William Robert Vann Jr. v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 2025
Docket09-24-00224-CR
StatusPublished

This text of William Robert Vann Jr. v. the State of Texas (William Robert Vann Jr. 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.

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William Robert Vann Jr. v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-24-00224-CR __________________

WILLIAM ROBERT VANN JR., Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. 23DCCR0633 __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A grand jury indicted Appellant William Robert Vann Jr. (“Appellant” or

“Vann”) for the offense of failure to comply with sex offender registration

requirements, and the indictment also alleged prior felony convictions as

1 enhancements.1 See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 62.102. The indictment alleged that

Appellant

on or about [] the 20th day of April, 2023, and anterior to the presentment of this indictment, in the County of Jefferson and State of Texas, being a person with a reportable conviction or adjudication for Indecency with a Child and while required to comply with the registration requirements of the Chapter 62, Sex Offender Registration Program, of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, and having a duty to report change of address with the local law enforcement authority, namely, the Beaumont Police Department, the law enforcement authority where the defendant had last registered, did intentionally and knowingly fail to report, in person, to the above named law enforcement authority and provide the defendant’s anticipated move date and new address as required by the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, Article 62.055, not later than the seventh day before the intended change[.]

Vann pleaded “not guilty” and waived a jury trial. After a bench trial, the trial court

found Vann guilty and sentenced him to eight years’ confinement. On appeal, Vann

challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction. We affirm.

Evidence at Trial

Candice Cox, a detective sergeant with the Beaumont Police Department,

testified she took over the sex offender program in January of 2021. Cox explained

that sex offenders in Beaumont must make an appointment to set up their

registration, which is done at the Beaumont Police Department to verify the

offenders are registered and for safety.

1 The record includes Vann’s June 9, 1986 Judgment on Plea of Guilty or Nolo Contendre for the offense of indecency of a child, committed on January 3, 1986, in the 252nd District Court of Jefferson County, Texas. 2 Cox identified State’s Exhibit 2 as an annual registration form for Vann,

which was dated July 6, 2021, was signed by Vann, and shows Vann’s “next

verification date[]” as April 19, 2022. The form includes a photocopy of Vann’s

photo ID. Cox agreed that she observed Vann fill the form out and provide his photo

ID.

Cox identified State’s Exhibit 3 as a CR-32 form, which is a state-required

form titled “Notification of Registration Duties Texas Sex Offender Registration

Program[.]” Cox testified that this form includes:

all of his information on there. It will have his charges that are listed on the state database, what he’s been charged with. It will have his length of duty for requirements, registration requirements, when he’s supposed to re[gister], and it also lists on the front of the address that he lists as where he lives at that time.

Cox testified that she witnessed Vann sign and initial each of the requirements on

the form, sign the form, and give his fingerprint on the form. State’s Exhibit 4 is a

video of Vann signing the form.

Cox explained that the form states that the offense for which Vann is required

to report is Indecency with a Child by Contact, with an offense date of January 3,

1986, and a disposition date of June 9, 1986. According to the form, Vann’s victim

was a nine-year-old female. Cox testified that Vann is required to register annually

on his birthdate for his lifetime. The form admitted as State’s Exhibit 3 shows an

address for Vann of 2495 Gulf Street in Beaumont. Cox testified that if an offender

3 who is required to register moves within the city, he has seven days to notify the

registration authority of a change of address. According to Cox, if an offender who

is required to register is about to move, he should make an appointment to “start

getting that process rolling.”

Cox testified that there was no contact with Vann between July 6, 2021, when

he signed the CR-32 form, and April 19, 2022, the next date on which Vann was

required to register. According to Cox, she searched within the state and national sex

offender registration records to determine whether Vann had moved and registered

elsewhere. She explained that she receives a weekly roster from the Beaumont

Center—the location where Vann had last reported living—but Vann’s name was

not on that roster. Cox testified that she noticed Vann was not listed on the Beaumont

Center roster on March 11, 2023, she began creating an offense report for failing to

comply in April of 2023, and her report states that Vann last registered on July 6,

2021, but he had not notified the program of a change of address since that date. Cox

explained that the roster from the Beaumont Center confirmed that Vann no longer

lived there, and Cox also determined that Vann was not in the county jail or in state

prison. Cox also testified that she checked the Texas Sex Offender Registry and a

national registry and found that he had not registered somewhere else. According to

Cox, between July 6, 2021, and the date of her report in about April of 2023, Vann

never notified the police department of a change of address. Cox testified that she

4 did not know that Vann had been arrested for a parole violation on April 5, 2023. On

cross-examination, Cox testified that if she finds out that an offender is incarcerated,

she changes his status in the database herself. She also testified that it was possible

Vann was on the roster for the Beaumont Center between March 11, when she first

checked, and April 4, 2023, when Vann was arrested.

William Vann testified that the last time he registered with the Sex Offender

Registry Program was in July of 2021, and he was living at the Beaumont Center at

that time. Vann testified that he tried to find another place to live, but many of the

places he identified as a possible place to move were too close to schools and he

tried to get an attorney to help him, but he never actually lived at a different address

than the Beaumont Center. Vann testified that he turned himself in to police in early

April of 2023 because he did not have money for an attorney, and the police picked

him up in Port Arthur and took him to the county jail in Beaumont as there was a

warrant because he had violated his parole by leaving the Beaumont Center. Vann

also complained that his parole officer stopped him from going to the law library for

three months and he would not let Vann go to his doctor’s appointments. Vann

agreed that at some point he was transferred to the Texas Department of Corrections,

where he stayed for six weeks, and two more years were added to his sentence. Vann

testified that he had never resided anywhere other than the Beaumont Center at 2495

Gulf Street in Beaumont except for going to an intermediate sanction facility (“ISF”)

5 in 2021 and 2022. Vann recalled that he was in ISF in 2022 for six months, including

the time that he was required to report.

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