Drake Costilla v. the State of Texas ( 2021 )


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  • Opinion issued October 19, 2021
    In The
    Court of Appeals
    For The
    First District of Texas
    ————————————
    NO. 01-20-00297-CR
    ———————————
    DRAKE COSTILLA, Appellant
    V.
    THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
    On Appeal from the 428th District Court
    Hays County, Texas
    Trial Court Case No. CR-18-0306-D
    O P I N I O N
    This appeal arises from a prosecution for domestic violence. Drake Costilla
    
    Per the Texas Supreme Court’s docket-equalization powers, this appeal was transferred
    from the Third Court of Appeals to this court on April 9, 2020. See TEX. GOV’T CODE
    § 73.001; Order Regarding Transfer of Cases from Courts of Appeals, Misc. Docket
    No. 20-9048 (Tex. Mar. 31, 2020). We are unaware of any relevant conflict between
    the Third Court’s precedent and ours. See TEX. R. APP. P. 41.3.
    was indicted and tried for the felony offense of continuous violence against a family
    member, his live-in girlfriend. The jury found him guilty of the lesser-included
    misdemeanor offense of assault causing bodily injury—family violence. Costilla
    contends we must reverse his conviction because the trial court:
    (1) erred in denying his directed-verdict motion as to an assault that allegedly
    occurred a month before the one resulting in conviction;
    (2) violated his constitutional right to confront the complainant when it
    allowed her to testify with use and derivative use immunity;
    (3) commented on the weight of the evidence by admitting the application for
    and order granting use and derivative use immunity; and
    (4) erroneously instructed the jury as to the mental state required to convict
    him of the lesser-included misdemeanor offense.
    We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    A grand jury indicted Costilla for the third-degree felony of continuous
    violence against the family. See TEX. PENAL CODE § 25.11(a), (e). The indictment
    alleged that Costilla intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly caused bodily injury to
    Christina Frausto, a member of his family or household or a person with whom he
    had a dating relationship, on two occasions within the span of a year, specifically on
    October 12 and November 12, 2017. See TEX. FAM. CODE §§ 71.0021(b), 71.003,
    71.005 (defining dating relationship, family, and household).
    2
    Costilla pleaded not guilty to the charged offense. The case was tried to a jury,
    which heard testimony from several witnesses, including two responding patrol
    officers, Frausto, and three acquaintances or friends of Frausto and Costilla.
    B. Pierce, a patrol officer with the San Marcos Police Department, testified
    that he was dispatched to Costilla and Frausto’s apartment about an alleged assault
    on the evening of November 12. Costilla, who was then 20 years old, had requested
    emergency assistance claiming that Frausto, his live-in girlfriend, who was 18 years
    old and two months pregnant at the time, had repeatedly struck him.
    When Pierce arrived at the scene, Costilla was standing outside the apartment
    and was still on the phone with the dispatcher. Costilla was shirtless, and he had
    visible scratches on his torso, shoulders, and neck.
    Pierce was wearing a body camera. The audio and video recording from his
    body camera was played for the jury, subject to a limiting instruction that the
    statements of the patrol officers themselves and the statements of Frausto picked up
    by Pierce’s body camera were not offered for their truth.
    As shown on the video, Costilla told Pierce that Frausto had wanted to return
    to her mother’s home. Costilla stated that Frausto began packing to leave, and he
    tried to talk her out of leaving. She became frustrated and “started throwing
    punches,” hitting him in the jaw. Costilla stated that he then swept Frausto’s leg,
    took her to the floor, and got on top of her, because he did not “want to get punched
    3
    anymore.” Frausto got one hand free and scratched him while he was on her. Costilla
    denied that he had covered Frausto’s mouth with his hand.
    Costilla told Pierce that he and Frausto had fought on multiple occasions.
    Costilla said the last time was about four weeks prior in October 2017. He indicated
    that Frausto had been violent in the past but that he had not reciprocated her violence,
    apart from taking her to the floor “every time she starts being this way.” According
    to Costilla, Frausto had told him that this was how her brother calmed her down
    when she previously resided with her brother. Costilla told Pierce that Frausto
    sometimes required restraint due to her anger problem. Costilla also said that mental
    health issues run in Frausto’s family.
    When Pierce arrived, Costilla had Frausto’s cell phone in his possession in
    addition to his own cell phone. On the video, Costilla admitted he had taken
    Frausto’s phone away from her, explaining that he did so because when Frausto gets
    angry with him she talks to other men.
    Pierce testified that Costilla’s injuries were inconsistent with his story. Pierce
    stated that typically an attack like the one Costilla described would “inflict offensive
    injuries” via closed fist or open hand, not scratches, which are “congruent with a
    defensive wound” by someone being restrained. Yet, Pierce did not see any marks
    on Costilla other than the scratches. Pierce conceded that there was some redness on
    4
    Costilla’s chest that he had not noticed at the time due to the dim lighting at the
    scene. But Pierce testified that it was difficult to say what caused the redness.
    Ultimately, Pierce arrested Costilla and took him to jail. Pierce photographed
    Costilla at the jail, and these photographs were admitted into evidence. These
    photographs showed the scratches Frausto inflicted on Costilla.
    Corporal J. Cormier arrived on the scene after Pierce. Cormier went inside the
    apartment and spoke with Frausto.
    Cormier testified that when he spoke with Frausto she was very upset and very
    timid. Cormier stated that she was visibly crying throughout the interview.
    Cormier also wore a body camera. Part of the audio and video recording from
    his body camera was played for the jury, subject to two limiting instructions. First,
    the trial court instructed the jury that statements made by the patrol officers and
    dispatcher were not offered for their truth. Second, the court instructed the jury that
    it could only consider statements about Costilla’s prior acts if it believed they
    occurred beyond a reasonable doubt and could not consider them as character
    evidence or proof of guilt of another act.
    As shown on the video, Cormier interviewed Frausto in a bedroom not far
    from where Pierce and Costilla were standing. Frausto told Cormier that she had
    tried to leave the apartment to return to her mother’s home and began to gather some
    belongings. Costilla responded by taking Frausto’s phone from her so she could not
    5
    talk to her mother and trying to tackle her. Costilla told Frausto that she was not
    going to leave, and he kicked her to the floor or took her to the floor with his leg.
    Once Costilla had Frausto on the floor, he put one of his hands over her mouth and
    nose, which impeded her breathing.
    Frausto told Cormier that Costilla did not have his hand over her mouth and
    nose for too long. Frausto explained that she scratched Costilla to get him off of her
    so that she could breathe again. Frausto denied hitting Costilla other than in self-
    defense.
    When Cormier asked Frausto if she and Costilla fought a lot, she replied that
    they only did so when she tried to go back home. Frausto stated that Costilla had
    held his hand over her mouth before. Frausto said that the previous time Costilla did
    so, he used so much force that a piercing on her lip pressed inward and injured the
    inside of her mouth.
    Like Pierce, Cormier testified that Costilla’s injuries were inconsistent with
    his version of events but corroborated Frausto’s account.
    In addition, Cormier took several photographs of Frausto, and these
    photographs were admitted into evidence. Cormier testified that one photograph
    showed her hair was “very disheveled in the back.” Cormier also testified that some
    of these photographs documented that Frausto had red and swollen blood vessels in
    her left eye. But Cormier agreed that there was no sign of petechia, or broken
    6
    capillaries, which is a physical indicator of strangulation or the obstruction of one’s
    ability to breathe. Cormier nonetheless maintained that Frausto’s appearance, as
    shown in the photographs he took, corroborated her version of events.
    At trial, Frausto was a reluctant witness. She stated she did not want to testify
    and asked if she could “plead the Fifth.” The State was only able to secure Frausto’s
    testimony by agreeing that it would not use her testimony or any facts derived from
    her testimony “as evidence against her in any criminal proceeding other than a
    prosecution for perjury, aggravated perjury, or contempt.” Both the State’s
    application for testimonial immunity and the trial court’s order granting it were
    introduced into evidence.
    Frausto testified that she and Costilla dated for six months when she was in
    high school, and she became pregnant. She lived with him and some roommates in
    a two-bedroom apartment when the November 12 altercation happened. Frausto and
    Costilla are no longer together, but they coparent their young son, who stays with
    Costilla on weekends. Costilla helps her with their son and provides financial
    support.
    On the evening of the November 12 altercation, Frausto and Costilla had been
    arguing. When questioned by the State at trial, however, Frausto disclaimed any
    memory of their ensuing altercation:
    Q. Did—did the defendant—did Drake ever push you down?
    7
    A. I don’t remember.
    Q. Did Drake ever sweep your feet out from underneath you and get
    on top of you?
    A. I don’t remember.
    Q. Did Drake ever cover your mouth with his hand?
    A. I don’t remember.
    The State tried to refresh Frausto’s recollection by showing her the written
    statement that she had made and signed when Pierce and Cormier responded to the
    November 12 altercation. Though Frausto acknowledged that she wrote and signed
    the statement, she said it did not refresh her memory:
    Q. Does reading that statement help refresh your memory about it?
    A. Somewhat.
    Q. So when you made that statement, were you able to recall more
    details than you can recall now?
    A. Somewhat.
    Q. So can you still remember the event right now?
    A. No.
    Frausto explained that she had no memory of the altercation because it had occurred
    “two years ago” and she had “been through so much.”
    Frausto further testified that she did not recall whether the November 12
    statement she had given to the police was accurate. When asked whether she would
    have signed an inaccurate sworn statement, she claimed she “didn’t swear to
    anything,” despite the statement’s contrary representation. Frausto testified, “I didn’t
    8
    know what I was signing.” She explained, “I didn’t even know this was, like, that
    even serious or anything like that.”1
    After being questioned about her November 12 written statement to the police,
    Frausto answered that she did not remember what had happened in reply to most of
    the State’s questions about that evening’s altercation. She likewise answered that
    she did not remember what had happened during prior altercations, including
    whether Costilla had ever injured her by pressing her lip piercing into her mouth.
    Later, when questioned by defense counsel, Frausto conceded that her trial
    testimony that she could not remember the November 12 altercation was false.
    Frausto explained that she had claimed not to remember because she did not want to
    admit that she had lied to the police. Frausto testified that her written statement to
    the police was not truthful and that she had lied about what happened to avoid going
    to jail. She explained, “The police will believe a female no matter what and that’s
    1
    The State wanted to read Frausto’s November 12 written statement to the police aloud
    to the jury. Out of the presence of the jury, counsel questioned Frausto so that the trial
    court could decide whether the statement was admissible under the recorded
    recollection exception to the hearsay rule. During this questioning, Frausto confessed
    that she remembered the events of that night and that her written statement was false:
    “I was panicking during that whole time and I thought I was gonna be the one going to
    jail, because he called the cops on me. So writing that statement down, I agree, like
    some of it is false reports, because I was panicking too much. I didn’t want to go to
    jail.” Frausto elaborated, “It’s not true. The statement’s not true.” She explained, “I
    didn’t want to go to jail and I just lied.” As Frausto disavowed her written statement,
    the trial court refused the State’s request to read it aloud to the jury.
    9
    exactly how it worked.” According to Frausto, Costilla went to jail instead of her
    because the police believed her false version of events.
    Frausto testified that she did not know Costilla would be charged with a
    felony. And she stated that she did not want him to get into trouble. She explained
    that she did not want him to go to jail; she wanted him to be able to get a better job,
    so that he could help her provide for their child. Frausto testified that Costilla was
    not guilty of the charged offense.
    Both sides questioned Frausto about an interview she had with a
    representative of the Attorney General’s Office in June 2018.2 But Frausto said she
    could not remember what she told this representative.
    Several other people were in the apartment on November 12. But none of them
    witnessed that evening’s altercation or meaningfully interacted with the police.
    Luis Martinez, one of Frausto and Costilla’s roommates, testified that he and
    his girlfriend, Chantel Espinoza, were present that evening. At one point while they
    were watching television in the living room, Martinez said he heard some noise—
    “just like bumping, people walking around” or possibly “some muffled
    screaming”—from Frausto and Costilla’s bedroom. Martinez turned down the
    television’s volume to verify if he “was hearing correctly” but heard nothing. He
    2
    Because one of Costilla’s relatives worked for the Hays County Criminal District
    Attorney, that office recused itself from this case. The Texas Attorney General’s Office
    prosecuted this case in the Criminal District Attorney’s stead.
    10
    testified that if he had thought something untoward was happening, he would have
    intervened. Shortly afterward, Costilla came out and told Martinez and Espinoza that
    the cops were on the way. Martinez and Espinoza then left the apartment. When they
    returned later that evening, Frausto seemed like she was in shock.
    Espinoza also testified. She had only recently begun dating Martinez and did
    not really know Costilla. Espinoza stated that while she and Martinez were watching
    television, she heard “muffled” noise “like when you’re talking aloud and you’re not
    supposed to and somebody just covers your mouth.” But Espinoza also characterized
    this noise as sounding like “muffled talking” or even “normal talking.” And when
    Martinez turned down the television’s volume, Espinoza did not hear anything. Like
    Martinez, she was not concerned that something was awry.
    Espinoza stated that she and Martinez left after Costilla told them the police
    were coming. Espinoza said that when they later returned to the apartment, Frausto
    “didn’t show any kind of emotion” and was “straight-faced, like she didn’t know
    how to react.” Espinoza stated that Frausto did not have visible injuries.
    Frausto and Costilla’s other roommate, Mike Gonzalez, did not testify. But
    Gonzalez’s girlfriend, Esmeralda Hernandez, did. Hernandez did not know either
    Frausto or Costilla very well, but she was at the apartment on the night of the
    altercation. She and Gonzalez were in another bedroom when the altercation
    occurred. Hernandez did not know anything was amiss at the time. After the police
    11
    came and went, Hernandez testified, Frausto looked like she was “in a state of shock”
    and her eyes were redder than usual. Hernandez conceded that when she was
    originally interviewed by personnel from the Attorney General’s Office, she had not
    described Frausto as being in shock after the police left the apartment.
    After the State rested, Costilla moved for a directed verdict as to the felony
    offense of continuous family violence, and the trial court denied his motion. Costilla
    also moved for a directed verdict as to the October 12 assault, in which he allegedly
    pressed Frausto’s mouth and lip piercing so hard with his hand that the piercing
    injured her. The trial court denied this directed-verdict motion as well.
    The defense introduced a recording of Costilla’s 911 telephone call into
    evidence, subject to a limiting instruction that the jury was not to consider the
    statements Costilla made during the call for the truth of the matter asserted. After
    the recording was published to the jury, the defense rested.
    The jury acquitted Costilla of the felony offense of continuous family
    violence. But it found him guilty of a lesser-included offense, the class A
    misdemeanor of assault causing bodily injury—family violence, based on the
    November 12 altercation. See PENAL § 22.01(a)(1), (b). The trial court assessed
    Costilla’s punishment at one year of confinement in the county jail, suspended the
    sentence, and placed Costilla under community supervision for two years.
    Costilla appeals.
    12
    DISCUSSION
    I.    Directed Verdict
    Costilla contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion for directed
    verdict regarding the October 12 assault, the one in which he allegedly injured
    Frausto’s mouth by pressing on her mouth and lip piercing with his hand a month
    before the altercation that resulted in his arrest. Costilla maintains that he was
    harmed by the trial court’s failure to grant a directed verdict as to the October 12
    assault because the jury might have chosen to acquit him altogether if the sole issue
    before it had been whether he committed the November 12 assault that resulted in
    his arrest and conviction for assault causing bodily injury—family violence.
    A.     Standard of review and applicable law
    We treat a complaint about a trial court’s refusal to grant a motion for directed
    verdict as a challenge to the legal sufficiency of the evidence. Williams v. State, 
    937 S.W.2d 479
    , 482 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996). A legal-sufficiency challenge requires us
    to determine whether, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict,
    any rational jury could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a
    reasonable doubt. Lang v. State, 
    561 S.W.3d 174
    , 179 (Tex. Crim. App. 2018). If we
    find the evidence is legally insufficient, we must reverse the appellant’s conviction.
    See 
    id. at 184
     (reversing conviction because evidence was legally insufficient);
    13
    Brooks v. State, 
    323 S.W.3d 893
    , 903 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010) (reversal on appeal
    for legal insufficiency of evidence has same effect as acquittal by jury).
    B.     Analysis
    Though framed as a legal-sufficiency complaint, Costilla’s complaint is not a
    cognizable legal-sufficiency challenge. A legal-sufficiency challenge asserts that the
    evidence would not allow any reasonable jury to find one or more essential elements
    of the offense of conviction. See Lang, 561 S.W.3d at 179. Here, however, Costilla
    challenges the legal sufficiency of the evidence supporting a finding that he
    committed the offense of assault during the October 12 altercation, which is not a
    finding the jury made. Nor did the jury find Costilla guilty of continuous family
    violence based in part on his conduct during the October 12 altercation. Instead, the
    jury found Costilla guilty of a lesser-included offense, assault causing bodily
    injury—family violence, based on his conduct in the separate and distinct November
    12 altercation. Under these circumstances, even if we sustained Costilla’s legal-
    sufficiency challenge, doing so would not result in reversal of his conviction or the
    entry of a judgment of acquittal because his conviction is based on evidence of
    different conduct on another occasion than the offense he challenges.
    In other words, Costilla asks us to decide whether there is legally sufficient
    evidence with respect to an offense for which he was not convicted, namely the
    alleged October 12 assault. This is a request for an advisory opinion. An opinion is
    14
    advisory when a court tries to resolve an issue that does not arise from an actual
    controversy between the parties. State v. Velasquez, 
    539 S.W.3d 289
    , 295 n.39 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 2018); e.g., Castaneda v. State, 
    138 S.W.3d 304
    , 309 (Tex. Crim. App.
    2003) (holding that appellant could not challenge whether surety was liable for bail
    bond forfeiture when principal is deported given that appellant wasn’t deported
    before failing to appear in court and issue thus called for advisory opinion).
    Similarly, an opinion is advisory when a court tries to resolve an issue but the party
    seeking review of the issue will not benefit from its resolution in any way. Pfeiffer
    v. State, 
    363 S.W.3d 594
    , 601 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012); e.g., State v. Haley, 
    811 S.W.2d 597
    , 598–99 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991) (holding in effect that State could not
    challenge ruling not made by trial court because it would result in advisory opinion).
    We lack the authority to render an advisory opinion. Pfeiffer, 
    363 S.W.3d at 601
    .
    Thus, we cannot review evidence for legal sufficiency if that evidence is immaterial
    to the appellant’s conviction or will not entitle him to some other relief.
    Costilla tries to avoid the prohibition on advisory opinions by arguing that the
    denial of his motion for a directed verdict as to the October 12 altercation potentially
    affected the verdict that the jury actually rendered. He explains:
    The jury did not find Mr. Costilla guilty of continuous assault
    family violence, because there simply was not any evidence of the
    alleged October 12th offense. The State will likely argue that Mr.
    Costilla’s argument is therefore moot, because Mr. Costilla was
    acquitted of the October 12th offense. However, as the Court is well
    aware, it is common for jurors to “split the baby” when they are given
    15
    a lesser-included offense. Therefore, if the trial court had properly
    granted the directed verdict, and the jury’s only option was to find Mr.
    Costilla guilty of a class A misdemeanor, it is Mr. Costilla’s position
    that the jury would have acquitted Mr. Costilla.
    Contrary to Costilla’s suggestion, however, we cannot assume that the jury
    “split the baby.” Instead, we must presume that the jury followed the trial court’s
    instructions absent evidence to the contrary. Thrift v. State, 
    176 S.W.3d 221
    , 224
    (Tex. Crim. App. 2005). The trial court instructed the jury that Costilla was
    presumed innocent and the State bore the burden to prove his guilt. In the application
    paragraphs for the offense of continuous family violence and the lesser-included
    offense of assault causing bodily injury—family violence, the trial court likewise
    instructed that the jury was to find Costilla “not guilty” unless it found from the
    evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that he was guilty or if it had reasonable doubt
    about his guilt. These instructions implicitly disallowed the jury from rendering a
    compromise verdict, and Costilla does not refer to any evidence that the jury
    disobeyed them. Thus, we must presume the jury obeyed the charge, and we reject
    Costilla’s suggestion that the trial court’s refusal to grant his directed-verdict motion
    as to the October 12 assault affected the jury’s verdict as to the November one.
    In sum, Costilla does not challenge the legal sufficiency of the evidence
    supporting the only offense for which he was convicted, assault causing bodily
    injury—family violence, which was based on the November 12 altercation. Instead,
    he challenges the sufficiency of the evidence with respect to the October 12
    16
    altercation. Thus, even if we sustained Costilla’s legal-sufficiency challenge, we
    could not reverse his conviction. Nor would the resolution of Costilla’s challenge in
    his favor benefit him in any other way. In particular, we reject Costilla’s argument
    that the ostensible legal insufficiency of the evidence as to the October 12 assault
    prompted the jury to render a compromise verdict acquitting him of continuous
    family violence but finding him guilty of the lesser-included offense of assault
    causing bodily injury—family violence based on the November 12 altercation. As
    there is no evidence that the jury rendered a compromise verdict, we must presume
    the jury obeyed the trial court’s instruction to find Costilla guilty only if the State
    proved his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. On this record, Costilla’s legal-
    sufficiency challenge seeks an advisory opinion, which we cannot render. We
    overrule his legal-sufficiency challenge.
    II.   Right of Confrontation
    The trial court overruled Costilla’s objection that allowing Frausto to testify
    with use and derivative use immunity violated the United States and Texas
    Constitutions by denying him “an effective right to confront and cross-examine” her.
    See U.S. CONST. amend. VI; TEX. CONST. art. I, § 10. Costilla contends the trial court
    erred. The crux of his argument is that because the trial court granted Frausto
    immunity from prosecution for any crime, including perjury, it made her testimony
    so untrustworthy that his opportunity to cross-examine her was meaningless. Costilla
    17
    also seems to suggest that allowing crime victims or complaining witnesses to testify
    with use and derivative use immunity always violates a defendant’s right to confront
    the witnesses against him when the defendant’s guilt or innocence essentially turns
    on the veracity and credibility of these victims or witnesses.
    A.     Standard of review and applicable law
    We review a trial court’s ruling on a Confrontation Clause objection de novo.
    Campos v. State, 
    186 S.W.3d 93
    , 96 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2005, no pet.).
    Both the United States and Texas Constitutions contain provisions that
    guarantee a criminal defendant the right to confront witnesses. See U.S. CONST.
    amend. VI; TEX. CONST. art. I, § 10. We interpret these provisions to confer the same
    right absent a compelling reason to interpret them differently. Gonzales v. State, 
    818 S.W.2d 756
    , 764 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991). Under these provisions, the defendant has
    the right to “physically confront those who testify against him.” Haggard v. State,
    
    612 S.W.3d 318
    , 324 (Tex. Crim. App. 2020). The main purpose of these provisions
    is to ensure that the defendant has the chance to cross-examine witnesses because
    cross-examination is the principal means of testing their credibility and veracity.
    Johnson v. State, 
    490 S.W.3d 895
    , 909 (Tex. Crim. App. 2016). Thus, the right of
    confrontation includes not only the right to compel a witness to take the stand at trial,
    but also the opportunity to conduct a meaningful and effective cross-examination.
    Coronado v. State, 
    351 S.W.3d 315
    , 325 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011).
    18
    Nonetheless, the right to cross-examine witnesses is not unqualified. Johnson,
    490 S.W.3d at 909. A defendant is not constitutionally entitled to cross-examination
    that is effective in whatever way, or to whatever extent, he deems expedient. Id. at
    909–10. The trial court retains broad discretion to limit questioning based on rules
    of procedure and evidence, so long as the court does not deprive the defense of the
    ability to effectively cross-examine witnesses, such as by limiting questioning to
    such a degree that it forecloses the presentation of a vital defense theory. Id. at 909–
    11. A less than optimal opportunity for cross-examination, of itself, is not a
    constitutional violation. Balderas v. State, 
    517 S.W.3d 756
    , 779 (Tex. Crim. App.
    2016). Only when the trial court restricts cross-examination to an extent so great that
    its restriction makes the examination wholly ineffective does it violate the right of
    confrontation. Johnson v. State, 
    433 S.W.3d 546
    , 557 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014).
    Both the United States and Texas Constitutions also contain provisions that
    confer a right against self-incrimination. U.S. CONST. amend. V; TEX. CONST. art. I,
    § 10. Though phrased differently, these provisions essentially guarantee the same
    right. See Cobb v. State, 
    85 S.W.3d 258
    , 267 n.30 (Tex. Crim. App. 2002). The scope
    of the right is comprehensive; it protects one from being called as a witness against
    herself by the State in a criminal prosecution and allows her to refuse to answer
    questions in other proceedings when the answers might incriminate her in a future
    prosecution. In re Medina, 
    475 S.W.3d 291
    , 299 (Tex. Crim. App. 2015).
    19
    In general, when there is no possibility of incrimination, there is no right
    against self-incrimination. See 
    id. at 300
    –01. Thus, when a trial court compels a
    witness to testify in exchange for a grant of use and derivative use immunity, the
    right against self-incrimination no longer applies. Butterfield v. State, 
    992 S.W.3d 448
    , 449–50 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999). This is because a grant of use and derivative
    use immunity eliminates any risk of self-incrimination associated with a witness’s
    testimony by guaranteeing the State cannot use incriminating statements, or
    evidence derived from those statements, in a subsequent criminal prosecution. See
    Medina, 475 S.W.3d at 297. It is well-established, however, that a witness who has
    been granted use and derivative use immunity may still be prosecuted for perjury if
    she perjures herself on the stand because the grant of immunity does not authorize
    her to be untruthful when testifying under oath. Butterfield, 92 S.W.2d at 450.
    The grant of use and derivative use immunity to compel a witness to testify
    does not implicate, let alone violate, the defendant’s right of confrontation because
    the witness is present and subject to cross-examination. See Johnson, 433 S.W.3d at
    551 (main and essential purpose of confrontation is opportunity to cross-examine
    because that is how veracity and credibility of witnesses are tested). This is true even
    if the witness testifies that she does not remember in response to defense counsel’s
    questions, so long as the defense has the chance to probe her lack of memory.
    Woodall v. State, 
    336 S.W.3d 634
    , 643–44 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011). But if a witness
    20
    who has been granted use and derivative use immunity categorically refuses to
    answer questions on cross-examination or fails to answer questions to such a
    significant extent that it makes cross-examination meaningless, this violates the
    defendant’s right to confront the witnesses against him. Preston v. Superintendent
    Graterford SCI, 
    902 F.3d 365
    , 370–71 & n.5, 380–82 & n.17 (3d Cir. 2018).
    B.     Analysis
    Costilla’s principal argument is based on a misunderstanding of the trial
    court’s order granting Frausto use and derivative use immunity. He maintains that
    the order immunized Frausto from a perjury charge if she lied on the stand, which
    made her testimony unreliable. But the trial court’s order did not immunize her from
    being charged with the offense of perjury if she committed perjury at trial.
    At trial, Frausto invoked her Fifth Amendment right not to testify because her
    testimony might incriminate her. The State then applied to compel Frausto to testify
    in exchange for use and derivative use immunity, and the trial court granted the
    State’s application and ordered Frausto to testify.
    In its order granting Frausto use and derivative use immunity, the trial court
    expressly excluded perjury at trial from the scope of immunity that it granted:
    PROVIDED, HOWEVER, no testimony or other information so
    compelled under this Order or any information directly or indirectly
    derived therefrom may thereafter be used against the said witness,
    CHRISTINA FRAUSTO, except in prosecution for perjury, aggravated
    perjury, or contempt, or otherwise failing to comply fully and
    completely with the terms and directions of this Order. This grant of
    21
    immunity extends only to testimony and evidence given by the witness,
    CHRISTINA FRAUSTO, in the above referenced trial.
    Thus, contrary to Costilla’s assertion, the trial court did not grant Frausto immunity
    from perjury as to her testimony at trial. Consistent with longstanding practice,
    Frausto remained subject to prosecution for perjury in the event that she perjured
    herself on the stand. See Butterfield, 992 S.W.2d at 450 (describing criminal liability
    for perjury as “nearly universal exception” to grants of testimonial immunity).
    Costilla does not address the trial court’s order. Instead, he argues that the
    State assured Frausto that she could not be prosecuted for perjury while she was on
    the stand. Costilla relies on the following exchange between the State and Frausto:
    Q. All right. Christina, when we took a break earlier—have you been
    given immunity for testifying here today?
    A. What do you mean? Like, can you dumb it down a little?
    Q. Sure. So earlier you said that you were pleading the Fifth, that you
    didn’t want to testify because pleading the Fifth means that you’re
    going to incriminate yourself for some crime.
    A. Uh-huh.
    Q. And so—
    A. Oh, yeah.
    Q. So has the State said that they will not prosecute you for the crime
    of perjury if—and that’s for a false report to the police officers, if
    you change your testimony in between what you’ve said before and
    now.
    A. Uh-huh.
    Q. Do you understand that?
    22
    A. Yes.
    But this exchange contradicts, rather than supports, Costilla’s argument. The
    State did not represent to Frausto that it would not prosecute her if she perjured
    herself on the stand. Instead, the State said it would not prosecute Frausto for perjury
    if she disavowed the version of events she related to the police in the sworn statement
    she gave on the night of the November 12 altercation. In short, the State’s description
    of Frausto’s immunity corresponds to the trial court’s written order, which provided
    that she could not be prosecuted for self-incriminating statements. Consistent with
    the oath Frausto took when she was sworn as a witness, she remained obliged to
    testify truthfully despite the grant of use and derivative use immunity.
    To the extent Costilla argues that the trial court’s grant of use and derivative
    use immunity to Frausto somehow deprived him of the right to effectively cross-
    examine her aside from his mistaken claim that she was immunized from prosecution
    if she perjured herself on the stand, we disagree. Costilla does not cite any authority
    for the proposition that granting use and derivative use immunity to an alleged victim
    of a crime or complaining witness generally violates a defendant’s right of
    confrontation. Nor can Costilla claim that it did so in this particular case.
    During defense counsel’s cross-examination of Frausto, Frausto testified that:
    •   the statement she gave to the police on the night of the November 12
    altercation was false and she misled the police to avoid going to jail;
    23
    •   her claim that she did not recall details about this altercation was false and
    she lied about her memory to avoid admitting she had misled the police;
    and
    •   the charges the State brought against Costilla were not accurate and
    Costilla was not guilty of the offenses for which the State was trying him.
    Thus, during defense counsel’s cross-examination of Frausto, he secured admissions
    from her that undermined the very basis of the prosecution by calling into doubt the
    veracity and credibility of her prior allegations against Costilla.
    While Frausto said she did not recall in response to multiple questions during
    cross-examination, a witness’s lack of memory does not violate a defendant’s right
    of confrontation, so long as his counsel has the chance to probe the witness’s recall.
    Woodall, 
    336 S.W.3d at 643
    –44. Costilla’s counsel had the chance to do so.
    In addition, all the questions about which Frausto disclaimed memory on
    cross-examination concerned statements she allegedly made to a representative of
    the Attorney General’s Office. If these prior statements were reduced to writing or
    recorded, they were not introduced into evidence in written or recorded form or
    otherwise. Nor was their content disclosed to the jury except to the extent that
    defense counsel’s questions indirectly did so. As characterized by defense counsel
    in his questions during cross-examination, these prior statements essentially
    corroborated Frausto’s trial testimony that she had misled the police on the night of
    the altercation. Counsel’s questions, of course, are not evidence. Madden v. State,
    
    242 S.W.3d 504
    , 513 & n.23 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007). But to the extent that the jury
    24
    could have (improperly) formed an impression based on defense counsel’s questions
    about these prior statements and Frausto’s purported lack of memory about them,
    that impression would not have been disadvantageous to Costilla’s defense.
    In sum, the trial court did not immunize Frausto from perjury in the event that
    she perjured herself on the stand. Moreover, Frausto neither categorically refused to
    answer questions on cross-examination nor failed to answer questions to such a
    significant extent that it made cross-examination meaningless. Cf. Preston, 902 F.3d
    at 370–71 & n.5, 380–82 & n.17 (holding that defendant was deprived of opportunity
    to effectively cross-examine accomplice in violation of Confrontation Clause when
    trial court admitted into evidence accomplice’s prior statement to police and
    testimony from accomplice’s own criminal trial but accomplice responded “no
    comment” to all but three of defense counsel’s questions, none of which were
    pertinent to veracity of accomplice’s prior statement or testimony or accomplice’s
    credibility in general, while on the stand during defendant’s trial despite having been
    granted use and derivative use immunity). We therefore reject Costilla’s complaint
    that the trial court erred in overruling his objection as to the right of confrontation.
    III.   Improper Comment on Weight of Evidence
    Costilla contends the trial court improperly commented on the weight of the
    evidence by admitting into evidence the State’s application for use and derivative
    use immunity and the trial court’s order granting the application. Based on the
    25
    language of the application and order, Costilla maintains that they could only have
    been understood by the jury as a guarantee of Frausto’s veracity and his guilt.
    A.     Standard of review and applicable law
    Article 38.05 of our Code of Criminal Procedure provides that when ruling on
    the admissibility of evidence, a trial court “shall not discuss or comment upon the
    weight of the same or its bearing in the case, but shall simply decide whether or not
    it is admissible.” This statutory mandate means exactly what it says: a trial court
    must announce its evidentiary rulings without elaborating on the evidence. Simon v.
    State, 
    203 S.W.3d 581
    , 590 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2006, no pet.).
    Whether the trial court violated Article 38.05 is a question of law, which we review
    de novo. See 
    id. at 590
    –92 (stating appellate court’s first inquiry under statute is
    deciding whether challenged remarks constitute comment on weight of evidence and
    making independent review of record and concluding that trial court erred). If the
    trial court errs by violating Article 38.05, the error requires reversal if the trial court’s
    comment was reasonably calculated to benefit the State or prejudice the defendant’s
    rights. Proenza v. State, 
    541 S.W.3d 786
    , 791 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017).
    B.     Analysis
    Costilla does not claim that the trial court discussed or commented on the
    application for use and derivative use immunity or the corresponding order in the
    jury’s hearing when the trial court admitted them into evidence. Nor could Costilla
    26
    do so, given that the trial court ruled on the application’s and order’s admissibility
    during a bench conference held outside the jury’s hearing. In addition, Costilla does
    not characterize any remark made by the trial court as an improper comment on the
    weight of the application or order. Instead, Costilla argues that the very act of
    admitting them into evidence was a comment on the evidence.
    Article 38.05 is not susceptible to the interpretation Costilla tries to give it.
    The statute forbids a trial court from discussing or commenting on the weight of the
    evidence when it decides whether the evidence is admissible. TEX. CODE CRIM.
    PROC. art. 38.05. The statute directs the trial court to “simply decide whether or not
    it is admissible.” 
    Id.
     This directive implicitly contemplates that the admissibility
    decision itself, unaccompanied by further remarks by the court, cannot constitute an
    improper comment under Article 38.05. See Smith v. State, 
    595 S.W.2d 120
    , 123–
    24 (Tex. Crim. App. [Panel Op.] 1980) (trial court’s statement overruling objection
    was not comment on weight of evidence). As Article 38.05’s plain language
    indicates, the trial court cannot violate the statute unless it engages in discussion or
    commentary beyond the announcement of its decision. See Hill v. State, 
    217 S.W.2d 1009
    , 1011–12 (Tex. Crim. App. 1948) (holding trial judge’s supposed frowns,
    scowls, and head-wags were not susceptible to review as comments on weight of
    evidence).
    27
    Moreover, the record shows that any remarks the trial court made about the
    application and order when deciding whether they were admissible were made
    during a bench conference conducted out of the jury’s hearing. Discussion or
    commentary that occurs outside the jury’s presence or hearing neither benefits the
    State nor prejudices the defendant’s rights and therefore cannot constitute reversible
    error. Becknell v. State, 
    720 S.W.2d 526
    , 532 (Tex. Crim. App. [Panel Op.] 1986);
    see also Baca v. State, 
    223 S.W.3d 478
    , 481–82 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 2006, no
    pet.) (statements made by trial court outside jury’s presence could not have tainted
    presumption of innocence); Murchison v. State, 
    93 S.W.3d 239
    , 262 n.4 (Tex.
    App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2002, pet. ref’d) (comments made by trial court outside
    jury’s presence could not have affected right to impartial jury trial). In the civil
    context, we have gone so far as to hold that statements made by the trial court outside
    the jury’s presence categorically cannot constitute comments on the weight of the
    evidence. See Mieth v. Ranchquest, Inc., 
    177 S.W.3d 296
    , 304 (Tex. App.—Houston
    [1st Dist.] 2005, no pet.) (declining to review such statements as comments on
    weight of evidence). Whether they are categorically excluded from the definition of
    comments on the weight of evidence or merely considered harmless, comments
    made outside of the jury’s presence or hearing cannot constitute reversible error.
    Costilla tries to sidestep the preceding authorities by attributing the statements
    made by the State in its application for use and derivative use immunity to the trial
    28
    court. Costilla posits that the application’s language “conveyed to the jury that the
    trial court was guaranteeing that the alleged victim’s testimony would be truthful,
    affording credibility to the alleged victim and ultimately fortifying the State’s case.”
    Of course, a trial court does not adopt or endorse the contents of an exhibit by ruling
    that it is admissible, and Costilla does not argue otherwise. Instead, Costilla argues
    that this particular situation is different because the trial court granted the State’s
    application and stated in its order doing so “that the testimony sought by the State
    may be necessary to the public interest and so that justice may be served,” which
    Costilla argues “communicated to the jury that the trial court had adopted the State’s
    position that the alleged victim was in fact a victim.”
    We disagree for two independent reasons. First, Article 38.05 states that when
    “ruling upon the admissibility of evidence, the judge shall not discuss or comment
    upon the weight of the same or its bearing in the case.” Thus, by its express terms,
    the statute applies to remarks made by the trial court about the evidence while ruling
    on its admissibility, not to remarks made within the evidence subject to the ruling.
    Here, the trial court ruled that the application and order were admissible during a
    bench conference. The application and order are evidence. Statements made within
    them cannot constitute a comment on their own weight. Nor can the application or
    order be construed as a comment on the weight of other evidence, such as Frausto’s
    testimony, because neither the application nor the order address the admissibility of
    29
    other evidence. The State applied for an order requiring Frausto to testify with use
    and derivative use immunity, and the trial court granted the State’s application. The
    trial court’s order does not purport to rule on the admissibility of Frausto’s trial
    testimony in general or on any particular aspect of her anticipated testimony. Thus,
    Article 38.05 does not apply to statements made in the application or order.
    Second, even if the application and order could somehow be shoehorned into
    Article 38.05’s coverage, Costilla’s characterization of the contents of these
    documents and their supposed implications is unpersuasive. The trial court did not
    characterize Frausto as a victim. Nor did the trial court guarantee her truthfulness.
    In its order granting the State’s application, the trial court found that Frausto was “a
    material witness.” It concluded that her testimony “may be necessary to the public
    interest and so that justice may be served” and ordered her to appear and testify at
    Costilla’s trial. But the trial court did not equate the public interest or justice with a
    verdict of guilty or a judgment of conviction. Nor did it suggest in any way that the
    jury ought to believe Frausto’s testimony because it was bound to be truthful. On the
    contrary, the trial court’s explicit statement that it was not granting Frausto immunity
    from “prosecution for perjury” was an acknowledgment that her untruthfulness was
    a possibility to be guarded against. Thus, even if statements in the application and
    order were subject to Article 38.05, they would not constitute an improper comment
    30
    on the weight of the evidence because the trial court did not, in fact, make or ratify
    any statements likes the ones Costilla tries to attribute to it.
    For all these reasons, we overrule Costilla’s Article 38.05 complaint.
    IV.    Jury Charge Error
    Costilla contends the trial court erroneously instructed the jury on the mental
    state required to find him guilty of assault. Because assault is a result-oriented
    offense, Costilla argues, the trial court should have instructed the jury to convict him
    only if it believed beyond a reasonable doubt that he had the requisite culpability
    with respect to the result of his conduct, as opposed to the nature of his conduct or
    the circumstances surrounding his conduct. See generally Young v. State, 
    341 S.W.3d 417
    , 423 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011) (discussing how crimes fall into three
    general categories: those that criminalize the result of conduct, nature of conduct,
    and circumstances surrounding the conduct). Instead, the trial court instructed the
    jury that it could find him guilty if it found that he acted with the requisite culpability
    as to the result of his conduct or its nature or the surrounding circumstances. Costilla
    contends that this error allowed the jury to convict him on an improper basis.
    A.     Standard of review and applicable law
    We review an alleged jury charge error regardless of preservation. Kirsch v.
    State, 
    357 S.W.3d 645
    , 649 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012). Our review of jury charge error
    consists of a two-step process. 
    Id.
     We first determine whether the challenged
    31
    instruction is erroneous. 
    Id.
     When we review a charge for error, we consider the
    charge as a whole rather than as a series of isolated and unrelated statements.
    Vasquez v. State, 
    389 S.W.3d 361
    , 366 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012). If the charge is
    erroneous, we then analyze the error for harm. Kirsch, 357 S.W.3d at 649.
    The degree of harm required for reversal varies depending on whether error
    was preserved. Id. If the appellant did not preserve error, it is reversible only if it
    caused egregious harm. Jordan v. State, 
    593 S.W.3d 340
    , 346 (Tex. Crim. App.
    2020). Under the egregious harm standard, the error warrants reversal if it resulted
    in so much harm that it deprived the defendant of a fair and impartial trial. Chambers
    v. State, 
    580 S.W.3d 149
    , 154 (Tex. Crim. App. 2019). But when, as here, the
    appellant preserved error, it is reversible so long as it caused some harm. Jordan,
    593 S.W.3d at 346. Under the some harm standard, any harm whatsoever requires
    reversal. Chambers, 580 S.W.3d at 154. Under both harm standards, the charge error
    must have caused some actual harm, as opposed to merely theoretical harm, to the
    appellant. Gonzalez v. State, 
    610 S.W.3d 22
    , 27 (Tex. Crim. App. 2020).
    Neither side has the burden to prove or disprove harm. Reeves v. State, 
    420 S.W.3d 812
    , 816 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013). Instead, we independently review the
    record. See 
    id.
     To assess harm, we must evaluate the entire record, including the jury
    charge, contested issues, weight of the probative evidence, arguments of counsel,
    and any other relevant information. Jordan, 593 S.W.3d at 347. Because our
    32
    assessment of harm turns on the record as a whole, we must decide whether jury
    charge error was harmful on a case-by-case basis, rather than by applying bright-line
    rules. Rogers v. State, 
    550 S.W.3d 190
    , 192 (Tex. Crim. App. 2018).
    B.     Analysis
    A section of the jury charge defined key terms. Costilla’s complaint concerns
    the definition of two of the culpable states of mind:
    (1) “intentionally,” which stated that a person acts with this state of mind
    “with respect to a result of his conduct when it is his conscious objective
    or desire to engage in the conduct or cause the result”; and
    (2) “knowingly,” which stated that a person acts with this state of mind “with
    respect to the nature of his conduct or to the circumstances surrounding
    his conduct when he is aware of the nature of his conduct or that the
    circumstances exist” and “with respect to a result of his conduct when he
    is aware that his conduct is reasonably certain to cause the result.”
    At trial, Costilla requested that the trial court “limit the culpable mental states to the
    result of the conduct.” In other words, he requested that the trial court delete the
    italicized language from the preceding definitions.
    The trial court denied Costilla’s request.
    On appeal, Costilla contends that the italicized language in the charge’s
    definitions is erroneous because assaultive offenses are result-oriented crimes. Thus,
    he reasons, his state of mind as to the conduct itself and surrounding circumstances
    is irrelevant. Costilla argues that this error harmed him by reducing the State’s
    burden of proof, inasmuch as it allowed the jury to find him guilty if it found that he
    33
    merely “engaged in the conduct or was aware of the nature of the conduct or the
    circumstances surrounding the conduct.” He maintains the jury was entitled to find
    him guilty only if it found that he intended to cause bodily injury or was aware that
    his actions were reasonably certain to cause bodily injury.
    A trial court errs when it does not limit the language concerning the culpable
    states of mind to the appropriate conduct element. Price v. State, 
    457 S.W.3d 437
    ,
    441 (Tex. Crim. App. 2015). Thus, when the Legislature makes an act criminal on
    account of its result, the jury charge must require culpability as to that result, rather
    than as to the commission of the act itself. 
    Id.
     The jury found Costilla guilty of
    misdemeanor assault causing bodily injury—family violence, which is a result-
    oriented crime. PENAL § 22.01(a)(1), (b); Price, 457 S.W.3d at 442. Specifically, the
    crime cannot be committed without bodily injury. See Price, 457 S.W.3d at 442
    (saying same as to third-degree felony version of offense). Because the gravamen of
    assault causing bodily injury—family violence is its result, the jury charge in a
    prosecution for this crime must limit the definitions of the culpable states of mind to
    the result, which is causing bodily injury. Id. at 441–43. Accordingly, we agree with
    Costilla that the jury charge was erroneous in failing to do so.3
    3
    The definitions of “intentionally” and “knowingly” should have read: “A person acts
    intentionally, or with intent, with respect to a result of his conduct when it is his
    conscious objective or desire to cause the result. A person acts knowingly, or with
    knowledge, with respect to a result of his conduct when he is aware that his conduct is
    reasonably certain to cause the result.” Price, 457 S.W.3d at 443.
    34
    But we disagree with Costilla’s contention that this error was harmful. The
    jury charge as a whole, the principal contested issue at trial, the weight of the
    evidence, and counsel’s arguments show that the error did not actually harm Costilla.
    Though the jury charge’s definitions of “intentionally” and “knowingly” were
    erroneous, the charge did not repeat the error in its application paragraphs. With
    respect to both continuous family violence and the lesser-included offense of assault
    causing bodily injury—family violence, the charge instructed that the jury was to
    find Costilla guilty only if it found he did “intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly
    cause bodily injury.” This language clarified that Costilla’s state of mind with
    respect to the result—causing bodily injury—was to be the focus of the jury’s
    deliberations and findings.
    In Hughes v. State, for example, the Court of Criminal Appeals addressed the
    same definitional error of “intentionally” and “knowingly” in the context of a murder
    prosecution. 
    897 S.W.2d 285
    , 294–95 (Tex. Crim. App. 1994). The Court concluded
    that the error did not harm the defendant because the application paragraph clarified
    that the jury was to find the defendant guilty only if it found that he did “intentionally
    or knowingly cause the death” of the victim. 
    Id. at 296
    –97. The jury charge in
    Hughes is materially indistinguishable from the one before us in this regard.
    Nor was Costilla’s mental state the principal contested issue at trial. Though
    Costilla told Pierce that he pinned Frausto down in self-defense, the main issue
    35
    before the jury was Frausto’s credibility as a witness. Frausto told two contradictory
    stories. On the evening of the November 12 altercation, she told Cormier that
    Costilla attacked her. At trial, Frausto disavowed that version of events, testifying
    that she had made up the allegations against Costilla to avoid being taken to jail
    herself. The jury had the task of deciding whether Frausto had lied on the evening
    of the altercation or was lying on the stand. Costilla’s guilt or innocence ultimately
    hinged on the jury’s decision as to which of Frausto’s stories was true (or whether
    the evidence allowed it to decide this beyond a reasonable doubt).
    Notably, the jury charge contained a self-defense instruction. Thus, the jury
    considered and rejected Costilla’s claim that he acted in self-defense.
    The weight of the evidence further underscores that Costilla suffered no harm
    from the erroneous definition of “intentionally” and “knowingly.” Costilla has not
    challenged the legal sufficiency of the evidence as to the offense of conviction. Nor
    could he successfully do so. The jury viewed the recording from Cormier’s body
    camera. As depicted in this recording, Frausto told Cormier that she tried to leave
    the apartment and Costilla responded by trying to tackle her. Costilla told Frausto
    she was not going anywhere, and he pinned her to floor. While Costilla had her
    pinned, he put one hand over her mouth and nose, which impeded her breathing.
    The jury’s verdict reflects that it found the version of events Frausto related
    to Cormier true beyond a reasonable doubt. The jury was entitled to find Costilla
    36
    guilty of the lesser-included misdemeanor offense of assault causing bodily injury—
    family violence based on this evidence alone. See Ploeger v. State, 
    189 S.W.3d 799
    ,
    810 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2006, no pet.) (complainant’s testimony she
    feared bodily injury or death legally sufficient to satisfy element that defendant
    caused complainant to be under such fear in stalking prosecution); see also
    Hernandez v. State, 
    470 S.W.3d 862
    , 867–69 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2015, pet.
    ref’d) (complainant’s testimony that defendant threatened him was legally sufficient
    evidence of threat in aggravated assault prosecution).
    Finally, the parties’ closing arguments underscored that Frausto’s veracity
    was the principal contested issue. Defense counsel emphasized in closing that
    Frausto had been untruthful, had manipulated the responding officers and the
    prosecution, and was trying to manipulate the jury. For example, defense counsel
    argued:
    Christina is the one that’s striking and hurting and attacking
    Drake. Drake calls the cops. What does she do? She gets out there and
    she manipulates Cormier right off the bat. And then what does she do?
    Then she manipulates the State into giving her immunity to testify. The
    only way she would testify [is] if she had immunity so that she can’t—
    I can’t get arrested. I can’t get charged. I can’t get prosecuted for lying.
    She manipulated them. She’s manipulated everybody since she’s been
    here.
    And if the State says she lied to them, I know she lied to me and
    I know she lied to you. We all know that, right? She’s a liar. Why in
    the world would you think that she wouldn’t lie to Cormier?
    37
    How can you determine, beyond a reasonable doubt, that what
    she told Cormier when you know for a fact that she’s a dead-up liar.
    You know that. The State’s gonna ask you to rely upon a liar and
    convict this man of a felony? They’re gonna ask you to conclude
    beyond a reasonable doubt that you can rely upon a liar, beyond a
    reasonable doubt, to that level of certainty, the highest level of certainty
    we have anywhere? Because you can’t blame people, you can’t label
    people, you can’t convict people on testimony like that.
    Counsel for the State, in turn, conceded that she was disappointed in Frausto’s
    courtroom behavior. The State agreed during closing that Frausto had “lied to all of
    us.” But the State argued that Frausto’s courtroom behavior was nonetheless
    explicable once one took into account Frausto’s desire to ensure that Costilla could
    continue providing for their daughter financially. The State maintained that Frausto
    lied on the stand for their child’s sake. But, the State argued, this case “isn’t about
    what Christina wants.” According to the State, Frausto had been truthful with
    Cormier, and her statements to Cormier showed that Costilla was guilty as charged.
    On this record, we hold that the trial court’s error in defining “intentionally”
    and “knowingly” in the jury charge did not actually harm Costilla. We therefore
    overrule Costilla’s challenge to the charge because the error is not reversible.
    38
    CONCLUSION
    We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    Gordon Goodman
    Justice
    Panel consists of Justices Goodman, Hightower, and Rivas-Molloy.
    Publish. TEX. R. APP. P. 47.2(b).
    39