Affirmed and Opinion Filed June 30, 2023
In The
Court of Appeals
Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
No. 05-22-00345-CR
DEMEATRICE RENEE SHEPPARD, Appellant
V.
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
On Appeal from the 397th Judicial District Court
Grayson County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. 071988
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Before Justices Nowell, Goldstein, and Breedlove
Opinion by Justice Breedlove
A jury found appellant Demeatrice Renee Sheppard guilty of injury to a child
and assessed punishment at nine years’ imprisonment. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN.
§ 22.04(f). In a single issue, appellant contends her trial counsel was ineffective. We
affirm appellant’s conviction in this memorandum opinion. TEX. R. APP. P. 47.4.
Background
Appellant was indicted for causing bodily injury to her niece J.L.B., age 8. In
the indictment, the State alleged that appellant intentionally or knowingly, recklessly
or by criminal negligence caused J.L.B. bodily injury by striking her with an
extension cord.
J.L.B. was living with appellant and appellant’s seven children on January 14,
2020. On that day, J.L.B. refused to get off the school bus on the way home from
school. Mindy Schoen, then the assistant principal of the school, instructed the bus
driver to bring J.L.B. back to school. There, J.L.B. told Schoen that appellant had
“whooped” her with an electrical cord. J.L.B. showed Schoen injuries on her hands
and legs. Schoen “quit counting after 20 marks on the back of her legs, and on the
backs of her knees.” Schoen immediately called the Department of Family and
Protective Services (DFPS), and, at DFPS’s instruction, the Sherman Police
Department.
Officer Brad Bigham responded to the call. He observed J.L.B.’s injuries,
which he described as “[t]hin lines across her legs and buttocks consistent with her
description of being hit with a cord of some sort.” Christiana Horn, then an
investigator with DFPS, arrived and took J.L.B. to the Grayson County Children’s
Advocacy Center. Horn then took pictures of J.L.B.’s injuries. These photographs
were admitted into evidence at trial as State’s Exhibits 1 through 23 and published
to the jury. They depicted what a medical expert later described as multiple “[l]inear
and looped-mark bruises and cuts” to J.L.B.’s body.
Detective Rob Ballew then took over the investigation. He testified that J.L.B.
was interviewed by Britney Barker of the Grayson County Children’s Advocacy
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Center later the same day. Ballew observed the interview from another room by
closed-circuit TV. He then returned to the police department to continue his
investigation. Later the same evening, he conducted a custodial interview with
appellant at the police department. After being advised of her rights, appellant spoke
with Ballew for approximately thirty-five minutes before she withdrew her consent
and invoked her right to counsel. The interview was recorded. The video recording
was admitted into evidence as State’s exhibit 47 and was played for the jury. During
the interview, appellant continuously denied any knowledge of, or responsibility for,
J.L.B.’s injuries. She described J.L.B. as a “manipulative child” who had told lies at
school and to other family members and had stolen things from other children and
from family members. Appellant also said that J.L.B. had been “gone for weeks” at
her grandmother’s and had just returned home. Appellant told Ballew that J.L.B.
“just lies.”
J.L.B. testified at trial. She testified that the injuries shown in State’s Exhibit
4, one of Horn’s photographs, were caused by appellant hitting her with an extension
cord. J.L.B. also testified that she had been at her great-aunt Beverly Frazier’s1 home
over the Christmas holidays and had been disciplined there; she said Frazier
“whooped me with a flyswatter.” On cross-examination, J.L.B. admitted that she had
told lies about appellant in the past.
1
Some of the other witnesses referred to Frazier as J.L.B.’s grandmother, but Frazier herself testified
that she is J.L.B.’s great-aunt.
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Jaleah Dixon, appellant’s oldest daughter, was twenty at the time of trial. She
testified she was living with appellant in January 2020. She observed appellant
disciplining J.L.B. for not taking a bath before she went to school:
Q. Did you actually see the defendant discipline JLB for this?
A. Yes.
Q. How did she discipline her for doing that?
A. She whooped her. She—she had her on the floor. She had her knee
into her back. And [J.L.B.] was yelling she couldn’t breathe. And she
got an extension cord. She told one of the kids to go get it, which was
me, and she whooped [J.L.B.] with it.
Q. So she actually had you go get an extension cord for her?
A. Yes.
Q. To whoop an eight-year-old kid?
A. Yes. And she was on her back. Her knee in her back, [J.L.B.] was
yelling she couldn’t breathe. And we all had to watch.
On cross-examination, Dixon admitted she initially told police she had not
seen any beatings. She also admitted that she had done things to get back at appellant
for matters unrelated to J.L.B. including making negative postings about appellant
on social media and putting sugar in the gas tank of appellant’s car.
J.L.B.’s great-aunt Beverly Frazier testified that J.L.B. had been visiting at
her home over the Christmas holidays in 2019. She admitted to spanking J.L.B. with
a belt during that visit. She hit J.L.B. on her bottom, not her legs, and did not use an
extension cord.
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Britney Barker of the Children’s Advocacy Center testified generally about
conducting interviews with children before turning to the specific interview with
J.L.B. on January 14, 2020. She talked about the Center’s procedures for forensic
interviews and “red flags” she looks for to determine if a child has been coached or
influenced to make a false allegation. She discussed her interview with J.L.B., noting
that J.L.B. was able to give sensory details, was consistent, and did not appear to
have been coached. J.L.B. told her that appellant got an extension cord and hit her
on the legs. When appellant broke her own fingernail, she hit J.L.B. harder on the
legs, and also hit J.L.B. on the hand. J.L.B.’s fingers swelled for two days afterwards.
She had bruises on her hands and legs. J.L.B. said the blood soaked through the
tights she was wearing.2
Dr. Suzanne Dakil, a medical doctor who is board certified in pediatrics and
child abuse pediatrics, was the State’s final witness. She testified that she made a
“forensic assessment” of J.L.B.’s injuries by reviewing photographs and other
background information. She discussed J.L.B.’s injuries in detail, describing them
as “[l]inear and looped-mark bruises and cuts to her body” on both legs. She
concluded the injuries indicated that J.L.B. “was hit with a flexible object
repeatedly,” and were consistent with being hit with an extension cord. She opined
that the injuries were excessive and were indicative of child abuse.
2
Two pairs of bloodstained tights or leggings were found by police in a bin of J.L.B.’s clothes at
appellant’s home. They were photographed, and the photographs were admitted into evidence at trial.
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Appellant testified before the jury in the first phase of the trial. She denied
that she injured J.L.B. She denied seeing J.L.B.’s injuries. She testified that J.L.B.
was lying about who caused the injuries.
But she conceded:
Q. If you believed that someone whooped a kid and caused those
injuries, would that upset you?
A. It would if I knew they did it. If I knew that a person did it, I
would say, hey, yes, it would bother me. If I knew they did it, of
course it would.
The jury found appellant guilty of intentional or knowing injury to a child.
During the punishment phase, J.L.B. and Frazier again testified for the State. The
State also called Tracy Knight, a communication supervisor at the Sherman Police
Department. Knight testified about a 911 call received the previous day. A recording
of the call was admitted into evidence and played for the jury. This evidence showed
that shortly after the jury’s verdict the previous afternoon, appellant called the police
department seeking a warrant against Dixon, her daughter who had testified against
her earlier in the day.
Three witnesses testified on appellant’s behalf during the punishment phase,
including a co-worker, one of appellant’s sons, and a young man who had been
appellant’s mentee in an internship. These witnesses testified to appellant’s
professionalism at work and her skills as the working parent of seven children.
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The jury assessed punishment at nine years’ confinement. The jury did not
“recommend that the imposition of [appellant’s] sentence be suspended and [s]he be
placed on community supervision.”
This appeal followed. In one issue, appellant contends her trial counsel
provided ineffective assistance “by failing to object to testimony that bolstered the
complainant’s accusation by improper vouching, improper opinion testimony, and
improper hearsay.”
Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
We evaluate the effectiveness of counsel under the standard enunciated in
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984). See Hernandez v. State, 988 S.W.2d
770, 770 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999). To prevail on her ineffective assistance claim,
appellant must show counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard of
reasonableness, and a reasonable probability exists that the result of the proceedings
would have been different absent counsel’s errors. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687–88,
694.
Our review of counsel’s performance is highly deferential, and we presume
counsel provided reasonable assistance. Bone v. State, 77 S.W.3d 828, 833 (Tex.
Crim. App. 2002). When the record is silent about the motivation of counsel’s
tactical decisions, the appellant will rarely overcome the strong presumption that
counsel acted reasonably. Mallett v. State, 65 S.W.3d 59, 63 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001).
We generally assume a strategic motive if any can be imagined and find counsel’s
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performance deficient only if his conduct was so outrageous no competent attorney
would have engaged in it. Andrews v. State, 159 S.W.3d 98, 101 (Tex. Crim. App.
2005). In most cases, the record on direct appeal is insufficient to review ineffective
assistance of counsel claims. Thompson v. State, 9 S.W.3d 808, 813–14 (Tex. Crim.
App. 1999). When the record on appeal is silent regarding counsel’s actions we may
not speculate to find trial counsel ineffective. See Bone, 77 S.W.3d at 835.
Appellant contends her counsel provided ineffective assistance “by failing to
object to testimony that bolstered the complainant’s accusation by improper
vouching, improper opinion testimony, and improper hearsay.” She argues that the
trial court would have sustained proper objections to this testimony. She also
contends that counsel “pursued a strategy of blaming an alternate perpetrator in the
face of compelling eyewitness testimony.”
The record contains no explanation of counsel’s motives or strategy in failing
to make certain objections and by “blaming an alternate perpetrator.” Although
appellant filed a motion for new trial, she did not argue that her counsel was
ineffective, and the record does not reflect a hearing or ruling on the motion.
Appellant argues, however, that her ineffective assistance claim may be raised
on direct appeal because (1) no strategic motive can be imagined, (2) the imagined
strategy was not objectively reasonable, or (3) counsel’s deficient performance was
outrageous. She cites Andrews in support of her argument that “trial counsel’s failure
to object to the improper opinions of multiple professionals and experts cannot be
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characterized as within the design of any objectively reasonable trial strategy—real
or imaginative.” In Andrews, trial counsel failed to object to the prosecutor’s
misstatement of the law regarding sentencing during the prosecutor’s closing
argument. See Andrews, 159 S.W.3d at 103. The court concluded that “[u]nder the
extremely unusual circumstances of this case, the record contains all the information
that we need to make a decision,” and there could be no reasonable strategy for not
objecting to the prosecutor’s misstatement of the law. Id. “Thus, counsel’s reasons,
if any, were unnecessary to resolve the ineffective assistance of counsel claim.”
Goodspeed v. State, 187 S.W.3d 390, 394 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005) (Price, J.,
concurring) (discussing Andrews). The “extremely unusual” circumstances that were
present in Andrews are not found here.
Appellant contends that witnesses Schoen, Ballew, and Barker were permitted
to “vouch” for J.L.B.’s veracity. She argues that witnesses Schoen, Bigham, Ballew,
and Dakil “share[d] hearsay accounts that bolstered J.L.B.’s accusation by showing
her consistency.” And she contends that counsel permitted Schoen, Bigham, Horn,
Ballew, and Dakil to “share[ ] expert or pseudo-expert opinions on excessive force
and child abuse.” She argues that counsel’s failure to object to this testimony
constituted ineffective assistance.
We agree with appellant that the jury must be the “ultimate arbiters of
credibility,” see Sandoval v. State, 409 S.W.3d 259, 291 (Tex. App.—Austin 2013,
no pet.), and that the “ultimate issue of criminal responsibility is beyond the province
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of expert witnesses” and must be decided only by the jury. Graham v. State, 566
S.W.2d 941, 949 (Tex. Crim. App. 1978). But we disagree with appellant’s
contention that because of counsel’s failure to object to certain testimony, the jury
was not the ultimate arbiter here.
We have recognized on numerous occasions that experts may rely on their
training and experience in interviewing children to determine whether a child’s
outcry exhibits signs of exaggeration, manipulation, or other “red flags.” Both the
Court of Criminal Appeals and this Court have concluded that this type of testimony
is admissible and not a direct comment on a complainant’s truthfulness. See, e.g.,
Schutz v. State, 957 S.W.2d 52, 73 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997); White v. State,
No. 05-21-00901-CR, 2022 WL 2763357, at *3 (Tex. App.—Dallas July 15, 2022,
no pet.) (mem. op., not designated for publication); Granados v. State,
No. 05-17-01301-CR, 2019 WL 1349510, at *1 (Tex. App.—Dallas Mar. 26, 2019,
no pet.) (mem. op., not designated for publication) (collecting cases). The testimony
of Ballew and Barker that appellant cites as “vouching” for J.L.B.’s honesty—such
as Barker’s testimony about a child’s ability to describe sensory details—falls into
this category. See White, 2022 WL 2763357, at *2–3 (expert’s testimony about
forensic interviewers’ training to look for “red flags” during the interview such as
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lack of sensory details, inconsistencies, and evidence of coaching was admissible
and not a direct comment on complainant’s truthfulness).3
Appellant next contends that “counsel allowed witnesses to share hearsay
accounts that bolstered J.L.B.’s accusation by showing her consistency.” The
testimony appellant cites, however, is evidence offered to show why the witnesses
acted as they did, not evidence offered for its truth. For example, Bigham and Ballew
testified that they arrived at J.L.B.’s school after receiving a report that a child had
been beaten or abused. Schoen testified that she instructed the bus company to bring
J.L.B. back to school after she was told J.L.B. did not want to get off the school bus
and did not want to go home. A hearsay objection to this testimony would not have
been sustained. See Scott v. State, 222 S.W.3d 820, 831–32 (Tex. App.—Houston
[14th Dist.] 2007, no pet.) (testimony offered to show circumstances under which
witness called the police was not hearsay); TEX. R. EVID. 801(d)(2) (hearsay is “a
statement . . . a party offers in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted in
the statement”). Further, Dakil, an expert, could testify about the information she
relied on in reaching her opinion that J.L.B.’s injuries were consistent with abuse.
See, e.g., Fox v. State, 175 S.W.3d 475, 482 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2005, pet. ref’d)
3
Appellant also complains about a final, single question to Schoen on redirect. Schoen answered
“Correct” to the question whether J.L.B. “didn’t appear to be mistaken that it was the defendant that
whooped her with an extension cord?” During the immediately-preceding cross-examination, appellant’s
counsel elicited testimony from Schoen that J.L.B. “has made mistakes.” The questions were based on
incidents at school appellant mentioned in her interview with police to support her contention that J.L.B.
was not truthful. Counsel’s decision to move on to the next witness and not bring attention to this final
salvo on redirect could have been a strategic decision not to prolong Schoen’s time on the stand when he
had already raised questions about her credulity and judgment.
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(expert may not testify a witness is truthful but may testify a child exhibits symptoms
consistent with abuse). Dakil could also base her opinions on inadmissible hearsay.
Allison v. State, 666 S.W.3d 750, 763 (Tex. Crim. App. 2023) (“Texas Rule of
Evidence 703 allows an expert to base his or her opinion on inadmissible hearsay.
TEX. R. EVID. 703. This is because the testifying expert’s opinion is not itself hearsay
and the testifying expert is available for cross-examination.”).4
Appellant next argues that counsel permitted witnesses to “share[ ] expert or
pseudo-expert opinions on excessive force and child abuse.” She contends the trial
court would have sustained objections to testimony that J.L.B.’s injuries were
excessive, were the result of physical abuse, and were beyond reasonable discipline.
Even if we were to assume that the trial court would have sustained objections to
this testimony, the issue for the jury was not the severity of J.L.B.’s injuries but
whether appellant was the person who inflicted them, and if so, whether appellant
did so intentionally or knowingly, recklessly, or by criminal negligence. It is possible
that given the graphic photographs of J.L.B.’s injuries that were already in evidence,
counsel decided it would be unwise to appear to be challenging testimony about the
injuries’ severity. Assuming this strategic motive, we may not conclude counsel’s
4
We also note that during Ballew’s testimony, the jury watched the video of appellant’s interview with
police during which she stated that J.L.B. “just lies,” and had told lies on a number of occasions. Because
J.L.B.’s character for truthfulness was attacked, evidence of her truthful character was admissible. TEX. R.
EVID. 608(a); see also TEX. R. EVID. 404(a)(3) (in a criminal case, with certain exceptions, a defendant
may offer evidence of a victim’s pertinent trait, and if the evidence is admitted, the prosecutor may offer
evidence to rebut it).
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performance was deficient. See Andrews, 159 S.W.3d at 101 (reviewing court
“assume[s] a strategic motive if any can be imagined”); Bone, 77 S.W.3d at 835
(reviewing court may not speculate to find counsel ineffective where record is silent
on counsel’s actions).
Appellant also contends that counsel’s “strategy of blaming an alternate
perpetrator” was not objectively reasonable because two eyewitnesses—J.L.B. and
appellant’s adult daughter Dixon—testified that appellant struck J.L.B. with an
extension cord and caused her injuries. However, the record reflects that counsel
cross-examined both Dixon and J.L.B. at some length, eliciting admissions from
Dixon that she was angry at her mother for her own reasons and admissions from
J.L.B. that she had told lies on other occasions. Further, the jury heard appellant’s
interview with police in which appellant unequivocally denied striking J.L.B. at all.
Although Ballew attempted to give appellant the opportunity to explain mitigating
circumstances—that perhaps appellant lost control after a long day and did not
realize the severity of her actions—appellant continued to deny that she had
disciplined J.L.B. in any way. Further, appellant chose to testify after being
admonished by her counsel about the risks of doing so. In her testimony, appellant
continued to deny that she caused J.L.B.’s injuries. Given appellant’s adamant
denials and without a record of counsel’s reasoning, we cannot say counsel’s
strategy was objectively unreasonable. See Andrews, 159 S.W.3d at 102.
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We conclude appellant has not “overcome the strong presumption that
counsel’s conduct was reasonable.” See Mallett, 65 S.W.3d at 63. We decide
appellant’s sole issue against her.
Conclusion
Appellant’s conviction is affirmed.
/Maricela Breedlove/
220345f.u05 MARICELA BREEDLOVE
Do Not Publish JUSTICE
TEX. R. APP. P. 47.2(b)
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Court of Appeals
Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
JUDGMENT
DEMEATRICE RENEE On Appeal from the 397th Judicial
SHEPPARD, Appellant District Court, Grayson County,
Texas
No. 05-22-00345-CR V. Trial Court Cause No. 071988.
Opinion delivered by Justice
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee Breedlove. Justices Nowell and
Goldstein participating.
Based on the Court’s opinion of this date, the judgment of the trial court is
AFFIRMED.
Judgment entered this 30th day of June, 2023.
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