William Shawn Waldrep v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 17, 2019
Docket08-19-00027-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
William Shawn Waldrep v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

WILLIAM SHAWN WALDREP, § No. 08-19-00027-CR

Appellant, § Appeal from the

v. § 90th Judicial District Court,

THE STATE OF TEXAS, § of Young County, Texas

Appellee. § (TC#11080)

OPINION

Appellant William Shawn Waldrep was found guilty by a jury on one count of continuous

sexual abuse of a child under 14 years of age and sentenced to 99 years in prison. In his sole issue

on appeal, he contends that the trial court erred by allowing into evidence the victim’s outcry

statement to her mother. Finding no error in that ruling, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.1

I. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Appellant was charged with the continuous sexual abuse of a child under age 14 by causing

the penetration of the mouth of the victim by his sexual organ over a two-and-a-half-year period.2

1 This case was transferred to us from the Second Court of Appeals pursuant to the Texas Supreme Court’s docket equalization efforts. We apply the precedents from that court where they might conflict with our own. TEX.R.APP.P. 41.3. 2 TEX.PENAL CODE ANN. § 21.02 (criminalizing the commission of two or more specified acts of sexual abuse committed over a thirty-day or more period of time). The victim in the case, L.M., was the daughter of Appellant’s then-girlfriend (hereinafter

“Mother”). Appellant had been living with Mother since 2014. L.M. made her first outcry when

she was seven years old to her then nine-year-old brother, telling him that Appellant had put his

penis in her mouth. Her brother, however, did not believe L.M. and did not tell anyone about her

allegation. About a year later, L.M. made a second statement to her brother, again telling him

that Appellant had put his penis, or his “thing”, in her mouth. This time, the brother reported that

statement to Mother. She then questioned L.M. and asked her what had occurred, encouraging

her to be truthful in her response. As discussed in more detail below, L.M. then made an outcry

statement that caused Mother to believe that Appellant had sexually abused her daughter. Mother,

however, did not immediately confront Appellant about the allegation, nor did she report her

concerns to law enforcement.3

In February of 2017, L.M.’s school made a report to Child Protective Services (“CPS”)

after it discovered that L.M. had used inappropriate search terms and may have watched

pornography on a school issued computer. During an ensuing CPS investigation, Mother told the

CPS investigators about the prior outcries of sexual abuse that L.M. had made to her and her

brother. L.M. was then questioned by forensic interviewer Tivoli Williams. During the

interview, L.M. was initially talkative, but withdrew and would not respond when asked questions

about “parts of [her] body” and “touching,” and she did not make an outcry to Williams.

However, that same day, Williams also interviewed L.M.’s brother who confirmed L.M.’s first

and second report of the matter to him. In both reports, L.M. had described to her brother what

3 During a December 2016 Child Protective Services investigation, the mother acknowledged that she and Appellant had been long-time methamphetamine users, and the two had been involved in several domestic disturbances, including one incident in which Appellant had broken Mother’s toe and pointed a gun at her. She testified at trial that she delayed making any report because of this and co-dependency issues.

2 could only be oral sex.

During this same time period, L.M. received counseling, but refused to speak to her

therapist about the incident. However, in late March of 2017 L.M. gave her therapist a journal

entry that she had written, which was introduced into evidence at trial, stating that “[Appellant]

made me suck his dick[.]” Shortly thereafter, Mother also learned that L.M. had disclosed the

abuse to several of her classmates, who in turn reported it to their teacher. In addition, both L.M.’s

therapist and Mother testified that they noticed changes in L.M.’s behavior during this same time

period. L.M. became clingy, she was upset when left alone with Appellant, and she began to have

frequent stomach aches. The therapist explained that these characteristics are common in child

victims of sexual abuse.

On May 2, 2017, L.M. was interviewed by Melissa Beard, a second forensic interviewer.

The night before the interview, at Mother’s suggestion, L.M. wrote in her journal what had

happened to her. The journal entry, which was admitted into evidence, graphically described how

Appellant had L.M. perform oral sex on him. At the forensic interview, L.M. described three to

four specific incidents involving the same act, at different locations and times.

That same day, L.M. underwent a Sexual Assault Nurse Exam (“SANE exam”). L.M.

initially stated that she did not want to speak about the incident but agreed to write down what had

occurred. L.M. circled the image of the male penis on an anatomical picture and wrote the words

“[p]rivate part in my mouth.” L.M. thereafter informed the SANE examiner that Appellant had

committed this act four times at her mother’s house, all while her mother was either asleep or not

at the house. In addition, L.M. stated that “[s]tuff came out of his privates when he put it in my

mouth.” L.M. also told the SANE examiner that she had been reluctant to make an outcry against

Appellant, as she feared she would get in trouble for doing so. The SANE examiner testified that

3 this is a common fear expressed by child victims of sexual abuse. And finally, L.M. testified at

trial that Appellant had committed the acts that she had described in her journal entries over the

course of at least a year, verifying that she had made the journal entries herself. L.M. recalled

that she told her brother on two occasions what Appellant had done, including approximately when

and where she made the outcries. Her testimony corroborated two other events that the jury had

heard about: that L.M.’s mother talked to her after the second outcry to her brother, and that L.M.

told two of her friends at school. L.M. further explained that she did not initially disclose the

abuse to the first forensic interviewer because at the time she was still having a hard time talking

about it.

Appellant defended against the charge through cross examination of the State’s witnesses,

and by calling his own friends who testified that his interactions with L.M. all appeared

appropriate, or that Appellant is not the type of person to commit this act. Appellant also

developed testimony that at one time Mother had denied to others that L.M. had ever been sexually

assaulted.

The jury found Appellant guilty of one count of continuous sexual abuse of a child under

14 years of age and sentenced him to 99 years in prison. This appeal followed.

II. DISCUSSION

In his sole issue on appeal, Appellant argues that the trial court erred in allowing Mother

to testify about L.M.’s outcry to her, arguing that it constituted inadmissible hearsay. In

particular, Appellant contends that the outcry testimony was neither sufficiently specific nor

reliable to satisfy the outcry exception to the hearsay rule found in Article 38.072 of the Texas

Code of Criminal Procedure. He further argues that the admission of the testimony was harmful

to his case.

4 A. Applicable Law and Standard of Review

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