IN THE
TENTH COURT OF APPEALS
No. 10-15-00376-CR
SAMUEL UKWUACHU,
Appellant
v.
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
Appellee
From the 54th District Court
McLennan County, Texas
Trial Court No. 2014-1202-C2
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Samuel Ukwuachu appeals from a conviction for the offense of sexual assault.
TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 22.011. In six issues, Ukwuachu complains that his due process
rights were violated due to the presentation of false testimony relating to cell phone
records of his roommate during the State's cross-examination of his roommate's friend
(issue one) and his roommate (issue two); that the indictment was defective; that evidence
of an extraneous offense was improperly admitted; that his due process rights were
violated due to an abuse of the grand jury process by the State; and that text messages
between the victim and a friend of hers the night of the alleged offense were improperly
excluded. 1 The only issues remaining for us to address are Ukwuachu's complaints
regarding the admission of the extraneous offense and the abuse of the grand jury
process. Because we find no reversible error as to those issues, we affirm the judgment
of the trial court.
EXTRANEOUS OFFENSE EVIDENCE
Ukwuachu complains that the trial court abused its discretion by allowing the
admission of evidence relating to his relationship with a prior girlfriend pursuant to
Rules 403 and 404(b) of the Rules of Evidence. During cross-examination, Ukwuachu
testified that he respected women and that he had never hit a woman before. Ukwuachu
objected that the evidence was not relevant, which the trial court overruled, and
Ukwuachu was given a running objection as to relevance.
The State called the prior girlfriend to testify, during which time she testified that
she and Ukwuachu had been in a dating relationship and during that time, he had hit her
1
We initially reversed the judgment based on the issue relating to the text messages; however, the Court
of Criminal Appeals reversed our judgment and remanded this proceeding for us to consider Ukwuachu's
other issues. See Ukwuachu v. State, No. 10-15-00376-CR, 2017 Tex. App. LEXIS 2432, 2017 WL 1101284 (Tex.
App.—Waco March 22, 2017) (mem. op., not designated for publication) (Ukwuachu I) (reversed by Ukwuachu
v. State, 2018 Tex. Crim. App. Unpub. LEXIS 442, 2018 WL 2711167 (Tex. Crim. App. June 6, 2018) (Ukwuachu
II). In our second opinion, we addressed the issues relating to the false testimony and the defective
indictment. See Ukwuachu v. State, No. 10-15-00376-CR, 2019 Tex. App. LEXIS 5783, 2019 WL 3047342 (Tex.
App.—Waco July 10, 2019) (Ukwuachu III) (reversed by Ukwuachu v. State, 613 S.W.3d 149 (Tex. Crim. App.,
Nov. 18, 2020) (Ukwuachu IV). Neither Ukwuachu nor the State filed new briefs after the second reversal,
therefore, we are proceeding on the same briefs filed prior to our second opinion.
Ukwuachu v. State Page 2
once, choked her briefly with one hand, and prevented her from leaving an apartment
when she wanted to leave. Ukwuachu did not object to the prior girlfriend's testimony
other than several objections that the State was leading the witness.
The State argues that Ukwuachu did not preserve this complaint because his only
objection was to relevance, and he did not object to the admission of the prior girlfriend's
testimony while she was testifying other than the leading objections. A trial objection
that does not comport with the issue raised on appeal preserves nothing for review.
Dixon v. State, 2 S.W.3d 263, 273 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999) (op. on reh'g); see TEX. R. APP. P.
33.1(a). Ukwuachu's trial objection was based solely on relevance and did not preserve a
Rule 403 or 404(b) objection for our review. Accordingly, we overrule this issue.
ABUSE OF THE GRAND JURY
Ukwuachu complains that his due process rights were violated by the State's
improper use of the grand jury to intimidate a witness at trial. Ukwuachu's roommate,
Tagive, had initially given a written statement approximately six weeks after the offense
occurred in which he claimed to be in the apartment asleep during the time of the offense.
Presumably because the State wanted to discredit Tagive's statement, the prosecutor and
an investigator with the district attorney's office had attempted to interview Tagive
shortly before trial, but Tagive refused to talk to them. The prosecutor then subpoenaed
Tagive, an Australian citizen, to testify before the grand jury before trial. Tagive failed to
appear before the grand jury, which resulted in a writ of attachment being issued. Tagive
Ukwuachu v. State Page 3
was taken into custody pursuant to the writ of attachment and appeared before the grand
jury a short time later pursuant to a second grand jury subpoena.
Tagive was questioned before the grand jury by one of the prosecutors that tried
the instant case regarding Tagive's knowledge of the events that occurred the night of the
offense. From his testimony before the grand jury, the State was also able to procure
Tagive's cell phone records and the phone numbers of others that Tagive communicated
with in the time surrounding the offense for purposes of cross-examination of Tagive at
trial. The contents of Tagive's cell phone records, which included tower locations, were
alluded to repeatedly during the State's cross-examination of Tagive, as the State
contended that the records showed that Tagive was in another location and was not
asleep in the apartment where the offense occurred although he had previously stated
that he was.
During the trial, after the State received the cell phone records of Tagive, the
prosecutor that questioned Tagive before the grand jury approached Tagive and his
attorney prior to Tagive testifying on Ukwuachu's behalf. According to Tagive's affidavit
attached to his motion for new trial, the prosecutor informed Tagive that he had Tagive's
cell phone records which showed that his prior statements regarding his location and
actions the night of the offense were false. According to Tagive, the prosecutor stated
that if Tagive testified the same as he had before the grand jury, he would be charged
with two counts of aggravated perjury. The prosecutor gave Tagive and his attorney the
Ukwuachu v. State Page 4
opportunity to look at the phone records.
After this conversation, the prosecutor informed Ukwuachu and the trial court
that Tagive might not be willing to testify because he might be asserting his Fifth
Amendment right against incrimination and informed Ukwuachu that he had Tagive's
cell phone records. At Ukwuachu's request, the trial court recessed the trial for the day
to give Ukwuachu time to review the records.
The next day, Ukwuachu sought a motion in limine as to the cell phone records
and objected to their admission into evidence because the records were not authenticated
and had not been on file for fourteen days. The trial court excluded the cell phone records
from evidence but stated that it would allow questions about cell phone calls. No ruling
was made as to the motion in limine.
Tagive then testified before the jury that he had been in the apartment during the
times that the offense was alleged to have taken place and that he would have heard it if
the victim screamed as she had testified. The State made reference to the cell phone
records and alluded to their contents, including that Tagive was "across town" or making
calls at times when Tagive contended that he was in the apartment asleep, during its
cross-examination of Tagive. The State was able to establish some amount of confusion
by Tagive as to the exact times that things took place that night, but he stood firm on his
contentions regardless of what the records showed, except for answering "Yes, sir" when
asked if he knew that the State had the phone records and that they showed he was across
Ukwuachu v. State Page 5
town or making calls at the relevant times. The State also argued that the cell phone
records showed that Tagive was untruthful in its closing argument.
Ukwuachu filed a motion for new trial, alleging in relevant part that the State had
abused the grand jury process and that the use of the cell phone records had created a
false impression as to Tagive. An affidavit executed by Tagive was attached to the
motion, which set forth his contention that the prosecutor had threatened him with the
aggravated perjury charges but that he decided to testify after he and his attorney
determined that the times shown in the cell phone records actually supported his prior
testimony. Tagive stated that the "threats" by the prosecutor were "unnerving" and
caused him "considerable stress" during his testimony.
PRESERVATION
As a preliminary matter as to this issue, the State argues that this alleged error was
not preserved at trial, and Ukwuachu concedes that he did not object on this basis during
the trial. On appeal, Ukwuachu argues that the error was of such character that an
objection was not required, because a violation of due process is a nonwaivable,
nonforfeitable systemic requirement. Marin v. State, 851 S.W.2d 275, 279 (Tex. Crim. App.
1993), rev'd on other grounds, 891 S.W.2d 267 (Tex. Crim. App. 1994). Pursuant to Marin,
a violation of due process need not be preserved in the trial court to be raised on appeal.
See Marin, 851 S.W.2d at 279. The State disagrees with this characterization of Marin and
contends that preservation was required. Ultimately, because of our holding below, it is
Ukwuachu v. State Page 6
not necessary for us to determine if the error was required to be preserved or if it was a
nonforfeitable systemic requirement, so we will not decide that issue here.
DUE PROCESS VIOLATION
Ukwuachu contends that the grand jury subpoena was issued solely for the
purpose of establishing what his testimony would be at trial because Tagive was
unwilling to speak with the State's investigators or the prosecutor prior to trial, which
was an improper use of the grand jury process and constituted a violation of his due
process rights. Further, Ukwuachu contends that the prosecutor's alleged threats of
prosecution for aggravated perjury based on the cell phone records procured because of
the forced grand jury testimony of Tagive were an attempt to force Tagive not to testify
but ultimately led to Tagive's testimony being tentative and "unnerve[ed]" at trial.
Generally, there is a presumption of regularity attending the purported acts of a
grand jury. State v. Huse, 491 S.W.3d 833, 845 (Tex. Crim. App. 2016) (internal citations
omitted). It is the defendant's burden to overcome the presumption. Id. However, there
are two instances in which it is improper to use the grand jury: (1) as a subterfuge to
compel an investigative interview in a prosecutor's office and (2) for the purpose of
preparing an already pending indictment for trial. See id. However, if the State is
investigating a different criminal offense, it is not improper for a grand jury to continue
to investigate those other potential charges, and "if, in the course of such legitimate
investigative efforts, the prosecutor obtains evidence that is relevant to the pending case,
Ukwuachu v. State Page 7
it can use that evidence at trial." Id. (internal citations omitted).
As it relates to this issue, the record before the trial court at the motion for new
trial consisted solely of the affidavit of Tagive and an expert who opined that the cell
phone records were inaccurately used at trial as to the times the calls in question allegedly
took place and as to the cell tower location information that the State also alluded to in
its questions to Tagive. However, as has been determined by the Court of Criminal
Appeals in Ukwuachu IV, any falsity or improper perception created by the State was not
adequately presented in the record, in large part because the cell phone records
themselves were never made a part of the record. See Ukwuachu IV, 613 S.W.3d at 155.
("[T]he record includes neither the phone records at issue nor any credible expert
testimony identifying actual inconsistencies between those records and the witness
testimony presented at trial.").
Similarly to the holding of the Court of Criminal Appeals in Ukwuachu IV as to
false testimony, we find that the record before the trial court was insufficient for
Ukwuachu to overcome the presumption of regularity of the grand jury process or to
establish that the grand jury was impermissibly used to such a degree to establish any
due process violation. The State's attorney argued during the hearing on the motion for
new trial that there was a concern as to witness tampering which was the reason for the
grand jury subpoena, and Ukwuachu did not address or refute this contention at that
Ukwuachu v. State Page 8
hearing by presenting any evidence to the contrary. 2 We have no record as to what
Tagive's grand jury testimony actually was to be able to ascertain if or how the State's
questioning before the grand jury was improper. 3 Ukwuachu did not object to the State's
2Like the Court of Criminal Appeals recognized in Ukwuachu IV, we recognize the challenge to Ukwuachu's
appellate counsel at the motion for new trial, who was different from his trial counsel, and agree with their
observations that:
[Appellate] Counsel indicated to the trial court during the hearing that he did not have
access to the trial record, presumably because the record had not yet been prepared. Thus,
counsel would not have had any knowledge of the exact manner in which the State used
the phone records to impeach Tagive at trial (e.g., actual questions asked and answers
given regarding call times/locations). Counsel's uncertainty in this regard is reflected in
the record from the motion for new trial.
Ukwuachu IV, 613 S.W.3d at 154, n.8. This uncertainty would presumably extend to the complaint regarding
the grand jury as well.
3In a supplemental brief filed with this Court in anticipation of oral argument in this proceeding in support
of his contention as to this issue, Ukwuachu cites to an article written by the prosecutors who tried the case
months after the trial, in which they addressed their use of the grand jury as follows:
The grand jury is a tool that prosecutors often underutilize. It is a tool we rarely use in
McLennan County, but we will use it with witnesses who refuse to talk to detectives during
the initial investigation or when we suspect witness tampering, as in this case. In front of
the grand jury, we confirmed that the defendant’s alibi was an outright lie that had been
concocted long after the sexual assault and that … Tagive was nowhere near Ukwuachu’s
apartment that night. He testified that the defendant had instructed him not to attend the
grand jury proceedings (which might explain why it took a writ of attachment and some
sheriff’s deputies to secure his testimony). We found out where he was and who he was
with the evening of the rape and obtained his cell phone records and his friends’ cell phone
numbers. (This made a huge difference at trial because cell phone data showed that Tagive
was not asleep the night of the assault, as he claimed, because he was making phone calls
long after he said he was in bed.) We also locked him into his story so that we could
prepare his cross-examination well in advance of trial, effectively neutralizing him as a
defense witness. Hilary LaBorde and Robbie Moody, Pushing Past Red Tape, Getting to the
Truth, THE TEXAS PROSECUTOR, Volume 46, No. 4, (July-August 2016).
To whatever degree this might support Ukwuachu's contentions, it was not part of the record considered
by the trial court and therefore, cannot be considered by this Court in support of this issue, even if we were
to find that it established the very violation of which he complains on appeal. Certainly, Ukwuachu's trial
counsel was aware that Tagive had testified before the grand jury before trial, and during trial was made
aware that the State had procured Tagive's cell phone records as a result of that testimony. However,
Ukwuachu v. State Page 9
references to the grand jury testimony during the trial on this basis. Therefore, because
Ukwuachu did not meet his burden to establish a due process violation against him
occurred from the allegedly impermissible use of the grand jury, we overrule this issue.
CONCLUSION
Having found no reversible error as to Ukwuachu's remaining issues, we affirm
the judgment of the trial court.
TOM GRAY
Chief Justice
Before Chief Justice Gray,
Justice Smith, and
Justice Davis 4
Affirmed
Opinion delivered and filed September 28, 2022
Do not publish
[CR25]
Ukwuachu's trial counsel did not request to review any of the relevant portions of the grand jury testimony
even after that testimony was mentioned by the State in front of the jury during Tagive's cross-examination,
nor did he request a continuance of more than a part of a day to review the cell phone records or to attempt
to procure an expert to assist with his review of the cell phone records. Ukwuachu's trial counsel did not
attempt to exclude the grand jury testimony or otherwise limit its use or the information received as a result
of the testimony, which has led us to the conclusion that the record is inadequate to establish a due process
violation from any improper use of the grand jury. However, our inability to consider the prosecutor's
contentions that are outside the record in this proceeding should not in any way be construed as support
for the State's use of the grand jury as set forth.
4
The Honorable Rex Davis, Senior Justice (Retired) of the Tenth Court of Appeals, sitting by assignment
of the Chief Justice of the Texas Supreme Court. See TEX. GOV'T CODE §§ 74.003, 75.002, 75.003.
Ukwuachu v. State Page 10