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CROSSOVER: Indecency Conviction Affirmed: Child’s Disclosures to Adoptive Mother and SANE Records Support Sufficiency—Useful Blueprint for Abuse/Protective-Order Proof

New Texas Court of Appeals Opinion - Analyzed for Family Law Attorneys

Julio Chapa v. The State of Texas, 13-25-00165-CR, March 12, 2026.

On appeal from 36th District Court of Aransas County, Texas.

Synopsis

The Thirteenth Court of Appeals held the evidence was legally sufficient to support two convictions for indecency with a child by sexual contact under Texas Penal Code § 21.11(a)(1), even though the case hinged largely on child outcries, in-court testimony, and sexual-assault exam (SANE) records rather than physical findings. The court affirmed the judgments (as modified), reinforcing that a child’s testimony—corroborated by consistent disclosures documented in medical records—can carry sufficiency despite credibility attacks and contextual inconsistencies.

Relevance to Family Law

For Texas family-law litigators, Chapa is a practical sufficiency roadmap for cases where sexual-abuse allegations drive temporary orders, SAPCR conservatorship restrictions, supervised visitation, or protective-order relief. The opinion underscores how “proof” can be built without third-party eyewitnesses: consistent child disclosures to a trusted caregiver, timely medical-exam documentation, and a narrative that explains delayed outcry and the child’s fear can collectively withstand credibility crossfire—an evidentiary reality that regularly dictates possession schedules and § 153.004 safety findings.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The defendant was convicted of two second-degree felony counts of indecency with a child by sexual contact. The complainants were two sisters (born 2011 and 2013) adopted by Naomi Rodriguez Cantu. The record placed the children overnight at a relative’s home where the defendant lived (or rented a room), alongside multiple adults with complicated histories and potential credibility baggage (including drug use allegations and CPS involvement).

The State’s core proof came from (1) the adoptive mother’s testimony about each child’s disclosures the day after the overnight stay, (2) the children’s trial testimony describing sexual contact and solicitations, and (3) sexual-assault examination records admitted at trial containing patient histories consistent with the outcries and trial testimony. The defendant attempted to undermine sufficiency by highlighting inconsistencies (lighting conditions, timing, whether the children were “off limits” from the bedroom, alleged failure to fully report details to a nurse, and contextual motives such as household conflict and access to food).

One adult resident testified in a defense-leaning narrative that the children were roaming and “ransacking” for food, and that the defendant cursed and told them to get out—suggesting an alternative explanation for allegations and placing credibility front and center.

Issues Decided

  • Whether the evidence was legally sufficient to support the conviction for indecency with a child by sexual contact as to Clara under Texas Penal Code § 21.11(a)(1).
  • Whether the evidence was legally sufficient to support the conviction for indecency with a child by sexual contact as to Belinda under Texas Penal Code § 21.11(a)(1).

Rules Applied

The court’s analysis tracks the standard sufficiency framework in Texas criminal cases and the statutory elements for indecency by contact:

  • Texas Penal Code § 21.11(a)(1): indecency with a child by sexual contact (requiring proof of sexual contact with a child younger than 17).
  • Legal sufficiency review (Jackson v. Virginia standard, as applied in Texas): whether, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, any rational factfinder could have found the essential elements beyond a reasonable doubt.
  • Credibility and conflicts in evidence: the jury, as factfinder, resolves conflicts, weighs credibility, and may accept or reject any portion of testimony; appellate courts do not re-weigh credibility under legal-sufficiency review.
  • Child-victim testimony: Texas law does not require corroboration of a child sexual-assault complainant’s testimony for sufficiency; consistency with other evidence (including outcry and medical histories) strengthens the State’s case but is not strictly necessary as a matter of law.
  • Medical/SANE records: when admitted, patient histories documented in medical records can function as corroborative context supporting the complainant’s narrative, particularly against “recent fabrication” themes.

Application

The court treated the case as a classic credibility-and-consistency dispute that belongs to the jury, not the appellate court. Each child provided an account at trial describing the defendant waking them, bringing them into his room, and engaging in contact with their genital area (over clothing), paired with stomach kissing/rubbing and sexual solicitation. The adoptive mother’s testimony supplied near-immediate disclosure evidence: she described separate conversations with each child, each describing being taken into the defendant’s room and being touched.

The defense’s sufficiency attack relied on the sort of factual friction that family-law litigators see constantly in SAPCR abuse disputes: different descriptions of lighting, the door being open, who could have seen into the room, the “off-limits” nature of the room, and perceived omissions or inconsistencies in the initial reporting to medical staff. The appellate court’s approach is the key lesson: under legal-sufficiency review, those points are framed as impeachment material the jury was free to weigh, not as fatal gaps. The SANE records—admitted without the nurse’s testimony—contained patient histories consistent with the State’s theory and the girls’ accounts, helping the State neutralize arguments that the accusations were manufactured after adult conversations.

In short, the court credited the basic alignment of (1) prompt disclosures to a caregiver, (2) trial testimony describing the charged contact, and (3) medical documentation that tracked the same essential narrative. The court held a rational jury could find the elements of § 21.11(a)(1) beyond a reasonable doubt for each complainant.

Holding

The court held the evidence was legally sufficient to support the indecency-by-contact conviction involving Clara. The complainant’s testimony about the defendant touching her genital area (over clothing) and the surrounding circumstances, coupled with her disclosure to the adoptive mother and the consistent medical-exam history, permitted a rational jury to find the statutory elements beyond a reasonable doubt despite impeachment themes about room lighting, delayed reporting, and household dynamics.

The court also held the evidence was legally sufficient to support the indecency-by-contact conviction involving Belinda. The jury was entitled to credit her testimony that the defendant’s hand moved from her stomach to her “private area” and touched it (over clothing) before she moved away, and to consider her disclosure to the adoptive mother and the SANE history as reinforcing reliability. The judgments were affirmed (as modified), leaving the convictions intact.

Practical Application

In family-court practice, Chapa supplies a litigation template for how factfinders can permissibly credit child disclosures and medical documentation even when the environment is chaotic and cross-examination is effective.

  • Temporary orders and § 153.004 findings: If you need to establish a safety-based restriction (supervised possession, no overnights, exchange protocols), this case supports arguing that the court may credit consistent child disclosures plus contemporaneous medical documentation even absent physical findings or third-party eyewitnesses.
  • Protective orders (Title 4) involving a child: While burden and procedural posture differ, Chapa is persuasive for the proposition that “he-said/she-said” framing is incomplete when you have prompt outcry to a caregiver and consistent medical-history documentation—especially where a respondent leans heavily on “inconsistencies” that are plausibly explained by fear, age, or context.
  • Impeachment management: The opinion is a reminder that “inconsistency” is not synonymous with “insufficiency.” In custody litigation, expect the respondent to amplify peripheral discrepancies (lighting, door open, who was present, timeline). Chapa illustrates how courts tolerate peripheral friction when core allegations of contact remain consistent.
  • Admissibility strategy matters: Here, exam records were admitted even though the nurse did not testify. In family court, attorneys should be equally deliberate about (a) business-record foundations, (b) hearsay exceptions, and (c) ensuring the record contains the “patient history” narrative that will be argued as reliability markers at a temporary-orders hearing or trial.
  • Preparing the record for appeal: Chapa is appellate-proofing guidance. If you’re the movant, build redundancy: caregiver disclosure + child testimony (where appropriate) + medical documentation + a coherent explanation for delay. If you’re the respondent, you need more than “they’re inconsistent”—you need affirmative alternative explanations and impeachment that goes to the core allegation, not the edges.

Checklists

Building a “Sufficiency-Resistant” Abuse Proof Package (SAPCR / Protective Order)

  • Obtain detailed caregiver/outcry-witness chronology (who, when, where, exact words if possible).
  • Secure SANE/medical records early and identify the “patient history” portions that track the outcry narrative.
  • Preserve timing: document when the child returned home, when the disclosure occurred, and what triggered the conversation.
  • Prepare a delay-of-outcry explanation (fear, power dynamics, supervision limits, child development) supported by testimony.
  • Identify and neutralize environmental impeachment points (lighting, door open, room layout, other adults present) with diagrams/photos where available.
  • Confirm that the conduct pleaded/requested maps to the legal elements you must prove (contact, sexual intent inference, age).

Using Medical Records Without the Examiner Live (When You Must)

  • Determine admissibility route: business-record affidavit, medical-records custodian, or other applicable exception/procedure.
  • Highlight objective intake fields: date/time of report, patient history narrative, consistency markers, and any quoted statements.
  • Anticipate defense argument: “no nurse testimony = weak”; prepare foundation and reliability argument anyway.
  • Ensure redactions comply with privacy rules and court orders while preserving substance needed for proof.

Respondent-Side Defense Checklist (Avoiding the “Mere Impeachment” Trap)

  • Attack the core element with affirmative evidence (impossibility, access, timeline, contemporaneous witnesses), not just peripheral discrepancies.
  • Develop an alternative narrative supported by corroboration (texts, calls, contemporaneous statements, third-party observations).
  • Identify whether “patient history” in records is second-hand/leading; contest foundation where appropriate and preserve objections.
  • Cross-examine for contamination sources (adult conversations, coaching opportunities, motive) and build a tight chronology.
  • Preserve appellate points: specific objections, rulings, offers of proof, and requests for findings where applicable in family court.

Trial-Court Record Hygiene for Family-Law Appeals (When Abuse Allegations Drive Orders)

  • Make clear, element-linked findings requests (e.g., § 153.004, best interest, protective-order findings).
  • Tie each finding to record cites: outcry testimony, medical records, corroborating circumstances.
  • Ensure exhibits are admitted (not just marked) and that demonstratives are either admitted or described on the record.
  • Get explicit rulings on objections to preserve error (especially hearsay and foundation).

Citation

Julio Chapa v. The State of Texas, No. 13-25-00165-CR (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg Mar. 12, 2026) (mem. op.) (judgments affirmed as modified).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

Even though Chapa is a criminal sufficiency decision, it is readily “weaponized” in Texas divorce and SAPCR litigation as a credibility framework: when the other side argues “no witnesses, inconsistent details, no physical findings,” you cite the appellate posture that those points are classic factfinder questions, and that consistent child disclosures plus medical-history documentation can rationally support findings of sexual contact. In practice, that becomes a strategic lever in (1) temporary orders to restrict possession immediately, (2) discovery fights over medical and CPS records, (3) appointment of an amicus/attorney ad litem and the scope of their investigation, and (4) negotiating leverage—because once the record contains prompt outcry + SANE narrative consistency, the “this is just a messy household misunderstanding” defense often reads like impeachment-only, which Chapa implicitly treats as insufficient to defeat a factfinder’s core acceptance of the child’s account.

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Tom Daley is a board-certified family law attorney with extensive experience practicing across the United States, primarily in Texas. He represents clients in all aspects of family law, including negotiation, settlement, litigation, trial, and appeals.