Juan Alberto Salazar Meza v. THE STATE OF TEXAS ( 2024 )


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  • AFFIRMED and Opinion Filed July 29, 2024
    S  In The
    Court of Appeals
    Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
    No. 05-23-00375-CR
    JUAN ALBERTO SALAZAR MEZA, Appellant
    V.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
    On Appeal from the 219th Judicial District Court
    Collin County, Texas
    Trial Court Cause No. 219-82319-2022
    OPINION
    Before Justices Reichek, Goldstein, and Garcia
    Opinion by Justice Goldstein
    Juan Alberto Salazar Meza appeals his continuous sexual abuse of a child
    conviction.    A jury convicted appellant and sentenced him to fifty years’
    confinement. In two issues, appellant argues the trial court erred in failing to submit
    a lesser-included offense instruction to the jury, and the evidence is legally
    insufficient to support his conviction. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    BACKGROUND
    In June 2022, appellant was charged by indictment with continuous sexual
    assault of C.V., a child younger than fourteen, on or about the first day of November
    2021 through the seventeenth day of March 2022.
    At trial in March 2023, C.V. testified she was twelve years old at the time of
    trial, and she lived in an apartment in Plano with her mother, nine-year-old sister,
    I.V., and her younger brother. When C.V. first met appellant, she thought he was
    her “mom’s friend,” but she also thought appellant and her mother were “dating”
    because he would “stay over” at their apartment sometimes. C.V. thought appellant
    was “cool” because he helped her with her homework, cooked food, and took C.V.
    and her sister and brother for ice cream. At that time, C.V.’s mother worked two
    jobs, and appellant usually came over on Thursdays at approximately 4:00 p.m.
    when C.V.’s mother left for work. C.V.’s mother usually came home from work at
    11:00 p.m., and appellant stayed the night.
    C.V. moved to the Plano apartment in “early 2021.” Appellant sometimes
    tickled C.V. and, when C.V. was eleven years old and living in the Plano apartment,
    appellant was tickling C.V. on her tummy when he “decided to change it up a little”
    and started “touching [C.V.’s] private” over her clothes. C.V. testified that her
    “private” was her “front bottom” that girls use to “pee.” Appellant moved his hand
    “up and down,” and C.V. felt “very uncomfortable” and “confused as to what
    –2–
    [appellant] was trying to do.” C.V. “moved away,” appellant stopped touching her,
    and “[t]hings just went back to normal, I guess we stopped playing.”
    In the apartment living room, there were two couches: a “gray couch and a
    long brown [couch]” arranged in an “L form.” On another occasion, C.V.’s sister
    was playing outside, her brother was asleep on the brown couch, and C.V. and
    appellant were on the gray couch when appellant touched C.V.’s “front part” with
    his hand moving “up and down” both “over and under” her clothes. C.V. was
    wearing loose shorts, and appellant moved his hand up her thigh and under C.V.’s
    underwear where he “started doing the same movement as he did over the clothes to
    [C.V.’s] front private.” Appellant’s fingers went inside C.V.’s “front private part,”
    and it felt “[w]eird but not in a good way and it kind of hurt.” Appellant moved his
    fingers “[i]n and out” of C.V.’s private part for “30 seconds, a minute” and stopped
    when C.V.’s brother “moved a little bit like he was about to wake up.” C.V.’s
    brother “kind of went back to sleep,” and appellant touched C.V. again “in the same
    way,” but this time appellant took C.V.’s hand and “forced [her] to touch” his private
    part outside his pants.
    When asked if there was a time when appellant touched C.V. and himself at
    the same time, C.V. described an assault that occurred when she was watching
    YouTube on her laptop in her top bunk bed. Appellant stood on the lower bunk bed
    and reached up to “put his fingers inside of [C.V.’s] private part.” C.V. could tell
    appellant was also touching himself because C.V. heard appellant’s “bracelets
    –3–
    jingling.” C.V. testified there were other times appellant touched her and himself at
    the same time, but she did not remember the details.
    C.V. testified there were also times when appellant put his mouth on her front
    private part. These assaults happened in C.V.’s bunk bed and “especially in the
    bedroom” on the queen-sized bed. C.V. described one instance in which appellant
    climbed up on the top bunk with C.V., pulled C.V.’s shorts and underwear
    “somewhere down [her] legs,” and licked C.V.’s private part. Similar assaults
    occurred in the queen bed “[m]ore than five times probably” and in C.V.’s bunk bed
    “more than once, less than five” times.
    C.V. remembered one occasion when she was lying on her stomach and
    watching YouTube on the queen bed. Appellant sat on the bed, lifted C.V. from the
    hips, pulled down C.V.’s shorts and underwear, took out his private part, and “tried
    to put it in [C.V.’s] private part.” This assault “hurt a lot,” and appellant was not
    able to put his private part in C.V.’s private part. Nevertheless, appellant’s private
    part contacted C.V.’s private part. Appellant “kept trying to, like, put it in” and kept
    putting C.V. in “that position,” but eventually he “gave up.”
    On more than one occasion in her mother’s bedroom, appellant tried
    unsuccessfully to put his private part in C.V.’s “bottom,” which she identified as the
    part she used for “[p]ooping.” C.V. testified appellant’s private part contacted her
    bottom, and he tried to put his private part in the “hole.”
    –4–
    C.V. testified an assault occurred on the brown couch where appellant pulled
    down her “pants or shorts or whatever [she] was wearing and [her] underwear,” took
    out his private part, and touched himself. C.V. knew he was “messing with his
    private part” because of “the bracelets.” C.V. felt “this warm temperature” in her
    bottom and, when appellant left to go to the restroom, saw white liquid on her
    bottom. Appellant “came back in with toilet paper and he wiped off the thing from
    [her] bottom.”
    Around February 2022, C.V. told her mother that appellant was touching her,
    but appellant “lied” when C.V.’s mother talked to him. C.V.’s mother told C.V. “not
    to tell anyone else about it,” and appellant continued to come over on Thursdays.
    Appellant acted “normal for a little bit” but started “doing things” to C.V. again.
    In March 2022, C.V. was called into the counselor’s office at school. C.V.
    did not know, at first, why she was called into the office, but the counselor
    “mentioned something” about how C.V.’s sister told the counselor “about the things
    that were going on in the home.” C.V. testified she did not “remember everything
    that [she] told the counselor,” but she remembered crying while talking to the
    counselor and she “believed” she told the counselor what appellant was doing to her.
    C.V. remembered that, after talking to the counselor, she was taken to “another
    place” to do an interview.
    Catie Daniels, a forensic interviewer at the Collin County Children’s
    Advocacy Center, testified that some of the things an interviewer looks for in a
    –5–
    forensic interview are general details, sensory details, consistency, chronological
    order, and “red flags.” General details are the “who, what, where, how something
    happened.” Sensory details are “things that you feel, you hear, you see, you taste”
    and includes “things that you’ve really experienced.” Consistency is present when
    the interviewer asks a child a question and the child gives the same answer even if
    the interviewer has asked the question in a different way. Daniels described
    chronological order as “being able to talk about something from the beginning to the
    end.” “Red flags” are “things in the interview that arise that are questionable” such
    as an inability to give the interviewer any type of details about the abuse.
    Daniels testified she interviewed C.V. in March 2022. C.V. was “able to
    describe things that amounted to sexual abuse,” she used age-appropriate terms, she
    described the abuse and how it felt in detail, and she demonstrated “the position that
    she would have to get in or that [appellant] would want her to be in” over the queen
    bed during the abuse. During the interview, C.V. “talked about how her sister was
    also aware of the situation” and knew her sister had told the counselor in the
    beginning of the week which led to C.V.’s outcry to the counselor and the forensic
    interview that followed.     Specifically, C.V. “talked about how her sister had
    witnessed seeing them under the blankets, the [appellant] and [C.V.], at times.” As
    Daniels “talked through all of these things with [C.V.],” C.V. was able to remain
    consistent in discussing the instances of abuse and gave chronological details and
    sensory details.
    –6–
    C.V.’s sister, I.V., testified she initially liked appellant but stopped liking him
    when she sometimes noticed that C.V. “had a blanket and [appellant] put, like, his
    hand under the blanket.” I.V. did not know what was happening, and she asked C.V.
    what was happening. At first, C.V. did not say what was happening, but the second
    time I.V. asked C.V. told her “the truth.” C.V. told I.V. that appellant “used to like
    touch her on her privates while he put his hand under the blanket.” One day at
    school, a counselor came and gave a lesson about “nobody touch you on your parts.”
    That same day, I.V. told her teacher what was happening. I.V. was “scared that they
    would be mad at [her] for telling [her] teacher.” At the conclusion of the evidence,
    the jury found appellant guilty of continuous sexual assault of a child. This appeal
    followed.
    DISCUSSION
    In his first issue, appellant complains the trial court erred in denying his
    request to submit a jury instruction for the lesser-included offense of indecency with
    a child by touching.
    At the charge conference, appellant’s counsel requested “a lesser-included
    offense of fondling.”    Counsel continued, “if the jury were to conclude that
    obviously he did not commit this more than one time, then, again, there has been
    testimony that the jury could conclude that the hands under the blanket can be some
    form of fondling.” The prosecutor responded:
    –7–
    I think I would -- obviously if we’re going to put a lesser in the charge
    we would need more specificity as to which lesser. Are you asking for
    aggravated sexual assault by penetration of her vagina with his hand or
    are you asking for indecency with a child by his hand contacting her
    vagina? Just putting a lesser of fondling I don’t think is something we
    can do.
    Defense counsel answered that he had “no objections to the touching with the
    hand of the vagina or -- they talked about the touching of the breast, there was breast
    contact touching.” The prosecutor countered that “that wouldn’t be a lesser-included
    because it’s not part of the continuous offense.” The trial court took the discussion
    off the record. Back on the record, the trial court stated that both the State and the
    defense had the proposed charge of the court. The trial court asked if either party
    had “any objections, or requests for instructions to the charge” and both the State
    and the defense stated they had no objections.
    Appellant did not request a jury instruction for the lesser-included offense of
    indecency with a child by touching. See TEX. R. APP. P. 33.1(a) (requiring a timely
    request, objection, or motion to preserve a complaint for appellate review).
    Appellant initially requested “a lesser-included offense of fondling” but after an off-
    the-record discussion, affirmed that there were no objections or requests that
    instructions be added to the charge following the charge conference. Unrequested
    defensive instructions are still subject to ordinary rules of procedural default.
    Williams v. State, 
    662 S.W.3d 452
    , 461 (Tex. Crim. App. 2021). A defendant cannot
    complain for the first time on appeal about the lack of a defensive instruction absent
    preservation of the error. 
    Id.
     Moreover, specific to requests for lesser-included
    –8–
    offenses, the defendant must point to evidence in the record that raises the lesser-
    included offense. 
    Id.
     On this record we conclude appellant failed to preserve this
    issue for our review. See 
    id.
     We overrule appellant’s first issue.
    In his second issue, appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to
    show that he committed multiple instances of sexual abuse against C.V. over a
    period of more than thirty days.1
    The indictment charging appellant with continuous sexual abuse of a child
    under 14, citing penal code section 21.02(b), alleged the abuse occurred “on or about
    the 1st day of November, 2021 through the 17th day of March 2022” under Count I,
    aggravated sexual assault of a child, and alleged appellant, “during a period that was
    30 days or more in duration, committed two or more acts of sexual abuse against
    [C.V.]” and alleged four types of acts.2 The indictment tracks the elements of an
    offense of continuous sexual assault of a young child under section 21.02 of the
    penal code. See TEX. PENAL CODE § 21.02(b)(1).3 Appellant contends that C.V.
    1
    Appellant incorrectly states that he was indicted under section 22.01 of the penal code, “which requires
    proof that two acts of sexual abuse occurred over a period of more than 30 days,” then argues the evidence
    was legally insufficient under section 21.02 of the penal code. We discern the first penal code reference
    was an inadvertent error and proceed with an analysis under section 21.02.
    2
    Count II of the indictment charged appellant with indecency with a child.
    3
    (b) A person commits an offense if:
    (1) during a period that is 30 or more days in duration, the person commits two or more acts of sexual
    abuse, regardless of whether the acts of sexual abuse are committed against one or more victims; and
    (2) at the time of the commission of each of the acts of sexual abuse, the actor is 17 years of age or
    older and the victim is:
    (A) a child younger than 14 years of age, regardless of whether the actor knows the age of the victim
    at the time of the offense; or
    –9–
    made a “clear allegation that an act of abuse occurred in 2021,” but there were not
    sufficient allegations to show that any other incident occurred more than thirty days
    after the first incident. In making this argument, appellant complains that evidence
    of other incidents of abuse only alleged “‘something’ happening.” This is the
    entirety of appellant’s argument, and it is not supported by the record.
    We review a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence under the standard
    of review set forth in Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
     (1979). Brooks v. State, 
    323 S.W.3d 893
    , 912 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010) (plurality op.); Polk v. State, 
    337 S.W.3d 286
    , 288–89 (Tex. App.—Eastland 2010, pet. ref’d). Under the Jackson standard,
    we review all of the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict and determine
    whether any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the
    charged offense beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson, 
    443 U.S. at 319
    ; Isassi v. State,
    
    330 S.W.3d 633
    , 638 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).
    In conducting a sufficiency review, we consider all of the evidence admitted
    at trial, including evidence that may have been improperly admitted. Winfrey v.
    State, 
    393 S.W.3d 763
    , 767 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013); Brooks, 
    323 S.W.3d at 899
    ;
    Clayton v. State, 
    235 S.W.3d 772
    , 778 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007). We defer to the
    factfinder’s role as the sole judge of the witnesses’ credibility and the weight their
    testimony is to be afforded. Brooks, 
    323 S.W.3d at 899
    . This standard is deferential
    (B) a disabled individual.
    TEX. PENAL CODE § 21.02(b).
    –10–
    and accounts for the factfinder’s duty to resolve conflicts in the testimony, to weigh
    the evidence, and to draw reasonable inferences from basic facts to ultimate facts.
    Jackson, 
    443 U.S. at 319
    ; Clayton, 
    235 S.W.3d at 778
    . We may not reevaluate the
    weight and credibility of the evidence to substitute our judgment for that of the
    factfinder. Dewberry v. State, 
    4 S.W.3d 735
    , 740 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999). Thus, if
    the record supports conflicting inferences, we presume that the factfinder resolved
    the conflicts in favor of the verdict, and we defer to that determination. Jackson,
    
    443 U.S. at 326
    ; Merritt v. State, 
    368 S.W.3d 516
    , 525–26 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012);
    Clayton, 
    235 S.W.3d at 778
    .
    The evidence need not directly prove the defendant’s guilt; circumstantial
    evidence is as probative as direct evidence in establishing the defendant’s guilt, and
    circumstantial evidence, alone, can be sufficient to establish guilt. Carrizales v.
    State, 
    414 S.W.3d 737
    , 742 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013) (citing Hooper v. State, 
    214 S.W.3d 9
    , 13 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007)). Each fact need not point directly and
    independently to the defendant’s guilt if the cumulative force of all incriminating
    circumstances is sufficient to support the defendant’s conviction. Hooper, 
    214 S.W.3d at 13
    . Therefore, in evaluating the sufficiency of the evidence, we treat
    direct and circumstantial evidence equally, and we must consider the cumulative
    force of all the evidence. Villa v. State, 
    514 S.W.3d 227
    , 232 (Tex. Crim. App.
    2017); Murray v. State, 
    457 S.W.3d 446
    , 448 (Tex. Crim. App. 2015); Isassi, 
    330 S.W.3d at 638
    ; Hooper, 
    214 S.W.3d at 13
    .
    –11–
    A person commits the offense of continuous sexual abuse of a young child if
    (1) during a period that is thirty or more days in duration, he commits two or more
    acts of sexual abuse, regardless of whether the acts of sexual abuse are committed
    against one or more victims and (2) at the time of the commission of each act of
    sexual abuse, the actor is seventeen years of age or older and the victim is a child
    younger than fourteen years of age, regardless of whether the actor knows the age of
    the victim at the time the offense is committed. TEX. PENAL CODE § 21.02(b). “[A]ct
    of sexual abuse” means an act that violates one or more enumerated penal laws of
    section 21.02(c), which includes the offenses of aggravated sexual assault of a child
    and indecency with a child by contact.          Id. § 21.02(c)(2), (4); see also id.
    §§ 21.11(a)(1), 22.021. Here, the indictment alleged appellant committed two or
    more acts of sexual abuse against C.V. during a period of thirty or more days in
    duration, to-wit: the offenses of aggravated sexual assault of a child and indecency
    with a child by contact. See id. § 21.02(b).
    The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has for decades recognized that child
    victims cannot be expected to testify with the same clarity and ability that is expected
    of mature and capable adults. Villalon v. State, 
    791 S.W.2d 130
    , 134 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 1990). Therefore, “[t]he legislature created the offense of continuous sexual
    abuse of a child in response to a need to address sexual assaults against young
    children who are normally unable to identify the exact dates of the offenses when
    there are ongoing acts of sexual abuse.” Michell v. State, 
    381 S.W.3d 554
    , 561 (Tex.
    –12–
    App.—Eastland 2012, no pet.); see also Williams v. State, 
    305 S.W.3d 886
    , 890 n.7
    (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2010, no pet.) (citing Dixon v. State, 
    201 S.W.3d 731
    , 737
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2006) (Cochran, J., concurring)).
    The testimony of a child victim alone is sufficient to support a conviction for
    continuous sexual abuse of a child. Garner v. State, 
    523 S.W.3d 266
    , 271 (Tex.
    App.—Dallas 2017, no pet.); see also TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. art. 38.07; Villalon,
    
    791 S.W.2d at 134
    . Furthermore, corroboration of the victim’s testimony by medical
    or physical evidence is not required. Gonzalez Soto v. State, 
    267 S.W.3d 327
    , 332
    (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg 2008, no pet.); see also Cantu v. State, 
    366 S.W.3d 771
    , 775–76 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 2012, no pet.); Lee v. State, 
    176 S.W.3d 452
    , 458 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2004), aff’d, 
    206 S.W.3d 620
     (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2006). Thus, C.V.’s testimony, without more, can be sufficient to support a
    conviction for continuous sexual abuse of a child. See Garner, 
    523 S.W.3d at 271
    .
    “[A]lthough the exact dates of the [sexual] abuse need not be proven, the
    offense of continuous sexual abuse of a child does require proof that there were two
    or more acts of sexual abuse that occurred during a period that was thirty or more
    days in duration.” Michell, 
    381 S.W.3d at 561
    ; see also Smith v. State, 
    340 S.W.3d 41
    , 48 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st. Dist.] 2011, no pet.). The jury was charged to
    determine whether the abuse occurred “during a period that was 30 days or more in
    duration.” See TEX. PENAL CODE § 21.02(b)(1). Here, appellant challenges only the
    sufficiency of the evidence to support the duration element of the offense: he
    –13–
    contends that C.V.’s testimony does not provide sufficient evidence for the jury to
    reasonably infer that the sexually abusive acts he allegedly committed against her
    occurred over a period of more than thirty days.
    “Speculation is mere theorizing or guessing about the possible meaning of the
    facts and evidence presented.” Anderson v. State, 
    416 S.W.3d 884
    , 888 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 2013) (quoting Hooper, 
    214 S.W.3d at 16
    ). Conversely, “an inference is a
    conclusion reached by considering other facts and deducing a logical consequence
    from them.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Hooper, 
    214 S.W.3d at 16
    ). “Juries are permitted to draw
    multiple reasonable inferences from the evidence as long as each inference is
    supported by the evidence presented at trial[.]” 
    Id.
     (citing Hooper, 
    214 S.W.3d at 15
    ).
    Although not cited by appellant, three cases from the Eastland court of appeals
    addressed circumstances in which, although the child victims could not recall
    specific dates that the alleged abuses occurred, that court affirmed the convictions
    based on other benchmarks in the victim’s testimony that permitted the jury to infer
    that the acts of sexual abuse spanned a period of thirty days or longer. See Wishert
    v. State, 
    654 S.W.3d 317
    , 329 (Tex. App.—Eastland 2022, pet. ref’d); Soto v. State,
    No. 11-19-00214-CR, 
    2021 WL 3235881
    , *5 (Tex. App.—Eastland July 30, 2021,
    no pet.) (mem. op., not designated for publication); Michell, 
    381 S.W.3d 554
    . These
    benchmarks included the various addresses where the child victims lived when the
    different abuses occurred, the sheer number of abuses, and testimony from the
    –14–
    victims about their ages when the acts of sexual abuse occurred. See Soto, 
    2021 WL 3235881
    , at *4–5; Michell, 
    381 S.W.3d at 561
    . Finding this persuasive authority
    applicable in the instant case, we proceed with an analysis of the benchmarks present
    here.
    C.V. testified she moved to the Plano apartment in “early 2021,” and appellant
    contends in his argument that C.V. made a “clear allegation that an act of abuse
    occurred in 2021.”4 Appellant sometimes tickled C.V. and, when C.V. was eleven
    years old and living in the Plano apartment, appellant was tickling C.V. on her
    tummy when he started “touching [C.V.’s] private” over her clothes. Appellant
    usually came over on Thursdays at approximately 4:00 p.m. when C.V.’s mother left
    for work. C.V.’s mother usually came home from work at 11:00 p.m., and appellant
    stayed the night.
    On another occasion, C.V.’s sister was playing outside, her brother was asleep
    on the brown couch, and C.V. and appellant were on the gray couch when appellant
    touched C.V.’s “front part” with his hand moving “up and down” both “over and
    under” her clothes. Appellant moved his fingers “[i]n and out” of C.V.’s private part
    for “30 seconds, a minute” and stopped when C.V.’s brother “moved a little bit like
    he was about to wake up.” C.V.’s brother “kind of went back to sleep,” and appellant
    4
    Appellant appears not to dispute one clear allegation of abuse in 2021 but avers there were not
    sufficient allegations to show that any other incident occurred more than thirty days after the first incident.
    –15–
    touched C.V. again “in the same way,” but this time appellant took C.V.’s hand and
    “forced [her] to touch” his private part outside his pants.
    C.V. testified about another incident that occurred in her top bunk bed.
    Appellant stood on the lower bunk bed and reached up to “put his fingers inside of
    [C.V.’s] private part.” C.V. could tell appellant was also touching himself because
    C.V. heard appellant’s “bracelets jingling.” C.V. testified there were other times
    appellant touched her and himself at the same time, but she did not remember the
    details.
    C.V. testified there were also times when appellant put his mouth on her front
    private part. These assaults happened in C.V.’s bunk bed and “especially in the
    bedroom” on a queen-sized bed. C.V. described an incident in which appellant
    climbed up on the top bunk with C.V., pulled C.V.’s shorts and underwear down
    “somewhere down [her] legs,” and licked C.V.’s private part. Similar assaults
    occurred in the queen bed “[m]ore than five times probably” and in C.V.’s bunk bed
    “more than once, less than five” times.
    C.V. testified about an incident that occurred when she was lying on her
    stomach and watching YouTube on the queen bed. Appellant sat on the bed, lifted
    C.V. from the hips, pulled down C.V.’s shorts and underwear, took out his private
    part, and “tried to put it in [C.V.’s] private part.” This assault “hurt a lot,” and
    appellant was not able to put his private part in C.V.’s private part. Nevertheless,
    –16–
    appellant’s private part contacted C.V.’s private part. Appellant “kept trying to, like,
    put it in” and kept putting C.V. in “that position,” but eventually he “gave up.”
    On more than one occasion in her mother’s bedroom, appellant tried
    unsuccessfully to put his private part in C.V.’s “bottom,” which she identified as the
    part she used for “[p]ooping.” C.V. testified appellant’s private part contacted her
    bottom and he tried to put his private part in the “hole.”
    C.V. testified an incident occurred on the brown couch where appellant pulled
    down her “pants or shorts or whatever [she] was wearing and [her] underwear,” took
    out his private part, and touched himself. C.V. knew he was “messing with his
    private part” because of “the bracelets.” C.V. felt “this warm temperature” in her
    bottom and, when appellant left to go to the restroom, saw white liquid on her
    bottom. Appellant “came back in with toilet paper and he wiped off the thing from
    [her] bottom.”
    Around February 2022, C.V. told her mother that appellant was touching her,
    but appellant “lied” when C.V.’s mother talked to him. C.V.’s mother told C.V. “not
    to tell anyone else about it,” and appellant continued to come over on Thursdays.
    Appellant acted “normal for a little bit” but started “doing things” to C.V. again. In
    March 2022, I.V. told her teacher about the abuse, and C.V. made an outcry to a
    school counselor. C.V. testified that the “last time something happened” with
    appellant was the Thursday before the day she spoke to the counselor.
    –17–
    Consistent with the applicable standard of review, we have reviewed the
    evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict. C.V.’s testimony
    encompassed multiple acts of sexual abuse that commenced early in 2021 and
    continued until at least February 2022 when she told her mom that appellant “was
    touching me” with the last time “something happened” being the Thursday before
    she spoke to the counselor in March of 2022. C.V.’s testimony further provided that
    appellant was there only on Thursdays when her mom left for work.5 C.V. testified
    to multiple specific acts of sexual abuse, involving multiple orifices, occurring in
    multiple locations in the apartment. At a minimum, C.V. testified appellant put his
    fingers in C.V.’s private part on the gray couch and in C.V.’s top bunk bed; touched
    C.V.’s private part and his private part “other times”; put his mouth on C.V.’s private
    part more than five times; tried to put his private part in C.V.’s private part on the
    queen bed; and more than once tried to put his private part in C.V.’s bottom. Further,
    her “abuse” timeline was at least partially corroborated by other testimony, including
    that of I.V. Considered as a whole, the cumulative force of the evidence was
    sufficient to support the jury’s finding that appellant’s repeated acts of sexual abuse
    against C.V. occurred during a period of thirty days or more in duration,
    5
    The record is clear that Thursday was the only day appellant was alone at the apartment with C.V.
    and her siblings and the only day of the week that the abuse occurred. The jury was permitted to draw
    multiple reasonable inferences from the evidence of the abuse occurring only on Thursdays and the sheer
    number of assaults, as long as each inference was supported by the evidence presented at trial. The record
    reflects testimony of at least six different, specific types of sexual assaults; only on one occasion did it
    appear that two types of assault occurred on the same date. From this evidence, the jury could deduce the
    logical consequence that the assaults occurred over more than thirty days.
    –18–
    commencing in 2021 and concluding in February or March of 2022. As such, we
    conclude the record before us contains sufficient evidence from which a rational jury
    could have logically inferred and found beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant
    was guilty of the offense of continuous sexual abuse of a young child as charged in
    the indictment.   See Jackson, 
    443 U.S. at 326
    ; Wishert, 654 S.W.3d at 329.
    Accordingly, we overrule appellant’s second issue.
    We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    /Bonnie Lee Goldstein/
    BONNIE LEE GOLDSTEIN
    Publish                                    JUSTICE
    TEX. R. APP. P. 47.2(b)
    230375F.P05
    –19–
    S
    Court of Appeals
    Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
    JUDGMENT
    JUAN ALBERTO SALAZAR                          On Appeal from the 219th Judicial
    MEZA, Appellant                               District Court, Collin County, Texas
    Trial Court Cause No. 219-82319-
    No. 05-23-00375-CR          V.                2022.
    Opinion delivered by Justice
    THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee                  Goldstein. Justices Reichek and
    Garcia participating.
    Based on the Court’s opinion of this date, the judgment of the trial court is
    AFFIRMED.
    Judgment entered this 29th day of July 2024.
    –20–
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 05-23-00375-CR

Filed Date: 7/29/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/31/2024