Deleon, Steven ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                                  PD-1318-15
    PD-1318-15                                  COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
    AUSTIN, TEXAS
    Transmitted 10/6/2015 4:18:30 PM
    Accepted 10/7/2015 5:09:50 PM
    NO. 03-13-00202-CR                                         ABEL ACOSTA
    CLERK
    STEVEN DELEON                                          §       IN THE COURT        OF
    §
    VS.                                                    §       CRIMINAL APPEALS OF
    §
    THE STATE OF TEXAS                                     §      THE STATE OF TEXAS
    MOTION FOR EXTENSION OF TIME TO FILE
    APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
    TO THE HONORABLE JUDGES OF THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS:
    Now     comes Kerrisa Chelkowski, attorney             for Appellant, Steven     DeLeon,
    and files    this   Motion asking     this   Honorable Court to extend the time for filing
    Appellant’s Petition for Discretionary Review in this cause.               In support of this
    Motion, Appellant shows the following:
    I.
    This cause      is   on appeal from the         4215‘ Judicial District Court, Caldwell
    County, Texas, in which Appellant was convicted of Continuous Sexual Abuse of
    a   Young   Child, No. 2012-166, styled The State of Texas               vs.   Steven DeLeon.
    Punishment was assessed       at   32 years imprisonment.
    October 7, 2015
    II.
    Appellant's conviction           was affirmed by the Court of Appeals, Third Court of
    Appeals District of Texas, San Antonio, Texas on                       May 29, 2015. Appellant filed a
    Motion       for   Rehearing and such Motion was denied on September 17, 2015. The
    current deadline for filing Appellant’s Petition for Discretionary                          Review from   that
    decision     is    October   17,   2015. This    is   Appellant’s      first   request for an extension of
    time.   The opinion of the Third Court of Appeals                 is   attached.
    III.
    Appellant moves that the Court extend the time for filing his Petition for
    Discretionary Review in this cause for a period of 30 days, to                          November   17, 2015.
    In support thereof, undersigned counsel shows this Court the following:
    1.          Counsel for Appellant has a brief due on October 13, 2015 to
    the United States Courts of Appeal for the Fifth Circuit in USA
    vs. Igcmacio Flores, Jr. in case number 15-50148.
    2.          Counsel   is   set for jury trial in State   of Texas       vs.   Jana Shilts, No.
    465822 in Bexar County, Texas. Jury selection is scheduled                     to
    begin on October 13, 2015, and the trial will last more than
    three days.
    3.          Counsel is set for july trial in State of Texas vs. Keith Coelho,
    No. 461465 in Bexar County, Texas. Jury selection is
    scheduled to begin on October 26, 2015, and the trial will last
    more than three      days.
    IV.
    For the foregoing reasons, Appellant needs additional time to prepare
    Appellant's Petition for Discretionary Review.
    V.
    WHEREFORE, PREMISES CONSIDERED,                     Counsel for Appellant prays
    that this   Honorable Court grant an extension of time    to   November   17,   2015 for the
    filing of Appellant's Petition for Discretionary Review.
    Respectfully submitted,
    Law Office of Kerrisa Chelkowski
    l0 17 South     Alamo
    San Antonio, Texas 78210
    (210) 228-9393 Telephone
    (210) 226-7540 Fax
    Email: kerrisa@defendtexas.com
    By:    /s/   Kerrisa Chelkowski
    KERRISA CHELKOWSKI
    State   Bar No. 24034373
    Attorney for Appellant:
    Steven DeLeon
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    I,   Kerrisa Chelkowski, do hereby certify that a copy of this Motion for
    Rehearing for the Appellant was sent by certified mail to the Caldwell County
    District Attorney’s Office at 201 E.     San Antonio    Street, P.O.   Box   869, Lockhart,
    6"‘
    Texas 78644 on this the         day of October, 2015.
    /s/   Kerrisa Chelkowski
    KERRISA CHELKOWSKI
    CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
    Pursuant to the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure (TRAP) 9.4(i)(3), the
    undersigned certifies this brief complies with the type-volume limitations or TRAP
    9.4(i)(3)
    l.EXCLUSIVE OF THE EXEMPTED PORTIONS IN TRAP                          9.4(i)(3),   THE
    BRIEF CONTAINS (select one):
    A.      644 words,    OR
    B.            lines   of text in monospaced typeface.
    2.   THE BRIEF HAS BEEN PREPARED (select one):
    A. in proportionally spaced typeface using:
    Software Name and Version: Microsoft Office Word 2011
    in (Typeface Name and Font Size): 14 pt. Times New Roman,           OR
    B. in monospaced (nonproportianally spaced) typeface using:
    Typeface name and number of characters per inch:
    3.       THE UNDERSIGNED UNDERSTANDS A MATERIAL
    MISREPRESENTATION IN COMPLETING THIS CERTIFICATE, OR
    CIRCUMVENTION OF THE TYPE-VOLUIVIE LIMITS IN TRAP 9.4(i)(3),
    MAY RESULT IN THE COURT’S STRIKING THE BRIEF AND IMPOSING
    SANCTIONS AGAINST THE PERSON SIGNING THE BRIEF.
    /s/Kerrisa Chelkowski
    Signature of Filing Party
    TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN
    NO. 03-13-00202-CR
    Steven DeLeon, Appellant
    v.
    The State of Texas, Appellee
    FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF CALDWELL COUNTY, 421ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    NO. 2012-166, HONORABLE TODD A. BLOMERTH, JUDGE PRESIDING
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    A jury found appellant Steven DeLeon guilty of continuous sexual abuse of a young
    child and assessed punishment at thirty-two years in prison.                 DeLeon contends       that insufficient
    evidence supports the judgment and that the                trial   court abused   its   discretion and violated the
    constitution   by refusing to allow him to make a defense and              fully confront witnesses against him.
    He also   contends that the   trial   court abused   its   discretion   by denying his motion     for mistrial   when
    the prosecutor   commented on his        exercise of his right to remain silent and         by imposing   a sentence
    without the possibility of parole.       We will affirm the judgment.
    BACKGROUND
    DeLeon taught physical education at the elementary school M.G.                   attended.   He met
    M.G. and her mother, D.A., in January 2010 when M.G. started playing on the school’s fourth-grade
    basketball team.   M.G. played basketball through the summer of 201 l, and DeLeon spent time with
    D.A. ’s family. The adults went on one date and never became romantically linked, though there was
    testimony that D.A. wanted more than a friendship.                  DeLeon testified that he helped D.A. with her
    finances, helped her          start   a checking account, and counseled her about her relationship with her
    son, D.G.,      who DeLeon also taught. DeLeon attended a parent-teacher conference regarding D.G.
    in place   of D.A., helped M.G. with homework, and stayed with the children, sometimes overnight.
    The children stayed with DeLeon and his brother overnight once. M.G.                     testified that   it   was during
    such stays that DeLeon assaulted her in the summer of 201                   l.
    M.G.     first   repoited an assault in     May 2012 after her mother found a recording of a
    March     19,   2012 telephone conversation between M.G. and DeLeon. The conversation began with
    a discussion of M.G.’s grandfather’s surgery, but veered into sex—related topics.                  DeLeon deemed
    the shift in topics inappropriate and said that              M.G. was responsible     for the shift, but   he admitted
    that   he participated in the inappropriate discussions. In a discussion prompted by M.G.’s query of
    why DeLeon seemed uncomfortable whenever female body parts were discussed, DeLeon said, “It’s
    kind of like with you        like    I   remember like I would tell you: Well, am Ihurting you? Or you know
    is   everything okay?      I just        want to make sure   that you’re like comfortable.”   DeLeon testified that
    this   statement referred to a basketball practice during which he had unknowingly hurt M.G. by
    inadvertently touching her breast and she had been embarrassed to explain her pain in front of
    the other players.     The conversation           also spanned other topics ranging     from the inappropriateness
    of physical violence       in a relationship to      M.G.    getting whistled at in a store to the size of DeLeon’s
    girlfriend’s vagina.       D.A. made a copy of the recording and took it to school officials, leading to the
    police investigation and this prosecution.
    M.G.     testified at trial that   DeLeon      assaulted her four times during the        summer of
    201 l—-three times      at   her home and once        at his.   She testified that one time he lay on top of her with
    his clothes on.    M.G.   said that another time he touched the outside of her private parts with his
    finger. She testified that DeLeon asked if she was okay or if he was hurting her. She said that, after
    this incident,   she requested a different babysitter, but her mother               still   chose DeLeon. She testified
    that when she    and her brother stayed overnight at DeLeon’ s house, DeLeon touched her private parts
    while her brother slept next to them. In the final incident, she testified that she and                          DeLeon were
    in her mother’s    room talking when DeLeon pulled his pants down and told her to touch his penis.
    She said   that she   touched     it   briefly and that he then grabbed her hand, put                 it   onto his penis, and
    moved their hands up and down on his penis while he grunted. She testified that, after five minutes,
    something gooey came out of his penis.
    M.G. conceded          at trial that    she had related different versions of these assaults at
    different times to different audiences.             M.G.   told her   mother that DeLeon assaulted her once, told
    a child advocate about three instances, and testified about four instances.                        At trial, she recanted her
    allegation to the child advocate that DeLeon               had touched the inside of her vagina. She testified that
    the touching hurt but had told the child advocate that it had not hurt.                  At trial, she rejected her report
    that   one of the incidents occurred during the day, insisting that                 it   occurred at night. M.G. told a
    child advocate that the    phone recorded the March 19 phone conversation without her knowledge,
    but she recanted that assertion          at trial   and explained the steps needed           to   make    a recording.    M.G.
    acknowledged      at trial that   she was sometimes perceived as “overly dramatic.”
    DeLeon argued          that the allegations of assault          were unfounded. He denied              that   he
    touched M.G.’s sexual organ and that she touched                      his.   He   denied being unclothed around the
    children and denied sleeping in a bed with them.                 DeLeon testified that his relationship with D.A.
    and her family changed       in the fall     of 201   1   when she began dating a man whom DeLeon described
    as extremely jealous.         D.A. changed M.G.’s phone number—M.G. linked the change to D.A.’s new
    boyfriend, but D.A. testified          it   was because DeLeon yelled       at   M.G. on the phone after she did not
    invite     him     to her holiday   band concert    in   December 2011. M.G.           testified that she surreptitiously
    stored his        number in her new phone under the name “William.” DeLeon testified                        that   he decided
    not to communicate with the family beginning in December 201                     1.   In February 20 l 2,   DA. contacted
    him       after   he sent a flyer to students    at his   school (including D.G.) regarding an event in Austin.
    DeLeon testified that D.A.           called to   tell   him that M.G. (who was now attending a different school
    for sixth graders)        wanted    to attend.
    DeLeon   testified that   D.A. used inappropriate language around the children when
    talking about topics including her ex—husbands and ex—boyfriends.                      He testified that M.G. picked up
    the language         from her mother. He acknowledged that he fell into similar patterns when around the
    family, including during the recorded              March l9 telephone       conversation.
    DeLeon’s brother, who has lived with DeLeon for almost fifteen years, testified that
    he never heard DeLeon express a sexual                   interest in children.   DeLeon’s brother testified          that they
    watched television together the night             that    M.G.   said   DeLeon   assaulted her at the brothers’        home.
    He testified that DeLeon slept on the couch that night. DeLeon’s brother also testified that the home
    is   l   ,30O square feet, that the bedroom doors had been removed during a remodel, and that the interior
    of the bedrooms was visible from the living room.
    A student, a parent of a student, and two fellow teachers testified about DeLeon.                 The
    student testified that she liked him, found              him truthful, and never had any problems with him. The
    parent testified that she and her daughter loved DeLeon and that he loved the kids, was truthful, and
    was a mentor. One fellow teacher described him                   as truthful, while another testified that she did not
    like   him because he was not prompt. She                 testified that   she told    DeLeon she thought he        acted too
    familiar with      all   the girls   on the team and that he should not be alone with any of the               girls   because
    it   looked inappropriate, but said that she did not see him pay any extra attention to M.G. The teacher
    testified that she found         M.G.    to   be truthful.
    At the punishment phase, DeLeon’s                   friends, colleagues,       and family     testified in
    support of DeLeon. They described him as a good teacher and a good person who was supportive
    and appropriate with children.               A psychologist evaluated DeLeon and testified that the test results
    showed no sexual deviancy,              that   he is quite conservative in his sexual practices,        that   he showed no
    sexual interest in children, and that he scored Very low on a scale of potential recidivism.
    DISCUSSION
    DeLeon raises four issues on appeal. He contends that the court improperly limited
    his ability to confront witnesses            and put on a defense. He argues that the evidence            is   insufficient to
    prove    all   of the required elements.         He contends that the trial court erred by denying his motion for
    mistrial based      on the prosecution’s comment on his                failure to testify.    DeLeon also asserts      that the
    sentence was unconstitutional because                 it is   disproportionate and cruel and unusual.
    DeLeon was not harmed by any error in                         the exclusion of evidence.
    DeLeon contends            that the trial court   abused   its   discretion   and violated   his right to
    confront witnesses when it prevented him from cross-examining D.A. about problems she had with
    Child Protective Services, in particular D.A.’s report to                     DeLeon      that she    had abused her      son.
    DeLeon also contends that the trial court improperly refused to allow him to question D.A. regarding
    her anger after he ignored her romantic advances toward him.                             He   contends that this evidence
    would have shown that D.A.’s report of his                alleged abuse         was a tactic   to divert attention      from her
    abuse of her children.
    The Constitution guarantees defendants a meaningful opportunity                                   to present a
    complete defense. Crane        v.      Kentucky, 
    476 U.S. 683
    , 690 (1986); see also U.S. Const. amends. VI
    (compulsory process and confrontation of witnesses)                     & XIV (due process).        There      is,   however, no
    absolute constitutional right to present favorable evidence. Potier                       v.   State, 
    68 S.W.3d 657
    , 659
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2002) (citing United States                v.   Sc/zefler, 
    523 U.S. 303
    ,        316 (1998)). The             right to
    present relevant evidence         is   subject to reasonable restrictions through evidentiary rules that are
    not arbitrary or disproportionate to the rule’s purpose.                 Id.;   see also Davis v. State, 
    313 S.W.3d 317
    ,
    329 n.26 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010). The improper exclusion of evidence may establish a constitutional
    violation (1)     when   a state evidentiary rule categorically and arbitrarily prohibits the defendant
    from offering relevant evidence            that is vital to his defense; or (2)         when a trial    court precludes the
    defendant from presenting a defense by erroneously excluding relevant evidence that                                     is    a vital
    portion ofthe case.      Ray v.   State,    l78 S.W.3d 833, 835 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005). The exclusion of
    evidence    is   unconstitutional only where        it   infringes     on a weighty     interest   of the accused. 
    Potier, 68 S.W.3d at 660
    (citing 
    Schejfer, 523 U.S. at 308
    ).     Erroneous evidentiary rulings rarely rise to the
    level   of denying the fundamental constitutional rights                 to present a   meaningfiil defense.            
    Id. at 663.
    The courts’    exercise of discretion          is   guided by competing        interests.     Courts should
    permit great latitude for the accused to show any fact that would tend to establish                         ill—feeling, bias,
    motive and animus upon the part of any witness testifying against him. Koehler v. State, 
    679 S.W.2d 6
    ,   9 (Tex. Crim. App. 1984).            On the   other hand, the        trial   judge retains wide latitude          to    impose
    reasonable limits on cross-examination to                show bias based on concerns           about,   among other things,
    harassment, prejudice, confusion of the issues, the witness’ s safety, or interrogation that is repetitive
    or only marginally relevant. Irby                v.   State,   
    327 S.W.3d 138
    , 145 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).
    The parties at trial entered an agreed order in limine concerning the mention of prior
    contact between any of the witnesses and Child Protective Services. During his cross—examination
    of D.A., DeLeon notified the court that he intended to ask questions regarding CPS involvement with
    D.A.’s family, which prompted the following exchange:
    [Defense counsel]:     . There is direct relations to this discipline going on that ties
    .   .   .
    to a very important defensive theory that this discipline made the child scared of her
    mother.
    THE COURT: You haven’t shown anything yet, Counsel, so I am not going to let
    anything like that   in,   unless you           show something that has some bearing on the case.
    [Defense counsel]: Well, then—okay, a                         later   time then. Okay. So that’s   fine.
    During DeLeon’s testimony, the State objected when he mentioned that the children had been
    “retumed from CPS custody,” and the court cautioned the witness not to blurt out CPS references.
    Later,   DeLeon agreed with         a question that after a conversation with D.A. he felt compelled to do
    something—specifically, “as an educator,                        it   was my obligation to Contact CPS to let them know—”
    at   which time the   State again objected              and invoked the motion           in limine.   The following exchange
    occurred during a bench conference:
    [Defense counsel]: This is different, Judge. This goes to her motive in                             filing the
    case. This is not talking about something that happened in the past. This                           is   talking
    about directly what her motive would be when this case was started.
    [Prosecutor]:   So wouldn’t the appropriate person to be—have gone                            into that    been
    with her?
    [Defense counsel]: This               is   my case. You can recall her.
    7
    [Prosecutor]: This witness can’t testify about her motive.
    [Defense counsel]: He can testify about what happened, not her motive.                 I   can argue
    it, based on the evidence.
    THE COURT:                I’m sustaining the objection at this time.   You can call the appropriate
    person to do        it.
    DeLeon      did not recall D.A. for further interrogation, but after the close of evidence, his attorney
    made the     following offer of proof:
    We   attempted to ask questions before the jury concerning whether [D.A.] had
    informed my client, Steven DeLeon, of child abuse that she had inflicted upon her
    son, [D.G.]. And that would have given her a direct motive to go into the place with
    a recording [of the phone conversation between M.G. and DeLeon]. It happened
    shortly before the recording was—excuse me—shortly before the recording was
    discovered. And that would have prompted her to go to the authorities with that and
    given her motive. And we were not allowed to ask those questions.
    It is   not entirely clear that      DeLeon preserved      this issue for appellate review.       To
    preserve error in the admission of evidence, a party generally must                        make   a complaint to the
    trial   court with sufficient specificity that the trial court is aware of the complaint, and the court must
    rule    on the request. Tex. R. App. P.           33.1(a). In order for a defendant to perfect a complaint that he
    was not allowed to inquire regarding a witness or party’s bias, he must establish what subject matter
    he desired      to   examine the witness about during the cross—examination. 
    Koelzler, 679 S.W.2d at 9
    .
    DeLeon      has not     shown that he was          totally forbidden    from making the    inquiries.   The   trial   court
    stopped him from asking D.A. about                  CPS until he “show[ed] something that has some bearing on
    the case.”    When the State objected to defense counsel’s attempt to ask DeLeon aboutD.A.’s motive
    for contacting        law enforcement, the         trial   court sustained the objection “at this time,” adding this
    directive to counsel:   “You can call the appropriate person to do it.” DeLeon did not recall D.A.                                or
    any other witness on the subject.
    Even   if DeLeon’s offer       of proof is sufficient   to preserve the issue regarding                      CPS’s
    investigation into a report of abuse,     DeLeon has not demonstrated that the trial court erred. There
    is   no showing that evidence relating     to D.A.’s abuse         of D.G. had any relevance on any element of
    whether DeLeon sexually assaulted M.G.             It   can therefore be excluded absent some other theory of
    admissibility.   See Tex. R. Evid. 402. Whether D.A. abused her son is not admissible impeachment
    evidence about her character for truthfulness and             is   not evidence of conviction for a crime. See
    Tex. R. Evid. 608(a), 609.      It is   a specific instance of conduct           which “may not be inquired                      into
    on cross—examination of the witness nor proved by              extrinsic evidence.”              See   
    id. 608(b). Also,
    the
    relevance to bias or motivation for D.A. reporting the recording of the phone conversation between
    MG. and DeLeon is not plainly apparent.             Ifl as   DeLeon argues, D.A. wanted to distract CPS from
    the report that she abused her son,     it is   not clear that she would serve that purpose by reporting that
    her daughter was sexually abused by a             man D.A.     repeatedly selected as a babysitter despite her
    daughter’s request that she not do so. Further, because there              is   no challenge           to the validity        of the
    recorded phone conversation, D.A.’s motive or bias in supplying                   it   to   law enforcement              is   at best
    marginally relevant to the contested issues in this case. See 
    Irby, 327 S.W.3d at 145
                              (trial   court can
    limit marginally relevant interrogation).         The content of the conversation matters much more. On
    the record presented, the   trial   court did not err     by excluding evidence of D.A.’s involvement with
    CPS and did not prevent DeLeon from presenting a defense.
    Harm from any wrongful             exclusion of this evidence              is   also not apparent.             The
    recording was not made in retaliation for D.A.’s admission of abuse. The conversation occurred on
    March     19,   2012, and D.A. made the abuse admission to DeLeon “shortlybefore” she discovered the
    recording on M.G.’s phone on May 20, 2012.          DeLeon does not dispute          that   he made the recorded
    statement, and although M.G.      may have introduced the topic of DeLeon’ s discomfort with discussion
    of female body parts, he      initiated the discussion   of unspecified events with      MG. when he wanted
    to ensure that she was comfortable      and that he was not hurting her. The trial court’s failure to allow
    DeLeon to delve into D.A.’s potential motivations for disclosing this recording to law enforcement
    did not affect the jury’s consideration of the substance of the phone        call.
    Further diminishing any harm,    DeLeon was      able to challenge D.A.’s and M.G.’s
    credibility in other ways.    DeLeon testified and flatly denied that the assaults occurred. He presented
    evidence that D.A. was biased against him because she was angered by his rejection of her romantic
    overtures.      He queried M.G. who    said that D.A.    had a “crush” on DeLeon and that he did not            like
    her mother in that way. DeLeon’ s brother testified that D.A. was obsessed with DeLeon and that his
    brother did not return her affection.      He testified that D.A. would show up              at the brothers’   house
    unannounced while they were out and would wash their dishes and feed their dog. DeLeon himself
    testified that    D.A. wanted to marry him but that, while he was interested in helping her children, he
    was not    interested in marriage with her. All this testimony called into question D.A.’s credibility
    because she testified that she and DeLeon went on a date but decided that they were better off as
    friends. Further, although     D.A. asserted that she did not telephone DeLeon, he confronted her with
    records showing that 570 calls went from her phone to his.         He confronted M.G.          about the different
    stories   of abuse she told to different questioners.    He highlighted the fact that she reported one, then
    three, then four incidents,   and noted inconsistencies between versions as to whether the contact hurt,
    where her brother was during an incident, and whether the         assault occurred during the         day or night.
    10
    Further,   DeLeon’s brother contradicted               details   of M.G.’s story about the assault            at the brothers’
    house.    The trial court’s failure to allow him to obtain the testimony he wanted about D.A.’s alleged
    abuse of her son did not prevent him from confronting witnesses and challenging their                             credibility.
    We conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that any erroneous exclusion of evidence discussed above
    did not contribute to DeLeon’s conviction or punishment. See Tex. R. App. P. 44.2(a).
    The evidence is     sufficient to support the conviction.
    In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction,                         we determine
    whether a rational trier of fact could have found that the essential elements of the crime were proven
    beyond a reasonable doubt. Brooks                v.   State,   
    323 S.W.3d 893
    , 895 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010). In
    making this determination, we consider all evidence that the trier of fact was permitted to                         consider,
    regardless of whether     it   was    rightly or      wrongly admitted. Clayton            v.   State,   
    235 S.W.3d 772
    , 778
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2007); Allen v. State, 
    249 S.W.3d 680
    , 688-89 (Tex.                            App.—Austin 2008, no pet.).
    We view this evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict.                        
    Clayton, 235 S.W.3d at 778
    .      The
    jury, as the trier of fact,   is   the sole judge of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given
    to their testimony. 
    Id. Therefore, we
    presume that the jury resolved any conflicting inferences and
    issues   of credibility in favor of the judgment.              
    Id. A person
    commits continuous sexual abuse of a child                       if,   while the person is 17 years
    of age or older and the victim is a child younger than fourteen years, the person commits two or more
    acts   of sexual abuse during a period that is 30 or more days in duration. Tex. Penal Code § 21.02(b).
    Acts of sexual abuse include indecency with a child                           if the   person committed the offense in a
    manner other than by touching the child’s breast,                    
    id. § 21.11(a)(1),
    sexual assault, 
    id. § 22.011,
      and
    aggravated sexual assault,          
    id. § 22.011.
    11
    M.G. ’s testimony is sufficient to support the conviction.           It is   undisputed that DeLeon
    and M.G. were, respectively,             thirty-nine   and twelve years old during the summer of 2011. M.G.
    testified that around June 3 201 1, ,
    DeLeon touched her vagina. She testified that they were lying on
    the floor, he asked her to         remove her shorts, and he moved his fingers on her vagina. She testified
    that, after   he touched her for about five minutes, he kissed her neck really hard and left a mark. She
    said he asked if she        was okay or       if   he was hurting her. This testimony supports a finding that
    DeLeon committed indecency with a child by contact. See                      
    id. § 21.1
    l(a)(1).    M.G.    testified that,
    about a month later—longer than thirty days, she said—when she and her brother were staying
    overnight     at   DeLeon’s house, DeLeon touched her vagina. She testified that, wl1ile they were lying
    on his bed, he asked her to remove her shorts and underwear, and he moved                           his   finger around and
    inside her vagina for about            five minutes. He again asked her if he was hurting her. This testimony
    supports a finding of indecency with a child by contact, sexual assault of a child, and aggravated
    sexual assault of a child. See 
    id. §§ 21.l1(a)(l),
    22.011(a)(2), 22.021(a)(1)(B)(i). M.G. testified that
    about three weeks        later   when she and DeLeon were talking in her mom’s bedroom, DeLeon pulled
    down his pajama pants and told M.G. to touch his penis. She did quickly, but he grabbed her hand,
    put his hand over hers, and moved their hands together up and down his penis for about five minutes.
    She said he made grunting noises, then something clear and gooey came out of the top of                                    his
    penis. This testimony is sufficient to support a             finding of indecency with a child by contact. See 
    id. § 21.1
    1(a)(1).      The   child testified that the second incident occurred            more than thirty days          after the
    first,   and that the third incident occurred about three weeks              after the second.       Even if the testimony
    that the   second incident occurred “about a              mom     ”
    after the first   were insufficient        to   show   the
    requisite period, the third incident occurred about a                  month and       three   weeks      after the   first—a
    12
    combination sufficient to support a finding of two incidents of sexual abuse of a child occurring over
    a period of at least thirty days. See             
    id. § 2l.02(b)(1).
    DeLeon challenges M.G.’s credibility, pointing to inconsistencies               in her statements
    at   various times and to contrary testimony by others.                  He notes her failure to make an outcry before
    her mother confronted her with the recorded telephone conversation with DeLeon.                         He points out
    that   she reported one incident, then three, then four, and that her reports varied with regard to
    how he touched her, whether his touch hurt, what time the offenses occurred, and where her brother
    was during these           events.     He   notes that she admitted liking to use sexual language, initiating the
    sexual theme into the telephone conversation, and being overly dramatic.                     DeLeon also points to his
    brotl1er’s   testimony that           DeLeon did not      share a bed with her    when   she stayed at their   home and
    that the   bedrooms         at that   house have no doors. The jury, however, could have either rejected            that
    testimony or found that the offense simply occurred in a short period during which DeLeon’s brother
    was not monitoring him. The jury was faced with a credibility choice and selected M.G. The record
    is   not such that we can intrude on the jury’s role and override its choice to credit M.G.’s testimony.
    See 
    Clayton, 235 S.W.3d at 778
    ; Jones v. State, 
    944 S.W.2d 642
    , 648 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996).         We
    find the evidence           sufficient to support the conviction.
    The court  did not abuse its discretion by denying DeLeon’s motion for mistrial during the
    State’s argument at the punishment phase.
    Permissible jury argument includes summation of the evidence, reasonable
    deduction from the evidence, answer to argument of opposing counsel, and plea for law enforcement.
    Allridge     v.   State,   
    762 S.W.2d 146
    , 155 (Tex. Crim. App. 1988). Commenting on an accused’s
    failure to testify violates his state            and federal constitutional privileges against self—incrimination.
    13
    Arc/zie   v.    State,   
    340 S.W.3d 734
    , 738 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011).                A defendant’s Fifth Amendment
    privilege against self—incrimination continues during the punishment phase of trial. See Mitchell
    v.   United States, 
    526 U.S. 314
    , 325-27 (1999); Carroll v. State, 
    42 S.W.3d 129
    , 131-32 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2001).
    We can reverse      a   trial   court’s denial of a   motion for mistrial only for an abuse
    of discretion. Archie v. State, 22] S.W.3d 695, 699 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007). To determine whether
    the court’s instruction cured the prejudicial effect of the improper                         comment, we balance
    three factors: (1) the severity of the misconduct’s prejudicial effect, (2) any curative measures,
    and    (3) the likelihood      of the same punishment being assessed absent the misconduct. Hawkins
    v.   State, 
    135 S.W.3d 72
    , 75 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004). Mistrial              is   the appropriate   remedy when the
    objectionable events are so emotionally inflammatory that curative instructions are not likely to
    prevent the juiy from being unfairly prejudiced against the defendant. 
    Archie, 340 S.W.3d at 739
    .
    Only in extreme circumstances where the prejudice is incurable will a mistrial be required. 
    Hawkins, 135 S.W.3d at 77
    .    Where a comment            leads to   two plausible inferences—one of which              is
    permissible—we do not presume that the jury would necessarily choose the improper inference. See
    Henson     v.   State,   
    683 S.W.2d 702
    , 704-05 (Tex. Crim. App. 1984).               A comment on the defendant’s
    failure to      show remorse     is   generally not proper if the defendant testifies at the guilt stage and
    presents       some defense, but does not testify at the punishment phase. Randolph v. State, 
    353 S.W.3d 887
    , 892 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011).              The prosecutor may during the punishment phase comment on
    any testimony given by the defendant                 in the guilt/innocence   phase and,   if the   defendant expressly
    or impliedly denies criminal responsibility during that testimony, the prosecutor may                      comment on
    that denial. 
    Id. at 895.
         A statement during punishment argument that the defendant failed to express
    14
    remorse might be taken as a comment on his                      failure to testify, but   any harm from that violation
    can be cured by an instruction               to disregard the   comment. Moore     v.   State,   
    999 S.W.2d 385
    , 405-06
    (Tex. Crim. App. l999).
    DeLeon contends that the trial court should have granted his motion for mistrial after
    the State commented on his exercise of his right to remain silent during the sentencing phase of trial.
    DeLeontestif1ed during the guilt/innocence phase and denied committing the offense but did not take
    the stand during the punishment phase.                The controversy centers on the following exchange during
    the State’s punishment argument:
    [Prosecutor]:    .   And it’s scary the way that he conducted himself, the absolute
    .   .   .
    denial with what he showed, and then the complete support of his family behind him.
    I do not believe 25 years, as a punishment, is appropriate in this case. Ibelieve a
    sentence of 60 years would be appropriate. [M.G.] is going to have to live with this
    for the rest of her          life.
    And if the Defendant had taken the stand, admitted what he had done, and begged for
    forgiveness, I believe the minimum sentence would be appropriate. But that’s not
    what we have here.
    [Defense counsel]: Your honor, could                    we approach the bench?
    (Bench Conference)
    DEFENSE MOTION FOR MISTRIAL
    [Defense counsel]: I am going to ask for a mistrial. He did not testify at punishment.
    He just said to the jury, if he got up on the stand at this phase and told you—
    [Prosecutorl]:       Iwas specifically          referring to guilt/innocence.
    [Defense counsel]:   didn’t say that. He said, if he got
    He                                               up here and asked   for
    forgiveness—this—I’m asking for a mistrial, Judge.
    15
    COURT’S RULING
    The Court: Well, you’re not going             to get one.      I   am   going to instruct the jury   to
    disregard that.
    [Defense counsel]: That’s unbelievable.
    (Open Court.)
    The Court: Ladies and gentlemen, the last comment by the prosecutor is improper,
    and you will not consider that for any purpose whatsoever.
    The   court then expressly denied the motion for mistrial.
    As   the   trial   court found, the argument      was improper. The prosecutor’s comment
    violated DeLeon’s right not to testify. See 
    Randolph, 353 S.W.3d at 89l
    . Even if the statement that
    DeLeon     did not take the stand and admit what he had done referred to DeLeon’s testimony
    at guilt/innocence        during which he denied wrongdoing, the statement that he did not beg for
    forgiveness    is   equivalent to the failure to express remorse found to be an improper                    comment by
    the court of criminal appeals. See Swallow             v.   State,   
    829 S.W.2d 223
    , 226 (Tex. Crim. App. 1992),
    overruled    in     part by 
    Randolph, 353 S.W.3d at 894-95
    (distinguishing between prosecutorial
    argument that defendant did not accept responsibility—a proper summation of the defendant’s
    guilt/innocence testimony denying committing the                     crime—from argument that defendant did not
    express   remorse—an improper comment on the failure to testify at punishment).
    We conclude, however, that the trial court’ s prompt, thorough, and proper instruction
    to the jury to entirely disregard the prosecutor’s                 argument cured the harm. DeLeon received a
    sentence of thirty—two years—seven years above the minimum of twenty-five years permitted for the
    offense of continuous sexual abuse of a child, but well below the maximum                      life   sentence permitted.
    See Tex. Penal Code             § 2l.O2(h).   Considering that the sexual abuse of the child found by the jury
    16
    was committed by an elementary school teacher——one                         entrusted with the safety and well—being of
    children—we are confident that the jury was not inflamed by the improper comment and very likely
    would have assessed the same punishment absent the misconduct. 
    Hawkins, 135 S.W.3d at 77
    . The
    trial   court did not abuse     its   discretion   by denying the motion for mistrial.
    The sentence did not violate the constitution.
    DeLeon contends       that his    punishment violates constitutional prohibitions against
    cruel    and unusual punishment because it does not have a possibility of parole. See Tex. Penal Code
    § 21.02(h); see also Tex.        Gov’t Code        § 508.l45(a).      He notes that his minimum possible sentence
    was twenty-five years         in prison, while     someone who murders             a child could get as   few as five years
    in prison with a possibility          of parole. See Tex. Penal Code            § 12.32; Tex.    Gov’t Code    § 508.l45(t).
    He      contends   that,   because a child murderer sentenced                  to thirty-two years in prison        would be
    eligible for parole but he      would not, his sentence is disproportionate to his crime. He contends that,
    in assessing whether this categorical denial of parole to persons guilty of continuous child sexual
    abuse     is   cruel   and unusual,     we   should examine four factors:               (1)    whether there   is   a national
    consensus against imposing the particular punishment                         at issue; (2)     the moral culpability of the
    offenders at issue in light of their crimes and characteristics; (3) the severity of the punishment; and
    (4)   whether the punishment serves legitimate penological goals. Meadoux v. State, 
    325 S.W.3d 189
    ,
    194 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010). He contends that murder is a worse crime than sexual abuse and that
    Texas’s sentencing parameters are inconsistent with that hierarchy.                        He contends that the sentence
    is   severe because he will be incarcerated until he               is in   his late sixties.
    The State leans on the conclusion by the Amarillo court that the punishment structure
    for continuous sexual abuse of a child                  is   constitutional,    even when a person about forty years
    17
    of age   is   sentenced to a sixty—year prison term without the possibility of parole. Glover                          v.   State,
    
    406 S.W.3d 343
    , 346-50 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 2013,                            pet.    ref d). The Amarillo court found a
    national consensus in favor of the constitutionality of the sentencing range for this offense, primarily
    based on the request by a judge on the Court of Criminal Appeals that the legislature enact tougher
    punishment on those who commit continuous sexual assaults of children. See                                  
    id. at 348
       (citing
    Dixon    v.   State,    
    201 S.W.3d 731
    , 737 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006) (Cochran,                        J.,   concurring)).       The
    Amarillo court wrote that—despite court holdings that murder is a more serious offense than child
    sexual assault—the nature of the offense,                its   repetitive nature,   and the vulnerability of child victims
    combined to make the moral culpability of the offenders weigh in favor of the no—parole punishment
    being constitutional. 
    Glover, 406 S.W.3d at 348-49
    .   The Amarillo       court opined that the severity
    of imprisonment for sixty years              (in that case) without the possibility          of parole weighed against the
    constitutionality of the statute. 
    Id. at 349.
    Finally, the Amarillo court opined that the                       mere fact that
    the sentencing range for this offense            is   greater than that for child murder does not necessarily render
    the sentencing range unconstitutional. 
    Id. That court
    reasoned that those convicted of the crime are
    already recidivists and opined that they are more likely to reoffend than murderers who, aside from
    serial killers,   tend not to reoffend.         
    Id. at 349—50.
       The court held that the prison term without parole
    served the penological goals of retribution, deterrence, and incapacitation.                        
    Id. DeLeon has
    presented no evidence or argument that requires rejection of the Glover
    opinion.      The sentence imposed in this case—thirty—two years                     in   prison—is substantially      less than
    the sixty—year prison term             imposed on a similarly aged defendant                 in that case   and found        to   be
    constitutional.        See   
    id. at 345.
      We are not persuaded that the mere fact that a child sexual abuser
    might be sentenced to a longer prison term than a child murderer necessarily renders the sentencing
    18
    structure unconstitutional.   Assuming that criminal behavior is     affected   by the punishment ranges
    enshrined in law,   we are somewhat concerned by the “incentive” inherent in a sentencing structure
    that mandates a   minimum sentence for a person who improperly sexually touches a child twice that
    is   five times longer than the   five-year   minimum sentence available   for a person   who murders that
    same child, but we are not persuaded that our concern is sufficient to render the statutes or DeLeon’ s
    sentence unconstitutional.
    CONCLUSION
    Finding that DeLeon has presented no reversible error,       we affirm the judgment.
    Jeff Rose, Chief Justice
    Before Chief Justice Rose, Justices Pernbeiton and Bourland
    Affirmed
    Filed:    May 29, 2015
    Do Not Publish
    19
    TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN
    JUDGMENT RENDERED MAY 29, 2015
    NO. 03-13-00202—CR
    Steven DeLeon, Appellant
    v.
    The State of Texas, Appellee
    APPEAL FROM 421ST DISTRICT COURT OF CALDWELL COUNTY
    BEFORE CHIEF JUSTICE ROSE, JUSTICES PEMBERTON AND BOURLAND
    AFFIRMED -- OPINION BY CHIEF JUSTICE ROSE
    This   is   an appeal from the judgment entered by the      trial court.   Having reviewed the record and
    the parties’ arguments, the Court holds that there          was no    reversible error in the trial court’s
    judgment. Therefore, the Court affirms the      trial     court’s judgment.    The appellant   shall   pay   all
    costs relating to this appeal, both in this Court   and the court below.
    COURT OF APPEALS
    THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    PO.   BOX I2547, AUSTIN, TEXAS 78711-2547
    www,lxcourIs.g0v/3rdcoa.aspx
    (512) 463-1733
    JEFF   L.   ROSE. CHIEF JUSTICE                                                             JEFFREY D. KYLE, CLERK
    DAVID PURYEAR, JUSTICE
    BOB PEMBERTON. JUSTICE
    MELISSA GOODWIN, JUSTICE
    SCOTT K. FIELD, JUSTICE
    CINDY OLSON BOURLAND, JUSTICE
    September      17,   2015
    Ms. Kathryn T. Alsobrook                                             Ms. Kerrisa J. Chelkowski
    Assistant Criminal District Attorney                                 Law Office of Kerrisa Chelkowski
    Caldwell County, Texas                                               1017 South Alamo
    P. O. Box 869
    ‘-
    San Antonio,TX 78210
    Lockhait, TX 78644                                                   *   DELIVERED VIA E-MAIL *
    *   DELIVERED VIA E-MAIL *
    RE:          Court of Appeals Number:     O3-13-00202~CR
    Trial Court Case Number:     20 I 2-1 66
    Style:         Steven DeLe0n
    v.The State of Texas
    Dear Counsel:
    Appellant's motion for rehearing   was overruled by this Court on the date noted above.
    Very truly yours,
    JEFFREY D. KYLE, CLERK
    C      QT‘
    BY:
    -
    e,/(4%?/kn
    Liz Talerico, Deputy Clerk