Ronald Starkey v. State ( 2019 )


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  •                                   In the
    Court of Appeals
    Second Appellate District of Texas
    at Fort Worth
    ___________________________
    No. 02-18-00192-CR
    ___________________________
    RONALD STARKEY, Appellant
    V.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS
    On Appeal from the 271st District Court
    Jack County, Texas
    Trial Court No. 4743
    Before Kerr and Bassel, JJ.; and Wallach, J.1
    Memorandum Opinion by Justice Kerr
    1
    The Honorable Mike Wallach, Judge of the 348th District Court of Tarrant County, sitting
    by assignment of the Chief Justice of the Texas Supreme Court pursuant to section 74.003(h) of the
    Government Code. See Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 74.003(h).
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    A jury found Ronald Starkey guilty of aggravated sexual assault of a child, a
    first-degree felony, and assessed his punishment at 50 years’ imprisonment and a
    $10,000 fine. Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.021(a)(1)(B)(v), (a)(2)(B), (e). After the trial
    court sentenced Starkey, he appealed, and in his brief, he asserts eight issues that fall
    into four groups:
    • His first four issues attack an allegedly defective indictment and various
    ramifications that followed as a result;
    • His fifth issue attacks Starkey’s recorded interviews that the trial court
    admitted over Starkey’s objections;
    • His sixth and seventh issues assert that the trial court erroneously
    admitted outcry-witness testimony; and
    • His eighth issue argues cumulative error.
    We hold that Starkey has shown error in his sixth and seventh issues but that the
    errors were harmless, and in his remaining issues, we hold that Starkey has not shown
    error; thus, we affirm.
    Background
    In 2004 when Abby 2 was four years old, she made an outcry to her babysitter in
    which she identified Starkey, her adoptive father, as the perpetrator. The babysitter
    then informed Abby’s mother (Mother), who discussed the matter with Starkey but
    2
    We use a fictitious name to refer to the complainant. See Tex. R. App. P. 9.8 &
    cmt., 9.10.
    2
    not with Abby. Mother then informed the babysitter that Starkey thought that the
    babysitter was trying to break up the family, and within about a week after Abby’s
    outcry, Starkey, Mother, Abby, and Abby’s younger sister all moved to Oklahoma.
    Over the next four years, the family moved around 15 times before eventually settling
    in California in 2009.
    Years later, in 2012, Mother and Starkey filed for divorce. But the proceedings
    dragged on until September 2014, when the trial court finally signed a divorce decree.
    Shortly after the divorce, in early 2015 Abby began receiving counseling in San
    Diego for anxiety, depression, and suicidal ideation. While in counseling, Abby made
    an outcry to Mother that Mother recognized as the same outcry that the babysitter
    had related to Mother back in 2004. Mother told Abby’s charge nurse, and later both
    Child Protective Services and the San Diego County Sheriff’s Office contacted
    Mother.
    By 2016, an Oklahoma special agent and a Texas investigator had interviewed
    Starkey in Oklahoma. During those interviews, Starkey acknowledged that something
    inappropriate occurred with Abby in 2004 in Texas but maintained that it was
    accidental. Starkey asserted that he was masturbating in the master bathroom when
    Abby came in unexpectedly, which startled him, and as he turned towards her, he
    ejaculated over Abby’s face and hair. When pressed to answer whether his penis’s tip
    had entered Abby’s mouth, Starkey indicated that he did not remember, later
    conceded that it was possible, then appeared to agree that contact had occurred, and
    3
    ultimately did not balk when the investigator twice summarized his statement as
    including his penis penetrating Abby’s mouth.
    During trial, the testimony varied greatly regarding Abby’s 2004 outcry to her
    babysitter. The babysitter testified that Abby simply stated that Starkey was touching
    her in ways that made her feel uncomfortable and denied recalling that Abby had ever
    said that Starkey had made Abby lick whipped cream off his genitals. In contrast,
    Mother testified that the babysitter had told her that Abby’s outcry described oral sex
    involving whipped cream. Finally, when Abby herself was asked what she had told the
    babysitter, she responded, “I told her that he told me that it tastes like whipped
    cream.” Abby did not know whether the babysitter ever told Mother.
    At trial, Abby testified that she performed oral sex on Starkey with Starkey’s
    assurances that “the white stuff . . . from his penis” would taste like whipped cream.
    But it had not; it had tasted sour instead.
    I. The indictment alleged aggravated sexual assault of a child, a first-degree
    felony, and Starkey waived any complaint to the contrary.
    Starkey’s first four issues focus on an allegedly defective indictment. He
    contends that although the grand jury indicted him for sexual assault of a child (a
    second-degree felony offense with a maximum punishment of 20 years’ imprisonment
    and a fine not to exceed $10,000) and not aggravated sexual assault of a child (a first-
    degree felony offense with a maximum punishment of 99 years’ or life imprisonment
    and a $10,000 fine), the petit jury convicted him of the first-degree offense, aggravated
    4
    sexual assault of a child. Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 12.33 (“Second Degree Felony
    Punishment”), 12.32 (“First Degree Felony Punishment”), 22.011(a)(2)(E), (f)
    (“Sexual Assault”), 22.021(a)(1)(B)(v), (a)(2)(B), (e) (“Aggravated Sexual Assault”).
    The same error meant that the jury punished him within the expanded range of the
    first-degree offense and beyond the range of the second-degree offense:
    [1] Did the trial court deprive [Starkey] of due process by submitting an
    unindicted offense of [a]ggravated [s]exual [a]ssault to the jury?
    [2] Was the indictment sufficient to support [Starkey’s] conviction of
    first-degree felony aggravated sexual assault?
    [3] Was the indictment sufficient to support the jury charge for [first-
    degree] felony aggravated sexual assault?
    [4] Did [Starkey] receive an illegal sentence when he was charged in the
    indictment with [second-degree] felony sexual assault, but sentenced for
    first-degree felony aggravated sexual assault of a child?
    Determining what the indictment alleged resolves all four issues.
    As shown below, the “indictment” had two parts:
    • a caption (above the charging instrument’s horizontal divider), and
    • the formal, statutory allegations as required by article 21.02 of the code
    of criminal procedure (below the horizontal divider). See Tex. Code
    Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 21.02.
    The charging instrument provides:
    No. 4743 Court: 271st Judicial District                       Bond $100,000
    The State of Texas vs. RONALD STARKEY
    Charge: SEXUAL ASSAULT CHILD
    Second Degree Felony 22.011(a)(2) PC
    5
    Person ID 355992
    ________________________________________________________
    IN THE NAME AND BY AUTHORITY OF THE STATE OF
    TEXAS:
    THE GRAND JURY, for the County of Jack, State of Texas, duly
    selected, impaneled, sworn, charged, and organized as such at the
    January Term A.D. 2016 of the 271st Judicial District Court for said
    County, upon their oaths present in and to said Court at said term that
    RONALD STARKEY, hereinafter styled Defendant, on or about the
    1st day of May, 2004, and before the presentment of this indictment, in
    the County and State aforesaid, did
    then and there knowingly cause the mouth of [Abby], a
    child who was then and there younger than 14 years of age
    and not the spouse of the defendant, to contact the sexual
    organ of the defendant.
    Against the peace and dignity of the State.
    /S/ [Foreperson]
    Foreperson of the Grand Jury
    The caption identifies the offense as a second-degree felony under § 22.011(a)(2)(E),
    which applies to a child “younger than 17 years of age.” See Tex. Penal Code Ann.
    § 22.011(a)(2)(E), (c)(1), (f). But by including “a child who was then and there younger
    than 14 years of age,” the formal, statutory allegations allege a first-degree felony. See
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.021(a)(1)(B)(v), (a)(2)(B), (e).
    To determine whether Starkey committed the second-degree felony, he
    contends that the allegation “a child who was then and there younger than 14 years of
    age” is surplusage and should thus be ignored. We are unpersuaded.
    6
    The charging instrument’s formal, statutorily required portion—starting with
    “In the name and by authority of the State of Texas” and concluding with “Against
    the peace and dignity of the State,” along with the foreperson’s signature—shows that
    the grand jury indicted Starkey for the first-degree offense of aggravated sexual assault
    of a child. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 21.02. It follows that the caption
    misidentified the offense as a second-degree sexual assault of a child.
    Starkey insists that we must consider the charging instrument as a whole, which
    includes the caption. See Jenkins v. State, No. PD-0086-18, 
    2018 WL 6332219
    , at *4–
    5 (Tex. Crim. App. Dec. 5, 2018). But to get there, Starkey must argue that the
    indictment is fundamentally defective (which was what the appellant in Jenkins
    argued 3), and here Starkey argues that the indictment is fundamentally defective for
    lack of notice because it does not allege or identify aggravated sexual assault of a child
    in the caption. True enough, the caption does not—but the formal, statutorily
    required portion of the charging instrument unequivocally sets out the elements of
    aggravated sexual assault of a child. Thus, lack of notice is not the problem. That
    leaves us with an indictment that potentially alleges two identifiable offenses.
    3
    See Jenkins, 
    2018 WL 6332219
    , at *1 (“Appellant argued to the trial court that,
    since the indictment filed by the State and read to the jury at the beginning of his trial
    did not name him personally, it did not charge ‘a person,’ and thus it was fatally
    defective . . . .”).
    7
    Assuming, without deciding, that Jenkins applies as Starkey asserts, 4 the dispute
    becomes which of the two identifiable offenses within the indictment controls.
    Starkey asserts that the caption controls over the portion that the grand jury
    foreperson formally approved.
    Initially, we note that Starkey’s position on appeal is at odds with his position at
    trial, where he did not dispute that the indictment alleged aggravated sexual assault of
    a child, the first-degree felony. For example, as the trial court was making its opening
    remarks during voir dire, the following occurred:
    [THE COURT:] Mr. Starkey is . . . charged with sexual assault of a child.
    It says on the indictment that that’s a second-degree felony, and—
    [PROSECUTOR]: Your Honor (gesturing), may we approach?
    THE COURT: Yes.
    4
    See Jenkins, 
    2018 WL 6332219
    , at *5 (stating that the rule set out in Stansbury v.
    State that the caption is not part of the indictment proper does not control when
    determining whether a charging instrument meets the constitutional definition of an
    indictment (citing 
    82 S.W.2d 962
    , 964 (Tex. Crim. App. 1935)); see also State v. Beatty,
    No. 09-17-00170-CR, 
    2018 WL 1097721
    , at *2, *3 (Tex. App.—Beaumont Feb. 28,
    2018, no pet.) (mem. op., not designated for publication) (“In the present case, Beatty
    argues that because the indictment cites one particular statutory subsection but the
    body of the indictment tracks the language of another subsection within the same
    statute, he cannot be adequately apprised of which law applies to his case . . . . We
    find this argument unpersuasive.”) (“[T]he [incorrect statutory] citation [about] which
    Beatty complains . . . is actually found in the caption. Texas courts have long held that
    a caption constitutes no part of an indictment. . . . Any error contained in the caption
    will be considered harmless surplusage absent a showing of prejudice.” (citing
    
    Stansbury, 82 S.W.2d at 964
    ; Thibadeaux v. State, 
    628 S.W.2d 485
    , 487 (Tex. App.—
    Texarkana 1982, no pet.))). Because we hold that Starkey waived his complaint, we
    need not decide whether Jenkins modified Stansbury in this context.
    8
    (At the Bench)
    [PROSECUTOR]: It’s wrong. It should be first-degree felony. It’s
    aggravated. It was . . . submitted from the Sheriff’s Department and
    didn’t get changed on the—I apologize.
    THE COURT: All right. It’s okay.
    [(To the venire)] Actually, I incorrectly stated on the indictment. It’s a
    first-degree felony, and the . . . attorneys will discuss that with you more
    in just a few minutes.
    Starkey did not object to the prosecutor’s asserting that the indictment alleged a first-
    degree felony.
    As another example, during the charge conference Starkey did not object to the
    charge, which encompassed aggravated sexual assault of a child and the lesser-
    included offenses of indecency with a child by sexual contact and indecency with a
    child by exposure. Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 21.11(a)(1), (2). Conspicuously absent was
    an instruction for the lesser-included offense of sexual assault of a child, presumably
    because if an offense occurred at all, it occurred to a child under 14 years of age. See
    Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 22.011(c)(1), 22.021(a)(2)(B), (b)(1); see also State v. Meru,
    
    414 S.W.3d 159
    , 161 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013) (noting that whether to give an
    instruction on a lesser-included offense involves a two-step analysis: (1) are the
    elements of the lesser-included offense included within the proof necessary to
    establish the charged offense’s elements? (2) is there evidence in the record from
    which a jury could find the defendant guilty of only the lesser-included offense?).
    9
    When the defendant does not attack an indictment “before the date on which
    the trial on the merits commences,” the code of criminal procedure provides that the
    defendant “waives and forfeits” any complaint. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art.
    1.14(b). 5 Starkey finds himself precisely in that procedural position, so we apply article
    1.14(b) here. If the indictment confused Starkey about which offense it charged, he
    had to complain “before the date on which the trial on the merits commence[d].” Id.;
    see Jenkins, 
    2018 WL 6332219
    , at *1 (“Since Appellant did not object to the indictment
    until the second day of his trial, he waived and forfeited the right to raise the
    objection on appeal.” (citing Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 1.14(b)); Kirkpatrick v.
    State, 
    279 S.W.3d 324
    , 329 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) (“Appellant had adequate notice
    that she was charged with a felony. If she had confusion about whether the State did,
    or intended to, charge her with a felony, she could have, and should have, objected to
    the defective indictment before the date of trial.”); Teal v. State, 
    230 S.W.3d 172
    ,
    182 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007) (“If appellant was confused about whether the State did
    Article 1.14(b) provides:
    5
    If the defendant does not object to a defect, error, or irregularity of form
    or substance in an indictment or information before the date on which
    the trial on the merits commences, he waives and forfeits the right to
    object to the defect, error, or irregularity and he may not raise the
    objection on appeal or in any other postconviction proceeding. Nothing
    in this article prohibits a trial court from requiring that an objection to
    an indictment or information be made at an earlier time in compliance
    with Article 28.01 of this code.
    Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 1.14(b).
    10
    or intended to charge him with a felony, he could have and should have objected to
    the defective indictment before the date of trial.”). Because Starkey did not object
    before the trial started, he waived and forfeited his right to complain about any
    ambiguity regarding which of two offenses the indictment alleged. See Tex. Code
    Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 1.14(b).
    We overrule Starkey’s first four issues.
    II. The trial court’s instructions to the jury, which the jury presumptively
    followed, precluded it from using the special agent’s and the
    investigator’s comments during their interviews with Starkey against
    him.
    Starkey’s fifth issue focuses on the two recorded interviews conducted by
    Agent Troy Morris and Investigator Robert Pawley: “[5] Did the trial court err by
    admitting inadmissible hearsay and other impermissible statements made by
    investigators in the recorded interview of [Starkey]?” During the interviews, Agent
    Morris and Investigator Pawley talked far more than Starkey did, so Starkey argues
    that their comments constituted hearsay, bolstering, confrontation-clause violations,
    and infringements on the province of the jury.
    A. Background
    Agent Morris interviewed Starkey on June 22, 2016. Before the State played the
    recorded interview to the jury, the trial court instructed the jury that Agent Morris’s
    statements were not evidence:
    THE COURT: All right. Ladies and gentlemen, you are about to listen
    to an interview. And any statements by Troy Morris as to things
    11
    someone else may have said, you are instructed that you should consider
    those only for the limited purpose of what they actually are, a question
    and not as actual evidence themselves. You . . . can consider the
    statements made by the Defendant in this case in response to them for
    all purposes.
    So you may proceed.
    Investigator Pawley spoke to Starkey after Agent Morris did. Before the State
    played Investigator Pawley’s recording to the jury, the trial court similarly instructed
    the jury not to consider Investigator Pawley’s statements as evidence:
    THE COURT: All right. Ladies and gentlemen, . . . in the event there are
    questions that bring in alleged statements made by someone else, the
    question in and . . . of itself by, in this case, Investigator Pawley would
    not be evidence in the case; however, any response made by the
    Defendant in the context within which it is made, based upon the
    question to the Defendant, can be considered as evidence for all
    purposes to the extent the jury wishes to consider it as evidence.
    Please proceed.
    The trial court followed up these admonishments with this jury-charge
    instruction: “You are instructed that the statements made by Special Agent Morris and
    D.A. Investigator Pawley during the recorded interviews with the Defendant are not
    admitted for their truth but only to assist you, if they do, in understanding the answers
    of the Defendant.”
    B. Standard of Review
    We review a trial court’s ruling to admit or exclude evidence under an abuse-of-
    discretion standard. Kirk v. State, 
    199 S.W.3d 467
    , 478 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2006,
    12
    pet. ref’d). A trial court abuses its discretion if its decision falls outside the “zone of
    reasonable disagreement.” 
    Id. C. Discussion
    Here, before the jurors heard either interview, the trial court instructed them
    that what Agent Morris and Investigator Pawley said was not evidence. And in the
    charge, the trial court again instructed the jury to consider their statements only if
    helpful understanding Starkey’s answers. Without evidence to the contrary, we
    presume that the jury follows the trial court’s instructions. Jenkins v. State, 
    493 S.W.3d 583
    , 616 (Tex. Crim. App. 2016); see 
    Kirk, 199 S.W.3d at 479
    . Starkey points to no
    such evidence. See 
    Jenkins, 493 S.W.3d at 616
    .
    And although Agent Morris and Investigator Pawley did most of the talking,
    the videos showed the jury how Starkey nonverbally responded to the accusations and
    the questions and, perhaps more importantly, how he did not deny them. This
    dynamic came out during Agent Morris’s testimony:
    BY [THE PROSECUTOR]:
    Q. Now, Special Agent Morris, I think there was a question that was
    asked, and your response was you were looking for the truth, and then
    you added but. . . but he has another option. Can you . . . finish—I think
    the [d]efense attorney objected. So if you could finish your . . . thought
    on that particular matter.
    A. So whenever we . . . bring out those affirmative questions I spoke
    about earlier regarding the moral behavior, we ask, obviously, about the
    . . . actual act itself. We also introduce . . . an option to save face, such as
    in this one about the masturbation, but they can also deny that
    13
    happened. That’s their third option. They can . . . deny. I hope I’ve
    answered your question.
    Q. Yes, sir. So that certainly was, you know, an option for the Defendant
    to say, I don’t know what you’re talking about, I’ve never done this,
    she’s lying?
    A. Yes, that’s correct.
    Q. And that never occurred, correct?
    A. No, it never did.
    Moreover, Starkey had an opportunity to cross-examine Agent Morris and
    Investigator Pawley at trial about their interviewing techniques.
    Because the trial court instructed the jury not to consider Agent Morris’s and
    Investigator Pawley’s statements as evidence, and because nothing rebuts the
    presumption that the jury followed the trial court’s instructions, we conclude that
    there was no hearsay, no bolstering, no confrontation-clause violation, and no
    invading the jury’s province. See 
    Kirk, 199 S.W.3d at 478
    –79.
    We overruled Starkey’s fifth issue.
    III. The trial court erroneously allowed two witnesses to testify about
    Abby’s 2004 outcry to the babysitter, but the error was harmless.
    Starkey’s sixth and seventh issues challenge the outcry witnesses’ testimony:
    [6] Did the trial court impermissibly admit hearsay testimony from
    two outcry witnesses when Texas law only permits hearsay testimony
    from the first adult to whom a child describes an alleged offense?
    [7] Did the trial court impermissibly admit hearsay outcry testimony
    when the testimony offered did not describe the alleged offense?
    14
    A. Standard of Review
    Code of criminal procedure article 38.072 (“Hearsay Statement of Certain
    Abuse Victims”) governs when a trial court may properly admit the outcry witness’s
    hearsay testimony in sex-related offenses committed against children younger than
    14 years old. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 38.072. This article provides that the
    trial court may admit hearsay statements if the State complies with the statutory notice
    requirements and if—in a hearing outside the jury’s presence—the trial court finds
    that
    (1) the statement is reliable based on its time, content, and
    circumstances;
    (2) the complainant testifies or is available to testify at the proceeding;
    and
    (3) the statement:
    • describes the alleged offense,
    • was made by the complainant against whom the charged offense or
    other extraneous crime, wrong, or act was allegedly committed, and
    • was made to the first person, 18 years of age or older, other than
    the defendant, to whom the complainant made a statement about
    the offense or extraneous crime, wrong, or act.
    
    Id. art. 38.072,
    §§ 2(a)(1)(A), 2(a)(2), 2(a)(3), 2(b)(2), 2(b)(3); Espinoza v. State,
    
    571 S.W.3d 427
    , 431 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2019, pet. ref’d).
    We review for an abuse of discretion a trial court’s ruling designating an outcry
    witness. 
    Espinoza, 571 S.W.3d at 430
    . The trial court has broad discretion when
    determining whether to admit such evidence, and we will uphold a trial court’s
    15
    findings when the evidence supports them. 
    Id. at 430–31.
    A trial court does not abuse
    its discretion unless its decision falls outside the zone of reasonable disagreement.
    Chapman v. State, 
    150 S.W.3d 809
    , 813 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2004, pet.
    ref’d) (citing Weatherred v. State, 
    15 S.W.3d 540
    , 542 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000); Tear v.
    State, 
    74 S.W.3d 555
    , 558 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2002, pet. ref’d)).
    The outcry witness is the first person, 18 years or older, to whom the child
    makes a statement that in some discernible manner describes the alleged offense.
    
    Espinoza, 571 S.W.3d at 431
    (quoting Garcia v. State, 
    792 S.W.2d 88
    , 91 (Tex. Crim.
    App. 1990)); see West v. State, 
    121 S.W.3d 95
    , 104 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2003, pet.
    ref’d) (“Article 38.072 allows the first person to whom the child described the offense
    in some discernible manner to testify about the statements the child made.”). And the
    “discernible manner” must be more than words alluding generally that “something in
    the area of child abuse was going on.” 
    Espinoza, 571 S.W.3d at 431
    (quoting 
    Garcia, 792 S.W.2d at 91
    ).
    An outcry witness is not person-specific but is event-specific. 
    West, 121 S.W.3d at 104
    . A trial court may admit hearsay testimony from more than one outcry witness
    under article 38.072 only if the witnesses testify about different events; for any one
    event, there may be only one outcry witness. Lopez v. State, 
    343 S.W.3d 137
    , 140 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 2011); Hernandez v. State, No. 02-14-00262-CR, 
    2016 WL 4903206
    , at
    *12 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Sept. 15, 2016, pet. ref’d) (mem. op., not designated for
    publication) (citing 
    West, 121 S.W.3d at 104
    ). The trial court has broad discretion to
    16
    determine which of several witnesses is an outcry witness to a particular event, and
    unless it clearly abuses its discretion, we will not disturb its decision. 
    Chapman, 150 S.W.3d at 813
    (citing 
    Garcia, 792 S.W.2d at 92
    ; Hayden v. State, 
    928 S.W.2d 229
    ,
    231 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1996, pet. ref’d)).
    B. Background
    1. State’s Motion.
    In the State’s motion to admit a child-abuse victim’s hearsay statement, the
    State sought to admit Abby’s 2015 outcry to Mother and “[i]n the alternative or in
    addition to” that outcry, Abby’s “oral statements” to the babysitter over a decade
    earlier. But in the motion, the State conceded that Abby’s outcry to the babysitter did
    not describe the alleged offense in a discernible way:
    COMES NOW THE STATE OF TEXAS and, pursuant to Article
    38.072 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, requests this Court to
    rule that the oral statements made by [Abby] on or about March or April
    2015, to [Mother], [Abby’s] mother, admissible at the trial of this case.
    Statements made by [Abby] to [Mother] provide a description as to time,
    content, and circumstances of the alleged offense that is the subject of
    the Indictment. The written summary of said oral statement is attached
    hereto and marked as State’s Outcry of [Abby] (Exhibit 1). In the
    alternative or in addition to testimony provided by [Mother] and
    pursuant to Article 38.072 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, the
    State of Texas requests this Court to rule that oral statements made by
    [Abby] on or about 2004 or 2005, to [the babysitter] shall be admissible
    at the trial of this case. [Abby’s] statement to [the babysitter] is general in
    nature as to time, content, and circumstances and does not describe the
    alleged offense or she does not recall the specific details of [Abby’s]
    statement that is the subject of the Indictment in a discernable way. A
    copy of the oral statement made to [the babysitter] is attached hereto
    and marked as State’s Outcry of [Abby] (Exhibit 2).
    17
    ....
    WHEREFORE, PREMISES CONSIDERED, the State prays that
    this Court set this motion for hearing, if necessary, and rule that at the
    trial of this case the State may offer proof of the statements made by
    [Abby] to [Mother] on or about March or April 2015 through the
    testimony of [Mother]. In the alternative or in addition to the testimony
    of [Mother], the State prays that this Court rule that at the trial of this
    case the State may offer proof of the statements made by [Abby] to [the
    babysitter] on or about 2004 or 2005 through the testimony of [the
    babysitter].
    2. The Article 38.072 Hearing
    At the hearing on the State’s motion, the babysitter testified just as the State
    alleged she would—that is, the babysitter described Abby’s outcry as not including the
    alleged offense in any discernible way. Despite that, the trial court ruled that it would
    allow the babysitter’s testimony.
    a. The Babysitter
    Initially, the babysitter asserted that the outcry was that Abby was being
    touched by Starkey in a way that made Abby uncomfortable:
    [THE BABYSITTER:] Well, we were sitting in the living—in the living
    room watching TV, like little kids do. She was really into Dora at the
    time. And she just—out of the blue she says, you know, people touch
    me. I said, okay. I said, I touch you. She said, yeah, but it’s different. I
    said, okay. She said, some people touch me and make me uncomfortable.
    I said, well, who? And she said, I can’t tell you. It would make things
    rough. I said, okay. So I didn’t say anything else.
    And a little while later, not too long later, she said she needed—
    she wanted to tell me who it was. And I said, okay. And she said it was
    her daddy. And at the time, the only father she had I knew of was
    [Starkey]. So I didn’t say anything else about it. I didn’t push her to tell
    me how or anything else. And I waited for [Mother] to come home.
    18
    Later, when asked if she told Mother that Abby had said anything about oral
    sex, the babysitter responded that she did not recall:
    A. No. What I told [Mother] was that [Abby] said she was
    uncomfortable. And when she finally told me who it . . . was that
    touched her, she said it was her daddy.
    Q. And you didn’t say to [Mother] that [Abby] made any descriptive—
    gave any description like her having to lick whipped cream off of his
    genitals?
    A. Not that I recall.
    Q. You didn’t make that statement?
    A. Not that I recall.
    b. Mother
    In contrast, Mother remembered the babysitter’s describing Abby’s outcry
    differently: “[The babysitter] had mentioned touching and licking whipped cream
    from his genitalia.” Despite Mother’s asserting that Abby’s outcry—as the babysitter
    allegedly described it to Mother—included oral sex, Mother denied ever speaking to
    Abby about it.
    Mother explained that not until 2015 did Abby make an outcry directly to her,
    but she added that Abby’s 2015 outcry included oral sex, just as Mother remembered
    the babysitter’s describing Abby’s 2004 outcry:
    A. It was March or April of 2015. She was in a hospital in northern San
    Diego. I had been doing what they call Kik messaging with her friend.
    Her friend told me that I needed to speak with [Abby] and that I should
    know something. And I was asking her what, and she used the word
    19
    “ruined.” And I asked her what does [“]ruined[”] mean, and she said you
    need to speak with [Abby].
    So I went to visitation with [Abby] that evening. And as visitation
    was ending, I sent my smaller children out of the area so I could speak
    with [Abby] by myself. And I said, [Abby], you know your friend asked
    me about this and told me I needed to speak with you, and this is what
    “ruined” meant to me. And [Abby] started crying and said that she was
    worried I was gonna think she was crazy and that I wouldn’t believe her
    and brought up a time when she was younger. She said she thought she
    was 3 or 4, that she was forced to lick whipped cream off of Mr.
    Starkey’s genitalia.
    Q. Was that consistent with the story that you had learned from [the
    babysitter] 12 years earlier?
    A. Yes, sir.
    c. Trial-Court Arguments
    At the end of the article 38.072 hearing, Starkey argued against letting the
    babysitter testify at all, which, in the context of the State’s motion, would have left
    Mother as the outcry witness for Abby’s 2015 outcry:
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Well, your Honor, under 38.072, Section 2(a),
    the . . . article applies only to statements that (1)(A) describe the alleged
    offense, or, of course, there’s a—our next section wouldn’t be applicable
    at this point, the statements offered during the punishment phase of the
    proceeding, a crime, wrong, or act of an alleged offense, and that is—it
    goes on for other details.
    But [the babysitter]—despite [Mother’s] claim of what was said to
    her, [the babysitter] has a statement before the Court she wrote out, . . .
    State’s Exhibit 55, that she affirmed on direct and cross-examination,
    that what she said was she was being touched—referring to [Abby], said
    she was being touched and it made her uncomfortable.
    [The babysitter], the hearsay . . . outcry witnesses, for purposes of
    this statute, leaves it at that. That’s . . . the full scope of her statement. It
    20
    doesn’t describe the offense . . . in the indictment[;] it does not describe
    the manner and means of the indicted offense, which is to cause the
    mouth of [Abby] to contact the sexual organ of the Defendant. So
    because it doesn’t describe the alleged offense and that word, I would
    submit to the Court, the statutory construction would require the Court
    to pay attention to the words actually placed in the . . . Code, the alleged
    offense, it must describe the alleged offense. It describes something that
    . . . may or may not be criminal[—]to touch a child. It doesn’t describe
    that . . . causing the mouth of the child to contact the sexual organ of the
    Defendant.
    And for those reasons I would object under 38.072. And that
    would be . . . the first adult or the first person over 18 that [Abby] spoke
    to about . . . an incident that would be outside the bounds of normal
    parenting between herself, [Abby], and Mr. Starkey.
    THE COURT: Okay. Are you saying that . . . none of her testimony
    should be allowed or—
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Yes. . . . I’m saying that [the babysitter’s]
    testimony should not be allowed because it doesn’t describe the offense
    as . . . the Code requires under 38.072.
    In contrast, deviating from its motion, the State then pitched making the
    babysitter the outcry witness based on Abby’s 2004 outcry to her:
    THE COURT: Counsel?
    [THE PROSECUTOR]: Judge, . . . in this particular matter we have a
    very, very, very young child. I mean, she was 4 at the time of the
    disclosure. Clearly, in her best ability—and, of course, the jury can put
    what weight that . . . they want, but it is the first person . . . over 18 years
    of age that had any information of something occurring of a sexual
    nature. So we think she’s the appropriate person to disclose the events
    that occurred. And, you know, unfortunately, . . . she was a very young
    child and we’re just . . . stuck with the fact that she was . . . 4 at the time
    of the . . . disclosure, so we would ask that . . . her particular statements
    to [the babysitter] be admissible.
    21
    THE COURT: All right. I’m going to—as far as the testimony given
    here today, I’m going to overrule the objection, and she . . . will be
    permitted to testify to what . . . she’s testified to here today.
    [THE PROSECUTOR]: And with clarification, . . . [the babysitter] will
    be able to testify?
    THE COURT: Yes.
    As the later trial testimony shows, this ruling effectively made the babysitter the
    outcry witness under article 38.072.
    3. At Trial
    During trial, the trial court allowed testimony about Abby’s 2004 outcry to the
    babysitter but not about Abby’s 2015 outcry to Mother. Mother was, however,
    allowed to testify about what the babysitter had purportedly told Mother about
    Abby’s outcry to the babysitter.
    a. Investigator Pawley
    Without disclosing the contents of the 2004 outcry, Investigator Pawley
    testified that Abby had made an outcry to the babysitter in “2003, 2004.”
    b. The Babysitter
    When the babysitter took the stand, Starkey renewed his objection from the
    article 38.072 hearing, which the trial court overruled, and then requested and
    received a running objection to the babysitter’s testifying. The babysitter proceeded to
    describe Abby’s outcry to the jury in the same manner that she had described it to the
    judge at the hearing:
    22
    A. One day we were watching TV, and [Abby] said that people touched
    her. I said, okay. I touch you. She said, yeah, but it’s different. I said,
    okay. And she said that sometimes the way people touched her made her
    uncomfortable, and I asked her who. She said, well, I can’t tell you
    because it would make things (inaudible)—
    THE REPORTER: I can’t tell you what?
    THE WITNESS: I can’t tell you because it would makes things rough.
    A. So I let it go. And a little while later she just kind of stopped, and she
    looked at me and she said, I’m going to tell you who it is. And I said,
    okay. I said, who? She said, my daddy. I didn’t push it any further. I
    waited for [Mother] to come home, and I told her.
    Q. Now, did you have a conversation with [Mother] when she returned
    home?
    A. Yes, I did.
    Q. And what did you tell her?
    A. I told her that [Abby] had told me that her daddy had been touching
    her. And as far as I knew, [Starkey] was . . . the only person she knew as
    her dad.
    And as with the pretrial hearing, the subject turned to the babysitter’s
    conversation with Mother about Abby’s outcry, and the babysitter again denied
    recalling any oral-sex outcry:
    Q. And what you told [Mother] was that [Abby] had said she was being
    touched and it was by her daddy?
    A. Yes.
    Q. So you didn’t say anything to [Mother], and you told us just a couple
    of days ago that [Starkey] had made [Abby] get whipped cream off his
    genitals with her mouth?
    23
    A. No, sir, that was not my testimony. What I told you was that that was
    an item I could not recall.
    Q. And . . . it’s not in your statement?
    A. No, it is not.
    Q. So in 2016, if that was in your knowledge, you would have reported
    that, right?
    A. If I had recalled it, yes.
    Q. Okay. What do you mean by if you had recalled it?
    A. As I said, it’s not something I recall, and it is not a vision that I would
    want stuck in my head.
    ....
    Q. (BY DEFENSE COUNSEL) Nowhere in Defendant’s Exhibit No. 1
    do you state anything about Mr. Starkey making [Abby] lick whipped
    cream off of his genitals?
    A. No, sir, none of it.
    Q. You said that would stick out in your mind, right?
    A. If that were to have been said and they left [Texas], I’m afraid that
    that would be a memory that I would not want to remember, because at
    that point there was nothing I could do about it.
    c. Mother
    Mother was the State’s next witness, and the prosecutor broached the subject
    of what the babysitter had told her. Mother asserted—over Starkey’s objection—that
    the babysitter had said that Abby’s outcry included licking whipped cream off
    Starkey’s genitals:
    Q. What did she [the babysitter] tell you?
    24
    A. She told me that—
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I don’t mean to interrupt, your Honor. Just
    renew my same objection, 38.072.
    THE COURT: I understand your objection. Overruled.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: For this witness may I have a running
    objection on [38.072]?
    THE COURT: You may.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Thank you, your Honor.
    Q. (BY [THE PROSECUTOR]) What is your recollection of what [the
    babysitter] told you?
    A. She had told me that during her time of watching [Abby] that day that
    [Abby] had mentioned that Mr. Starkey had touched her inappropriately
    and had her lick whipped cream off his genitalia.
    But when the State attempted to get in Abby’s 2015 outcry to Mother, the trial
    court kept it out:
    Q. Based on that, . . . did you seek treatment for her?
    A. Yes, sir.
    Q. And ultimately did she go to Chandler, New Mexico?
    A. Chandler, Arizona—
    Q. Excuse me. I’m sorry.
    A. —yes, sir.
    Q. Chandler, Arizona.
    25
    Now, prior to that time,6 did you have a conversation with your
    daughter [Abby] . . . about an incident that had occurred between the
    Defendant and her?
    A. Yes, sir.
    Q. All right. And what did she tell you?
    A. She told me --
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Excuse me. Object to hearsay, your Honor,
    and violation of confrontation clause.
    THE COURT: At this time I’m going to sustain the objection.
    Q. (BY [THE PROSECUTOR]) Let me ask it this way: I’m not asking
    for the specific details, based on the Court’s ruling. I’m just asking in
    general, did she give you some information that caused you much
    concern?
    A. I was scared because it was information that I had been told years
    before.
    Q. The same information?
    A. Yes, sir.
    d. Abby
    Less than a month shy of her eighteenth birthday when testifying, Abby
    articulated the offense as: “I performed oral sex on him,” and she then provided
    details. Abby did not recall having whipped cream that night, but she asserted that
    6
    Abby’s outcry to Mother occurred in San Diego. Abby “ultimately” went to
    Chandler, Arizona, for treatment, and it was there that her forensic interview
    occurred.
    26
    Starkey had told her that “the white stuff . . . from his penis” would taste like whipped
    cream. She stated that it instead tasted sour.
    Regarding what she had told the babysitter, Abby said, “I told [the babysitter]
    that he told me that it tastes like whipped cream.” On cross-examination, Abby
    repeated that all she had told the babysitter was that Starkey had said that “it” tasted
    like whipped cream:
    Q. . . .
    The . . . first time—well, of course, you testified that you
    remember [the babysitter]—did you call [the babysitter by her first
    name]?
    A. Yes, sir.
    Q. Do you remember that conversation? Do you actually remember it?
    A. Briefly.
    Q. Can you explain that, please?
    A. I remember I told her that he said it would taste like whipped cream.
    Q. Is that all you said to her?
    A. Yes, sir.
    C. Discussion
    1. Error
    The babysitter’s testimony was that, to her recollection, Abby had complained
    only about Starkey’s touching her in some way that made her feel uncomfortable, but
    that testimony did not describe the alleged offense or even necessarily an offense at
    27
    all; at best it was “a general allusion that something in the area of child abuse was
    going on,” which appears to have been the babysitter’s understanding, because she
    spoke to Mother about it. See 
    Espinoza, 571 S.W.3d at 431
    . But this outcry did not
    describe the alleged offense in a discernible way, so article 38.072 did not authorize
    the babysitter’s hearsay testimony. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 38.072,
    § 2(a)(1)(A); 
    Espinoza, 571 S.W.3d at 431
    .
    And Mother’s testimony—that the babysitter had asserted that Abby had made
    an outcry to the babysitter that Abby had performed oral sex on Starkey—would have
    made the babysitter the outcry witness. See 
    Espinoza, 571 S.W.3d at 431
    . Mother was
    not the outcry witness in 2004 because Abby never made an outcry to her at that time.
    See 
    id. Conversely, if
    the trial court disbelieved Mother’s testimony regarding the scope
    of Abby’s 2004 outcry (that is, if the trial court disbelieved Mother’s assertion that
    Abby made an oral-sex outcry to the babysitter in 2004), then Abby’s oral-sex outcry
    to Mother in 2015 would have made Mother the first adult over 18 to whom Abby
    made such an outcry. Either way, article 38.072 did not authorize Mother’s hearsay
    testimony regarding the 2004 outcry. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 38.072,
    § 2(a)(3).
    Ultimately, Mother’s testimony regarding the 2004 outcry was hearsay within
    hearsay. See McDowell v. State, No. 02-17-00410-CR, 
    2018 WL 6215906
    , at *4 n.6 (Tex.
    App.—Fort Worth Nov. 29, 2018, no pet.) (mem. op., not designated for
    publication). Mother was relying on what the babysitter had told her; the babysitter
    28
    was relying on what Abby had told the babysitter. And as noted, neither the babysitter
    nor Mother independently qualified as the 2004 outcry witness under article 38.072.
    See Tex. R. Evid. 805 (“Hearsay within hearsay is not excluded by the rule against
    hearsay if each part of the combined statements conforms with an exception to the
    rule.”).
    We hold that the trial court erred by permitting both the babysitter and Mother
    to testify about Abby’s 2004 outcry.
    2. Harm
    Improperly admitting hearsay testimony is nonconstitutional error that is
    harmless unless the error affected the appellant’s substantial rights. See Tex. R. App. P.
    44.2(b); Garcia v. State, 
    126 S.W.3d 921
    , 927 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004); Nino v. State,
    
    223 S.W.3d 749
    , 754 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2007, no pet.). An error is
    harmless if we are reasonably assured that the error did not influence the verdict or
    had only a slight effect. See 
    Garcia, 126 S.W.3d at 927
    ; Shaw v. State, 
    329 S.W.3d 645
    ,
    653 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2010, pet. ref’d). Likewise, improperly
    admitting evidence is not reversible error if the same or similar evidence is admitted
    without objection at another point in the trial. Merrit v. State, 
    529 S.W.3d 549
    ,
    556 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2017, pet. ref’d).
    Here, allowing the babysitter and Mother to testify about the 2004 outcry was
    harmless error. Our reasoning follows.
    29
    During Starkey’s interviews, he admitted that something had happened with
    Abby in 2004 but that it was accidental. Abby herself described something quite
    different. The indictment alleged that Starkey “knowingly cause[d] the mouth of
    [Abby], a child who was then and there younger than 14 years of age and not the
    spouse of [Starkey], to contact [Starkey’s] sexual organ.” The question for the jury was
    not so much whether Abby’s mouth in fact contacted Starkey’s penis, which Starkey
    seemed to grudgingly concede, as it was whether Starkey’s penis accidentally contacted
    her mouth.
    The 2004 outcry testimony varied both about whether oral sex was alleged and,
    assuming it was alleged, about how whipped cream fit into the outcry.
    The babysitter’s testimony harmonized more with Starkey’s story (accidental
    contact) than Abby’s (oral sex)—that is, something happened that upset Abby, but
    whatever it was, the babysitter did not recall Abby’s describing it in 2004 as oral sex.
    In contrast, Mother asserted that the babysitter had said that Abby’s outcry had
    included oral sex. Mother’s and Abby’s respective testimony about the 2004 outcry
    also did not align about whipped cream’s role in the assault.
    But for all its inconsistencies—usually a fertile area for creating reasonable
    doubt—what the 2004 outcry testimony tended to do was corroborate what Starkey
    himself conceded during his interviews: that something of a sexual nature had
    happened between him and Abby in 2004.
    30
    Here, the jury heard both Starkey’s version—through his interviews—and
    Abby’s version through her testimony, and so the jury did not have to rely on the
    babysitter’s or Mother’s memories of what they had heard (or not heard) over a
    decade earlier. And unlike the outcry witnesses, neither Starkey nor Abby had
    difficulty remembering that something out of the ordinary occurred; they simply
    differed on whether it had occurred accidentally or knowingly.
    Starkey’s explanations about being startled might have served to “save face”
    during the interviews, as Agent Morris discussed, but for purposes of creating a
    reasonable doubt at trial, jurors might have seen them as far-fetched. The jury, as the
    factfinder, determines witnesses’ credibility, and for each witness, it can choose to
    believe all, some, or none of that witness’s testimony. See Chambers v. State, 
    805 S.W.2d 459
    , 461 (Tex. Crim App. 1991); Chasco v. State, 
    568 S.W.3d 254
    , 258 (Tex. App.—
    Amarillo 2019, pet. ref’d). With or without the outcry testimony, the jury could have
    concluded that Starkey’s explanations were implausible.
    We are thus reasonably assured that the evidentiary error did not influence the
    verdict or had only a slight effect. See 
    Garcia, 126 S.W.3d at 927
    ; Hernandez,
    
    2016 WL 4903206
    , at *13; 
    Shaw, 329 S.W.3d at 653
    .
    We overrule Starkey’s sixth and seventh issues.
    IV. Starkey’s cumulative-error argument fails.
    In his final issue, Starkey argues: “[8] Did the trial court err by allowing hearsay
    testimony, improper witness testimony, and impermissible ‘bolstering’ statements that
    31
    were so pervasive as to cumulatively affect the fundamental fairness of the trial?”
    Having held that the trial court erred only in Starkey’s sixth and seventh issues but
    also having held that those errors were harmless, and not having held that the trial
    court otherwise erred in Starkey’s other issues, Starkey has no other error or harm to
    cumulate. See 
    Jenkins, 493 S.W.3d at 613
    .
    We overrule Starkey’s eighth issue.
    Conclusion
    Having held that there was no error in Starkey’s first, second, third, fourth,
    fifth, and eighth issues and having held that there was harmless error in Starkey’s sixth
    and seventh issues, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    /s/ Elizabeth Kerr
    Elizabeth Kerr
    Justice
    Do Not Publish
    Tex. R. App. P. 47.2(b)
    Delivered: August 15, 2019
    32