OPINION ON APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
Appellant was charged and convicted of sexually molesting his own eleven year old daughter. He received a sentence of twenty years’ confinement. The Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction.
Brewington v. State,
Appellant never attempted to contest the merits of the allegations that he molested his daughter; his only defense to the prosecution was that the offense took place in Amarillo, not El Paso as alleged in the indictment. After it was revealed that this *692 would be his defense, the prosecutor sought to introduce testimony that appellant was a pedophile, explaining:
“We, of course, are aware what the defense is in this case: it didn’t happen in El Paso.... The whole idea is that a fixated offender doesn’t stop without intervention and treatment and usually then [it] does not stop and it is absurd to assume [that] since [the complainant] was still within the age that a fixated pedophile would be attracted to, he would ... all of a sudden have stopped since they live in El Paso.”
Thus, it is clear from the record that the prosecutor sought to introduce testimony that appellant was a fixated pedophile solely to prove appellant’s propensity to molest children and that he acted in conformity therewith when he committed the charged offense. Under both the common-law, see
Bell v. State,
Moreover, we cannot say that the impermissible evidence did not contribute to the conviction.
2
As stated previously, appellant’s only defense to the prosecution was lack of jurisdiction in El Paso County — he contended that the offense occurred in another county prior to his moving to El Paso. The State sought to introduce the testimony that he was a pedophile solely to discredit this defense through the testimony’s implication that appellant had continued to molest his children even after he moved to El Paso. The only other evidence of the molestation having occurred in El Paso is that of the eleven year old complainant. Although the complainant was unwavering in her testimony, we cannot say that the impermissible testimony did not contribute to the conviction. Rule 81(b)(2), Tex.R.App.P. See
Bell,
The judgments of the trial court and Court of Appeals are reversed; the cause is remanded to the trial court.
Notes
. Rule 404(a) provides that "[e]vidence of a person's character or a trait of his character is not admissible for the purpose of proving that he acted in conformity therewith on a particular occasion."
. Appellant introduced the same testimony in the punishment phase of trial in an effort to receive a probated sentence with psychiatric help as a condition of probation. But appellant maintained throughout his punishment evidence that he did not molest his children in El Paso County. That is, he never admitted to having committed the crime as alleged in the indictment — only that he was a pedophile.
