OPINION
Opinion by:
NATURE OF THE CASE
A jury found that Ricardo Dante Avila committed the offense of sexual assault and sentenced him to four years and six months confinement. He challenges his conviction in six issues. In his first two issues, Avila asserts the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction. In his third issue, he alleges the trial court abused its discretion in admitting the results of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) testing. In his final three issues, Avila challenges the admission of the testimony of a victim of a separate rape. We address Avila’s issues in an order different than that presented in his brief in order to offer a more logical explanation of our disposition in this case. We reverse and remand this case to the trial court for further proceedings.
Factual BackgRound
On March 2, 1997, the complainant went to Crystal City with her older sister and a friend. After the three girls checked into a motel, the two older girls crossed the border into Mexico. The complainant remained in Crystal City and spent the evening driving around town with friends.
After dropping off her friends at approximately 2:00 a.m., the complainant saw Avila flash his heаdlights at her. Avila mistook the complainant for her older sister. However, once he realized who was actually driving the car, Avila waved the complainant on.
The complainant returned to her motel room and prepared herself for bed. Just before she fell asleep, she heard a honk outside. She peered around the curtain to see who it was, and realizing it was Avila, ignored him. The complainant saw him again approximately ten minutes later on the side of the motel, as if he was heading for the road. She then went to sleep.
The complainant was awakened suddenly by a slap to her face. A man had entered her room. He turned her over onto her stomаch and raped her. The complainant never saw the perpetrator.
After the man left, the complainant waited a little while and then left the motel. She went to a friend’s house and then to see her mother, who took her to the police station. After explaining to the police what happened, she went to the hospital, where a rape kit was administered.
Admissibility of the Evidence
In three issues, Avila challenges the admission of DNA and extraneous offense evidence against him. First, he complains the trial court abused its discretion in admitting the results of DNA testing because *739 the State did not sufficiently establish a chain of custody to support that evidence. He also contends the trial judge’s admissiоn of extraneous offense evidence to prove identity was erroneous because the extraneous offense was not substantially similar to the charged offense. Finally, Avila asserts that the extraneous offense evidence is not relevant and its probative value was substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.
Standard of Review
The admission of evidence is a matter within the discretion of the trial court.
See Montgomery v. State,
DNA Evidence
Avila contends that the trial court erred in admitting the results of DNA testing into evidence. He specifically complains that the State failed to show, by establishing a proрer chain of custody, that the DNA testing was based on a comparison of bodily fluids he contributed.
Texas Rule of Evidence 901 governs authentication.
See
Tex.R. Evid. 901. As a predicate to admissibility, Rule 901 requires a party who offers an item into evidence to establish to the trial judge’s satisfaction that the item is what the party represents it to be.
See id.
When the evidence being introduced does not have any unique characteristics, a chain of custody may be required to prove that the item presented in trial is the same one involved in the events at issue.
See Jackson v. State,
The chain of custody is conclusively established if an officer testifies that he seized the item of physical evidence, tagged it, placed an identifying mark on it, placed it in evidence storage, and retrieved the item for trial.
Lagrone v. State,
We have before us the following evidence concerning the chain of custody of the complainant’s rape kit, her panties, and Avila’s underwear:
1) the hospital in Uvalde conducted a rape kit on the complainant;
2) Avila surrendered his underwear to Officer Erasmo Ramon, who placed the underwear in the evidence roоm;
3) Officer Ramon transported and submitted the rape kit, the complainant’s panties, shorts, and her t-shirt, as well *740 as Avila’s underwear to Javier Flores, a forensic analyst for the Texas Department of Public Safety laboratory.
In this regard, Avila essentially asserts that the State did not prove the initial link in the chain of custody and therefore the trial judge аbused his discretion in admitting the results of the DNA analysis. However, Rule 901 only requires a showing that satisfies the trial judge' that the item in question is what the State claims.
See
Tex.R. Evid. 901;
Garner v. State,
Extraneous Offense
Additionally, Avila complains that the admission of the testimony of a second rape victim at his trial was an abuse of discretion because it constituted inadmissible extraneous offense evidence.
Rule ¿04-(b) Relevancy
Generally, evidence of other offenses is not admissible as evidence of guilt.
See
Tex.R. Evid. 404. However, in
Albrecht v. State,
the Court of Criminal Appeals stated that “[e]vidence of other crimes committed by the accused may be admitted, ..., where such evidence is shown to be both material and relevant to a contested issue in the case.”
Here, identity is clearly at issue because the complainant never saw the man who raped her. She therefore was unable to provide a positive identification of who committed the offense. In this regard, the State offered evidence of an extraneous offense to prove Avila committed the offense. The State argued during a hearing on Avila’s motion in limine to exclude the evidence that the extraneous rape was extremely similar to the offense charged and was therefore relevant to prove identity. Specifically, the State explained that both rapes “occurred] in the dark, at night. In both instancеs, the victim was asleep; both occurred here in the city limits of Crystal City; both instances the perpetrator entered the room without the consent of the victim. In both instances the perpetrator turned the victims over. In both instances the sexual act was essentially in the same type of position.” The trial court admitted the testimony of P.M., the victim of the extraneous rape, based on the State’s representations of the high degree of similarity between the two rapes.
During the State’s case-in-chief, P.M. testified that in the early morning hours of May 23, 1997, she was raped. She explained that as she was sleeping, she felt a man, whom she believed to be her husband, begin to kiss her. The man then turned her оver, and the two had sexual intercourse. P.M. stayed in bed until after the man left and after a few minutes, thought it was strange that her husband had not said goodbye. P.M. got out of bed and went to the front door, which was slightly ajar. She looked through the door and realized that her husband’s truck wasn’t there. She then paged her husband, thinking he was nearby. When he *741 called back, however, P.M. discovered her husband was in another town.
Numerous cases have involved claims that an extraneous offense and the charged offense were not substantially similar enough to warrant the admission into evidence of an extraneous offense. For example, in
Walker v. State,
the court found the two offenses at issue to be sufficiently similar.
By contrast, in
Ford v. State,
the Court of Criminal Appeals found that the two offenses at issue were not sufficiently similar to warrant admission into evidence of the extraneous offense.
In reaching its conclusion, the court recognized that:
“there will always be similarities in the commission of the same type of crime. That is, any case of robbery by firearms is quite likely to have been committed in much the same way as any other. What must be shown to make the evidence of the extraneous crime admissible is something that sets it apart from its class or type of crime in general, and marks it distinctively in the same manner as the principal crime.”
Id. (emphasis added).
Unlike in
Walker
and in
Clarke,
where the assailant either took all coins except pennies from his victim, or forced the victims to wash themselves after the offense, there is nothing in this case that would act as the “signature” of the perpetratоr and affirmatively link the charged offense to the extraneous offense. Although the two offenses share some similarities, we find those similarities are not substantial enough to warrant the admissibility of the extraneous conduct testimony. Both rapes occurred within the city limits of Crystal City during the early morning hours while both victims were sleeping. In each ease, the assailant entered the premises without the consent of the victim and raped each victim in a common sexual position. None of these similarities would mark both offenses as the “handiwork of the accused.” Instead, the similarities are “more in the nature of the similarities common to the type of crime itself, [rape], rather than similarities рeculiar to both offenses” involved here.
Ford,
Harm Analysis
Upon reaching the conclusion that the trial court erroneously admitted the extraneous offense evidence, we must determine whether such error was harmless. The erroneous admission of an extraneous offense does not constitute constitutional error.
See Phelps v. State,
999
*742
S.W.2d 512, 520 (Tex.App.-Eastland 1999, pet. filed);
Garza v. State,
Clearly, the introduction of P.M.’s rape to prove Avila committed the charged offense would adversely affect the jury’s verdict. Given the lack of unique similarities between the two offenses, we do not find that the extraneous offense was relevant to the issue of identity.
See
Tex.R. Evid. 404(b);
Bishop,
Legal and Factual Sufficiency
In addition, Avila complains that the evidence is both legally and factually insufficient to sustain his conviction. Specifically he argues there is no evidence that proves he is the person who committed the offense. A challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence must be addressed before disposing of a case even though a reversal of the case might be based on other grounds.
Hooker v. State,
Standard of Review
In analyzing the legal sufficiency of the evidence, we review only the evidence that supports the verdict to determine whether a rational trier of fact could have found beyond a reasonable doubt all the elements of the offense charged.
See Jackson v. Virginia,
In reviewing a challenge to the factual sufficiency of the evidence, we consider all of the evidence without substituting our judgment for that of the trier of fact.
See Clewis v. State,
Discussion
Avila asserts that the evidence is both legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction. Specifically, he contends that evidence of his “mere presence” is not enough to prove identity. Avila suggests that because the Statе’s DNA *743 evidence was never affirmatively linked to him, and because the extraneous conduct evidence is not sufficiently similar to the present offense to be admissible, his conviction cannot be sustained.
In conducting a sufficiency of the evidence review, we examine all of the evidence, both admissible and inadmissible, that supports the vеrdict.
See Gardner,
The State additionally introduced evidence of another rape as extraneous conduct evidence of Avila’s guilt. The DNA evidence drawn from the second rape investigation contains the same genetic markers as the first, and in neither cаse can Avila be excluded from being a potential contributor of that genetic material. This evidence, viewed in a light most favorable to the jury verdict, allows us to conclude that a jury could have found beyond a reasonable doubt that Avila committed the charged offense.
Avila also challenges the factual sufficiency of thе evidence against him. However, because our disposition of a prior issue requires this case to be remanded to the trial court, we need not address his contention.
See Howley v. State,
Conclusion
Because we find the trial judge erroneously admitted harmful extraneous offense evidence, we reverse Avila’s conviction and remand the cause to the trial court for further proceedings.
