IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
OF TEXAS
NO. WR-86,381-01
EX PARTE ARMANDO RUBIO, Applicant
ON APPLICATION FOR A WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS
CAUSE NO. 97-CR-1286-C IN THE 94 TH DISTRICT COURT
FROM NUECES COUNTY
A LCALA, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
OPINION
Armando Rubio, applicant, was convicted of three counts of aggravated sexual assault
of one of his daughters, hereinafter referred to as “complainant.” Because the complainant
has recanted her allegations that applicant sexually assaulted her, applicant now seeks post-
conviction habeas relief from these convictions on the theory that this recantation is new
evidence that demonstrates his actual innocence. After conducting a live hearing on
applicant’s actual-innocence claim, the habeas court recommended that this Court grant
relief. The habeas court made findings of fact and conclusions of law that applicant had
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established by clear and convincing evidence that, given the complainant’s recantation, no
reasonable juror would have convicted him. We disagree. Although the complainant’s
recent recantation is more decisive, the jury that convicted applicant knew about a prior
pretrial recantation by the complainant when it convicted applicant, and thus the instant
recantation is not clear and convincing evidence that would have swayed a juror’s
determination as to applicant’s guilt. Furthermore, when viewed in light of her inconsistent
statements over the course of twenty years with respect to whether applicant sexually abused
her, the complainant’s new recantation merely muddies the waters, but it does not rise to the
level of showing by clear and convincing evidence that it would have affected the outcome
of the proceedings. We conclude that this new recantation fails to establish by clear and
convincing evidence that no reasonable juror would have found applicant guilty of sexually
assaulting the complainant. Accordingly, we deny relief.
I. Background
The background of this case is lengthy, as it includes the pretrial investigation, guilt
testimony from the retrial at which applicant was convicted, punishment evidence from that
retrial, a motion for new trial hearing, the habeas hearing, and the trial court’s findings of fact
and conclusions of law.
A. The Pretrial Investigation
Applicant is the father of five daughters: A.M.T., A.A.P., complainant, A.L.L, and
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D.L.R., listed in order from oldest to youngest.1 In January 1997, D.L.R., who was five
years old at the time, asked her maternal grandmother, Dora Ann Curiel, if it was “nasty” for
someone to touch her legs. Curiel and A.M.T., applicant’s oldest daughter who was
seventeen years old, interpreted this question as an outcry of abuse. D.L.R. was taken to a
hospital and a SANE examination was conducted that revealed evidence of sexual assault.
The following day, two of D.L.R.’s sisters, the complainant and A.L.L, who were nine and
seven years old respectively, were examined, and evidence of sexual abuse was discovered
in both girls. The complainant and D.L.R. each indicated to hospital staff during their
medical examinations that their father, applicant, had sexually abused them. In separate
interviews with Child Protective Services, the children indicated sexual abuse by applicant.
The case was forwarded to law enforcement, and charges were brought against applicant.
In 2001, applicant was tried for six felony counts: one count of indecency with a child
against D.L.R., three counts of aggravated sexual assault against the complainant, and two
counts of aggravated sexual assault against A.L.L. The case ended in a mistrial after a hung
jury.2 In 2003, applicant was retried for four counts: one count of indecency with a child
1
Because they were minors at the time the offenses were committed, we refer to applicant’s
daughters by their initials or their birth order in this opinion. See TEX . R. APP . P. 9.10(a)(3).
2
Although the record on habeas mentions testimony and evidence presented at applicant’s first
trial in 2001, the record and transcripts of that trial were not provided to this Court with the habeas
record, and we have been unable to obtain them from the trial court.
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against D.L.R. and three counts of aggravated sexual assault against the complainant.3
Applicant was convicted on all four counts. The jury sentenced him to ten years’
imprisonment for indecency with a child and thirty years’ imprisonment for each count of
aggravated sexual assault, with all sentences to run consecutively. Applicant’s convictions
were upheld on appeal. See Rubio v. State, No. 13-03-426-CR, 2004 WL 1698321, at *1
(Tex. App.—Corpus Christi July 29, 2004) (mem. op., not designated for publication).4
B. Evidence at Applicant’s Guilt Retrial
Because actual-innocence claims based on new evidence must be considered in light
of the totality of evidence that was before the jury, resolving these claims necessarily requires
3
The second indictment stated as follows:
Count 1: Armando Rubio, Defendant, on or about December 20, 1996 in Nueces County, Texas, did
then and there, with intent to arouse and gratify sexual desire, intentionally and knowingly touch the
genitals of another person, namely, [D.L.R.], and that [D.L.R.] was then a female child younger than
17 years of age and not the spouse of the Defendant. See TEX . PENAL CODE § 21.11.
Counts 2 to 4: Armando Rubio, Defendant, on or about [August 15, September 15, and December
15, 1996] in Nueces County, Texas, did then and there, by inserting his finger, intentionally and
knowingly cause the penetration of the sexual organ of [complainant], a female child younger than
14 years of age and not the spouse of the Defendant. See TEX . PENAL CODE § 22.021.
4
On appeal, applicant complained of ineffective assistance of counsel due to trial counsel’s
failure to: “(1) meet with him prior to trial with sufficient time to prepare a defense; (2) interview
potential witnesses; (3) properly cross-examine the victims; and (4) pursue a defense.” Rubio v.
State, No. 13-03-426-CR, 2004 WL 1698321, at *1 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi July 29, 2004)
(mem. op., not designated for publication). The court of appeals found that applicant’s claims
regarding trial counsel’s failure to prepare a defense and interview potential witnesses were
dependent upon testimony received at an untimely motion-for-new-trial hearing and, thus, could not
be considered on appeal. Id. at *2. The court of appeals was unpersuaded by applicant’s claims
concerning trial counsel’s failure to communicate with applicant and properly cross-examine
witnesses, and it affirmed his convictions. Id. at *2-3.
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examining the evidence and testimony presented at applicant’s 2003 retrial. Accordingly, we
summarize below the State’s case, which consisted of testimony from Orlando Benavidez,
Dora Ann Curiel, Teresa Garcia, D.L.R., complainant, and the SANE reports of D.L.R. and
complainant, as well as the defense’s case, which consisted of testimony from Dr. Marshal
Voris.
1. The State’s Case
a. Orlando Benavidez
Orlando Benavidez was an investigator for the Nueces County Sheriff’s Department.
Benavidez testified that he became involved in applicant’s case after receiving an
investigative report from Child Protective Services that three of applicant’s daughters,
D.L.R., A.L.L., and complainant, had been sexually assaulted. According to the report, an
outcry had been made by D.L.R. to her grandmother; the three girls had been examined at
Driscoll Children’s Hospital and each had physical indications of sexual trauma. D.L.R. and
complainant had made outcries to the examining nurse accusing applicant of abuse. The CPS
report named three alleged perpetrators of the sexual assaults: applicant, Vicente Cano, and
Johnny Molina. Benavidez contacted the men and each of them denied any wrongdoing.
Benavidez also interviewed Dora Ann Curiel, the girls’ maternal grandmother, and A.M.T.,
the girls’ eldest sister, but did not interview the three minor daughters. Given the
corroborating medical evidence and interviews by Child Protective Services, Benavidez
forwarded the case to prosecutors.
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b. Dora Ann Curiel
Dora Ann Curiel testified that, in January 1997, she was caring for complainant,
A.L.L., and D.L.R. while their mother, Norma Pena, sought treatment for drug addiction.
During that time, D.L.R. approached her and asked, “Grandma, it’s nasty if somebody touch
your legs?” After Curiel asked who was touching her, D.L.R. answered, “my dad.” Curiel
noted that applicant had routinely changed diapers, bathed, and dressed all the children since
they were infants, and so she did not immediately suspect molestation. However, she relayed
the exchange to A.M.T., and together they took D.L.R. to be medically examined for sexual
assault. After learning that D.L.R. had physical indications of sexual abuse, Curiel and
A.M.T. brought complainant and A.L.L. to be examined. Curiel stated that she had little
involvement after that point and did not ask A.M.T. or the girls any further questions about
the possible abuse. On cross-examination, Curiel acknowledged that D.L.R. said that Johnny
Molina and Vicente Cano, friends of applicant, had also touched her when they babysat her.
Curiel lastly testified that she called Child Protective Services numerous times before
she started caring for the girls in 1997. She stated that applicant “never was there” and that
applicant’s residence often had “certain men coming in and out like drug addicts.”
c. Teresa Garcia
Teresa Garcia worked for Child Protective Services and, in January 1997, was
assigned to investigate reports of negligent supervision of the Rubio children due to their
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parents’ drug abuse.5 Due to the negligent supervision, complainant, A.L.L. and D.L.R. had
been placed with Curiel. While investigating the negligent supervision complaint, Garcia
received a report that D.L.R. had made an outcry of sexual abuse to Curiel. Garcia noted this
is not unusual because “[o]nce a child is placed in with a relative, you’ll find that they feel
a little bit more safer of their surroundings and so they become a little bit more open about
what’s going on in their home.” Garcia noted that following the outcry, complainant, A.L.L.,
and D.L.R. each had positive medical indications of sexual assault: complainant and A.L.L.
showed signs of vaginal trauma, and D.L.R. showed signs of vaginal and anal trauma.
After the medical examinations, Garcia interviewed the children separately at the
Children’s Advocacy Center. Garcia testified that, during complainant’s interview,
“[complainant] had indicated that she thought it was [applicant] but was not sure.” Garcia
indicated that the complainant stated applicant had touched her but then wavered in her
assertion. According to Garcia, “[Complainant] had indicated that she thought her father had
touched her but that she didn’t know. She acted confused and ashamed and really kind of
—at that point she kind of brought herself into—herself not really wanting to disclose which
is not uncommon of an initial outcry.” Garcia described complainant’s hesitation to discuss
her earlier accusation as a recantation:
5
Garcia testified, “The report had indicated that the children [complainant, A.L.L., and D.L.R.]
were running around at all hours of the night unsupervised, that they were asking neighbors for food
and there was no food in the home, and that there was no adult supervision in the home, and the
parents were drug users. And this was the reason that the children were being neglected was because
of the parents’ drug use.”
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[State]: So you’re saying at first [complainant] said that [applicant] did something to
her but later recanted and said that—
[Garcia]: Yes
[State]: —he didn’t?
[Garcia]: Exactly. When I asked specifically what happened, [complainant] kind of like
didn’t want to talk about it and so she just said, “I don’t know,” which is not
uncommon for somebody who has gone through a situation, a traumatic
situation like that.
Garcia testified that she interviewed D.L.R. twice. During the first interview, D.L.R.
“made an outcry that she had been touched by [applicant], her father, in her vaginal area.”
After that interview, Garcia learned from Curiel that D.L.R. had made a second outcry by
telling her “something about Johnny Molina and [Vicente] Cano touching her in her private
parts” while lying on a bed and opening her legs. When Curiel asked D.L.R. what she was
doing, D.L.R. replied, “Well, this is what my daddy makes me do. He makes me open my
legs.”
Garcia interviewed D.L.R. a second time after receiving the information from Curiel.
D.L.R. indicated that applicant had penetrated her vagina and anus with both his fingers and
penis, as had Vicente Cano and Johnny Molina, on multiple occasions. Garcia testified that
D.L.R. recalled two specific incidents of abuse. D.L.R. stated that in the first incident,
applicant entered her bedroom late at night, woke her, undressed himself, removed her
underwear, and penetrated her vagina and anus. D.L.R. stated that in the second incident,
Johnny Molina and Vicente Cano were fondling her vaginal area over her clothes while
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applicant watched and that Molina and Cano had also vaginally and anally penetrated her
with a stick.
On cross-examination, the defense challenged Garcia’s interview methodology as
improperly leading the children to indicate that applicant had sexually abused them. Garcia
testified that, at times, it is necessary to ask questions a certain way because children will
withdraw or lose focus. However, Garcia denied that she sought to elicit particular
responses, and she stated that her questions were instead aimed at confirming and expanding
upon statements the children had previously made during their SANE examinations. Defense
counsel also asked Garcia if she had questioned the children about Molina or Cano. Garcia
testified that she did and “once the children indicated to me that these were some of the
people that had victimized them, I did get a little bit more information from them in reference
to who they were, why they were there, what they were doing.”
d. D.L.R.
D.L.R. was eleven years old by the time of applicant’s retrial in 2003. At that trial,
she testified regarding the claims of abuse that occurred when she was four years old. She
testified that she remembered telling her grandmother that applicant touched her vagina with
his hands on more than one occasion but could not remember where it occurred, if the touch
was over or beneath her clothing, or if applicant said anything during the incidents. She
testified that it made her feel ugly and that she did not like being touched in that way. She
could not remember if anyone else had touched her private areas. D.L.R. testified that she
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remembered going to the hospital and being examined and speaking with the SANE nurse
and Teresa Garcia.
e. Complainant
Complainant was sixteen years old when she testified at applicant’s retrial in 2003
regarding the claims of abuse that occurred when she was nine years old. She testified that
she remembered going to “Driscoll Children’s Hospital to get checked because we told – we
said the truth and we said that we got touched by our dad and the nurse checked us to see[.]”
She also recalled speaking with a CPS worker at the Children’s Advocacy Center and
discussing the abuse. She testified on direct examination that applicant had sexually
assaulted her:
[State]: Tell—tell us if anyone ever touched you on any of your private parts?
[Complainant]: Yes, they have.
[State]: Okay. And when did that happen?
[Complainant]: When I was small. I was a little kid.
***
[State]: Who touched you on your private parts?
[Complainant]: My so-called dad.
***
[State]: Okay. Which private part were you touched on?
[Complainant]: My vagina.
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[State]: All right. Would you tell us how—what part of your dad’s body
touched your vagina?
[Complainant]: His hands and his fingers.
[State]: What—what would he do when he touched you there?
[Complainant]: He would put—he would go and he [would] put his fingers in me.
[State]: Where would you be when this happened?
[Complainant]: In the shower or in bed.
[State]: How many times did this happen in the shower?
[Complainant]: In the shower, many times.
[State]: How many times did this happen in the bed?
[Complainant]: Many times as well.
***
[State]: Did it ever happen after you went to Driscoll Children’s Hospital and
had the SANE exam?
[Complainant]: No.
[State]: So it happened before that?
[Complainant]: Yes.
[State]: Did it happen when you were living [with applicant]?
[Complainant]: Yes.
[State]: Did anyone else touch you in any of your privates?
[Complainant]: No.
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[State]: Did [applicant] say anything while he was touching you?
[Complainant]: No.
[State]: When he was touching you in the shower, did you have any clothes on?
[Complainant]: No.
[State]: When he was touching you in the bed, did you have any clothes on?
[Complainant]: No.
[State]: Do you know if he had any clothes on when he touched you?
[Complainant]: He had his boxers.
[State]: How did it make you feel when he touched you?
[Complainant]: Like I was trash, like I was nobody. I was nobody to him.
[State]: [W]hen [applicant] would touch your vagina you said that he would put
his fingers inside of your body; is that correct?
[Complainant]: Yes.
[State]: Do you remember saying anything to [applicant] when this was
happening?
[Complainant]: No, because I was scared.
[State]: Did you want him to stop touching you?
[Complainant]: Yes, but I was scared. I was a little kid. I didn’t know what to do.
The State questioned complainant about her statements during the interview with
Child Protective Services. The State asked, “I believe that during that interview you—at one
point you said, ‘I don’t remember if anybody touched me,’ and then you said ‘nobody
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touched me.’ Do you remember that?” Complainant explained that she said that “because
I didn’t even know who [the interviewer] was and I was embarrassed. I was ashamed that
happened to me.” The State asked if it was her testimony at trial that applicant had touched
her sexually. Complainant answered yes.
On cross-examination, the defense asked complainant if she recalled Child Protective
Services coming to meet with her and her parents. Complainant answered that they “would
come all the time,” “[l]ike every month but that she did not speak with them. The defense
asked, “And you testified earlier that when you met with the CPS worker Mrs. Garcia, that
you told her that nothing had happened at one time, correct?” Complainant answered, “Yes.”
f. Medical Evidence
The SANE reports for D.L.R. and complainant were admitted as State’s exhibits
during applicant’s retrial. The annotations made on each report are described below.
i. D.L.R.
D.L.R.’s SANE examination report form detailed the physical indications of sexual
abuse as well as a handwritten statement of notes concerning the SANE examination. Under
“Sexual Assault Examination Record (History),” it states, “[Patient] states ‘Cano touched me
with his hand right here ([patient] touches vaginal area) it happened at my house. My dad
touches me there with his hand and a stick’ (said when examining rectal area).” Under the
“General Appearance” section, D.L.R. was described as “Alert, oriented, very cooperative,
good historian.” Notations on the report under “Pelvic Examination” state, “Well healed tear
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between 5-6 o’clock on hymen” and “narrowing of hymen between 3-6 o’clock” for hymen;
“not visualized” for the vagina and cervix; “no trauma noted” for the vulva labia majora or
vulva labia minora; “bimanual exam not performed” for uterus and adnexae; and “anal
dilation occurred within 5 seconds of both the external and internal sphincters up to 10mm.”
Under “Sexual Assault Examination Record (Impression),” it states, “History of sexual
assault given by patient. Genital trauma demonstrated on physical examination. Lab
findings negative.” The SANE report includes a section of handwritten notes following the
Sexual Assault Examination Record form. The notes include a passage that states, “[D.L.R.]
did have genital trauma and rectal trauma (please refer to SANE report) and stated
[applicant] and Vincente Cano were perpetrators.”
ii. Complainant
Complainant’s SANE examination report form detailed physical indications of sexual
abuse. Under “Sexual Assault Examination Record (History),” it states, “[Patient] states ‘My
dad touched me on my privates.’ When asked what he touched her with, [patient] got upset
and said she did not want to talk about it.” Notations on the report under “Pelvic
Examination” state, “Well healed tear between 5-6 o’clock on hymen” and “narrowing of
hymen between 7-9 o’clock” for hymen; “not visualized” for the vagina and cervix; “no
trauma noted” for the vulva labia majora or vulva labia minora; and “bimanual exam not
performed” for uterus and adnexae. The report continued that she had “good sphincter tone
no trauma noted” for the anus. Under “Sexual Assault Examination Record (Impression),”
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it states, “Sexual assault by history. Genital trauma demonstrated on physical examination.”
The SANE report includes a section of handwritten notes with a passage that states, “Theresa
Garcia[,] CPS[,] has been notified that per SANE examiner, Mary Ellen Jones, [complainant]
did have positive outcry concerning father but recanted. Her physical examination reveals
vaginal penetration.”
2. The Defense Case Consisted of Testimony From A Sole Witness, Dr. Marshal
Voris
Dr. Marshal Voris, a psychotherapist and professor of psychology, was the sole
defense witness. Dr. Voris testified that the children’s accusations against applicant were
likely biased by improper interviewing techniques for young children due to the susceptibility
of these children in light of the circumstances of their upbringing. Dr. Voris testified that the
personal biases of an interviewer and the form of questions asked by medical staff and
investigators can telegraph and reinforce the desired answers rather than truthful responses.
Dr. Voris testified that children without strong parental support who are raised in less stable,
lower socioeconomic conditions, such as the conditions applicant’s daughters grew up in, are
more susceptible to being improperly led by questioning. Additionally, younger children
who have limited vocabulary often cannot convey nuance, such as the difference between
“touch” and “fondle.” Consequently, answers to questions asking about being fondled rather
than being touched might convey more meaning to an interviewer than the child intended.
Dr. Voris further discussed the fact that children are still cognitively progressing and have
difficulty separating what is objective reality and what is imagined as part of the
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developmental process of making sense of the world. Dr. Voris testified that many of these
factors appeared to be present in the complainant’s and D.L.R.’s allegations. In this case, Dr.
Voris testified that, because the initial outcry was to Curiel, she was functionally the first
interviewer who might have communicated a bias against applicant to the girls. Given their
young ages at that time, they may have adopted that bias against applicant throughout later
questioning. Dr. Voris also testified that, after reviewing the videotaped interviews, he
believed the questioning by Child Protective Services was slanted to find that sexual assaults
had occurred.
Dr. Voris also discussed the SANE medical reports for complainant and D.L.R. He
noted that the “sexual assault history” annotation did not mean there was DNA, semen,
venereal disease, or physical trauma. Rather, it meant only that there had been a claim of
sexual abuse. Dr. Voris testified that the medical findings showing “narrowing of the
hymen” and a “well-healed tear in the hymen” did not conclusively show sexual abuse and
such injuries could have been caused by innocent activities such as riding a bike or climbing
a tree. Dr. Voris cited a study that concluded that, without DNA, semen, venereal disease,
or blunt trauma present, abnormalities to the hymen are not indicative of sexual assault and
relying on only hymenal abnormalities to indicate sexual abuse produces a sixty-seven
percent false-positive rate. Dr. Voris stated he did not understand the annotations in D.L.R.’s
medical reports concerning anal penetration and dilation of the anus and so he could offer
no conclusions as to their veracity. Dr. Voris concluded that the medical evidence did not
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suggest that any sexual assaults occurred, and he observed that the notes section in
complainant’s SANE report documented that complainant had recanted her claim of sexual
abuse by applicant.
C. Evidence at Applicant’s Retrial Punishment Phase
After applicant was found guilty, the retrial proceeded to the punishment phase, and
the State called applicant’s four oldest daughters to testify.
1. A.A.P.
Applicant’s second-oldest daughter, A.A.P., testified that she wished to thank the jury
because complainant and D.L.R. had “been through a lot.” She testified that D.L.R. could
not sleep at nights, required medication and counseling, and was afraid to be around men.
She testified that D.L.R. is “not well in the head anymore because of [applicant]” and that
“she’s not a normal 11-year-old. She can’t think right at all.” A.A.P. testified the same was
true of complainant and that “she can’t get close to anybody . . . [s]he’s afraid of everybody.”
2. A.M.T.
Applicant’s oldest daughter, A.M.T., testified that the sexual abuse had affected both
complainant and D.L.R. Both girls were seeing therapists and taking medication to sleep and
to function during the day. She testified that applicant’s failures to provide or care for her
and her sisters had robbed her of a childhood because she had to be a parent to her sisters.
A.M.T. testified that she had done “everything in [her] power to keep [applicant and his
family] away from them.” However, she stated, “There’s not one day that goes by that the
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girls don’t have a thought of him touching them or killing—wanting to kill themselves,
cutting themselves.” She similarly thanked the jury for finding applicant guilty “because
everybody needs to know what he did to us because nobody believes us.” When asked if
there was anything else she would like to tell the jury, A.M.T. stated,
Please imagine being a baby and having drugs and everything all over the
place and him French kissing you because he did that to me. My mother told
me [] it was okay because he was my father and he could do it. And please put
yourself in our shoes because we’re five girls and we need you guys to please
make everybody see that it was the truth because we lived it, but when nobody
sees it, nobody feels it, and they need to know that.
3. Complainant
Complainant testified that the abuse had “messed up my whole life . . . I feel like
we’re nobody. It hurts because people say that we’re lying but it’s not true because they
don’t know what happened. We’re the one[s] that were there. They weren’t.” She stated
that she missed having a mother and father in her life and that not having parents “kills me
inside. It’s like I’m nobody.” She also thanked the jury. She stated, “I just want to say thank
you. I appreciate it. Without you-all, my family’s all screwed up. You helped my little
sisters and me.”
4. A.L.L.
A.L.L., applicant’s second-youngest daughter, stated that applicant’s crimes against
her and her sisters had seriously affected her. She testified that she had been diagnosed with
bipolar depression. She further testified,
They say we’re liars and stuff, so I mean, why would a four-year-old child
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make up such a thing? I mean, who would—who would do such a horrible
thing to a little girl? It’s hurt so much that I can’t sleep sometimes. I take
medicines. I mean, it’s to the point where sometimes I do think about ending
my life because sometimes it’s just not worth all the pain that I have to go
through and see my sisters go through because of somebody else’s mistake.
The State asked A.L.L. whether she had experienced anyone touching her. She
testified that applicant had abused her. She stated,
My father sexually molested me as well. My trial’s coming up next year,
but—hopefully next year. He touched me on several occasions. I didn’t know
it was going on with my other sisters but I knew it was happening with me.
He would touch me whenever, I guess he wanted to. And I guess to him, we
were just a thing that he owned.
She testified that applicant had touched, but did not penetrate, her vagina with his hands both
on top and under her clothes while she was in the shower or in bed or “just whenever.” She
stated that she believed that applicant abused her over a period of several years until she was
around seven years of age. A.L.L. testified that she did not make an outcry at the same time
as D.L.R. and complainant. Rather, her outcry occurred to her foster mother sometime
shortly after she began living in foster care.
5. Edward Rubio
Applicant’s brother, Edward Rubio, testified for the defense. He stated that he had
never seen or heard about applicant behaving inappropriately with applicant’s or Edward’s
children. He testified that applicant’s eldest daughter, A.M.T., had grown up hating
applicant. He testified that he did not believe applicant had assaulted his daughters and
thought that the evidence did not make sense.
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6. Irma Ortega
Applicant’s sister, Irma Ortega, also testified for the defense. She testified that,
despite applicant’s drug use, he was a caring father who loved his daughters. Ortega stated
that she did not believe applicant had assaulted his daughters. She testified that applicant’s
oldest daughter, A.M.T., hated applicant and had spread that hatred of applicant to her sisters,
which led them to fabricate their claims of abuse.
7. Applicant
Applicant testified that he had not sexually abused his daughters. He stated that he
was not a perfect father but had cared for his daughters since they were infants, including
bathing them, dressing them, cooking for them, and ensuring they went to school. He
testified that he believed their grandmother, Curiel, despised him and had either convinced
the girls to expressly lie or convinced them to believe a fiction. He also testified that because
his daughters were angry with him for being poor and not being a better father, the girls
could be coached to falsely accuse him.
D. Motion for New Trial
Shortly after his retrial, applicant filed a motion for new trial on the basis of
ineffective assistance of counsel. Before the trial court conducted a hearing on applicant’s
motion, A.L.L. signed an affidavit stating that her testimony during the punishment phase of
applicant’s retrial was not completely accurate. Applicant then amended his motion for new
trial for the court to consider whether false testimony had been presented. The trial court
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held a hearing at which A.L.L.’s affidavit was admitted into evidence:6
My name is [A.L.L.], I am 14 yrs. old, my B-day is on 4-18-89. I have dune
a lot of thinking from the time that my father has been in jail. So much has
happened to get me today. I am currently a run-away. I was living with my
older sister [A.M.T.] & her husband [] for 7 yrs. Till about January of 2003
I ran away from all the pressures I had at home. Such as court against my dad
and so many other things I was on the run for a month and a half. When I was
caught I was placed at Padrie Behavaral for a month and a half from there I
was placed at San Antion State Hospital, for a month and a half. I was finally
released into the custidy of [A.M.T. and her husband]. When I got home
everything seemed to be going fine until one day after summer school. My
sisters husband asked me to lay down with him something I had done before
and felt comfortable enough to do again. Once I layed down with him I feel
asleep only to wake up with him masterbating on myside. I then left the room
& procided to tell my sister [complainant]. We then called my older sister
[A.A.P.] and told her what had happened I was then kicked out along with my
sister [complainant] & [D.L.R.]. We stayed with my sister [A.A.P.] for about
a month & then we moved in with my mother who I had not seen in 7 yr’s.
Scince then life has been hard for me. I’ve done so much thinking. One day
I decide I’d help myself so I left and I am now trying to do whats right. I
belive with in thoughs 7 yr’s away from my father and mother was taught to
hate them. I feel I was told to say many things in court about my father. I feel
my sisters hate toward my father has brought us to today. I know my
testamony towards my father was not 100% accurate. My father is a good
person & he does not deserve this. I was wrong to say things about my father
in the manner I did. I feel was so young, and so confused that I went along
and said what everyone wanted to hear. In this I will say my father is innocent.
A.L.L. testified at the hearing that she had visited applicant’s new-trial-motion
counsel on her own accord and had written the above statement without any input from
others. She testified that she had run away from A.M.T.’s care, at least in part, because
A.M.T. was abusive. However, A.L.L. also testified that A.M.T. had consistently told the
6
Except for the change in the identification of the names, A.L.L.’s affidavit is reproduced
verbatim, including original spelling and punctuation.
Rubio - 22
children to be honest about what had happened to them, and A.L.L. confirmed that A.M.T.
never dictated to them what their testimony should be. When asked if she felt pressure from
A.M.T. to testify at applicant’s retrial, A.L.L. stated, “I felt pressure from my sisters. A lot
of it was just guilt that I had for my little sister, the stuff that happened to her.” However,
later on redirect examination, A.L.L. testified that A.M.T. had gotten upset with her because
she did not want to discuss the details of what happened to her with the prosecutor and that
A.M.T. told her that she hated applicant.
On cross-examination, A.L.L. testified that she had initially gone to see applicant’s
former trial counsel because she “felt guilty” about her punishment-phase testimony and
wanted to “help her dad.” She testified that she “went to [applicant’s attorney’s] office and
we started to talk. He asked me why I was there and I told him cause I felt bad because my
dad had to be in jail because what we said and then the sentencing that he got.” She stated,
that applicant’s former counsel told her that she “could help him by writing this paper and
by just telling them how I felt and what I thought was—what I believe was true.” She
testified that applicant’s former counsel then directed her to applicant’s new-trial counsel’s
office. When asked about her feelings for applicant, A.L.L. testified, “He’s my dad. I mean,
I’m always going to love him no matter what.” She confirmed that no one had prompted her
to make a statement or directed her about what to say in her statement.
After the State and the defense had finished their examinations, the judge conducted
his own examination of A.L.L. A pertinent portion of the exchange is detailed below:
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[Court]: You—are you telling this Court that what you told the jury was not true? Is
that what you’re telling the Court?
[A.L.L.]: I’m not saying that things didn’t happen because many things did happen but
I’m saying everybody messes up. I mean—
[Court]: Well, now, okay, there’s a difference between “everyone messes up.” And you
know what the difference between telling the truth and telling a lie is, don’t
you, young lady?
[A.L.L.]: Yes, sir.
[Court]: And you know how important it is to tell the truth?
[A.L.L.]: Yes, sir.
***
[Court]: Now, my question to you is, which is true, that’s what we’re here for, to ask
this Court to overturn and give [applicant] another trial because what you said
at the trial and other things were not true. Was what you told this jury true
about what your father did to you? And there’s no pressure because I want you
to look at me and tell me that, that’s what this is. This Court, we’re here to
seek the truth and find out exactly what happened, and what I understood your
testimony to be just a minute ago there were things that happened. So are you
telling me—are you telling me that what you told those men and women sitting
over here in this jury box was not true, that your father did not do those things
to you?
[A.L.L.]: He did things but not as extreme as I made them sound.
***
[Court]: So if I understand and these ladies and gentlemen understand what you said at
trial was true but you went—you may have carried it a little too far and said
things that maybe were exaggerated; is that what you’re saying?
[A.L.L.]: Yes, sir.
[Court]: But basically what your testimony was it was true what occurred to you?
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[A.L.L.]: Yes, sir.
In discussing the significance of A.L.L.’s affidavit with the State and defense, the trial
court found that A.L.L.’s affidavit did not constitute a recantation of her testimony at the
punishment phase of applicant’s retrial that applicant had sexually assaulted her. Rather, the
trial court found that A.L.L. had exaggerated some details of her testimony but was not
claiming that she falsely accused applicant. The trial court denied applicant’s motion for new
trial.
E. Habeas Application and Hearing
In November 2015, approximately nineteen years after the outcries of sexual abuse
and twelve years after applicant’s 2003 retrial, the complainant recanted her allegations that
applicant had sexually assaulted her. Based on the complainant’s recantation, applicant filed
an application for a post-conviction writ of habeas corpus asserting that this is new evidence
of actual innocence as to his three convictions for aggravated sexual assault of complainant.
Applicant is not challenging his conviction for indecency with a child against D.L.R. In his
application, applicant contends,
The only evidence at trial against applicant was the testimony of [complainant]
combined with outcry testimony and expert testimony concerning the veracity
of child testimony. There was no forensic evidence to show applicant
committed the alleged offenses. The lack of any evidence to corroborate
[complainant’s] testimony creates a situation in which her recantation would
make it so no reasonable juror could have found applicant guilty of the
offenses of aggravated sexual assault[.]
At the evidentiary hearing on applicant’s writ of habeas corpus asserting his actual
Rubio - 25
innocence, the habeas court heard testimony from complainant, A.A.P., A.L.L., and
applicant. However, no evidence was presented from the other witnesses who had testified
at applicant’s retrial regarding D.L.R.’s and complainant’s outcry or the medical evidence.
We detail the habeas testimony below.
1. The Complainant’s Affidavit
In her sworn affidavit, the complainant asserts that she falsely accused applicant at his
retrial because her eldest sister, A.M.T., who was twenty-four years old at the time of
applicant’s retrial, and A.M.T.’s husband, would physically assault her to coerce her to testify
falsely against applicant. The complainant also explained that she and her sisters, A.L.L. and
D.L.R., were removed from A.M.T.’s custody shortly following applicant’s retrial. In her
affidavit, complainant states,
I am [complainant], one of the alleged victims in State of Texas v.
Armando Rubio, Cause No. 97-CR-1286-C in the 94 th Judicial District Court,
Nueces County, Texas. I was . . . 16 when I testified at trial in June, 2003, that
[applicant] committed sexual acts upon me. I was 9 years old when the
conduct was alleged to have happened.
[Applicant] did not penetrate my female sexual organ with his finger or
anything else at any time in 1996. I falsely testified he did so out of fear of my
older sister, [A.M.T.], who was 24 and married. My sister [A.L.L.] and I were
living with [A.M.T.] and her husband. [A.M.T.] had been appointed managing
conservator for me, [A.L.L], and my other sister, [D.L.R.]. [A.M.T.] and her
husband would physically assault me and my sister [A.L.L.] when we would
refuse to follow her orders to tell adults that [applicant] sexually assaulted us.
[A.L.L.] ran away more than once in 2003 before the trial. The day before I
testified against [applicant], I witnessed [A.M.T.] beat [A.L.L.] again for
refusing to testify.
I know who [applicant] is, since he is my father, and I lived with him
for many years. Many people came into our home when I was a young child.
[A.L.L.], [D.L.R.], and I were taken from [A.M.T.] and placed in the
Rubio - 26
custody of the State in 2003.
2. Complainant’s Habeas Testimony
The complainant testified that she has no present recollection of applicant
inappropriately touching her. She testified that she recalled being examined, being undressed
with her legs open during the examination, and being questioned about whether applicant had
touched her. Complainant recalled telling medical staff during her examination that applicant
had not touched her, but remembered being told by medical staff that D.L.R. had alleged that
applicant touched her. Complainant testified that she indicated that applicant had assaulted
her to conform with D.L.R.’s accusation in hopes of terminating the exam because she felt
embarrassed and uncomfortable being undressed and exposed for the examination. She
testified, “I wanted to put my clothes back on and leave out the room, like, you know I just
said it was my dad so I could put my clothes back on.” Complainant further testified that she
again alleged applicant had touched her when interviewed by Child Protective Services
because that is what she had been told by the medical staff.
Complainant also testified that she was living with A.M.T. and her husband leading
up to applicant’s trial and that they were abusive towards her. She testified that A.M.T. hated
applicant and that she was afraid to say that applicant had not touched her because she
witnessed A.M.T. physically beat A.L.L. for saying that applicant had not abused her.
Complainant testified that she had lied at trial out of fear but, as an adult, she had become
motivated to admit the truth and seek forgiveness from applicant. Complainant
Rubio - 27
acknowledged that she had maintained her accusations against applicant as recently as a few
months prior to the habeas hearing. Several months before her recantation, complainant and
A.L.L. had visited the Robstown Police Department concerning an outcry of abuse made by
another family member. During that meeting, complainant stated that applicant had molested
her. Despite her recent statements adhering to her trial testimony that applicant sexually
abused her, complainant maintained in her testimony that her recantation was true. She
explained, “I said it because I’m so used to saying it, it’s in my mind. . . . Even though it’s
not true, it’s just in my mind, and I tried to remind myself not to say it.”
Complainant testified that she was assaulted when she was younger, but it was by
someone other than applicant. When asked, “Do you think, or do you recall somebody—
anybody touching you in an inappropriate fashion when you were a little girl?” complainant
responded, “Yes, I do.” She testified that she was six or seven years old at the time. She
recounted the lights were off during the incident and there was not enough light to identify
the person but that she knew it was not applicant. When asked how she knew it was not
applicant, complainant answered, “Because I know my dad. I love my dad. I would follow
him everywhere.” Despite stating there was not enough light to recognize the person’s face,
she testified that “it wasn’t my dad because I know how my dad looks.” Complainant then
stated that the person was “one of my dad’s friends.” She stated that Johnny Molina had
assaulted her but that she had accused applicant because “at that time . . . everybody wanted
me to blame my dad.”
Rubio - 28
The State traced the inconsistencies in the complainant’s accounts, as follows:
[State]: [T]he 2001 trial and when you said, “Everything you said was the truth,
that your dad put his hands inside you,” correct?
[Complainant]: Yes, I said that.
[State]: Okay. And you said your dad’s friends did not touch you, correct?
[Complainant]: Yes, I said that.
[State]: Okay. In 2003, you had the second trial . . . and you testified there too
where you testified that you told the truth to the hospital that you were
touched by your dad?
[Complainant]: Yes.
[State]: Do you remember that?
[Complainant]: Yes, I do.
[State]: But your testimony today is that the hospital told you, you were touched
by your dad?
[Complainant]: Yes, and you can see it on the CPS [Child Protective Services]—the
CPS recording that I had it’s on there that I said that doctors told me.
[State]: So you don’t—so the doctors said, here’s what I want you to say?
[Complainant]: No, the doctors told me, [D.L.R.] had said that my dad touched [her] so
they asked me, did your dad touch you? I had said no. Then I said I
didn’t remember. Then they said, okay. I just said, okay, my dad
touched me so I could put my clothes back on.
***
[State]: And then at trial, you told the jury that your so-called dad touched your
privates with his hands and fingers in the shower and in the bed many
times?
[Complainant]: Yes.
Rubio - 29
[State]: And that no one else touched your privates?
[Complainant]: Yes, but I lied.
***
[State]: And you also said that that made you feel like trash, that that made you
feel like nobody?
[Complainant]: Yeah.
[State]: So you just made that up too?
[Complainant]: I made it up. Well, I still felt like trash because I was getting beat at
home, but I felt like trash, yeah.
[State]: And later on in that same trial, after your father was convicted and you
moved on to the sentencing phase, you told the jury that he had messed
up your life, and that even though a lot of people were saying that you
were lying, that wasn’t true?
[Complainant]: Yes.
[State]: That you were telling the truth and you thanked the jurors . . . for
helping you . . . and your sisters . . . by convicting your father?
[Complainant]: Yeah.
[State]: But none of that was true either?
[Complainant]: It’s not true.
Complainant acknowledged the State’s point that she had lied consistently to police,
doctors, the hospital, the court, and jurors for almost twenty years, including as recently as
a few months before her recantation, but she asserted that she was now telling the truth. She
testified that she had lied consistently and knowingly to protect herself and her sisters from
Rubio - 30
A.M.T. and A.M.T.’s husband and also that she was pressured by Curiel, who felt that
applicant needed to be in jail for touching D.L.R. and getting complainant’s mother, Curiel’s
daughter, involved with drugs. Complainant also acknowledged that a few months prior to
recanting, she had reconnected with applicant and some of his family. Copies of two letters
sent by complainant to applicant were admitted as exhibits.7 The first, DX-5, is from October
28, 2015. It reads,
Hey dad sorry I have not wrote you. I have been really stressed with
everything that is going on in life ..I’m sorry again don’t think wrong I love
you always I won’t forget you .I wishyou were out here with me and my family
and I have been praying for things to change .I’m hoping to go see you soon
.please keep up with positive attitude I love you for that you seem so strong
spiritually I hope to be like that one day .I love you dad always and forever
.hope your doing ok. Let me know if u need to do anything for you .I don’t
know what to do to help you .I know I was scared when I was little but I know
it was wrong for me to say things that weren’t ture I hope you can forgive me
for that .I’m sorry .I feel so bad but I was a little girl now I am an adult I need
to fix it but don’t know where to start. I love dad always and forever .pls write
me back.
The second, DX-6, is from September 30, 2015. It reads,
Hi dad. It’s me [complainant]. Hope your doing ok. As for me I’m doing
alright. I’m writing you to let you know that I love you always. I WILL never
leave you again. I’m sorry it took me all these years to contact you. I know
you tried your best as a parent I remember you always taking care of me and
[A.L.L.] and [D.L.R]. Cooking cleaning and washing or clothes even if it was
by hand. I love you for trying and for being a mom and dad. I wish things in
our lives could be different it makes me so sad and angry how everything
happened I know you weren’t a bad person .when I saw you I remember lots
of great memories that I miss as a family. I prey every night for you and that
god keeps you mind positive. I want you to know I never forgot about you .you
were always in my hear. I just didn’t know how to come forward. I hope our
7
Both letters are reproduced verbatim, including spelling and punctuation.
Rubio - 31
relationship can get better because you are my daddy always and forever .I
read bones the letter you wrote me she was in tears .we love you always have
and always will. I’m so proud of you of how strong you are spiritually and
mentally. I hope to hear from you soon I love you always your [complainant].
PS. I hope you got the picture.
Complainant denied that reconnecting with applicant or his family was the reason for
recanting her allegations. Instead, she testified that Curiel’s death had freed her to finally
recant because complainant had been afraid of hurting her grandmother or anyone in her
mother’s family.
3. A.A.P.’s Habeas Testimony
A.A.P. testified that she was neither sexually abused by applicant nor witnessed
applicant sexually abuse any of her sisters. She testified that she and her younger sisters,
complainant, A.L.L., and D.L.R., were living with their eldest sister, A.M.T., and her
husband in 2003 at the time of applicant’s retrial. A.A.P. testified that A.M.T. and her
husband were physically and emotionally abusive and that they pressured complainant and
A.L.L. to testify that applicant had assaulted them. A.A.P. testified that her testimony at the
punishment phase of applicant’s trial, in which she thanked the jury for finding applicant
guilty for what he had done to her sisters, was about her anger and resentment towards
applicant for the lack of any parental support and the squalid and impoverished conditions
in which they were raised due to his drug abuse. However, notwithstanding her testimony
during the punishment phase of applicant’s trial, A.A.P. testified that, when sober, applicant
was a good father and “the dad I wanted.” She stated that her current testimony was
Rubio - 32
completely voluntary and that she had not been coached.
A.A.P. also testified about the genesis of complainant’s current recantation. A.A.P.
testified that, around two years earlier, complainant had expressed to A.A.P. feeling as
though complainant had been pressured into falsely accusing applicant and “needed to do
something.” On cross-examination, A.A.P. testified that, although A.M.T. and her husband
pressured complainant to testify against applicant, A.A.P. could not recall if they told
complainant what to say. A.A.P. testified that her grandmother, Curiel, disliked applicant
and probably blamed him for her daughter’s drug abuse.
4. A.L.L.’s Habeas Testimony
A.L.L. testified that she was unaware that she had been sexually assaulted until she
was told that the examination indicated sexual assault, and even then she did not believe it
to be possible. She testified that she recalled being interviewed by Child Protective Services
but stated that she never accused applicant of sexually assaulting her. However, she testified
that she did want to talk about other men who scared her but the interviewer continued
focusing on applicant.
A.L.L. testified that she lived with her sister A.M.T. for a period of time leading up
to applicant’s trial. She testified that A.M.T. and her husband could be physically abusive
and that they pressured A.L.L. to accuse applicant despite her belief that applicant had not
sexually assaulted her. She also testified that her later allegations that applicant touched her
made during a follow-up interview with Child Protective Services just prior to applicant’s
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trial were fabrications. A.L.L. testified that her testimony during the punishment phase of
applicant’s trial was based on anger because she had begun to believe that something must
have happened to her sisters despite having no knowledge of what actually happened. A.L.L.
testified that, shortly after applicant’s trial, she produced an affidavit recanting her trial
testimony. She explained,
I told [applicant’s] attorney that I had basically lied and that I was feeling
really guilty even though I was young, I knew it was wrong, but I was very
scared and I had a lot of reasons why I did lie and they weren’t right. They’re
probably not good reasons to lie to most people. I had already been through
a lot and I was just tired.
A.L.L. testified that she recalled testifying at applicant’s motion-for-new-trial hearing
that A.M.T. had not pressured her to accuse him but rather had told her to be honest. A.L.L
testified that, although that was true, she believed she needed to continue falsely accusing
applicant in order to avoid physical abuse from A.M.T. and her husband. When asked if she
had actually been sexually assaulted by anyone, A.L.L. testified, “Yes, Sir. I’ve seen what
they showed me in black and white [referring to the SANE reports].” But A.L.L. disavowed
her earlier statements at applicant’s punishment hearing in 2003 that applicant had assaulted
her. The focus of her habeas testimony was that she accused applicant to maintain solidarity
with the accusations of her sisters and to avoid physical abuse from A.M.T., but she had no
memory of applicant abusing her.
F. Habeas Court’s Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law
After the close of testimony, the habeas court recommended that this Court grant relief
Rubio - 34
to applicant on the basis that the complainant’s recantation was new evidence that showed,
by clear and convincing evidence, that applicant was actually innocent. The habeas court
made the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:
Findings of Fact
1. [Complainant] indicated that [applicant] had touched her in 1997, 2001,
2003, and in early 2015.
2. [Complainant] did not make a public recantation until she went to the
Robstown Police on November 15, 2015.
3. [Complainant’s] testimony on December 12, 2016 was that she did not know
who committed sexual assaults upon her, but that she was pressured by family
members to blame [applicant]. She testified she only blamed [applicant] to
end the embarrassment of the continuing examinations and investigations. She
testified that she wasn’t sure who had touched her because the lights were off.
She stated she knew it wasn’t her dad who touched her because she knows and
loves her dad. At the trial in 2003 she testified that it was her “so called dad”
who had touched her but now maintains that she lied about that.
4. [Complainant’s] statement to child protective service advocates was
contradictory and ambiguous. At times she denied her father’s participation.
At times she admitted it. At times she stated she didn’t see who touched her.
She stated that she was in fear concerning other men in the house. She said
she heard her sister say her dad touched her.
5. [Complainant] testified during the trial of June, [2003], that [applicant]
touched her. She also testified that in 2003 she had told the hospital the truth
about being touched by her dad, but now claimed that it was the hospital who
told her that her father had been the perpetrator.
6. [Complainant’s] testimony that she was afraid of her sister and sister’s
husband was corroborated by the testimony of [A.L.L.] and [A.A.P.]. While
there are some tangential matters on which this Honorable Court finds a lack
of credibility on the part of [A.L.L.], it is clear the girls grew up in horrendous
conditions with [applicant], had reason to hold grudges against him, and were
subjected to physical abuse at the hands of [A.M.T. and her husband] before
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and after the 2003 trial before they were removed from [A.M.T.’s] custody by
Child Protective Services litigation later in 2003 and 2004. It was alleged that
[complainant] and [A.L.L.] were coerced into testifying against [applicant] at
the guilt-innocence or punishment phases regardless of whether such testimony
would have been true or false.
7. [Complainant] told the doctors at the hospital that her father had sexually
assaulted her and they found physical evidence that she had been sexually
assaulted.
8. [Complainant] did not make any pre-trial recantation that the jury could
have weighed when it found [applicant] guilty in 2003.
Conclusions of Law
1. [Applicant] brought this claim within the time allowed by law to bring a
claim based on actual innocence.
2. The testimony of [complainant] recanting her testimony is “new evidence”
for purposes of permitting a claim based on actual innocence.
3. A reasonable juror would not have found [applicant] guilty of the alleged
offenses had it been presented with [complainant’s] recantation of her outcry
in 1997 and her trial testimony in 2003.
4. Though the timing of the recantation is suspect, the Applicant has proven
by clear and convincing evidence that no reasonable juror would have
convicted him in light of the newly discovered evidence.
5. The Applicant has met his burden to prove entitlement to habeas relief as
analyzed under the Herrera standard or its Texas progeny Elizondo, et al.
II. Analysis
We disagree with the habeas court’s determination that applicant has demonstrated
his actual innocence by clear and convincing evidence and is entitled to habeas relief on that
basis. We conclude that, under these circumstances, the complainant’s recantation fails to
Rubio - 36
unquestionably establish applicant’s innocence. We review the applicable law before
applying that law to the facts of this case.
A. Applicable Law
“To establish that he is actually innocent of an offense of which he has been
previously convicted, an individual seeking post-conviction relief on that basis must
demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that no reasonable juror would have convicted
him in light of the new evidence.” Ex parte Navarijo, 433 S.W.3d 558, 560 (Tex. Crim. App.
2014); Ex parte Elizondo, 947 S.W.2d 202, 209 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996). A claim that a
witness’s recantation unquestionably establishes innocence, as here, is properly understood
as a freestanding claim of innocence. Navarijo, 433 S.W.3d at 567 n.2. When an applicant
asserts a freestanding claim of innocence based on newly discovered evidence, the evidence
presented must constitute affirmative evidence of his innocence, such as a trustworthy
witness recantation. Ex parte Franklin, 72 S.W.3d 671, 678 n.7 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002).
However, post-conviction recantations in sexual-assault cases “should not be accepted
without close scrutiny nor, generally, without strong corroboration by independent evidence.”
Ex parte Brown, 205 S.W.3d 538, 549 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006). Evaluating whether an
applicant has shown by clear and convincing evidence that no reasonable juror would have
convicted him if presented with the newly discovered evidence requires examining the new
evidence in light of the evidence presented at trial. Navarijo, 433 S.W.3d at 567. “[O]ur task
is to assess the probable impact of the newly available evidence upon the persuasiveness of
Rubio - 37
the State’s case as a whole, [and] we must necessarily weigh such exculpatory evidence
against the evidence of guilt adduced at trial.” Id. Accordingly, an applicant must make an
“‘exceedingly persuasive case that he is actually innocent’” before relief is warranted. Id.
(quoting Elizondo, 947 S.W.2d at 206).
Although this Court is the ultimate fact-finder in resolving applications for post-
conviction habeas relief, this Court ordinarily defers to the habeas court’s factual findings,
particularly those related to witness credibility and demeanor, when supported by the record.
Id. We similarly defer to the habeas court’s rulings on mixed questions of law and fact, if
the resolution of those questions depends on an evaluation of credibility and demeanor.
However, if the habeas court’s findings and conclusions are not supported by the record, this
Court may make contrary or alternative findings and conclusions. We review de novo mixed
questions of law and fact that do not turn on an evaluation of credibility and demeanor. Id.
B. Application of Law to the Facts
We conclude that applicant has not carried his “Herculean” burden of demonstrating
his actual innocence. We explain our determination by reviewing the findings of fact that
fail to show whether the habeas court found the recantation to be credible, and the
conclusions of law that are not supported by the record.
In the instant case, the habeas court’s findings did not make express evaluations of
credibility, and thus they are of limited value in this case. The habeas court’s factual findings
detail the testimony presented, but they fail to explain whether the habeas court determined
Rubio - 38
that the complainant’s recantation was more credible than her trial testimony. Even assuming
that the habeas court found the complainant’s recantation to be more credible than her retrial
testimony, we disagree that that finding would support the habeas court’s recommendation
to grant habeas relief on the basis of actual innocence under these circumstances, as we
explain next.
We disagree with the habeas court’s determination that the complainant had not
recanted her allegations against applicant at any time prior to trial and that the jury was thus
unaware of any such prior recantation. As noted above, the jury at applicant’s retrial heard
testimony from Teresa Garcia, the complainant, and Dr. Marshal Voris discussing the fact
that the complainant had recanted her accusations before trial. Garcia testified that she
attributed this to the trauma or discomfort of the situation. Voris testified that it was a result
of improper questioning that reinforced that an accusation against applicant was being
sought. The SANE report contained an annotation that, during the evaluation, complainant
had accused applicant but then retracted that claim. Given this evidence that was heard at
trial, the record does not support the habeas court’s conclusion that the jury had not
previously heard any recantation on complainant’s part. What is “new” here is the
resoluteness of complainant’s recantation. Although the complainant’s recent recantation
is more adamant than her earlier recantation, it is not so much more compelling that it
establishes by clear and convincing evidence that no reasonable juror would have found
applicant guilty of sexually assaulting complainant.
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We also disagree with the habeas court’s conclusion that a “reasonable juror would
not have found [applicant] guilty of the alleged offenses had it been presented with
[complainant’s] recantation of her outcry in 1997 and her trial testimony in 2003.” The
habeas court did not expressly make a finding that the complainant’s recantation is credible,
and the record is unpersuasive with respect to the veracity of the recantation. The habeas
court notes in its third conclusion of law that “the timing of the recantation is suspect,” and
we agree with that observation. The complainant has inadequately explained why it took
over a decade of time from the retrial until now for her to reveal the supposed pressure from
her older sister that caused complainant to falsify her trial testimony against applicant. And
the complainant’s suggestion that she was coerced by her older sister to make false
statements against applicant is inconsistent with the testimony of her other sister who denies
being pressured in that way and with another sister who maintains that applicant was a sexual
abuser. It appears that the habeas court may have determined that the lack of consistency in
the complainant’s testimony would likely have undermined her credibility at trial, but that
is not the appropriate standard for an actual-innocence claim. Rather, the standard requires
an applicant to make an “exceedingly persuasive case that he is actually innocent,” which,
here, would require him to provide evidence of a credible recantation supported by the
record. See Elizondo, 947 S.W.2d at 206.
Even assuming that the habeas court’s conclusion of law implies that it determined
that the complainant’s recantation was credible, that evidence is unpersuasive when it is
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considered in the context of the totality of the record. The habeas court did not discuss the
complainant’s outcry or the medical findings in its conclusions of law favoring relief. The
complainant claimed that she was pressured by her grandmother to say that applicant sexually
assaulted her, but she waited until her grandmother had passed away to reveal that fact so
now her grandmother cannot respond to those accusations. The medical reports show that
the complainant was sexually abused, but the complainant does not provide any reasonable
explanation with respect to who may have abused her if her claim that applicant is innocent
is true. Complainant explains the medical evidence showing that she was sexually abused
by stating that it was too dark to see who was sexually abusing her, yet she maintains that she
knows it was not applicant. Complainant, therefore, is unable to identify anyone who is
responsible for sexually abusing her. Complainant’s current version of the events claiming
abuse by an unknown person is not clear and convincing evidence of applicant’s innocence,
given that she has repeatedly identified applicant as the perpetrator over the course of twenty
years off-and-on. We conclude that this post-conviction recantation in these sexual-assault
cases lacks strong corroboration by independent evidence, and thus fails to establish that
applicant is actually innocent. See Brown, 205 S.W.3d at 549.
By examining the new evidence in light of the evidence presented at trial, we
determine that applicant has failed to show by clear and convincing evidence that no
reasonable juror would have convicted him. See Navarijo, 433 S.W.3d at 567.
Complainant’s retrial testimony was specific and detailed, describing the frequency, location,
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and mechanics of the abuse applicant committed against her. The SANE examination’s
findings offered independent corroboration of complainant’s testimony, and her retrial
testimony asserted that no one else had sexually abused her. In her punishment retrial
testimony, complainant maintained applicant’s guilt, and she did not seek to withdraw or
change her retrial testimony at any point after the trial until almost two decades later.
Moreover, she had persisted in her assertion of applicant’s guilt long after she was removed
from any coercive pressure from A.M.T. The timing of complainant’s recent recantation is
suspect, given that it was only a short period before her recantation that she reestablished
contact with applicant and some of his family.
At best, complainant’s recent recantation muddies the waters because it shows the
inconsistency in her claims of sexual assault against applicant. We hold that applicant has
failed to establish that he is actually innocent because he has not established by clear and
convincing evidence that no reasonable juror would have convicted him in light of the new
evidence. See Navarijo, 433 S.W.3d at 566-67; Elizondo, 947 S.W.2d at 209.
III. Conclusion
Complainant’s recantation fails to prove by clear and convincing evidence that
applicant is actually innocent. We, therefore, deny relief.
Delivered: November 15, 2017
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