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CROSSOVER: CAC/School Counselor Disclosures and Delayed Outcry Testimony Upheld in Continuous Sexual Abuse Case—Blueprint for Family-Violence Proof

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

Sergio Adrian Contreras v. The State of Texas, 13-24-00145-CR, March 31, 2026.

On appeal from 36th District Court, San Patricio County, Texas

Synopsis

The Thirteenth Court of Appeals affirmed a continuous sexual abuse conviction, rejecting complaints about alleged jury-charge errors, legal insufficiency on the “30-days-apart”/continuous-period element, voir dire limits about jurors with sexual-assault experiences, and claimed prosecutorial misconduct. For family-law litigators, the opinion is a practical roadmap for building (or attacking) a “family-violence/sexual-abuse” evidentiary record using CAC interviews and school-based disclosures, even when outcry is delayed and children use qualifying language (“I think,” “I’m not sure”).

Relevance to Family Law

Although this is a criminal appeal, its evidentiary architecture mirrors what routinely decides SAPCRs, temporary orders, and protective-order hearings: third-party disclosures to school personnel, CAC forensic interviews, delayed outcry dynamics, and credibility attacks framed around child imprecision. The case supplies language and framing that can be repurposed to support findings that (1) abuse disclosures may be delayed and still reliable; (2) children’s “fuzziness” about details is not inherently exculpatory; and (3) corroboration can come from the disclosure process itself (school referral → CAC interview → medical clinic evaluation). That sequence is often the spine of a successful best-interest and § 153.004 “history or pattern” case.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The indictment alleged continuous sexual abuse of a child under Texas Penal Code § 21.02, premised on multiple acts over a period of at least thirty days (charged as January 1, 2014 through December 31, 2015) against children under fourteen, when the accused was seventeen or older. The State tried the case over five days, presenting, among other witnesses, a school-based wellness interventionist, a CAC forensic interviewer, and a child-abuse pediatric specialist.

The first disclosure surfaced in a school setting: a student wellness interventionist saw K.V. after a self-harm referral. During assessment, K.V. reported being “triggered” after seeing her uncle and disclosed sexual abuse occurring when she was six or seven, including digital contact and coercive scenarios in a bedroom after her mother left.

The CAC forensic interviewer later interviewed both K.V. and C.V. The interviewer testified that delayed outcries are “very common,” and described K.V.’s disclosures of genital/breast touching and “jumping on top of him,” including clarification attempts where K.V. expressed uncertainty about penetration details. C.V. disclosed oral penetration by the same uncle and used qualifying language (“I think,” “I’m not sure,” “I don’t remember”) at points in the narrative. Recordings of both forensic interviews were admitted.

A child-abuse pediatrician testified about the clinical realities of childhood sexual abuse reporting: younger victims often have “fuzziness” as to details, and when children minimize or qualify accounts, that does not necessarily indicate fabrication—misrepresentation more commonly occurs by minimizing rather than inventing events. The pediatrician recounted the 2021 medical-clinic history taken from K.V., including that K.V. identified “Uncle Sergio,” described forced entry into his room, and described contact “underneath” clothing.

Against that evidentiary backdrop, the jury convicted. On appeal, the defense attacked the charge, the sufficiency of proof on the continuous-period/multiple-acts requirement (including the “more than thirty days apart” concept), the trial court’s limitation on voir dire of jurors with sexual-assault experiences, and alleged prosecutorial misconduct.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

Application

The court treated the State’s proof as a coherent disclosure-and-assessment chain rather than as isolated soundbites. The school wellness interventionist’s testimony established an early disclosure context (self-harm referral, “triggering,” identification of an “uncle,” and specific acts). The CAC interviewer added structured disclosure testimony, including the frequent phenomenon of delayed outcry and the reality that children may qualify or hedge details while still reliably reporting abuse. The medical expert supplied the interpretive bridge juries—and family courts—often need: child victims can be imprecise about timing and certain mechanics without that imprecision negating truthfulness; if anything, minimization is common.

On sufficiency, the court concluded the jury could rationally find the statutory continuous-period requirement and multiple acts based on the children’s disclosures and the surrounding circumstances, even where the defense emphasized uncertainty language and imperfect time anchoring. In other words, the appellate court declined to reweigh credibility and permitted the jury to credit the State’s witnesses and the interview recordings.

On voir dire, the court upheld the trial judge’s control over questioning of panelists who had personal or close-association experiences with sexual assault. The opinion reflects the typical appellate posture: voir dire restrictions do not become reversible error unless the limitation prevents meaningful exploration of bias and results in an unfair jury (and the record must show what was foreclosed and why it mattered).

On prosecutorial misconduct, the court found no reversible harm—either because the challenged conduct was not improper in context, was not preserved, was cured, or did not rise to the level that would undermine confidence in the verdict.

Holding

The court affirmed the conviction, holding that the asserted jury-charge errors did not warrant reversal because the appellant failed to show the level of harm required under the applicable charge-error standard.

The court further held the evidence was legally sufficient for continuous sexual abuse, rejecting the argument that the State failed to establish the “two acts more than thirty days apart” concept embedded in the statutory continuous-period requirement. The jury was entitled to credit the children’s accounts, including delayed and partially qualified disclosures, along with the corroborative testimony from the CAC and medical pathways.

The court also held the trial court did not commit reversible error in limiting voir dire examination of jurors with sexual-assault experiences, concluding the judge remained within the permissible zone of discretion for managing voir dire.

Finally, the court rejected the prosecutorial misconduct complaints and held the record did not show a denial of a fair trial requiring reversal.

Practical Application

For Texas family-law litigators, this case is less about § 21.02 mechanics and more about proof design: how disclosures are introduced through school personnel, CAC interviewers, and medical professionals; how delayed outcry is normalized; and how “qualifying language” is framed as a function of child development and trauma rather than as impeachment gold.

Use it in at least four recurring settings:

Checklists

Building a “Disclosure Pathway” Record (School → CAC → Medical)

Proving Time and Pattern in Family Court (When Kids Can’t Date-Stamp)

Attacking the Allegation Without Looking Like You’re Attacking the Child

Preserving Voir Dire and “Bias Exploration” Complaints

Citation

Sergio Adrian Contreras v. State, No. 13-24-00145-CR (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg Mar. 31, 2026) (mem. op., not designated for publication).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

This criminal affirmance can be weaponized in a Texas divorce or custody case as a credibility-and-process authority: when the other side argues the child’s report is unreliable because it was delayed, emerged through a counselor, or contains uncertainty language, you can point to an appellate court’s acceptance of that exact evidentiary profile as capable of supporting a finding beyond a reasonable doubt. Translating to the civil burden (preponderance, or clear-and-convincing for certain findings), the argument is straightforward: if a jury can rationally credit a school disclosure + CAC interview + medical testimony sequence despite “fuzziness,” a family court can likewise credit it to impose immediate safety restrictions, deny unsupervised possession under § 153.004, support protective orders, and justify tailored injunctions (no contact, exchanges at safe locations, supervised visitation, and orders for specialized counseling). On the defense side, the crossover lesson is equally strategic: you must litigate the disclosure pipeline itself—methodology, contamination risk, and anchoring—because appellate courts (and family judges) will often view the pipeline as corroboration rather than as a weakness.

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