Chae Antonides v. State

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS,

AT AUSTIN









NO. 3-93-171-CR





CHAE ANTONIDES,

APPELLANT



vs.





THE STATE OF TEXAS,

APPELLEE







FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 5 OF TRAVIS COUNTY,

NO. 354-109, HONORABLE WILFRED AGUILAR, JUDGE PRESIDING







PER CURIAM

A jury found appellant guilty of prostitution. Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 43.02 (West 1989). The county court at law assessed punishment at incarceration for 180 days and a $1000 fine, but suspended imposition of sentence and placed appellant on probation.

Appellant's only point of error is that the court should have granted her motion for mistrial after the prosecutor said during jury argument, "Prostitution is a small offense, but it leads to bigger things, and that is what the officer told you. It leads to money laundering, drugs -- ." Appellant argues that this argument was outside the record and improperly suggested that she was involved in money laundering and illicit drugs.

Appellant did not present this argument to the trial court. Tex. R. App. P. 52(a). Appellant's trial objection was that "[t]he prosecutor is violating the Motion in Limine." The objection referred to a motion in limine filed by appellant and granted before trial began instructing the State to refrain from mentioning "[a]ny purported link of prostitution or sexually-oriented businesses to drugs or any other criminal activity" without first approaching the bench and obtaining a ruling outside the hearing of the jury. The court did not rule on the objection, but the prosecutor immediately withdrew the statement. At appellant's request, the court instructed the jury to disregard the statement, but overruled her motion for mistrial.

Even if appellant's failure to preserve error is disregarded, reversible error is not presented. The prosecutor's argument was not outside the record. Two police officers testified that prostitution and money laundering are closely connected, and one officer testified that the owner of the massage parlor at which the offense took place was under investigation by federal authorities for suspicion of money laundering. In addition, the challenged remark was made only after defense counsel, in his argument, said that appellant had stumbled into a much larger case involving organized crime and money laundering. We believe that the prosecutor's remark, if error, was not so prejudicial as to be incurable by an instruction to disregard. The point of error is overruled.

The judgment of conviction is affirmed.



[Before Chief Justice Carroll, Justices Aboussie and B. A. Smith]

Affirmed

Filed: October 6, 1993

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