WR-80,635-02
COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
AUSTIN, TEXAS
Transmitted 2/17/2015 1:28:23 PM
Accepted 2/17/2015 1:43:01 PM
ABEL ACOSTA
IN THE CLERK
COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
OF TEXAS RECEIVED
COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
2/17/2015
EX PARTE § ABEL ACOSTA, CLERK
§ CAUSE NO. WR-80,635-02
DANA MARIE CONTRERAS §
THE STATE’S MOTION FOR REHEARING
TO THE HONORABLE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS:
The State files its Motion for Rehearing to the Court’s Order of February 4,
2015, pursuant to Rule of Appellate Procedure 79.1, and would show the Court of
Criminal Appeals the following:
1. The State would prefer not to be required to notify all participants in the
investigation and trial, giving them an opportunity to testify. This is because all
known relevant information has already been gleaned from the witnesses and
through affidavits. The matter has been thoroughly investigated by this office.
2. The recantation cases that this Court has remanded for an evidentiary
hearing are in a much different posture than the instant case. The typical
recantation case involves a child who testified at trial that she was sexually abused
and recants when she is an adult. The State typically contends that the trial
testimony was true and the recantation is false. Where there is a factual dispute
regarding whether the witness lied at trial or in the recantation affidavit, an
evidentiary hearing is required to determine credibility.
3. This case presents the converse of the typical situation. Sueleta Andrews
[Susie] testified at the trial in 1997, when she was 10 years old, that Neal Winegar
[Neal] did not sexually abuse her. She provided an affidavit in 2013, when she
was 26 years old, that he sexually abused her many times and that her 1997 trial
testimony was false. Susie’s sister, Dana Contreras [Dana], filed a habeas corpus
application requesting a new trial on punishment because the State used Susie’s
false testimony.
4. Confronted with this uncommon allegation, the 47th District Attorney’s
Office has invested more than three hundred and fifty (350) hours of time over a
number of months investigating the Applicant’s Habeas Corpus Writ claims. This
included, among other things, (1) finding participants in a trial that occurred about
seventeen years ago, (2) looking for potential witnesses who were not interviewed
by officers over nineteen years ago, (3) finding witnesses who were interviewed
nineteen years ago but did not testify, (4) asking witnesses about the events, (5)
asking witnesses to sign affidavits, (6) actually getting twenty affidavits signed;
and (7) reviewing the evidence, the clerk’s record, and the trial record. The
undersigned has talked to and questioned a number of potential witnesses and
every witness who signed an affidavit for the State. A law enforcement officer was
present during most of the interviews which resulted in an affidavit and also
questioned these witnesses. Based on its extensive investigation, the State
concluded that the recantation is likely truthful and the trial testimony was likely
false.
5. Most of the witnesses were cooperative. Due to health issues and/or the
distance from Amarillo, some interviews were conducted on the phone and
affidavits sent to the witness.
6. The State has actually visited with four of the deceased’s family members,
three sisters and a niece, prior to signing the Agreed Findings of Fact and
Conclusions of Law. They reside outside of Amarillo, Texas. These family
members were aware of the State’s reasons for the Agreed Findings of Fact and
Conclusions of Law. The deceased’s mother, Betty Winegar, passed away in
2007, and his father predeceased the victim. His significant other on the date of
death was Kena Andrews, the mother of the Defendant / Applicant, Dana
Contreras. Kena Andrews passed away in 2005. The deceased had no children.
7. When the State started its investigation into the Applicant’s claims, the
office worked to determine whether there were any other facts refuting or
supporting the Applicant’s claims.
8. The State heard information that Susie was taken to a female counselor after
the trial. It took the State many hours of work trying to identify a number of
female counselors through employee benefits program(s) and from contacting a
number of mental health providers who had worked in Amarillo about sixteen
years ago to search their memories and/or files to determine whether they or an
associate had counseled with Susie. The State finally discovered the identity of the
social worker, Betsy Franks, who counseled with Susie.
9. Betsy Franks provided an affidavit in 2014 that Susie told her during an
interview on November 12, 1998, that her mother’s boyfriend, Neal, played with
her vagina when her mother was not at home, made her promise not to tell anyone,
and threatened her. Franks’ impressions were that Neal sexually abused Susie “a
lot”; that Susie told Dana about it; and that Susie lied about it at Dana’s trial.
Franks was able to refresh her memory from her notes of the interview. (AX 13).
The counseling notes are consistent with Franks’ affidavit. Franks’ affidavit is
consistent with what the undersigned discovered from her too. (AX 13). The
recanting witness, Susie, in November 1998, told Betsy Franks facts consistent
with her 2013 recantation. These 1998 statements occurred about a year after the
1997 trial and were unknown to the State until 2013-2014. (AX 4 & AX 13).
10. Applicant obtained an affidavit from Rosa Saldana, a neighbor at the time of
the offense. (AX 15). The State spent hours interviewing Ms. Saldana, and she
eventually gave the State a twelve page affidavit covering years of information.
(SX 11). In that affidavit, Ms. Saldana, the mother of Susie’s friend, provided an
affidavit in 2013 that Susie told her in 1996 that she did not want to go home
because the deceased was “touching her.” Saldana told Susie to tell her mother.
Susie said that she had, but her mother did not believe her and told her to stop
lying. Saldana told Susie to tell Dana. Saldana did not inform law enforcement
authorities because she assumed that Susie was talking about physical rather than
sexual abuse. Saldana next saw Susie when she was 15 or 16 years old and asked
about Dana. Susie said that Dana was in prison for killing Neal. The recanting
witness told Ms. Saldana, that the deceased was touching her prior to Neal’s
demise; years later, after his demise, Susie repeated this to Ms. Saldana. (SX 11 at
pgs 3, 6, 9, 10). The information given by Saldana was first known to the State in
2013. (SX 11 pg 10).
11. Robert Walker, Dana’s former boyfriend, provided an affidavit in 2013 that
Dana told him a few days before the offense that she thought that Neal was
“messing with” Susie. (SX 9 pg 5). Walker, who has not seen Dana since Neal’s
death, resides in Brighton, Colorado. (SX 9 pg 1).
12. Raymond Andrews, Susie’s father, provided an affidavit in 2013 that Susie
made statements to him during the 1997 trial. These statements called into
question whether Susie could have testified untruthfully at Dana’s trial, was
confused about what was happening or would happen, was confused about her role
as a witness, and/or was confused as a child witness. The State was unaware of
these matters until 2013 (SX 4, page 3).
13. At trial, Susie testified that she was not sexually abused by the deceased. (4
R.R. 381-84). Her testimony only impacted the punishment verdict; she was not a
complainant. She now avers that she was sexually abused by the deceased. She
was nine years-old when the offense occurred in January 1996. She testified when
she was eleven in November 1997. (4 R.R. 381-84). She told Franks in a private
counseling session that she lied at the trial about not being sexually abused. This
occurred in 1998 when she was twelve. She now lives in Colorado, and it will be
difficult for her to travel to Amarillo for a hearing.
14. It is difficult for sexual assault victims to declare publically that they were
sexually abused as a child. Testimony about such matters can be traumatic and
humiliating. It also seems that it was difficult for Susie to declare in court
documents that she was sexually abused as a child at 26 years of age. This is so
because she has a new life and a young toddler. The State does not envision any
gain by having her give live testimony about her sworn recantation, be questioned
about these matters, and relive her memories. There are other habeas corpus
affidavits that are congruent with Susie’s statement that she was sexually abused.
The recantation is consistent with Dr. Anthony Arden’s 1997 trial testimony,
among other things, that Susie was sexually abused. (4 R.R. 336-37, 340). When
Susie denied any sexual abuse at the 1997 trial, the State and the jury found Dr.
Arden’s testimony implausible.
15. There is evidence that Susie’s recantation is truthful, that she testified falsely
at Dana’s trial in denying the sexual abuse, and that her false testimony adversely
impacted the verdict. The State agreed to findings of fact and conclusions of law
recommending a new trial on punishment after an extensive investigation,
discussions with Neal’s family, and careful consideration. The State requests that
this Court reconsider in the interest of justice its order to remand the case for an
evidentiary hearing. The witnesses with knowledge of the relevant facts will
simply testify to the content of their affidavits at a hearing. If the State did not
accept Susie’s recantation, it would have requested an evidentiary hearing and
opposed relief. The State requests that the Court approve the Findings of Fact that
are supported by the record, approve the Conclusions of Law, grant the habeas
corpus relief, and remand the cause for a new sentencing hearing.
16. The State has not factored into the equation that Alesa Simpkins has given
statements that contradicted her testimony at Dana’s trial about Neal’s conduct
with Dana. Alesa also said that, about a year after Dana went to prison, Kena
Andrews told Alesa that Susie said that she lied at Dana’s trial about Neal not
doing anything sexual to her. Finally, Alesa acknowledged at one point that she
lied at the Dana’s trial, lacking the fortitude to tell the truth when confronted with
Neal’s family in the courtroom and how she had been treated by them in the past.
Alesa’s testimony also tends to corroborate Susie’s recantation. Alesa Simpkins
told law enforcement authorities and Dana’s habeas corpus counsel in 2013 that,
months before Neal’s 1996 death, Neal told her about inappropriate sexual conduct
with a three year old, female child and that Neal would bathe Susie even though
she was nine years old. (SX 21) (see also SX 18, pgs 1-2).
18. Dana told her teenage friend, Shannon Garza, that she believed that Neal
was sexually molesting Susie. (SX 8 pg 3).
19. In this Court’s order of February 4, 2015, it directed that the issues be
resolved within 90 days and other matters completed in 120 days, absent a proper
extension. Since this Court has placed a rapid deadline on this matter, the State
would ask the Court to expedite the State’s Motion for Rehearing.
Respectfully submitted,
Randall C. Sims, 47th District Attorney
/s/Mark Baskett
MARK BASKETT, SBN 01870600
Date: February 17, 2015
47th Assistant District Attorney
Potter County Courts Building
501 S. Fillmore, Suite 5A
Amarillo, Texas 79101
Phone: 806/379-2325; Fax: 806/379-2823
CERTIFICATE OF CONFERENCE
I sent a copy of this motion and conferenced with Randy Schaffer, counsel
for applicant, who agrees with the relief requested by the State.
/s/Mark Baskett
Assistant District Attorney
CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
In accordance with Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.4(i)(3), I hereby
certify that the forgoing Motion for Rehearing, as reflected in the computer word
count, is 2,051 words. That count includes some words in the Motion, which are
excluded from the prescribed word limit of 4,500 words. Tex. R. App. P. 9.4
(i)(2)(D).
/s/ Mark Baskett
Assistant District Attorney
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
The undersigned hereby certifies that a true and correct filed copy of the
foregoing instrument was served upon the following attorney(s) of record in the
above-referenced cause, as shown below on or before the 17th day of February,
2015.
Via:
☐ U.S. Regular Mail, Postage Prepaid The Schaffer Firm
☐ Hand Delivery Randy Lee Schaffer, Jr.
☐ Certified Mail RRR # 1301 McKinney Ste 3100
☐ Facsimile (713) 951-9854 Houston, TX 77010
Emailed to noguilt@swbell.net Phone 713-951-9555
☐ Federal Express noguilt@swbell.net
/s/Mark Baskett
Assistant District Attorney