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CROSSOVER: Continuous Sexual Abuse Appeal: Child-Victim Timing Testimony, CAC Interview Corroboration, and Extraneous-Offense Admission—Pointers for Texas SAPCR/Protective-Order Trials

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

Christopher Joe Bradshaw, Sr. v. The State of Texas, 03-23-00356-CR, March 31, 2026.

On appeal from 207th District Court of Comal County, Texas

Synopsis

The Third Court of Appeals held that the State presented legally sufficient evidence for the “30-or-more-days” duration element of Penal Code § 21.02 (continuous sexual abuse), even though the child’s age-based timing testimony could be read to suggest a narrow four-day window. The court also rejected challenges to the mandatory life sentence, the jury charge on duration, and the admission of extraneous-offense evidence, but modified the judgment to correct the enhancement-subsection citation and affirmed as modified.

Relevance to Family Law

This opinion is a roadmap for how Texas courts treat imprecise child-victim “time” testimony and how corroboration can be built through CAC interview evidence and digital forensic proof—issues that routinely surface in SAPCR modification trials, protective orders, and parental-rights restriction disputes. In custody litigation, the same evidentiary dynamics arise when a parent argues the alleged abuse “could only have happened” during a short visitation window; Bradshaw illustrates how courts allow factfinders to reconcile a child’s age references with broader circumstantial proof to reach a longer timeline. The extraneous-offense discussion also has direct crossover value when litigators seek to admit prior sexual-misconduct history (criminal convictions, investigations, or “similar acts”) to prove current risk to the child, best interest, and the necessity of conservatorship limits and supervised access.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The appellant (the child’s father) lived with the child and family in a trailer in Comal County during summer 2018 and slept in the same room as the child (and sometimes the child’s older brother) on mattresses on the floor. The child later alleged escalating sexual abuse, including indecency-type contact and oral-sex conduct, and described pornography exposure on the appellant’s phone and frequent masturbation activity tied to the child’s presence.

After the appellant moved out of state, the appellant’s then-partner contacted the child’s mother about disturbing images on the appellant’s Facebook accounts. The mother confronted the child, contacted law enforcement, and the child was interviewed at a Child Advocacy Center (CAC), where he made a fuller outcry and provided details, including drawings. Investigators collected physical samples (with no semen results) but obtained digital evidence from a phone the appellant left behind—searches and downloads consistent with child pornography over a multi-month period. The State also introduced an Oklahoma conviction for “lewd molestation,” found substantially similar to Texas indecency by contact, which triggered enhanced punishment.

At trial, the defense emphasized timing—arguing the child said the abuse happened when he was ten, and he turned eleven only days after the appellant arrived—plus attacked credibility through the mismatch between the child’s ejaculate drawing and negative DNA testing.

Issues Decided

  1. Whether the evidence was legally sufficient to prove the § 21.02 element that the abuse occurred “during a period that is 30 or more days in duration.”
  2. Whether the trial court erred by imposing an automatic life sentence based on the enhancement scheme.
  3. Whether the jury charge inadequately instructed the jury on the duration element.
  4. Whether the trial court reversibly erred in admitting extraneous-offense evidence.
  5. Whether the judgment contained a correctable clerical error as to the cited enhancement-subsection.

Rules Applied

Application

The duration fight turned on a familiar defense strategy: isolate one slice of the child’s testimony—here, that the “first time” and “last time” occurred when he was ten—and marry it to external calendar facts (arrival date and birthday) to argue the State proved, at most, a four-day opportunity window. The Third Court declined the defense’s reading as the only rational interpretation, emphasizing that the jury could reasonably understand the referenced exchange as describing a particular subtype of conduct (e.g., the request for oral sex), not the full range of charged “sexual abuse” acts that qualify under § 21.02.

Critically for practitioners, the court credited the pattern evidence that tends to carry duration in continuous-abuse prosecutions: testimony that qualifying conduct occurred “maybe weekly,” “once or twice,” or “every once in a while,” combined with the broader context of frequent pornography exposure (“once or twice a day”) and masturbation requests. The opinion also treated corroboration as a timeline-builder: CAC interviewer testimony that the child said the conduct happened “basically every night,” plus digital forensic evidence showing pornography/child-pornography search activity stretching from late June into September. The court framed these sources as reinforcing a rational inference that the abuse spanned at least 30 days—even if the child could not “pin down” precise dates.

On punishment and charge issues, the court found no reversible error in the mandatory life sentence application, nor in the jury instruction on duration, and it rejected the evidentiary complaint regarding admission of extraneous-offense evidence. But the court did address a judgment defect: the enhancement statute subsection was mis-cited, and the court modified the judgment to reflect the correct subsection before affirming as modified. That portion matters in family-law crossover contexts because it highlights how appellate courts treat labeling errors (correctable) versus substantive defects (reversible).

Holding

The court held the evidence was legally sufficient for a rational jury to find the continuous-abuse duration element (30+ days) beyond a reasonable doubt, despite the defense’s argument that the abuse necessarily occurred only during a four-day window.

The court held there was no reversible error regarding the automatic life sentence, the jury charge addressing the duration element, or the admission of extraneous-offense evidence.

The court held the judgment contained a clerical error in the enhancement-subsection citation and modified the judgment to correct the enhancement reference, then affirmed the conviction as modified.

Practical Application

For Texas family-law litigators, Bradshaw is most useful as a litigation template for proving (or attacking) duration, opportunity, and pattern when a child cannot provide calendar precision—especially in cases where the opposing party tries to convert “I was ten” into a rigid date constraint.

Checklists

Building a Duration Record When the Child Can’t Give Dates

CAC / Forensic Interview Deployment (Civil Crossover)

Digital Evidence: Make It a Timeline Tool, Not Just “Bad Character” Proof

Avoiding the Non-Prevailing Party’s Trap (Selective Testimony Parsing)

Citation

Christopher Joe Bradshaw, Sr. v. State of Texas, No. 03-23-00356-CR (Tex. App.—Austin Mar. 31, 2026) (mem. op.) (judgment modified and affirmed as modified).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here.

Family Law Crossover

In a Texas divorce or SAPCR, Bradshaw can be weaponized to defeat the common “timing impossibility” argument—i.e., “the child said X age, so it could only have happened during my four-day possession.” The case supplies appellate-approved reasoning that a factfinder may (1) interpret a child’s age reference as describing only one category of conduct, (2) credit frequency testimony (weekly/nightly) to establish an extended course of abuse, and (3) rely on circumstantial corroboration—especially CAC interview content and device-based timelines—to bridge gaps in calendar precision. Practically, that combination strengthens requests for supervised visitation, § 153.004 restrictions, geographic limitations, and protective-order relief by reframing the dispute from “exact dates” to “pattern + opportunity + corroborated time range,” which is often where child-safety cases are actually won or lost.

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