OPINION
I. Introduction
A jury convicted William Clint Cain of continuous sexual abuse of a child and possession with the intent to promote child pornography. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 21.02(b), 43.26(e). He raises a single issue on appeal: whether the trial court erred by admitting allegedly unauthenticated copies of text messages he exchanged with the complainant, Anna.
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But Cain did not preserve this authenticity challenge for review, and even if he had, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by admitting the text messages into evidence. We therefore affirm Cains judgment of conviction for continuous sexual abuse of a child and—after correcting a clerical error sua sponte—affirm as modified Cains judgment of conviction for possession with the intent to promote child pornography.
II. Background
According to his stepdaughter, Anna, Cain repeatedly sexually abused her over a two-year period. In addition to his in-person abuse, Cain also requested and received nude photographs of Annas breasts via text message. After being charged, Cain pleaded not guilty to continuous sexual abuse of a child and possession with the intent to promote child pornography.
As relevant to this appeal, Anna, who was sixteen years old at the time of trial, testified about the contents of the text messages she had exchanged with Cain. Before the State offered the messages into evidence, Anna identified Cain in the courtroom and stated that he was her stepfather. She provided a timeline of Cains sexual abuse, confirming that Cain first asked to see her breasts in 2015 when she was eleven or twelve years old. A few months after this initial request, when the rest of her family was asleep and she was in the living room with Cain, he “reached his hand under [her] shirt.” Later, he began offering her money, and his abuse became increasingly frequent. Anna explained how Cain sent her text messages to try to make her feel guilty and to manipulate her into doing what he wanted. She also described the various acts of sexual abuse perpetrated on her by Cain.
The State then offered excerpts of the text messages between Anna and Cain as States Exhibit 2. The trial court admitted the exhibit over Cains objection. The court also admitted, as separate exhibits, magnified versions of some of the photos Cain and Anna exchanged via text—including photographs of Annas breasts.
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The jury found Cain guilty of both continuous sexual abuse of a child and possession with the intent to promote child pornography, and it assessed his punishment for the offenses at twenty-five years confinement and two years confinement, respectively. The trial court entered judgments in accordance with the verdicts. Approximately one week later however, the trial court modified Cains promotion-of-child-pornography judgment to correct clerical errors.
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III. Discussion
On appeal, Cain claims that the trial court erred by admitting his text-message exchanges with Anna because, Cain argues, there was insufficient evidence that he was the author of the text messages Anna received. We reject Cains authenticity challenge for two independently sufficient reasons: (1) Cain did not preserve his current challenge for review; and (2) even if he had, the trial court did not abuse its discretion because there was ample evidence that Cain authored the text messages sent from his phone.
A. Preservation
First and foremost, Cains authenticity challenge fails because he did not preserve it for review.
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To preserve an error for appellate review, a party must make a timely and specific objection, and “[t]he point of error on appeal must comport with the objection made at trial.” Clark v. State, 365 S.W.3d 333, 339 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012). To “determin[e] whether a complaint on appeal comports with a complaint made at trial, we look to the context of the objection and the shared understanding of the parties at the time” to evaluate whether the appellant “ma[d]e the trial court aware of the complaint.” Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a)(1)(A); Clark, 365 S.W.3d at 339.
Cains authenticity complaint on appeal does not comport with the objection he made at trial. When the State offered Exhibit 2 into evidence, Cain took Anna on voir dire and asked her if she had personal knowledge as to “how information from [her] cell phone got transmitted over to States Exhibit 2,” questioning whether she “kn[e]w for certain that every word thats [in States Exhibit 2] actually came from [her] phone.” Cains voir dire focused on the fact that Anna was not present when law enforcement extracted the text messages from her phone. He remarked, “There could have been a mistake in some of the electronic devices[;] you dont know, do you?” After establishing this context, Cain objected that “there ha[d] been no showing as to how what purport[ed] to be on her phone got on States Exhibit No. 2.”
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The prosecutor expressed confusion as to whether “that is some sort of chain of custody objection” or an authenticity objection, but he responded on both grounds. The trial court did not expressly state how it understood Cains objection; it simply overruled the objection and admitted States Exhibit 2.
Even broadly construing Cains trial objection based on the context, and even assuming the trial court understood the objection as an authenticity complaint rather than a chain-of-custody complaint,
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Cains trial objection is unrelated to the argument he now raises on appeal. At best, Cains trial objection was that the paper printout constituting States Exhibit 2 was not transferred from Annas phone by a known, reliable process and thus could not be verified as an accurate, authentic reflection of the text messages stored in Annas cell phone. See Tex. R. Evid. 901(b)(9) (listing, as an example of evidence that satisfies the authentication requirement, “[e]vidence describing a process ․ and showing that it produces an accurate result”). But on appeal, Cain challenges his purported authorship of the text messages—as they appeared in Annas phone—and he claims that even if the communications came from his phone number, the State did not prove that he was the actual author. The record contains no indication that the trial court, the State, or anyone else understood Cains trial objection as a challenge to the messages authorship. See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a)(1)(A). Cains complaint on appeal thus fails to comport with the objection he made at trial. See, e.g., Camacho v. State, 864 S.W.2d 524, 533 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993) (holding hearsay and relevancy objections did not comport with or preserve appellate argument that extraneous-offense evidence was inadmissible character evidence); Bigon v. State, Nos. 03-05-00692-CR & 03-05-00693-CR, 2006 WL 2852476, at *8 (Tex. App.—Austin Oct. 4, 2006) (mem. op., not designated for publication) (holding appellants argument that there was insufficient evidence connecting him to the medical records did not comport with authenticity, hearsay, and chain-of-custody objections raised at trial), affd, 252 S.W.3d 360 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008); cf. Chavezcasarrubias v. State, No. 02-14-00418-CR, 2015 WL 6081502, at *1 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Oct. 15, 2015, no pet.) (mem. op., not designated for publication) (holding appellant preserved authenticity argument even though he only expressly objected to hearsay because his voir dire of the sponsoring witness pertained to the text messages authorship and the trial court cited the authentication requirements and admitted the evidence “under Rule 901” when it overruled appellants objection). Consequently, Cain has not preserved any error for review. See Santellan v. State, 939 S.W.2d 155, 171 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997); Thomas v. State, 723 S.W.2d 696, 700 (Tex. Crim. App. 1986).
B. Admissibility
Yet, even if Cain had preserved his authenticity challenge for review,
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the challenge would fail because the trial court did not abuse its discretion by admitting the text messages.
A “bedrock condition of admissibility” is that the proposed exhibit is “authentically what its proponent claims it to be.” Tienda v. State, 358 S.W.3d 633, 638 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012); see also Tex. R. Evid. 901(a). But authenticity is ultimately a question for the jury; the trial court is merely the gatekeeper of the evidence and is charged with making a preliminary determination of authenticity. Tienda, 358 S.W.3d at 638. This preliminary determination is simply whether the proponent of the proffered evidence has supplied facts that are sufficient to support a reasonable jury determination that the evidence is authentic. Butler v. State, 459 S.W.3d 595, 600 (Tex. Crim. App. 2015); Campbell v. State, 382 S.W.3d 545, 549 (Tex. App.—Austin 2012, no pet.); see Gardner v. State, No. 02-14-00459-CR, 2015 WL 4652718, at *2 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Aug. 6, 2015, pet. refd) (mem. op., not designated for publication) (citing Campbell for the proposition that the test for authenticity “requires only a threshold showing [of evidence] that would be sufficient to support a [jury] finding that the matter in question is what its proponent claims”); see also Jackson v. State, Nos. 02-17-00253-CR & 02-17-00254-CR, 2018 WL 3581002, at *2 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth July 26, 2018, no pet.) (mem. op., not designated for publication) (describing the preliminary authenticity determination as “not stringent”). We review a trial courts determination of whether the proponent has met this threshold requirement for an abuse of discretion and will not countermand it “so long as it is within the zone of reasonable disagreement.” Butler, 459 S.W.3d at 600.
In the context of electronic messages, authenticity includes a subsidiary issue: whether the messages were authored by the purported sender. Although the trial courts preliminary authenticity determination is a “low bar,” evidence “that merely shows the association of a phone number with a purported sender—alone—might be too tenuous” to show authorship. Butler, 459 S.W.3d at 601–02 (analogizing a cell phone number to a return address on a letter); Gardner, 2015 WL 4652718, at *2; see Tienda, 358 S.W.3d at 641–42 (observing that “cell phones can be purloined” and thus evidence “that a text message emanates from a cell phone number assigned to the purported author ․ without more ․ [i]s [in]sufficient to support a finding of authenticity”); Chavezcasarrubias, 2015 WL 6081502, at *2. To “bridge the logical gap” and permit an inference that the person associated with a specific cell phone number authored and sent the text messages at issue, the proponent is generally required to offer additional direct or circumstantial evidence—such as testimony from a witness with knowledge, contextual details indicating authorship, or distinctive content in the substance of the messages themselves. Butler, 459 S.W.3d at 601–03; see also Tex. R. Evid. 901(b).
For example, in Butler v. State, the Court of Criminal Appeals held that the trial court had the discretion to admit text messages from the defendant to the States primary witness based on authenticating testimony from that witness together with the content of the messages themselves. Butler, 459 S.W.3d at 604–06. There, the witness testified that the text messages came from a phone number she knew to be Butlers “[b]ecause thats where he called [her] from”—implying that Butler had used that phone number to call the witness on past occasions. Id. at 600, 603. The witness further testified that she knew Butler “was the one texting [her] back and forth” in part because “he had even called in between the conversations talking mess”—implying that Butler called her from the same cell phone sending her text messages, that she recognized Butlers voice on the phone, that she thus knew Butler possessed the phone around the time of their text-message exchange, and that the content and context of the texts convinced her that Butler authored the messages. Id. at 600, 603–04. Moreover, the Court noted that, “[w]hen considering the admissibility of text messages, ․ courts must be especially cognizant that such matters may sometimes be authenticated by distinctive characteristics found within the writings themselves”; “[c]onversations and events that precede or follow the communications at issue, when identified or referred to within the written communication, can provide contextual evidence demonstrating the authenticity of such communications.” Id. at 603–04. The Court observed that Butlers texts—which were sent the week before his trial—threatened the recipient and called her a “snitch” who had “run to the cops.” Id. at 604. This content was consistent with Butlers situation and his awareness that the recipient would serve as the primary witness against him at trial; the record contained no evidence of “anybody else who might have had a similar motive to threaten [the witness] ․ in the week before [Butlers] trial began.” Id. Although the Court chastised the State for failing “to make all of these circumstantial indicia of authenticity more explicit,” it nonetheless held that the trial court was “well within the zone of reasonable disagreement” to admit the text messages based on this evidence. Id. at 604–06.
We applied Butler in Chavezcasarrubias and upheld the admission of allegedly unauthenticated text messages between Chavezcasarrubias and the complainant—a minor with whom he had engaged in sexual intercourse—based on the content of the messages and the testimony of the complainant. Chavezcasarrubias, 2015 WL 6081502, at *2. There, the complainant testified (1) “that she had witnessed Chavezcasarrubias [program] the phone number that the text messages were received from into her phone”; (2) “that the text messages [depicted in the exhibit] were a true and accurate depiction of text messages between herself and Chavezcasarrubias”; (3) “that Chavezcasarrubias had previously given her accurate instructions on what to wear and where to be [for their in-person meetings] through text messages sent from this same number”; (4) “that she knew that the phone number belonged to Chavezcasarrubias because she had called him on it and recognized his voice when he answered”; and (5) “that the text messages contained information with which only she and Chavezcasarrubias would have been familiar”—namely, references to their romantic and sexual relationship. Id. This evidence was sufficient to support the trial courts preliminary authenticity determination. Id.
Likewise, in Jackson, we applied Butler and upheld the authentication and admission of text messages that the defendant had exchanged with a minor female he had sexually assaulted. Jackson, 2018 WL 3581002, at *2–3. There, the complainant testified that she had used two different phone numbers to communicate with Jackson, that she had saved one of the numbers as “Eric Jackson” in her phone, that Jackson had sent her the text messages at issue, and that she remembered the text-message conversations shown in the proffered exhibit. Id. at *2. The complainant further testified that Jackson would text her to arrange in-person meetings at a stop sign near her home and that, on at least one occasion, he had walked her from the stop sign into the woods where he had raped her. Id. The text-message content referenced the stop sign, their having sexual intercourse in the woods, and a laptop Jackson had stolen when he burglarized the complainants home. Id. Moreover, the complainant testified that Jackson used the word “mines” rather than “mine,” and the text messages contained this distinctive word choice. Id. This evidence was sufficient to support the trial courts preliminary authenticity determination and admission of the messages into evidence. Id. at *2–3.
As in Chavezcasarrubias and Jackson,
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Cain was convicted of sexually preying upon a minor—Anna—based in part on text-message evidence, but Cain now denies authorship of the text messages purportedly sent from his phone and claims they were erroneously admitted. See Jackson, 2018 WL 3581002, at *1–2; Chavezcasarrubias, 2015 WL 6081502, at *1–2. Again applying Butler, we reach the same conclusion we reached in Chavezcasarrubias and Jackson; here, as in those cases, the trial courts preliminary authenticity finding and its admission of the text messages were supported by sufficient evidence of authorship, including (1) testimony from Anna that she knew the senders phone number belonged to Cain, corroborated by text-message content showing that Anna had saved Cains number as “dad” in her cell phone; (2) testimony from Anna that the challenged exhibit was a true and accurate reflection of the text messages she had exchanged with Cain; (3) testimony, corroborated by text-message content, that Cains texts to Anna had provided accurate instructions on where to join him for in-person meetings and in-person abuse; (4) text-message content containing verifiable information regarding Cains location and activities, as well as those of other members of Annas household; (5) text-message content referencing and depicting Cain and Anna using their cell phones to videoconference via FaceTime; (6) text-message content reflecting identifying personal information specific to Cain; (7) text-message content referencing the sexual relationship between Cain and Anna—distinctive information that only Cain and Anna knew; and (8) text-message content demonstrating the unusual father-daughter dynamic between Cain and Anna due to Cains dual roles as stepfather and sexual abuser.
First, when the State began to lay the predicate for the text messages admissibility, Anna testified that she “kn[e]w [her] fathers phone number or what it was [w]hen [the text messages were exchanged],” and she confirmed that she “recognize[d] the text messages [i]n [States Exhibit 2] as being from [her] phone number to [her] fathers phone number and vice versa.” See Jackson, 2018 WL 3581002, at *2–3; Chavezcasarrubias, 2015 WL 6081502, at *2; see also Damm v. State, No. 02-16-00380-CR, 2018 WL 1528605, at *17 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Mar. 29, 2018, pet. refd) (mem. op., not designated for publication) (affirming trial courts threshold authenticity finding based in part on testimony from text-message participant that the number she received the texts from was “the number she had routinely used to communicate with Damm”). Indeed, the text messages themselves showed that Anna had saved the senders phone number in her cell phone as “dad.” And—as in Butler, Chavezcasarrubias, and Jackson—we infer that the trial court considered the contents of the texts themselves in determining their authenticity. See Butler, 459 S.W.3d at 602–04; Jackson, 2018 WL 3581002, at *2–3; Chavezcasarrubias, 2015 WL 6081502, at *2.
Furthermore, Anna—a participant in the text-message exchange—testified that “all the text messages in [States Exhibit 2 were] accurate,” that they were “[t]he exact way that [she] remember[ed] them,” that the thumbnails of photographs exchanged via text message were “accurate photos that [she] sent to [her] father that he made [her] send,” and that the messages were “[t]he way that [she] remember[ed] [her] fathers responses to [her] and [her] texts to him.” See Tex. R. Evid. 901(b)(1) (listing, as an example of “evidence that satisfies the [authentication] requirement,” “[t]estimony that an item is what it is claimed to be”); Jackson, 2018 WL 3581002, at *2; Chavezcasarrubias, 2015 WL 6081502, at *2 (reiterating the rule that, “[f]or authentication by a witness with knowledge of an electronic communication, a witness qualifies as having knowledge when he participated in an exchange of messages and can testify to an exhibits fair and accurate depiction of the messages exchanged”). As the State summarized before the trial court admitted the text messages into evidence:
[S]hes said that she remembers them. She said that theyre from her phone number to his phone number, and from his phone number to her phone number. Shes read through every one of them and she testified on the stand that this is how she remembers the text messages and theyre accurate.
Moreover, Anna testified that Cain sent her text messages to coordinate in-person interactions, and the text messages themselves referenced these interactions. See Butler, 459 S.W.3d at 604 & n.11 (recognizing that references within a text message to other conversations or events can provide evidence of authorship). For example, Anna testified that Cain would text her at night and ask her to come into the living room of their home, and that, when she complied with such text-message requests and went “into the living room[,]․ he was waiting in his recliner” to fondle her breasts or perform other sexual acts. The timing and content of the text messages were consistent with this testimony; many of Cains messages asked Anna to “come in here” late at night, followed by a “thank you” after a short gap in time.
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Similarly, Anna testified that Cain would sometimes ask her “out to his office” where he would put his hand in her underwear and rub her vagina. Again, the text-message content was consistent with this testimony; in one late-night exchange, Cain asked Anna to “come see [him]․ [i]n [the] office,” and about thirty minutes later, Cain sent a text message thanking Anna “for [his] moments of happiness.” The texts were thus tied to Cains in-person interactions with Anna and verified that he authored the messages. See Jackson, 2018 WL 3581002, at *2–3; Chavezcasarrubias, 2015 WL 6081502, at *2; see also Butler, 459 S.W.3d at 604 (recognizing that the timing of the defendants threatening text messages to the States primary witness the week before his trial provided circumstantial evidence of authenticity).
The text messages referenced other, seemingly innocuous in-person interactions as well. In one text, Cain told Anna he was “[g]etting [her] some pizza” and the two exchanged messages regarding Annas preferred pizza topping. Presumably, Anna would have detected if such a message had been authored by an imposter in possession of Cains phone because the promised pizza would not have arrived. Annas testimony that she understood Cain to be the author of the messages instead implied that the pizza arrived as anticipated—linking Cain to the texts. See Butler, 459 S.W.3d at 600–04 (recognizing that, when the text-message recipient stated she knew Butler to be the author of the texts because “he had even called in between the [text-message] conversations,” “it [wa]s at least implicit” that the contemporaneous call she received was “from a person whose voice she recognized to be [the a]ppellants”).
And even when Cains texts were not coordinating in-person interactions, his messages frequently contained verifiable information regarding his location within the family home as well as the locations and activities of other members of Annas household. For example, in one nighttime exchange, Cain indicated that he was “[i]n [ ] bed,” and Anna asked if her mother was with him. Cain responded “[n]ope” and stated that Annas mother was instead “[o]n [the] couch.” Such information would have been extremely difficult for an individual outside of Annas household to falsify yet extremely easy for Anna to check. In another exchange, Cain indicated that he was “[m]aking progress in [the] garage” and asked Anna if “[her] mom [was] up yet”—implying that her mother slept in late that day. Again, such messages reflected a knowledge of the daily life of Annas family that few—if any—outside imposters likely possessed, and Anna presumably could have detected if the texts were forged. Annas attribution of the text messages to Cain instead supported a reasonable inference that these everyday details were valid and linked the messages to Cain. See Butler, 459 S.W.3d at 603 (recognizing that text-message recipients testimony identifying Butler as the author of the texts implied, among other things, that “the content and context of the text messages convinced her that the messages were from [Butler]”).
The text-message exchanges also contained photographs and statements consistent with Cains occupation, travel, and plans. See id. at 603 n.10 (recognizing that written communications such as letters “may be authenticated by distinctive characteristics such as the documents ․ location” (quoting Cathy Cochran, Texas Rules of Evidence Handbook 934 (7th ed. 2007–08))); Gardner, 2015 WL 4652718, at *2 (affirming trial courts threshold authenticity finding because, among other things, the text messages “showed that the sender was planning to commit a robbery” and discussed using a gun similar to one seen in the surveillance video of the robbery in which Gardner had been positively identified as a participant). For example, Anna testified that Cain was a truck driver, and on one occasion Cain sent Anna a photograph of the open roadway through the front windshield of what appeared to be a truck.
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After Anna asked Cain where he was and when he would “get back,” Cain texted that he was in “California” and was returning “[t]omorrow night.” Again, if Cains phone had been “purloined” by another individual, it is doubtful that such individual would have known Cains travel schedule and then-current location, much less have been able to forge an impromptu photograph consistent with Cains surroundings. See Tienda, 358 S.W.3d at 641–42 (discussing authenticity analysis and cautioning that “cell phones can be purloined”).
Additionally, the substance of the messages referenced—and even depicted—Anna and Cain videoconferencing using the same cell phone numbers they used to exchange texts.
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Numerous text messages from Cain asked Anna to talk with him via FaceTime,
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and one exchange contained a screenshot depicting their videoconference on FaceTime.
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Such messages were “yet another circumstance which made it reasonable for [Anna] (and hence, the jury) to conclude that [Cain] was the person who controlled the phone at the time that the text messages at issue were generated.” Butler, 459 S.W.3d at 604 (recognizing that the appellants phone call to the text-message recipient “in between the [text] conversations” was a circumstance indicating his authorship of the text messages); see also Chavezcasarrubias, 2015 WL 6081502, at *2 (relying in part on testimony from the recipient “that she knew that the phone number belonged to Chavezcasarrubias because she had called him on it and recognized his voice when he answered”).
The substance of the text messages also contained identifying information specific to Cain. See Tex. R. Evid. 901(b)(4). For example, when Cain agreed via text message to pay for Annas Apple Music subscription, he authorized her to “use [his] Bank of America card that ends in [XXXX],”
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and he told her she could find it “in [his] wallet.” The jury could infer that Cain was one of the few people—if not the only person—who knew the last four digits of his bank card and the then-current location of that bank card. Similarly, on his birthday, Cain sent numerous guilt-inducing text messages and claimed Anna had “really broken [his] heart” by failing to realize that it was his birthday. The content of the text messages sent from Cains phone thus indicated that the authors birthday was Cains birthday.
Furthermore, the content of the text messages contained references to Cains in-person sexual abuse of Anna—distinctive information only Cain and Anna could have been expected to know. See Tex. R. Evid. 901(b)(4); Tienda, 358 S.W.3d at 640–41 (recognizing that an individual may be sufficiently linked to authorship of an electronic communication if it “contain[s] information that only the purported sender could be expected to know”). In one text exchange while Cain was traveling, he asked whether “[m]y girls”—i.e., Annas breasts—“miss me.”
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Then, later in the conversation, Cain responded to a nude photograph of Annas breasts by stating that he “c[ould]nt wait to get home”—implying his intent to view or touch Annas breasts in person. See Jackson, 2018 WL 3581002, at *2–3; Chavezcasarrubias, 2015 WL 6081502, at *2; see also Gardner, 2015 WL 4652718, at *2 (affirming trial courts threshold authenticity finding based in part on text-message content anticipating an in-person robbery similar to the robbery Gardner committed). Since Cains sexual abuse of Anna was not common knowledge while it was occurring, the text messages reflected knowledge of a sexual relationship of which only Cain and Anna were aware.
Even Cains requests for photographs reflected a knowledge of his sexual abuse. Anna testified that Cains in-person abuse often involved him fondling or sucking her breasts. Consistent with this testimony, many of the text messages contained in States Exhibit 2 involved Cain soliciting photos from Anna and Anna reluctantly sending pictures of her breasts. The previously mentioned exchange on Cains birthday was a prime example:
[Anna] 2:45 a.m. I forgot what date it was Im sorry[.] ․ Happy Birthday[.]
[Dad] 2:48 a.m. You know what would really make it happy?
․
[Anna] 2:50 a.m. Is it what I think it is[?] ․ A picture?
[Dad] 2:54 a.m. Now that would be happy. Lol
The next text, which was from Anna to Cain, was a clothed photograph of her breasts. Cain responded “Lol. Nice․ I wish they blinked. That would be funny.” But, unsatisfied, Cain asked for another picture only a few minutes later:
[Dad] 3:03 a.m. Hit tha[t] send button and make my birthday happy.
․
[Anna] 3:03 a.m. Thought I already did?
[Dad] 3:03 a.m. Very close. Lol
[Dad] 3:06 a.m. I love them[.]
․
[Anna] 3:08 a.m. Idk
[Dad] 3:09 a.m. I will delete. You can check my phone.
Finally, Anna sent Cain a photograph of her naked breasts, to which he replied, “[h]appy birthday to[ ] me.” Yet, less than ten minutes later Cain was asking for more, texting, “Can I get one sitting up[?]” Again, Anna sent him a naked photograph. These repeated requests for photographs of Annas breasts were consistent with Cains in-person abuse—abuse of which only Anna and Cain were aware.
Moreover, Anna testified that Cain often used money or gifts to get her to comply with his sexual requests. She described how, when she “started indicating that [she] didnt like what he was doing to [her] ․ he reached into his wallet and he showed [her] a 20-dollar bill.” Cains text messages to Anna contained similar bribes for sexual favors. At the end of the birthday exchange quoted above—in which Anna sent “dad” numerous photos of her breasts—he texted, “If your mama wont buy you something today just keep it in mind and Ill buy it for you.” On another occasion, Cain offered to “give [her] $1 to see them,” on another he told her to “[s]end [him] a good pic and [she could] go get money out of [his] wallet,” and on yet another he agreed to pay for an Apple Music subscription after receiving a nude photograph of Annas breasts. Just as Cains sexual abuse of Anna was not common knowledge at the time it was occurring, the methods he employed to manipulate her were not common knowledge; Cains texts reflected knowledge only he and Anna possessed. See Tex. R. Evid. 901(b)(4).
Similarly, the content of the text messages in States Exhibit 2 demonstrated knowledge of the unusual father-daughter dynamic between Cain and Anna stemming from Cains dual roles as stepfather and sexual abuser. Anna regularly texted Cain to ask if she could purchase things such as clothes, a game, a phone case, jewelry, and an Apple Music subscription—items a teenager could reasonably be expected to ask her father to purchase. When Cain agreed to purchase the requested items—which he often used as bargaining chips for sexual favors—the items were purchased with Cains finances, further linking him to the messages. The text messages also contained parental scoldings from Cain such as “[y]ou dont leave here without telling someone,” and the messages were littered with “I love you” statements common in father-daughter relationships. See Butler, 459 S.W.3d at 604 (recognizing that the content of the text messages—calling the States primary witness a “snitch” and threatening her the week before Butlers trial—was consistent with Butlers relationship with the witness and circumstantially linked him to the messages); Hunsaker v. State, No. 02-16-00331-CR, 2017 WL 4053897, at *4–5 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Sept. 14, 2017, pet. refd) (per curiam) (mem. op., not designated for publication) (affirming trial courts threshold authenticity finding based on evidence that Hunsaker owned the cell phone that sent and received the text messages, and that the content of the text messages exchanged indicated a close relationship between the authors consistent with the relationship between Hunsaker and his fellow gang member). But Cain frequently texted an expression of love in the same conversation as an inappropriate request for a nude photograph. Again, this content indicated that the author of the text messages sent from Cains phone was aware not only of the sexual relationship between Cain and Anna but also of Cains role as Annas stepfather, and of the unusual dynamic created by these dual roles.
In sum, the State provided more than enough evidence to “bridg[e] the logical gap” and allow a reasonable jury to conclude that Cain authored and sent the text messages purporting to be from him and contained in States Exhibit 2. Even if Cain had preserved his current authenticity complaint for review, his complaint would fail.
We overrule Cains sole issue.
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C. Clerical Error
We raise a final issue sua sponte; there is a clerical error in Cains corrected judgment for possession with the intent to promote child pornography.
The corrected judgment states that Cain was convicted under Section 43.26(d)(1) of the Texas Penal Code—the subsection that penalizes possession of child pornography after a prior conviction. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 43.26(d)(1). But the record reveals that Cain was indicted, convicted, and sentenced under Section 43.26(e) of the Texas Penal Code—the subsection that penalizes possession with the intent to promote child pornography.
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Compare id., with id. § 43.26(e).
“Appellate courts have the power to modify whatever the trial court could have corrected by a judgment nunc pro tunc when the information necessary to correct the judgment appears in the record”; this authority “depends neither on a partys request nor on whether a party objected in the trial court.” Ette v. State, 551 S.W.3d 783, 792 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2017), affd, 559 S.W.3d 511 (Tex. Crim. App. 2018); see Baker v. State, No. 02-19-00292-CR, 2020 WL 2202324, at *8 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth May 7, 2020, pet. refd) (mem. op., not designated for publication).
The erroneous citation to Section 43.26(d)(1) in Cains judgment for possession with the intent to promote child pornography appears to have been a typographical clerical error and not the result of erroneous judicial reasoning. See Ex parte Poe, 751 S.W.2d 873, 876 (Tex. Crim. App. 1988) (“A clerical error is one which does not result from judicial reasoning or determination.”). Consequently, the citation could have been corrected by the trial courts entry of a judgment nunc pro tunc. See Blanton v. State, 369 S.W.3d 894, 897–98 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012) (reiterating the rule that nunc pro tunc judgments are “limited to clerical errors and are not appropriate for errors involving judicial reasoning”); Collins v. State, 240 S.W.3d 925, 928 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007) (“A judgment nunc pro tunc is the appropriate avenue to make a correction when the courts records do not mirror the judgment that was actually rendered.”); Roots v. State, 419 S.W.3d 719, 723–24, 727–28 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2013, pet. refd) (quoting Blanton). We therefore modify the judgment to reflect the accurate statute for Cains promotion-of-child-pornography offense: Section 43.26(e) of the Texas Penal Code. See Tex. R. App. P. 43.2(b); Ponce v. State, No. 02-19-00151-CR, 2020 WL 5949919, at *2 & n.9 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Oct. 8, 2020, pet. refd) (mem. op., not designated for publication) (modifying judgment to correct clerical error); Baker, 2020 WL 2202324, at *8 (modifying clerical errors in the judgment on the courts own initiative).
IV. Conclusion
Having overruled Cains sole issue, we affirm Cains judgment of conviction for continuous sexual abuse of a child and affirm as modified his judgment of conviction for possession with the intent to promote child pornography.
FOOTNOTES
1
. We use aliases for minors to protect their privacy. See Tex. R. App. P. 9.10(a)(3); 2nd Tex. App. (Fort Worth) Loc. R. 7.
2
. The State offered and the trial court admitted both censored and uncensored magnified versions of the pornographic photographs Anna sent Cain via text message.
3
. Cains original promotion-of-child-pornography judgment was entered on June 6, 2019. The judgment was corrected on June 13, 2019, due to errors in the date of the offense and Cains plea to the offense. See Tex. R. App. P. 23.1. Although the corrected June 13 judgment was entitled “Nunc Pro Tunc Judgment of Conviction by Jury,” it was not a true judgment nunc pro tunc because it was entered while the trial court still had plenary power over the case. See Williams v. State, 603 S.W.3d 439, 442–43 (Tex. Crim. App. 2020) (“Nunc pro tunc orders or judgments generally are reserved for actions taken outside a trial courts plenary power, requiring a trial court to rely on its inherent authority to make the record reflect what previously and actually occurred during its plenary power.” (quoting and reviewing language from this courts opinion in Williams v. State, No. 02-17-00001-CR, 2018 WL 3468458, at *4 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth July 19, 2018) (mem. op., not designated for publication), affd, 603 S.W.3d 439 (Tex. Crim. App. 2020)). Rather, the June 13 judgment was a corrected judgment, and we refer to it as such. See Tex. R. App. P. 23.1.
4
. Neither party has addressed the preservation issue. However, “issues of error preservation are systemic in first-tier review courts” such as ours. Gipson v. State, 383 S.W.3d 152, 156, 159 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012) (quoting Menefee v. State, 287 S.W.3d 9, 18 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009)); see Haley v. State, 173 S.W.3d 510, 515 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005).
5
. Cain lodged a second objection to States Exhibit 2, arguing that “a minor [could not] giv[e] consent to search a property [i.e., her phone] that belongs to another person.” But this objection has not been re-urged on appeal.
6
. After States Exhibit 2 was admitted, Cain objected to several related exhibits “based on the same objections [ ] made to States ․ Exhibit 2.” In doing so, Cain restated the ambiguous objection discussed above by arguing “there [wa]s no chain of custody between the phone and these documents that have been presented.” The record thus indicates that Cain intended his objection to States Exhibit 2 to be a chain-of-custody objection and not an authenticity objection. Nonetheless, because the trial court could have misunderstood Cains initial, ambiguous objection to States Exhibit 2 as an authenticity complaint rather than a chain-of-custody complaint, we address this possibility.
7
. Specifically, Cains authenticity challenge on appeal contends that “in attempting to authenticate the text messages, [Anna] testified only that she recognized her cell phone number and the number she believed to be [Cains]” and that “[t]he record is void of any testimony corroborating [that he] was the actual sender of the text messages.”
8
. Unpublished opinions—including Chavezcasarrubias and Jackson—have no precedential value. Tex. R. App. P. 47.7(a). Nonetheless, we consider unpublished opinions with similar facts instructive and cite them in agreement with their guidance as to the application of settled law. See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4.
9
. After States Exhibit 2 was admitted into evidence, Anna confirmed that Cain would often thank her via text message after inappropriately touching her—linking the author of the text message to the just-finished act of indecency.
10
. After States Exhibit 2 was admitted, Anna testified that Cain sent her another photograph while he was on a cruise with her mother. Specifically, Cain sent Anna a photograph of a small boat that appeared to be in the water near the cruise ship with the message “We [are] getting pulled over. Lol.” The photograph and message were consistent with Cains travel plans and his then-current geographic location, supporting the inference that he authored the texts.
11
. Although Anna did not expressly testify that she and Cain FaceTimed using the same cell phone numbers they used to exchange text messages, this could be reasonably inferred from Annas testimony confirming Cains cell phone number, and from the text-message content in which Cain repeatedly asked Anna to “Ft [him].” See Butler, 459 S.W.3d at 603–04 (inferring from the authenticating witnesss testimony that Butler “called in between the conversations talking mess” that the calls came from the same cell phone number used to exchange text messages).
12
. Cain and Anna often used the abbreviation “ft” rather than the full word “FaceTime.” However, Annas occasional use of the full word “FaceTime” confirmed the meaning of the “ft” abbreviation, as did subsequent testimony.
13
. After States Exhibit 2 was admitted, Anna testified that Cain would text to ask if she wanted to videoconference then call her on FaceTime to see her breasts. Anna explained that, on one occasion, she decided to take a screenshot because she “just kind of caught [Cain] in a freeze-frame and [ ] thought it looked funny, so [she] just saved it․ [a]nd then [she] sent it to him” via text message.
14
. We redact Cains bank card number in accordance with Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.10(a)(2).
15
. Although Cains text messages did not expressly identify the “girls” he was referencing, the references were followed by Cains pleas for “a pic” and Annas reluctant transmission of a nude picture of her breasts. The context of Cains references to the “girls” thus implied his meaning. Moreover, after States Exhibit 2 was admitted, Anna testified regarding the exchange and confirmed that the “girls” referred to Annas breasts.
16
. Furthermore, even if the trial court had erred by admitting the text messages, such error would have been harmless because Cain failed to object to other evidence proving the same underlying facts. “An error [if any] in the admission of evidence is cured where the same evidence comes in elsewhere without objection.” Lane v. State, 151 S.W.3d 188, 193 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004) (quoting Valle v. State, 109 S.W.3d 500, 509 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003)). Here, at least two witnesses—Anna and Investigator Michael Young—testified regarding the contents of the challenged text messages, and the State read many of the text-message exchanges into evidence during their testimony. Cain did not object to this testimony. Thus, even if Cain had preserved his authenticity challenge, and even if the trial court had erred by admitting the text messages, any error would have been harmless. See Sampson v. State, No. 02-15-00202-CR, 2016 WL 4474339, at *3 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Aug. 25, 2016, pet. refd) (mem. op., not designated for publication) (holding any error in the admission of photos—including photos of text messages–was harmless “because unobjected-to evidence prove[d] the same facts as the objected-to photographs”); Mai v. State, 189 S.W.3d 316, 323–24 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2006, pet. refd) (holding defendant failed to preserve error in the admission of a transcript “by not repeating [his] objection again each time the State asked Officer Richie to read from or refer to the transcript”).
17
. The erroneous citation to Section 43.26(d)(1) did not originate with the corrected judgment; it was also present in Cains original judgment for possession with the intent to promote child pornography.
Opinion by Justice Womack