             IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
                         OF TEXAS
                                         NO. AP-76,994

                     Ex parte DAVID LYNN BRATCHER, Applicant

               ON APPLICATION FOR A WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS
               CAUSE NO. 1037467-A IN THE 182 nd DISTRICT COURT
                               HARRIS COUNTY

             K ELLER, P.J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which M EYERS, P RICE,
K EASLER, and H ERVEY, JJ., joined. C OCHRAN, J., filed a concurring opinion in which
J OHNSON, J., joined. W OMACK and J OHNSON , JJ., concurred. A LCALA, J., did not
participate.

       Applicant was convicted of aggravated sexual assault of a child and sentenced to seventy-five

years in prison. In his habeas application, applicant contends that his trial counsel, Jules Laird,

rendered ineffective assistance in a number of respects. We filed and set three of his allegations, in

which he claimed counsel was ineffective because:

       (1) Counsel failed to determine before voir dire examination that applicant wanted
       the court to assess punishment and allowed the prosecutor to inform the jury panel
       of the enhanced range of punishment if the defendant had prior convictions even
       though the jury did not assess punishment.

       (2) Previous counsel violated the attorney-client privilege by giving a document
       received from applicant to a psychologist without applicant’s knowledge and consent,
       and trial counsel failed to file a motion in limine and object to the document on the
       basis that the State obtained it as a result of previous counsel’s violation of the
       attorney-client privilege and was an inadmissible prior consistent statement.
                                                                                 BRATCHER — 2

       (3) Counsel opened the door to testimony that applicant was convicted of sexually
       assaulting the complainant in Dallas and sentenced to 55 years in prison.1

                                 I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

                                       A. State’s Evidence

       Applicant opened a sports-trading-card shop in Dallas sometime between August and

November 1990. Shortly thereafter, the complainant (C.W.) and one of his older brothers (J.W.)

began associating with applicant and his two stepsons and began working at the shop. In January

1991, applicant and several boys—including C.W., J.W., and one of applicant’s stepsons

(J.G.)—traveled to Houston to attend a trading-card show. Two retired members of the Harlem

Globetrotters—Meadowlark Lemon and Curly Neal—were present and posed for a photo with the

boys. While they were in Houston, applicant and the boys stayed at the house of Herbert Weaver,

a friend of applicant.

       According to C.W., the group spent two nights at Weaver’s house. One of those nights, C.W.

slept in the same bed with applicant in an upstairs guest room. C.W. awoke the next morning to feel

applicant rubbing his stomach. Applicant began fondling C.W.’s penis and eventually performed

oral sex on him. At the time this incident occurred, C.W. was twelve years old. After this incident,

applicant molested C.W. on numerous other occasions until C.W. was sixteen or seventeen years old.

C.W. recounted that applicant had molested him between fifty and one hundred times. Except for

another trading-card-show trip to Houston in January 1993 (which J.G. and J.W. did not attend),

these other incidents all occurred in Dallas. At some point, applicant warned C.W. not to tell anyone

about these incidents or applicant would have C.W. “taken care of.” C.W. interpreted that statement


       1
          We have renumbered applicant’s allegations. They were allegations 2, 4, and 7 in the
application.
                                                                                   BRATCHER — 3

to mean “death.”

        At some point, C.W.’s family was having financial troubles. When C.W. was sixteen years

old, applicant bought him a car. The record contains faxes, sent by C.W. to applicant at about the

same time, offering free tans at a tanning salon and depicting homosexual acts, as well as pictures

and notes indicating an affectionate relationship.

        C.W. testified to having trust issues with his high-school girlfriend and others. He explained

that he was depressed, anxious, and extremely jealous. He further explained that he did not know

who to trust, that he felt that he was taken advantage of at a young age and “it just really took a part

of me that I never got to fully develop.” He said that he and his girlfriend broke up because he

“pretty much drove her away.”

        After he broke up with his girlfriend, C.W. decided that he needed help, so he visited a

doctor. C.W. mainly talked about his girlfriend but also mentioned that he had been sexually abused.

The doctor prescribed an anti-depressant, but C.W. visited her only a few times, because he could

not afford it.

        In 1999, while living in California, C.W. told his brothers, Ross and J.W.,2 in vague terms,

about applicant molesting him. They were livid about it. Around that time, C.W. sent applicant a

letter confronting him about what he had done. C.W. stated that the letter expressed his true feelings

in the harshest manner that he could put on paper. After the letter was sent, applicant never

attempted to contact C.W. again.

        Later that year, C.W. moved back to Texas, and he sought help for depression from Fayteen

Marshall, a licensed professional counselor. C.W. saw Marshall for approximately four months.


        2
            C.W. and Ross both testified about C.W.’s outcry. J.W. did not testify.
                                                                                 BRATCHER — 4

C.W was using marijuana heavily, which Marshall advised him to stop. She also recommended that

he get on anti-depressants. C.W. expressed confusion and sometimes thought he was at fault for the

sexual abuse he had suffered. Marshall testified that C.W. carried a lot of shame for what happened,

that he had sexual-identity issues, that he had low self-esteem, and that he had had suicidal feelings

in the past. Testing showed that C.W. had “severe anxiety” that was “off the chart.” Each session,

Marshall advised C.W. to tell his parents. At some point during treatment, C.W. told his father, who

was supportive of C.W. but angry with applicant. A few days later, C.W. told his mother, who was

also upset.

       In January 2002, C.W. called the Dallas Police Department about applicant’s molestation of

him over the years. Detective Joseph Corden took the call and was subsequently assigned to the

case. In March 2002, he arranged the recording of a phone call between C.W. and applicant without

applicant’s knowledge.3 The contents of that conversation convinced Detective Corden that probable

cause existed to arrest applicant.

                                           B. The Letter

       During the State’s direct examination, C.W.’s letter to applicant was read by C.W. to the jury

as follows:

               David Bratcher, I’m writing you a letter that I feel is well overdue and I feel
       I need to write to you. What you did to me, when I was younger was a very cold and
       one of the most awful things anyone could do to another human being. You not only
       took advantage of me at a young age, you have made me very emotionally
       unbalanced. You know very well what you did, and I think of you as one of the
       sickest minded human beings that has ever walked the face of this earth.


       3
          Because C.W. knew that the phone call was recorded, the recording did not violate Texas
law. See TEX . PENAL CODE § 16.02(c)(3)(A) (West 2004) (affirmative defense to prosecution if a
person acting under color of law intercepts a wire, oral, or electronic communication if one of the
parties to the communication has given prior consent to the interception).
                                                                                 BRATCHER — 5

                I not only trusted you as my boss, my friend, but my whole family did as well.
       Now that I look back over what you did to me, you were never a friend to me or my
       family. Because of this, I have not been able to give a hundred percent of my trust
       to anybody including my family, my friends, and my relationships that I have been
       in. I put a lot of trust into you, and why wouldn’t I? But you took that trust and
       absolutely demolished it.
                I think you have some very major problems. Otherwise you never would have
       done to me what you did. Who knows who else you have done this to. All the times
       that you told me you were my friend, now I know what you were really wanting from
       me. You are nothing but a pedophile.
                You have taken a part of my life and completely ruined it. I’ve been in a deep
       depression for a number of years. And after knowing what happened to my family
       before this, you just saw me as a vulnerable little boy and took advantage of the
       situation.
                How do you even live your life as a Christian? You’re much closer to the
       devil. You portray a life totally unlike the one you live. I’ve just noticed so many
       things about you. And it’s no wonder why you live alone and have no friends
       because you are a sick, sick, sick, sick, sick excuse of a human being. And, in fact,
       I bet the whole reason that you opened All Pro Sports Cards was to be like a lion over
       his prey. Little boys.
                I don’t want to ever have contact with you again. I’ve already told both Ross
       and [J.W.] what you did to me. And you better hope and pray that our paths never
       cross again in the future. Should you ever have contact with anyone in my family or
       that I know, I promise I will ruin your life. I promise. I hope that you rot in Hell
       because I know that I won’t see you in heaven. Signed Corey.
                Also, find a way to make [J.G.] quit his job with my father. That could just
       be contact with people I know, and I already told you what I would do.4

                                  C. Recorded Telephone Call

       The recorded telephone conversation between C.W. and applicant was played to the jury.

In that conversation, applicant admitted to having a sexual relationship with C.W. but claimed that

C.W. initiated the conduct, that it occurred when C.W. was eighteen, and that it lasted only a short

time. Applicant claimed that this experience caused him to fall in love with C.W., and although he

was not gay, he would have that experience again.


       4
          The written version of the letter, admitted as an exhibit, contains minor stylistic
discrepancies from C.W.’s reading of the letter to the jury. Also, we replaced J.W.’s and J.G.’s
names in the letter with initials.
                                                                                  BRATCHER — 6

       But applicant made various statements in the telephone conversation that indicated that

applicant had harbored unusually affectionate feelings towards C.W. even when C.W. was a child:

“I think about you all the time,” “[Y]ou’re still my best friend I’ve ever had,” “I gave you

everything,” “I’ve got every note, every fax, every letter that you ever wrote to me. I’ve still got

every one.” Applicant further said, “I’ve got the very graphic things too that you sent to me.”

       Applicant also described two types of conduct that he claimed C.W. engaged in as an

adolescent, in which C.W. arranged on his own initiative to be in applicant’s presence when

applicant was nude. First, he claimed that C.W. would crawl through a dog door to get inside

applicant’s house while applicant was taking a bath.5 Second, applicant claimed that C.W. would

unlock a door at the tanning salon and walk in when applicant had no clothes on. Applicant never

said that he reported such inappropriate behavior to C.W.’s parents or anyone else. Applicant

maintained: “I always respected your privacy and I never repeated anything you ever said to me.”

       In a few instances during the conversation, applicant changed his story about events when

pressed by C.W. When C.W. referred to the Houston trip that included J.W. and J.G. (which was

the first trip), applicant maintained that he slept in a bed upstairs while C.W. slept downstairs. When

C.W. stated that J.W. would know what happened, applicant said, “Wait a second, when [J.W.] went

with us,” applicant slept downstairs on a fold-out sofa with J.W. Applicant further stated, “You’ve

go the trips mixed up.” When C.W. referred to the time he spent with applicant in applicant’s

Cadillac, applicant said he had just gotten a divorce, but when pressed, he acknowledged that he and

his wife were in fact still married at the time. Applicant said that C.W. was already driving when



       5
        To this statement, C.W. retorted, “Where were [J.G.] and [applicant’s other stepson]?
Where would they have been at this time?”
                                                                                    BRATCHER — 7

he worked for a tanning salon, but when pressed, applicant acknowledged that C.W. did not yet have

a car, but applicant maintained that C.W. did have a driver’s license.

        At one point applicant said, “Okay, do you just need somebody to cuss at or somebody to

blame, do it to me. I mean really, if that will help you get on with your life, then say whatever you

want to to me and I’ll accept it. I mean really, I want you to have a good life.”

        Numerous times in the conversation, when C.W. pressed applicant to explain what happened

to C.W. as a child, applicant told C.W. to come and see him. But later, when C.W. suggested that

he would take applicant up on his offer and come talk to him in person, applicant appeared to demur,

saying, “Well, you’ll have to call me.” At various times, applicant expressed suspicion about the

telephone call—referring to C.W.’s letter that told applicant not to contact him, suggesting that C.W.

was trying to set him up, and asking who was sitting there with C.W.

        Applicant mentioned C.W.’s letter six times during the conversation. The first time C.W.

broached the subject of being molested, applicant said that he was “very confused” by the letter.

Later, applicant told C.W. to come and see him to explain the letter to him. In his third reference to

the letter, applicant stated, “[A]ll I got was a letter from you saying you didn’t want me to contact

you again.” Later, he said, “I can’t get past the fact you wrote me a letter when what happened with

us when you were eighteen was your initiation.” A fifth time, applicant referred to the letter as

follows: “[Y]ou all of a sudden wrote me a letter and started saying a bunch of stuff that I didn’t even

know what you’re talking about” and saying that C.W. had already told his brothers. The final time

he referred to the letter, applicant said, “You blew my mind when you wrote that letter.”

                                       D. Defense’s Evidence

        On cross-examination, C.W. acknowledged that he had a shoplifiting conviction from 2004
                                                                                  BRATCHER — 8

or 2005, which occurred around the same time he began talking to the Houston police. He also

acknowledged that his family finances were bad in 1990. When questioned about whether J.W. slept

in the same bed with applicant during the 1991 Houston trip, C.W. replied that they stayed at

Weaver’s house for multiple nights and he did not remember if J.W. slept with applicant on one of

those nights. Nevertheless, C.W. had a “very vivid memory” of applicant sexually assaulting him

on that trip because it was C.W.’s first sexual experience.

       Weaver testified for the defense. He claimed that applicant and the boys stayed only one

night at his house in January 1991. He also testified that there was no bed in the upstairs guest room

at that time. He further testified that applicant and the boys slept downstairs in the living room, but

Weaver acknowledged that he went to sleep before everyone else.

       J.G., one of applicant’s stepsons, also testified for the defense. He said that he never noticed

any unusual behavior between applicant and C.W. He acknowledged that applicant sometimes gave

C.W. things and that C.W. sometimes sat on applicant’s lap, but he maintained that those events

occurred with C.W. no more often than with applicant’s step-children or their other friends.

       Regarding the January 1991 trip to Houston, J.G. said that applicant and all the boys spent

only one night at Weaver’s house, and they all slept in the living room. J.G. said that he and C.W.

slept on the floor near each other in sleeping bags while applicant slept on a couch, which might

have been a pull-out sofa bed. He also said that he had a bad case of poison ivy at the time that kept

him awake most of the night. As far as he knew, C.W. did not leave his sleeping bag that night.

       J.G. also testified that he and C.W. had a sexual relationship that began a month before the

January 1991 trip. On cross-examination, J.G. acknowledged that his memory of dates was fuzzy,

and that it was possible that his first sexual encounter with C.W. occurred in January or February of
                                                                                  BRATCHER — 9

1991. On rebuttal, C.W. acknowledged that he and J.G. had, in fact, had a sexual relationship, but

C.W. maintained that the relationship began after the January 1991 incident with applicant.

                              II. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

                                         A. Dallas Charges

        Applicant was indicted in Dallas for acts committed against C.W. He gave his attorneys,

Rick Russell and Reed Prospere, the letter that C.W. had written to him. Russell and Prospere used

numerous experts on applicant’s behalf, including Dr. Randall Price. In his habeas affidavit,

Prospere stated that applicant was aware that his attorneys had a “full disclosure” policy with their

experts and were not selective with any information they had. Prospere further stated that applicant

knew of this and never objected, nor did he suggest that his attorneys not disclose any information

he gave them. C.W.’s letter was disclosed to Dr. Price in the course of his work in assisting the

defense, and Dr. Price testified for the defense at trial. After Dr. Price’s testimony on direct

examination, the State asked to see his file. In the heat of battle during trial, Prospere offered the

letter into evidence, without consulting applicant, because he was certain that the State would offer

it if he did not.

        Applicant was convicted and sentenced to fifty-five years in prison, but a motion for new trial

was granted.

                                      B. Houston Indictment

        Applicant was subsequently indicted in Houston for the offense of aggravated sexual assault

of a child. For enhancement purposes, the Houston indictment alleged that applicant had previously

been convicted in 1979 of sexual abuse of a child.

                                            C. Voir Dire
                                                                               BRATCHER — 10

       During jury selection, the prosecutor approached the bench and told the judge and defense

counsel that she intended to talk about punishment. The judge responded that there was no

punishment election for a jury in the file, so punishment would be to the court. Defense counsel

Laird responded that punishment was supposed to be to the jury and that he thought applicant’s

previous attorney had filed an election. After some discussion, the prosecutor said that she did not

mind if the defense wanted to elect jury punishment. Laird responded, “That’s what we had

anticipated all along.” The judge then directed, “Go ahead and get it filed right now and then I’ll

give you some time to talk to them about punishment.”

       After the bench conference, the prosecutor discussed the punishment range for the offense

of aggravated sexual assault, the punishment range with one prior conviction, and the punishment

range with two prior convictions. She also discussed the punishment range for the lesser-included

offense of sexual assault, the range if the lesser offense were enhanced by one prior conviction, and

the range if the lesser offense were enhanced by two prior convictions. The prosecutor’s discussion

was hypothetical, and she never told the venire that applicant had any prior convictions. After this

discussion, the prosecutor asked the venire—first in general and then row by row—if anyone had

a problem with the punishment ranges discussed. She received responses from several prospective

jurors and passed the discussion to defense counsel.

       Laird then approached the bench and informed the trial judge that applicant was refusing to

sign the punishment election. According to Laird, applicant was concerned that the current judge

presiding over jury selection (Judge Jeannine Barr) would not be the same judge that was presiding

over the trial (Judge Mary Bacon). When asked if applicant was now interested in having the

punishment phase tried before the judge, Laird responded that applicant might want to have it before
                                                                                BRATCHER — 11

the current judge (Judge Barr) but not before Judge Bacon, because applicant did not know her. The

judge suggested the possibility that she would be available for punishment proceedings “by way of

a P.S.I. if he’s found guilty.” A break was taken for Laird to explain the situation to applicant.

       After the break, Laird proceeded with voir dire. He referred only once to the possibility of

having a prior conviction, to explain that a person might choose not to testify to avoid being

impeached with a prior conviction at the guilt phase of trial. He gave the hypothetical of being

accused of sexual assault and having a prior conviction for theft.

                                             D. Trial

       Applicant pled “not guilty,” and the guilt phase of trial was conducted before a jury, with

Judge Bacon presiding. Applicant did not testify, and no one mentioned applicant’s 1979 conviction.

       In her opening statement, the prosecutor briefly talked about the recorded telephone

conversation between C.W. and applicant. She stated that Officer Corden recorded the conversation,

that C.W. was trying to get applicant “to admit all the abuse,” and that applicant appeared to be

suspicious about the phone call. Laird objected to the prosecutor discussing what was in the

defendant’s mind in opening statement, the objection was sustained, and the jury was given an

instruction to disregard.

       In his opening statement, defense counsel also referred to the recorded telephone

conversation. Defense counsel said, “I think when you look at the tape and you make your own

conclusions from it, you will see that it is not somebody who has guilty knowledge or guilty actions

that made that tape recording. You will see that the Dallas Police Department used [C.W.] as bait

to try and lure him into a false admission and it wasn’t done.” Defense counsel further stated, “You

will actually hear the defendant’s voice. You’ll hear his comments. You’ll hear his statements,
                                                                                 BRATCHER — 12

unbeknownst to him and as a setup with the Dallas Police Department and [C.W.] as bait saying that

this occurred.”

        During C.W.’s direct examination, the State offered into evidence the letter that C.W. had

written to applicant. Laird objected that the letter was “self-serving,” “cumulative of the testimony

already given to the jury,” and “meant only to inflame the minds of the jury.” He argued that the

prejudicial effect of the letter outweighed its probative nature because C.W. had “already testified

to all of this.” The State responded that the letter “goes to show the relationship at the time between

the victim and the defendant. His first time he ever told the defendant and approached him with this

topic. And it’s relevant to the sequence of the case.” Laird responded that C.W. “had time to

compose it and put in there what he wanted to as opposed to saying, ‘Here’s what happened and this

is what I did.’” And Laird argued that C.W. had “already told two other doctors before that time

period.” The trial judge overruled the defense objections and admitted the letter, which C.W. later

read to the jury.

        In response to defense questioning about prior statements made by C.W. regarding his age

when he had his first sexual experience, the State questioned C.W. about statements he made at a

Dallas hearing. In subsequent cross-examination, defense counsel asked C.W.: “All your time and

effort that you put into your testimony under oath in Dallas as to the number of events and occasions

it happened, that bothered you when you didn’t get the result that you wanted, didn’t it?” The State

objected to the question, and the objection was sustained. At a bench conference, the State argued

that this question by defense counsel created a false impression and opened the door to the results

of the Dallas trial. Defense counsel argued that his questioning did not open the door, and also that

because the State’s objection was sustained, he never received an answer to his question. But Judge
                                                                                 BRATCHER — 13

Bacon sided with the State and ruled that evidence about the Dallas trial would be admitted. C.W.

was then permitted to testify that applicant was convicted at a jury trial in Dallas and sentenced to

fifty-five years in prison but that there was a problem with the jury charge that caused the case to be

dismissed with the possibility that it might be retried. On cross-examination, Laird questioned C.W.

more about the dismissal and then asked if it was correct that C.W. was not happy, “because that’s

when the charges got filed here in Houston, was after the results of the case in Dallas were

overturned.” C.W. responded, “The only reason I’m not happy is it’s not over from the original

charges being guilty and I’m still having to deal with this when all I want to do is put it behind me.”

       Over Laird’s objection, Judge Bacon submitted the lesser-included offense of sexual assault

in the jury charge. The jury charge also included instructions regarding extraneous offenses and

prior convictions, which appear to be a response to the evidence of applicant’s extraneous offenses

against C.W. in Dallas and the conviction arising from those offenses that was later overturned. The

jury was instructed that it could not consider extraneous offenses unless it found beyond a reasonable

doubt that applicant had committed them and that those offenses could be considered only for certain

specified purposes (e.g. motive, opportunity). The jury was instructed that prior convictions could

not be considered as any evidence of guilt, and that such evidence was admitted “for the purpose of

aiding you, if it does aid you, in passing upon the weight you will give that certain evidence, and you

will not consider the same for any other purpose.”

       Jurors were also given a general instruction not to consider matters that were not in evidence:

       During your deliberations in this case, you must not consider, discuss, nor relate any
       matters not in evidence before you. You should not consider nor mention any
       personal knowledge or information you may have about any fact or person connected
       with this case which is not shown by the evidence.

       In closing argument, the prosecutor argued that C.W. had no motive to lie and that, C.W.,
                                                                                BRATCHER — 14

as a heterosexual male with “a girlfriend sitting outside,” was undergoing great embarrassment in

testifying. The prosecutor further argued that applicant was a pedophile and that the sexual contact

between C.W. and J.G. was proof that applicant had abused C.W. because it was not normal for

twelve-year-olds to engage in such conduct.

       The prosecutor also argued that C.W. accurately remembered details associated with the 1991

trip to Houston: the Harlem Globetrotters and the Boy Scout paraphernalia upstairs at Weaver’s

house. And she argued that the recorded telephone conversation showed that applicant was

perverted, had an abnormal relationship with C.W., and was molesting C.W. The prosecutor made

no mention of prior convictions.

       Laird’s closing argument included a discussion about the Dallas trial. He told the jury that

the Dallas case had been dismissed and then, “after the Dallas case didn’t do any good,” C.W. had

essentially said, “Wait a second. . . . There was one time in Houston at Herb Weaver’s house in

1991 that I was sexually assaulted. It was my first sexual experience.” Laird then referred to the

testimony from J.G. to show that it was “not [C.W.’s] first sexual experience, that it was a long list

of sexual experiences.” Laird argued that C.W.’s allegations were the result of his confusion about

his own sexual identity, not from a sexual assault committed by an adult.

       Near the end of his closing argument, Laird admonished the jury to focus on whether the

Houston offense occurred:

       The point is it [the Houston offense] occurred in January of 1991 or it didn’t. If you
       believe beyond a reasonable doubt that the proof shows to you that it didn’t occur in
       January of 1991 in Herb Weaver’s house, then find him not guilty and get out of here
       and be done with this and let him go back to Dallas and let them decide what they’re
       going to do up there because that is not your concern. Your concern is that he’s
       already been tried for a case in Dallas and the case has been dismissed. “Well, let’s
       try him on this one event in Houston.” When does this madness stop? How many
       trials do you have to go through? How many trials does that man and his family have
                                                                                  BRATCHER — 15

        to go through?

        The jury found applicant guilty of aggravated sexual assault. Punishment was tried to Judge

Barr, who assessed punishment at seventy-five years in prison.

                                         E. Habeas Evidence

                                 1. Voir Dire / Enhancement Claim

        In his affidavit, Laird said that he fully discussed with applicant his options for jury or judge

sentencing. Before trial began, applicant said that he wanted a judge to assess punishment, not a

jury. Laird said that he explained to applicant that Judge Barr, not Judge Bacon, would be assessing

punishment, and that in his opinion, Judge Barr might assess a harsher punishment because of the

nature of the conviction and in light of the presentence report. Laird stated that he had believed that

applicant’s previous attorney had filed a jury election, “but the bench discussion gave me one more

opportunity to confirm with Mr. Bratcher that he did not want the jury to assess punishment.”

        Laird further stated that he allowed the prosecutor to discuss the full range of punishment for

enhanced offenses because he had used the same tactic in a trial six months earlier (State v. Collins)

and secured an acquittal. He said that he believed that jurors who were easier on punishment would

also be less inclined to find a defendant guilty.

        At the habeas hearing, Laird reiterated some of the responses in his affidavit, but he also

testified to other facts. He testified that applicant had passed a polygraph test and that the polygraph

examiner was one that Judge Barr used in connection with sex-offender probationers. Applicant

wanted punishment to be assessed by Judge Barr because, if he were convicted, she would at least

know that he passed a polygraph conducted by an examiner on whom she often relied. Laird also

testified that he knew at the time the State was questioning the venire about punishment that
                                                                                 BRATCHER — 16

punishment would be assessed by the judge.

        But Laird did not want punishment to be assessed by a judge; he preferred a jury. He claimed

that he told the judge6 that he wanted the jury to assess punishment, not that he thought the jury was

assessing punishment. Laird testified that he did not want the judge to assess punishment because

he thought Judge Barr would be too harsh on applicant. Laird acknowledged that jury assessment

of punishment was against applicant’s wishes and that who assessed punishment was applicant’s

call.

        During questioning, Laird reiterated that he allowed the prosecutor to ask questions about

enhancements because the prospective jurors’ answers to those questions would help him determine

which jurors would be more lenient at the guilt stage of trial. Laird believed that the prosecutor, by

framing her questions hypothetically, avoided informing the jurors of applicant’s prior convictions.

When asked further about the Collins case, Laird acknowledged that the defendant had elected for

the jury to assess punishment.

        Laird also said that he had not reviewed his case file before executing his affidavit or

testifying at the habeas hearing because his file was lost. He also said that he had not reviewed the

trial record except for a small portion sent by habeas counsel.

        Applicant testified that he told his attorney that he wanted the judge to assess punishment

because of the polygraph he had taken and the fact that the examiner was someone upon whom Judge

Barr relied. Applicant testified that he never told counsel that he wanted a jury to assess punishment.

                                            2. The Letter



        6
         At the habeas hearing, both habeas counsel and Laird were under the mistaken impression
that Judge Bacon had presided over jury selection.
                                                                                 BRATCHER — 17

       In his affidavit, Laird stated that he was never made aware of communications between

applicant and the Dallas attorneys, that applicant did not inform him how the State had obtained the

letter, and that he (Laird) did not know that the Dallas prosecutor had, in fact, obtained the letter.

Laird stated that he was “genuinely surprised by the letter” and that Judge Bacon would let it in after

C.W. had testified to the same facts on direct examination. Laird further said, “That was the first

time I had heard about the letter, and that it had been used by the other attorneys.” Although Laird

had reviewed the testimony of every witness in the Dallas trial, he did not recall seeing the letter.

He contended that he did not find any mention of the letter in the record of the Dallas trial.

       At the habeas hearing, habeas counsel pointed to where the letter had been admitted into

evidence and read by C.W. to the jury in the Dallas trial. Laird acknowledged that he had made a

mistake. Laird also acknowledged that, in the heat of battle in the Houston trial, he did not think of

objecting to the admission of the letter on the basis that it was an inadmissible prior inconsistent7

statement. In retrospect, he “would have loved to have made that objection.”

                                       3. Dallas Trial Claim

       In his affidavit and at the habeas hearing, Laird said that he did not believe that he had

opened the door to the results of the Dallas trial by asking C.W. whether he was satisfied with the

results. During the habeas hearing, Laird acknowledged that he did not want the jury to know about

the results of the Dallas trial. Later in the habeas hearing, Laird said that he “should not have asked

that question.” But Laird articulated a strategy for asking the question:

       I was trying to give the jury the impression that as much as he had wanted to
       convince them that all of these prior bad acts between him and Mr. Bratcher


       7
         Habeas counsel framed the question using the word “inconsistent,” but he appears to have
meant “inadmissible prior consistent statement.”
                                                                                   BRATCHER — 18

        obviously must have been bad and must have been something that the jury should
        have considered, that it frustrated him and that he was made and came to Houston to
        file this case, so that it frustrated him from the standpoint that as much as he was able
        to get in in Dallas, and yet he still wasn’t able to get the conviction so he comes to
        Houston to get a conviction in Houston.

In his affidavit and during the hearing, Laird opined that opening the door to the results of the Dallas

trial did not change the outcome of the Houston trial.

                                    F. Habeas Judge’s Findings

                                 1. Voir Dire / Enhancement Claim

        The habeas judge8 made the following relevant findings regarding the voir dire claim:

        10. The applicant testified that he desired the court to assess punishment.

        11. The court did, in fact, assess punishment.

        12. The court finds credible the assertion by Jules Laird that he wished to voir dire
        the jury on ranges of punishment because he believed it was a strategic device helpful
        in determining which jurors would be desirable/undesirable in guilt/innocence, even
        in a case where the judge was going to assess punishment.

        13. The jury was never informed during voir dire whether the defendant had any prior
        convictions; all discussions were properly had in the hypothetical.

        14. The applicant fails to demonstrate that Laird’s chosen strategy regarding voir
        dire, and his choice not to object to the State’s punishment voir dire, fell below an
        objective standard of reasonableness.

        15. The applicant fails to demonstrate that but for Laird’s chosen voir dire strategy,
        a reasonable probability exists that the result of the proceeding would have been
        different.

                                             2. The Letter

        Regarding the admission of C.W.’s letter, the habeas judge made the following findings:

        21. The January 22, 1999 letter from the complainant to the applicant was introduced


       8
           Judge Randy Roll.
                                                                            BRATCHER — 19

as evidence at the applicant’s trial in Dallas by his attorney Reed Prospere.

22. The aforementioned trial in Dallas took place before the trial in the instant cause.

23. The court finds credible Prospere’s assertion that the letter was not divulged to
the defense expert in violation of attorney-client privilege.

24. The applicant never told Laird he believed the letter had been divulged in
violation of attorney-client privilege.

25. Laird’s failure to object to the letter, on the basis that it was obtained in violation
of attorney-client privilege, did not fall below an objective standard of
reasonableness, especially in light of the fact that it was an exhibit in a prior trial and
the prior attorneys deny a violation of privilege and the applicant never advised him
it was divulged in violation of privilege.9

26. The applicant fails to show that but for the admission of the January 22, 1999
letter, a reasonable probability exists that the results of the proceeding would have
been different.

                                 3. Dallas Trial Claim

With respect to the allegation regarding the Dallas trial, the habeas court found:

38. Counsel made a strategic decision to cross-examine the complainant in the instant
case with the fact that the complainant “did not get the result [he] wanted [in Dallas]”
to show that the complainant was so frustrated, he made up the incident in Houston,
which did not have the same evidentiary problem the Dallas case had.10

39. Counsel did not believe that his cross-examination would open the door to the
result of the Dallas trial.

40. The applicant’s appellate counsel (who is also habeas counsel) also argued on
direct appeal that trial defense counsel’s question did not open the door to the result
of the Dallas trial.

41. The Court finds that counsel’s opening the door to the Dallas verdict fell below
an objective standard of reasonableness.



9
     Emphasis in original.
10
     Brackets in habeas court’s findings.
                                                                               BRATCHER — 20

       42. The applicant fails to demonstrate that but for Laird opening the door, a
       reasonable probability exists that the result of the proceeding would have been
       different.

                                        III. STANDARD

       In addressing claims of ineffective assistance of counsel, we employ the familiar two-part

standard articulated in Strickland v. Washington11 that requires a showing of deficient performance

and prejudice.12 With respect to the deficient performance prong, we examine whether counsel was

acting “within the range of competence demanded of attorneys in criminal cases.”13 Our review of

counsel’s performance is highly deferential, with a strong presumption that counsel acted in

accordance with a considered trial strategy.14 Although we look to prevailing professional norms,15

trial counsel will not be deemed deficient simply because his trial strategy was “risky, and perhaps

highly undesirable to most criminal defense attorneys.”16

       With respect to the prejudice prong, we must determine whether there is a reasonable

probability that the outcome would have been different but for counsel’s deficient performance.17

A reasonable probability is one that is sufficient to undermine confidence in the result.18 This



       11
            466 U.S. 668 (1984).
       12
            See Ex parte Ellis, 233 S.W.3d 324, 329-30 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007).
       13
            Id. at 330.
       14
            Id.
       15
            Id.
       16
            Id. at 331.
       17
            Id. at 330.
       18
            Id.
                                                                                BRATCHER — 21

standard does not require a showing that counsel’s actions “more likely than not altered the

outcome,” but “the difference between Strickland’s prejudice standard and a more-probable-than-not

standard is slight and matters only in the rarest case.”19 “The likelihood of a different result must

be substantial, not just conceivable.”20

                                    IV. ISSUE 1: VOIR DIRE

       Rather than address complex issues concerning deficient conduct, we choose to address only

the prejudice prong of Strickland with respect to this issue. We observe that the prospective jurors

were never told in voir dire that applicant had a prior conviction. We also observe that the State’s

voir dire on punishment ranges—which included ranges for the charged offense, a lesser-included

offense, and enhancements for both one and two prior convictions—would appear, at least to a

layperson, to be comprehensive. A layperson might suspect that the prosecutor was talking about

enhanced punishments because the defendant had at least one prior conviction, but a layperson might

think that questioning about all of these punishment ranges was simply the general practice. In any

event, the jury charge contained an instruction that the jurors were not to consider matters that were

not admitted into evidence. We generally presume that jurors follow the instructions,21 so we

presume that jurors would not infer the existence of a prior conviction that no one has said exists.

       In fact, if applicant had elected for the jury to assess punishment, no one would even

seriously question the discussion of enhanced punishment ranges in voir dire. This is not because



       19
            Harrington v. Richter, 131 S. Ct. 770, 792 (2011).
       20
            Id.
       21
         Casanova v. State, 383 S.W.3d 530, 543 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012); Young v. State, 283
S.W.3d 854, 882 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009)
                                                                                  BRATCHER — 22

discussion of enhanced punishment ranges is a necessary evil when the jury assesses punishment.

Rather, it is because such a discussion does not necessarily taint the jury—at least when the jury is

not informed that a prior conviction exists and when the jury is instructed not to consider matters that

are not in evidence.22 If the defendant’s rights at the guilt stage are not prejudiced by such a

discussion when the jury is set to decide punishment, it is difficult to see how that changes simply

because the judge is set to decide punishment instead. We hold that applicant has failed to satisfy

the prejudice prong of Strickland.

                                     V. ISSUE 2: THE LETTER

                                     A. Deficient Performance

        When the claim of ineffective assistance is that the attorney failed to object to the admission

of evidence, part of what must be shown is that the trial judge would have committed error to

overrule such an objection.23 Thus, if we find that the trial judge would not have erred in overruling

such an objection, then we need not assess whether counsel’s failure to object was the result of trial

strategy. With this caveat in mind, we address applicant’s proffered bases for excluding the letter

from evidence.

                                     1. Attorney-Client Privilege

        The attorney-client privilege gives the client the privilege to prevent the disclosure of



        22
           See Frausto v. State, 642 S.W.2d 506, 509 (Tex. Crim. App. 1982) (quoting Martinez
v. State, 588 S.W.2d 954 (Tex. Crim. App. 1979) (emphasis in original) (“Certainly, one can
inform generally of applicable punishment without reading the precise allegations for
enhancement, and thereby avoid what some have regarded as jeopardizing the presumption of
innocence.”).
       23
         Ex parte Martinez, 330 S.W.3d 891, 901 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011); Ex parte White, 160
S.W.3d 46, 53 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004).
                                                                                   BRATCHER — 23

“confidential communications” made within the attorney-client relationship.24 But C.W.’s letter was

not a communication that was made within the attorney-client relationship. C.W. was a third party,

who stood outside that relationship.25 The rule that codifies the attorney-client privilege contains a

“[s]pecial rule of privilege in criminal cases,” which provides that “a client has a privilege to prevent

the lawyer . . . from disclosing any other fact which came to the knowledge of the lawyer . . . by

reason of the attorney-client relationship.”26 But such a fact must still be one that is known only

within the confines of the attorney-client relationship; facts known by others are not privileged.27

C.W. obviously knew (at least at one time) the entire contents of the letter because he wrote it. We

have indicated that the special rule of privilege is designed to cover attorney work product.28 C.W.’s

letter to applicant was clearly not attorney work product. But even if we set aside the fact that

C.W.’s letter was not privileged because it originated from a third party, Prospere’s affidavit, which

was believed by the habeas judge, supports the proposition that applicant understood that the letter

would not remain in confidence. So Laird did not perform deficiently in failing to object to the

admission of the letter on the ground of attorney-client privilege. The habeas judge’s finding to that

effect is supported by the record.

                                     2. Prior Consistent Statement

        The habeas judge made no findings regarding applicant’s contention that the letter was an

        24
             See TEX . R. EVID . 503(b)(1).
        25
           See id., subsections (A)-(E) (specifying the entities within the attorney-client
relationship).
        26
             TEX. R. EVID. 503(b)(2).
        27
             Landers v. State, 256 S.W.3d 295, 309-10 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008).
        28
             Cameron v. State, 241 S.W.3d 15, 20 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007).
                                                                                  BRATCHER — 24

“inadmissible prior consistent statement.” Applicant contends that the letter was inadmissible under

Rule 613 because it failed to meet the heasay exclusion found in Rule 801(e)(1)(B). Rule

801(e)(1)(B) provides that a statement is not hearsay if the declarant testifies at trial and is subject

to cross-examination, and the statement is “consistent with the declarant’s testimony and is offered

to rebut an express or implied charge against the declarant of recent fabrication or improper influence

or motive.”29 We will assume, without deciding, that the letter did not qualify under this hearsay

exclusion and that Laird should have been aware of that fact.

                                        a. Non-Hearsay Purpose

        It does not necessarily follow from that assumption that the letter (or its contents) constituted

inadmissible hearsay. Prior consistent statements within a letter might qualify under a hearsay

exception, such as excited utterance,30 or might be relevant to a non-hearsay purpose. Hearsay is

defined as an out-of-court statement offered “to prove the truth of the matter asserted.”31 If the

statements in the letter were relevant for a purpose other than the truth of those statements, then they

would not be excludable as hearsay, though the statements might still be excludable under some

other rule of evidence, subject to redaction, or subject to a limiting instruction.

        Here, the contents of the letter were relevant to a non-hearsay purpose: to shed light on

statements made by applicant during the recorded telephone conversation. Was applicant an

innocent person responding to a false accuser, or was he a guilty person trying to hedge, minimize,


       29
             TEX . R. EVID . 801(e)(1)(B).
       30
           See TEX . R. EVID . 803(2). Although a letter might conceivably qualify as an excited
utterance, we are not saying that the letter in this case did so. We merely cite the excited
utterance exception for illustrative purposes.
        31
             TEX. R. EVID. 801(d).
                                                                                 BRATCHER — 25

and deny his misconduct? Applicant referred to the letter six times during the recorded conversation

to question C.W.’s motive in making the call, applicant expressed suspicion that the call was some

sort of setup (which it was), and applicant made statements that could be seen as attempting to

minimize responsibility.32 Thus it was established that applicant knew the contents of the letter, and

the jury could infer that the contents of the letter were a motivating force behind various statements

made by applicant during the course of the recorded telephone conversation.

       It is true that the letter was read to the jury before the recorded conversation was played. But

defense counsel referred to the recorded conversation in opening statement. He specifically

contended that the recording showed that applicant did not have “guilty knowledge or guilty actions”

but instead showed C.W. trying to lure applicant into a false admission.

                                      b. Non-Bolstering Purpose

       Applicant’s argument does not depend solely upon a conclusion that the letter constituted

inadmissible hearsay. Rule 613(c) provides that a prior consistent statement “is inadmissible except

as provided in Rule 801(e)(1)(B).”33 Rule 613 relates to the use of prior statements to impeach or

support the testimony of a witness. Rule 613(c) essentially codifies the rule against “bolstering” to

the extent that it “prevents the use of prior consistent statements of a witness for the sole purpose




       32
           See Morris v. State, 361 S.W.3d 649, 652 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011) (expert testimony that
grooming child sex victims can involve minimizing the offender’s conduct); Walter v. State, 267
S.W.3d 883, 896-97 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) (discussing “blame-shifting” statements that are
designed to minimize culpability); Williams v. State, 273 S.W.3d 200, 214 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008)
(defendant’s statements that minimized the severity of his motives and actions could be viewed by
the jury as indicating that the defendant’s acceptance of responsibility was not genuine).
       33
            TEX . R. EVID . 613(c).
                                                                                BRATCHER — 26

of enhancing his credibility.”34 The rule, however, “says nothing about the admissibility of

substantive evidence that happens to corroborate a witness.”35 For reasons explicated above, the

letter’s contents had substantive relevance apart from bolstering C.W.’s credibility.

                                             c. Rule 403

       We now address other rules or doctrines under which evidence that is admissible for a limited

purpose might be excluded or restricted.36 Otherwise-admissible evidence may be excluded under

Rule 403 if there is a sufficiently high danger that the evidence will be used for inadmissible

purposes as compared to the evidence’s probative value with respect to the admissible purposes.

Rule 403 provides:

       Although relevant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially
       outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading
       the jury, or by considerations of undue delay, or needless presentation of cumulative
       evidence.37

This rule may be cited most often in criminal cases in connection with extraneous offenses that are

found to be admissible for non-character purposes under Rule 404(b),38 but it can also apply to out-




       34
         Rivas v. State, 275 S.W.3d 880, 886 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) (quoting Cohn v. State, 849
S.W.2d 817, 820 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993)) (emphasis added).
       35
            Cohn, 849 S.W.2d at 820.
       36
           Applicant does not allege that the evidence was inadmissible under Rule 403, that the
letter could have been redacted, or that he was entitled to a limiting instruction, but because he did
not anticipate the purpose for which we have found the letter to be relevant, and because this is an
ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim, we will address issues that naturally arise when evidence
is offered for a limited purpose.
       37
            TEX . R. EVID . 403.
       38
            See Montgomery v. State, 810 S.W.2d 372, 386-97 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991) (op. on reh’g).
                                                                                   BRATCHER — 27

of-court statements found to be admissible for non-hearsay purposes or pursuant to some other rule.39

        Laird made a Rule 403 objection when he argued that the prejudicial effect of the letter

outweighed its probative value. Laird’s statement that the letter was “self-serving” could be

construed as referring to the bolstering potential of the letter, and his statement that C.W. had time

to compose the letter and had already made outcry to two doctors could have been a reference to the

hearsay potential of the letter. However, even if we conclude that Laird’s Rule 403 objection failed

to sufficiently apprise the trial court of the letter’s potential use for bolstering and hearsay purposes,

we conclude that the record does not demonstrate a Rule 403 violation as a matter of law.

        Claims under the rules of evidence are generally reviewed for abuse of discretion, with an

appellate court reversing only if the trial judge’s decision is outside the zone of reasonable

disagreement.40 And with respect to evidentiary objections, the trial judge’s discretion is the greatest

when the rule at issue is Rule 403.41

        In a Rule 403 analysis, a court must balance the probative force of the evidence and the

proponent’s need for the evidence against any tendency the evidence has to suggest a decision on an

improper basis or to confuse or distract the jury from the main issues.42 A court should also consider

whether the jury is adequately equipped to evaluate the evidence, the amount of time needed to


        39
           Walters v. State, 247 S.W.3d 204, 218 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007). See also Ex parte
Wheeler, 203 S.W.3d 317, 332 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008) (Keller, P.J., concurring) (“Most commonly,
an unfair prejudice claim [under Rule 403] flows from the admission of evidence for a limited
purpose under some other evidentiary rule, such as Rule 404(b), . . . Rule 411, Rule 801 (hearsay)”).
        40
         Blasdell v. State, 384 S.W.3d 824, 829 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012); Guzman v. State, 955
S.W.2d 85, 89 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997).
        41
             See Montgomery, 810 S.W.2d at 378-79 (discussing cases and commentaries)
        42
             Gigliobianco v. State, 210 S.W.3d 637, 641 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006).
                                                                                BRATCHER — 28

develop the evidence, and whether the proferred evidence merely repeats evidence that has already

been admitted.43

        The probative force of the letter was high because it figured prominently in applicant’s

recorded telephone conversation with C.W. and was highly relevant to applicant’s state of mind and

to assessing the meaning, significance, and credibility of statements made by applicant during the

recording. The State’s need for the evidence was also high because applicant described the letter in

the recording only by saying that C.W. did not want contact with applicant and that C.W. had told

his brothers. Applicant alluded to the fact that C.W. was making allegations in the letter but did not

describe what those allegations were. To properly assess applicant’s recorded statements, the jury

needed to know the content of the letter. And assessing applicant’s recorded statements was

important because the recording was the only source of admissions from applicant that was available

to the State.

        The letter contained some highly inflammatory language, which posed some risk of

suggesting decision on an emotional basis, but the inflammatory nature of the letter was also highly

relevant to applicant’s state of mind during the recorded conversation. Further, any unfair prejudice

relating to the possible hearsay or bolstering purposes to which the letter might be accorded could

have been ameliorated by a limiting instruction.44 If an instruction were requested, the trial judge

could have instructed the jury not to consider the contents of the letter for the truth of the matters


        43
             Id. at 641-42.
        44
           See Garcia v. State, 201 S.W.3d 695, 704 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006) (under Rule 403
analysis, limiting instruction diminished potential prejudice flowing from the evidence);
Henderson v. State, 962 S.W.2d 544, 567 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997) (“whether a limiting
instruction would have been effective in preventing the jury from being influenced by the
evidence’s prejudicial aspects” is a legitimate factor in a Rule 403 analysis).
                                                                                BRATCHER — 29

asserted, nor to consider the contents for the purpose of bolstering the credibility of C.W.’s trial

testimony, nor to consider the contents for any other purpose except to show applicant’s state of

mind during the recorded telephone conversation and to assess the meaning, significance, and

credibility of the statements made by applicant during that conversation.

       And while the letter contained allegations that were cumulative of what C.W. testified to, the

letter itself was a unique piece of evidence because it influenced applicant’s statements during the

telephone call. In other words, the allegations were cumulative but applicant’s knowledge of the

allegations at the time of the telephone call was not. Finally, we observe that reading the letter to

the jury did not take much time. For all of the reasons discussed, we conclude that it would not have

been an abuse of discretion to overrule a Rule 403 objection.

                                            d. Redaction

       One possible remedy to reduce prejudice is to redact objectionable portions of a document.45

As we observed earlier, however, the probative value of the letter flows from its effect on applicant,

and the inflammatory portions of the letter are highly probative for that purpose. The trial judge

would not have erred in refusing to redact the letter.

                                       e. Limiting Instruction

       When evidence is admissible for a limited purpose, the party against whom the evidence is




       45
           See Coronado v. State, 351 S.W.3d 315, 321 n.30 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011) (repeating
suggestion by commentator that some videotapes could be redacted to eliminate testimonial
statement to avoid a confrontation problem); Tucker v. State, 771 S.W.2d 523, 535 n.6 (Tex. Crim.
App. 1988) (“The trial judge should hear the recordings outside the presence of the jury in order to
rule on objections to their admissibility, and has the power to delete objectionable portions if
necessary.”); Carey v. State, 455 S.W.2d 217, 223 (Tex. Crim. App. 1970) (referring to redaction
as a possible remedy in connection with admitting evidence).
                                                                                  BRATCHER — 30

admitted is entitled to a limiting instruction upon request.46 Because we have assumed, without

deciding, that the letter did not satisfy the hearsay exclusion—and therefore was not admissible for

its truth or to support C.W.’s credibility—we further assume that applicant was entitled to a limiting

instruction in line with what we have discussed above. We will likewise assume, without deciding,

that Laird performed deficiently in failing to request a limiting instruction.

                                             B. Prejudice

        Because the letter was admissible for some purposes, defense counsel’s conduct did not cause

the jurors to hear the contents of a letter that they would not have otherwise heard. The only

question is whether there is a reasonable probability that the outcome of the trial would have been

different if the jurors had been given a limiting instruction to guide their consideration of the letter.

        Applicant essentially had two defensive theories: (1) he did not molest C.W. during the 1991

Houston trip, and (2) he did not molest C.W. at all as a child. In the present case, applicant had an

advantage that most persons accused of child molestation do not have. There was only a narrow

window in time in which the charged offense could have occurred. The only time C.W. and

applicant were together in Houston when C.W. was under the age of fourteen was the weekend they

went to Houston in January 1991 for the card show.47 Weaver’s testimony that there was no bed in

the upstairs guest room and J.G.’s testimony that C.W. did not leave his sleeping bag would, if

believed, tend to refute the claim that applicant molested C.W. during that time. In addition, Laird



        46
             TEX . R. EVID . 105(a).
        47
          If the jury believed that applicant molested C.W. only during the second trip to Houston,
in 1993, it could have convicted applicant only of the lesser-included offense of sexual assault
because C.W. was fourteen years old at the time. See TEX . PENAL CODE §§ 22.011(a)(2), (c)(1),
22.021(a)(1)(B), (a)(2)(B).
                                                                                 BRATCHER — 31

supplied the jury with a motive for C.W. to make up the Houston incident: the Dallas conviction

was overturned. And J.G.’s testimony that C.W. had a sexual relationship with him before the 1991

Houston trip (which, if true, would mean that the Houston trip was not in fact the site of C.W.’s first

sexual experience) suggested the possibility that C.W.’s memory of that trip was faulty.

       The letter did not discuss or allude to the 1991 Houston incident. The letter’s bolstering

effect, if any, was to whether applicant had molested C.W. in general. It was possible for the jury

to believe that applicant molested C.W. over the years in Dallas but did not molest C.W. on that

Houston trip.    If the jury were inclined to so believe, it would not matter whether the letter’s

allegations were true or whether C.W. was credible, in general, on the point that applicant had

molested him during his childhood.

       We are not saying that applicant’s Houston-specific defense was without serious flaws,48 but

the defense that applicant did not molest C.W. as a child at all was, in many respects, a much more

difficult one to advance. Applicant had only the general testimony from J.G. that nothing out of the

ordinary happened and applicant’s denials in the recorded telephone conversation. But J.G.’s

testimony and applicant’s statements were laced with incriminating evidence. J.G.’s sexual

relationship with C.W. at age twelve suggested that one or both boys had been sexually abused by

an adult. And although, during the recorded telephone conversation, he denied molesting C.W. as

a child, applicant admitted to having sex with C.W. when he was eighteen (barely an adult from a

lay perspective) and made a number of statements that strongly suggested, especially in light of


       48
          J.G. acknowledged that his sexual relationship with C.W. might have begun after the 1991
Houston trip, and the implication that C.W. was motivated to lie about the Houston incident because
he was dissatisfied with the outcome of the Dallas trial was rebutted by his reference to the Houston
incident in the recorded telephone conversation, which occurred before the Dallas trial. See below.
                                                                                 BRATCHER — 32

applicant’s knowledge of the contents of C.W.’s letter, that applicant’s denials were not true.

       In any event, with respect to whether applicant molested C.W. in general, the letter did not

add much, hearsay or bolstering-wise, to the trial evidence. The substantive facts contained in the

letter were elicited elsewhere in the trial. C.W. testified to applicant’s sexual abuse, to C.W’s

resulting depression and problems trusting others, and to the fact that C.W. had told his brothers

about the abuse. C.W. recounted that the sexual abuse had happened over an extended period of

time in Dallas. Ross, the oldest brother, also testified about C.W.’s outcry to him. Fayteen Marshall

testified that C.W. suffered from depression and from anxiety that was “off the chart.”

       Much of the letter was not factual but was simply an evaluation of what kind of person

applicant must be to have done what he did to C.W. Given C.W.’s accusations of child molestation

at trial, those evaluative statements—that C.W. regarded applicant as a “pedophile” and a “sick”

person, for example—were not news to the jury. The letter also conveyed a tone of emotional

distress, but Marshall’s testimony about C.W.’s “off the chart” anxiety did so as well. And the jury

would understand that the emotional tone of the letter was somewhat artificial because C.W., who

was trying to force applicant to break contact with him and his family, testified that he purposefully

wrote the letter in as harsh a manner as he could.

       Moreover the bolstering significance of the letter is diminished when one considers that the

trial was full of evidence of prior consistent statements from a variety of sources: outcries to C.W.’s

brothers, to C.W.’s parents, to a doctor, and to a counselor, and statements made by C.W. in the

recorded telephone conversation as he was talking to applicant. And at least some of these

statements were admissible for the truth of the matters asserted. C.W.’s statements to Marshall, for
                                                                                    BRATCHER — 33

example, were admitted under the outcry statute.49

        For all of these reasons, we conclude that applicant has not demonstrated a reasonable

probability that the outcome of the trial would have been different if the trial court had issued a

limiting instruction with respect to the letter.

                                   VI. ISSUE 3: DALLAS TRIAL

        Rather than address the issue of deficient performance, we will go straight to the question

of prejudice. One path to acquittal in this case—at least of the offense of aggravated sexual

assault—was to convince the jury that, even though applicant may have molested C.W. over the

years, no molestation occurred during the 1991 Houston trip. The defense had testimony from

Weaver and J.G. that suggested that a molestation incident could not have happened at that time.

Any dissatisfaction harbored by C.W. about the outcome of the Dallas trial could supply a motive

to make up an incident in Houston. And to make applicant guilty of aggravated sexual assault

(instead of the lesser offense of sexual assault), the incident had to have occurred during the first trip,

in 1991, when C.W. was twelve years old, rather than the second trip, in 1993, when C.W. was

fourteen.50

        The notion that the Houston incident was made up because the Dallas conviction had been



        49
           See TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 38.072; Bratcher v. State, No. 01-08-00610-CR, 2009
Tex. App. LEXIS 3336, *16-17 (Tex. App.–Houston [1st Dist] May 14, 2009, pet. ref’d) (upholding
admission of Marshall’s testimony as outcry evidence). In addition, C.W.’s statements to applicant
during the recorded telephone conversation that referred to the Houston incident qualified as prior
consistent statements under Rule 801(e)(1)(B) because they tended to rebut the claim of recent
fabrication arising from Laird’s cross-examination suggesting that C.W. was dissatisfied that the
Dallas conviction had been overturned.
        50
          And by opposing the submission of sexual assault, Laird was attempting to force the jury
to decide only whether the 1991 incident had occurred.
                                                                                   BRATCHER — 34

overturned was undermined by references to the Houston incident in the recorded telephone call,

which occurred before the Dallas trial. But applicant made statements during the recorded

conversation that suggested that C.W. was getting the 1991 and 1993 trips mixed up. Consistent

with testimony later given by Weaver, applicant stated that everyone slept on the first floor of

Weaver’s house during the 1991 trip—with applicant and J.W. (not C.W.) on a sleeper sofa. So, it

was at least possible for the jury to believe that C.W.’s references to the first Houston trip during the

recorded conversation were a result of confusion and that C.W. later decided to make up a 1991

Houston incident because of his frustration with the Dallas conviction being overturned. Or it is

possible that the jury could believe that C.W.’s later memory of the 1991 incident was false and

influenced by his frustration with what happened in Dallas.

        And while evidence about the result of the Dallas trial may have been only marginally helpful

to applicant’s Houston-specific defense, the evidence was only marginally damaging with respect

to applicant’s general defense that he had never molested C.W. The usual prejudice associated with

informing a jury about a defendant’s prior convictions is that the jurors learn of extraneous offenses.

But the jury in the present case had already heard evidence that applicant had committed extraneous

offenses in Dallas.

        Knowledge that another jury had found applicant guilty of those offenses might have

marginally enhanced the credibility of C.W.’s allegations, except that the conviction was overturned,

which could have been because of a technicality or could have been a sign that something was wrong

with the State’s case. The jury was not told the exact reason the verdict was overturned—just that

it was a jury-charge problem, which could be any number of things. Habeas counsel has suggested

that, if the jurors learned about the conviction and its dismissal, they “would be furious and convict
                                                                               BRATCHER — 35

[applicant] to make things right,” but that is speculation, and how a jury perceives an overturned

guilty verdict could well depend upon its own assessment of the complaining witness’s credibility.

And the jury was told that the Dallas offenses could possibly be retried, so it did not need to “make

things right.” The jury could let the Dallas authorities attend to the Dallas offenses, a point Laird

made in his closing argument.

       In addition, other factors enhanced C.W.’s credibility. C.W. made multiple outcries and

suffered serious emotional problems. Applicant admitted that he had sex with C.W.—the only

question was when, with applicant positing the age of eighteen. By his own admission, applicant

overlooked inappropriate behavior engaged in by C.W. without informing C.W.’s parents. Applicant

kept all of C.W.’s faxes (mementos, the prosecutor would call them), thought of C.W. as his best

friend, and said that he had fallen in love with him. And according deference to the trial judge’s

finding that applicant was not prejudiced, we can infer that C.W. appeared credible on the witness

stand. The prosecutor emphasized in closing argument that C.W. had no reason to lie because the

allegations C.W. was making were embarrassing, especially to a heterosexual male with a girlfriend.

       Moreover, the Dallas jury’s guilty verdict was not a finding that applicant committed the

Houston offense, and the jury in the present case was given limiting instructions regarding both

extraneous offenses and prior convictions. In that regard, the jury was instructed that extraneous

offenses could be considered for only limited purposes, and while the instruction regarding prior

convictions was not a model of clarity, the instruction explicitly provided that a prior conviction

could not be considered as evidence of guilt.

       And as we have explained in connection with the second issue, contending that applicant had

never molested C.W. was, in many ways, much more difficult than merely contending that he did
                                                                           BRATCHER — 36

not molest C.W. during the 1991 Houston trip. That evidence from the Dallas trial may have

produced a (marginal) trade-off between applicant’s defensive theories in his Houston

trial—marginally boosting the Houston-specific theory while marginally damaging the general

denial-of-molestation theory—does not establish a reasonable probability that he would not have

been convicted.

       We conclude that the three filed-and-set grounds are without merit. Concluding that none

of applicant’s other grounds are meritorious, we deny relief.



Delivered: June 26, 2013
Do not publish
