, when S.P. was thirteen, S.P. stated that appellant had molested her.  Earlier that evening, appellant had informed Virginia that S.P. had been disrespectful to him, so Virginia had approached her daughter about the situation.  In response, S.P. asked whether Virginia remembered what ACandy said her brother did to her@ and then stated that appellant had raped her.[2]  S.P. explained that about a year earlier, when she was almost thirteen, appellant had jumped on her while she was lying on the couch, pulled her pants down, and bumped his penis against her vagina for ten to fifteen minutes.  Appellant also told S.P. not to tell her mother.  Virginia testified that she sent S.P. upstairs and immediately confronted appellant.  According to Virginia, appellant responded that A[he] knew these kids would break [them] up somehow@ and stated that A[he=d] never admit it.@  After confronting appellant, Virginia asked S.P. if she was telling the truth and told her that she would be very hurt if S.P. were lying about the abuse.  S.P. assured her mother that she was telling the truth.  Virginia testified that she planned to leave immediately with the children, but that appellant ultimately left instead.  Virginia testified that appellant was uncharacteristically calm when he decided to leave.


Virginia, who was an officer with the Galveston Police Department at the time, told fellow officer Clemente Garcia about S.P.=s allegations when she went to work the next morning.  Virginia testified that Officer Garcia spoke with S.P. at the house and that S.P. was also interviewed at the Advocacy Center in Galveston on May 14, 2004.  Virginia was not present during S.P.=s medical exam or her  meeting with the district attorney.  Virginia filed for divorce because of S.P.=s allegations, but she insisted that she had not told S.P. to fabricate the allegations in order to gain custody of her younger son.  She testified that she believed S.P. instead of appellant because she Ahad to protect [her] daughter@ and could Atell by looking in [appellant=s] eyes that he was lying.@  Virginia also stated that S.P. had never wavered in her account since May 13, 2004.

On cross-examination, Virginia acknowledged that as part of her police officer training, she had taken a class about sexual abuse and sex offenders a few months before S.P. told her about the molestation.  However, Virginia denied telling appellant that it was easy to make sexual abuse allegations without proof.  Virginia also admitted that she had been married to S.P.=s father when she first met appellant but denied that appellant believed she was single.  Virginia testified that the only additional detail S.P. had provided regarding the incident on the couch was that it had occurred around Atennis time,@ meaning April 2003.  She acknowledged that she did not tell any family members about S.P.=s allegations until roughly two weeks after S.P.=s disclosure.  Virginia testified that her marriage to appellant had been troubled, that she had spoken to an attorney just a few days after May 13, and that her divorce from appellant was pending.  Virginia denied that their marital problems stemmed from financial difficulties, stating that appellant was mean, rude, and yelled a lot.  She testified that appellant had hit her once about six years ago, but she did not report the incident because she was not injured.  Virginia stated that appellant often talked to her all night about wanting to save their marriage.

Pediatrician Dr. James Lukefahr, a specialist in child abuse and neglect who examined S.P., summarized S.P.=s medical records and the results of her examinations.  Dr. Lukefahr read a portion of S.P.=s interview with a nurse, in which she described the incident on the couch and stated that appellant was Aalways touching [her] on [her] breasts or [her] front privates under [her] clothing.@  The notes indicated that S.P. did not maintain eye contact and folded into a fetal position when describing the encounter on the couch.  Dr. Lukefahr 

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William Drumwright v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-drumwright-v-state-texapp-2006.