Thomas Lee Capps appeals the denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas corpus petition, claiming insufficiency of the evidence, denial of his right to confrontation, and ineffective assistance of counsel. Finding no merit to Capps’ assignments of error, we affirm.
Background
Capps was convicted by a Texas state jury of aggravated rape and sentenced to 75 years imprisonment. At trial the complaining witness testified to the following scenario. She had been introduced to Capps six months earlier and had seen him only briefly on that one occasion. Around 9:30 p.m. on August 19, 1983 Capps unexpectedly came to her trailer home and said he had a message from the friends who had introduced them six months before. That was a ruse; Capps did not have a message but wanted her to go have a drink with him. She declined and he left. Shortly thereafter she retired for the night. Around 1:30 a.m. she was awakened by someone banging on the door. She looked outside and saw a shadowy figure in her yard. Frightened, she called the Sheriff’s Department and reported an intruder. She was holding for the dispatcher when Capps broke open the locked exterior door and came into her bedroom and demanded that she hang up the telephone. Capps threatened to kill her if she was talking to the police. Capps hit her in the face chipping a tooth and, grabbing her by the hair, half-dragged half-pulled her to her vehicle. He drove to a nearby house where he forced her into the bedroom, made her disrobe and, reaching for what he said was a gun, demanded that she fondle him. He then compelled her to engage in sexual intercourse and in oral sex. During the episode Capps repeatedly threatened her. After-wards he again threatened her life if she told what he had done and then reached beside the bed and retrieved a pistol which he brandished.
The court of appeal affirmed the conviction,
Capps v. State,
Analysis
1. Insufficient evidence.
Capps maintains that there was insufficient evidence to sustain his conviction for aggravated rape, arguing the applicability of a heavier burden of proof required before the 1981 amendment to the Texas aggravated rape statute. Capps committed the rape on August 20, 1983. On that date Texas’ aggravated rape statute provided that simple rape became aggravated rape if the defendant,
by acts, words, or deeds occurring in the presence of the victim threatens to cause death, serious bodily injury, or kidnapping to be inflicted on anyone....
Texas Penal Code Ann. § 21.03(a)(3) (Ver
*60
non).
1
The indictment tracked the language of the statute as it read prior to its amendment in 1981, charging that Capps “did compel submission to the rape by threatening the imminent infliction of serious bodily injury and death.”
2
In
Rucker v. State,
The 1981 amendment was intended to overturn the
Rucker
court’s holding of the conduct required for a conviction of aggravated rape.
Richardson v. State,
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, it is manifest that the jury could have found proven, beyond a reasonable doubt, the essential elements of aggravated rape as that crime was defined on the date of the offense.
Jackson v. Virginia,
2. Right to confrontation.
Capps challenges the exclusion of testimony concerning the complainant’s pri- or sexual activities, maintaining that his right to confrontation was abridged. Capps proffered testimony that the complainant had engaged in group sex sessions as evidence of her consent to his advances. Capps was not involved in any of those alleged encounters. Evidence of the victim’s prior sexual activities with persons other than the defendant is not relevant to the question of her consent to sex with the defendant at the time of the charged rape, where, as here, the alleged prior activities are under circumstances radically different from those of the charged offense.
United States v. Kasto,
3. Ineffective assistance of counsel.
Finally, Capps contends that he received ineffective assistance of counsel because his trial attorney did not introduce reputation or opinion evidence of the complainant’s promiscuity, even though the court purportedly would have permitted such. This argument also lacks merit.
To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel a defendant must show that (1) counsel made errors so egregious that he was not functioning as the “counsel” guaranteed by the sixth amendment, and (2) the deficient performance so prejudiced the defense that there is “a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
Strickland v. Washington,
As the Texas appellate court noted in affirming Capps’ conviction,
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Effective September 1, 1983, section 21.03 was replaced by section 22.021.
. The statute was cast in the disjunctive, requiring proof of threats of serious bodily injury or death. Use of the conjunctive rather than the disjunctive in the indictment did not oblige the state to prove both.
See United States v. Anderson,
