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Date: 02-13-2021

Case Style:

Terry Lynn Terlaje v. The State of Texas

Case Number: 02-19-00356-CR

Judge: Mike Wallach

Court: Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth

Plaintiff's Attorney: Joseph W. Spence
Joshua Lewellyn

Defendant's Attorney:


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Fort Worth, TX - Criminal defense attorney represented Terry Lynn Terlaje with a Sexual Assault charge.



In 2011, Terlaje pled guilty pursuant to a plea bargain to sexually assaulting the
adult sister of his then girlfriend. Honoring the bargain, the trial court placed Terlaje
on DFAJ for six years and imposed a $600 fine and community-supervision
conditions, including requirements that Terlaje “[c]ommit no offense against the laws
of this State” and that he “[c]omply with sex offender registration procedures as
required by the laws of this State.”1
1
In the spring of 2016, after Terlaje pled true to allegations that he had violated
other community-supervision conditions, the trial court extended his DFAJ for two
more years.
3
Because of Terlaje’s sexual assault conviction, he had a lifetime duty to register
as a sex offender. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. arts. 62.001(5)(A) (defining
“[r]eportable conviction or adjudication” to include a deferred adjudication for sexual
assault), 62.001(6)(A) (defining “[s]exually violent offense” to include sexual assault),
62.101(a)(1) (providing that a person with a reportable conviction or adjudication for
a sexually violent offense has a lifetime duty to register as a sex offender). Specifically,
Terlaje was required to report to the “local law enforcement authority” to verify his
registration annually within thirty days of his December birthday for the rest of his
life. Id. art. 62.058(a), (c), (e); see also id. art. 62.051. If he did not reside at a physical
address when verifying his registration annually, he was required to provide “a
detailed description of each geographical location at which he “reside[d] or intend[ed]
to reside.” Id. art. 62.051(c)(1-a). If he did not have “a physical address assigned by a
governmental entity,” he was also required to provide the “local law enforcement
authority” with “a detailed description of the geographical location where [he]
reside[d] or intend[ed] to reside for more than [seven] days” and to report at least
every thirty days to confirm his location until he had a physical address. Id. art.
62.055(i).
Terlaje was also required to comply with other sex offender statutes. For
example, he was required to notify both his community-supervision officer and the
“local law enforcement authority” at least seven days before an intended move and
within seven days after a move. Id. art. 62.055(a).
4
In April 2011, a week after Terlaje was placed on DFAJ, a Tarrant County
community-supervision officer discussed the registration rules and laws with Terlaje at
length, warning him that failure to comply would result in a new felony charge. As
early as September 2012, Terlaje signed a Texas Department of Safety (DPS) form
stating the registration requirements and initialed each requirement. In 2013, when
Terlaje lost his housing, his community-supervision officer instructed him to check in
daily with the address of where he would be staying that night until he found a
permanent place.
After Terlaje lost another permanent residence in December 2014, his
community-supervision officer suggested that he stay at the Fort Worth Presbyterian
Night Shelter. Terlaje wanted to sleep in his car and told the community-supervision
officer that the Fort Worth Police Department (FWPD) would allow him to do that if
he slept within a two-block radius of the shelter, but even if the FWPD would have
countenanced that arrangement, the community-supervision department did not.
Terlaje began staying at the shelter and soon became a resident. As a resident of the
shelter, unlike an overnight guest, he had a guaranteed bed each night. Nevertheless,
Terlaje told his community-supervision officer that he would have to check in
monthly with the FWPD because the shelter was listed as his residence.
5
In December 2015 and December 2016, in accordance with the FWPD’s2
policy at the time, Terlaje verified his address on the DPS Sex Offender Registry form
(registration form) used by the FWPD as “[t]ransient within two blocks of
2400 Cyprus Street [(the shelter’s street address)] in Fort Worth” even though he was
a resident of the shelter. However, between 2016 and 2017, the FWPD dropped the
“two-block rule.” Because sex offenders residing in homeless shelters had
government-assigned physical addresses (the shelters’ addresses), the FWPD no
longer considered them transient. Sex offenders who were transient, on the other
hand, were required to give a detailed geographical description of where they lived. See
id. art. 62.055(i). Terlaje’s annual registration form for 2017 showed that his primary
address was 2400 Cypress Street; the “transient within two blocks of” language that
had been in his two prior annual forms was absent.
Terlaje remained a resident of the shelter until late June 2018. In June 2017, the
shelter had placed Terlaje in the Rapid Rehousing program, which would assist with
finding him permanent housing and help him with rent for six months. In January
2018, Terlaje told the community-supervision officer that he was worried that the
program would not work for him because even after six months of financial
2
One of the State’s theories was that Terlaje had moved to the Euless
apartment of his girlfriend and children. Without addressing the strength of the
evidence supporting that theory, we resolve this case based on the theory that after his
discharge from the shelter, Terlaje resided in Fort Worth. Thus, Terlaje’s “local law
enforcement authority” for the purposes of this opinion was the FWPD.
6
assistance, he would be unable to afford rent on his own and could get evicted and
become homeless again. In April 2018, Terlaje told the community-supervision officer
that his caseworker at the shelter had told him to develop a plan to leave the shelter.
In June 2018, Terlaje quit the Rapid Rehousing program. In addition to the reasons he
had given his community-supervision officer, Terlaje also testified that he was afraid
that after an eviction, he would have an even harder time finding housing for his
girlfriend, children, and himself in the future due to his status as a sex offender.
After Terlaje quit the Rapid Rehousing program, the shelter discharged him as
a resident. He could have chosen to return to the shelter as an overnight guest, but
Terlaje worked days in Irving, so he likely would have seldom appeared at the shelter
soon enough to secure a bed under the first-come, first-served system the shelter used
for accepting overnight guests. According to the shelter’s vice-president of operations,
Terlaje never checked into the shelter again after June 25, 2018.
Although Terlaje informed his girlfriend that the shelter had kicked him out,
and although the only place his boss “knew that he lived was . . . in his car,” Terlaje
did not report to the FWPD or to his community-supervision officer that he was no
longer a resident at the shelter and did not modify his registration records. In his
December 12, 2018 registration form, he again stated that he was living at
2400 Cypress Street, giving no geographic details of where he lived even though he
had not lived in the shelter for almost six months. Above his signature, the form
stated in bold, “I verify the above information is complete and accurate.” Below his
7
thumbprint, the signed form stated in bold, “This is a true and exact copy of
information sent electronically to [DPS].”
Officer Andrew Dilbeck of the FWPD Sex Offender Registration Tracking
(SORT) unit testified that the information gathered during a registrant’s yearly update
is uploaded to the statewide sex offender database kept by DPS. Admitted through
Officer Dilbeck was Defendant’s Exhibit 1, a printout of a computer screen from the
DPS Texas Secure Sex Offender Registry setting forth details of Terlaje’s most recent
annual update, including the reported residential address. Unlike the 2018 FWPD
registration form, the printout stated that as of December 12, 2018, Terlaje’s address
was “transient, within two blocks of 2400 Cypress Street.” Like the FWPD
registration form, the unsigned printout also purported to be “a true and exact copy
of information sent electronically to [DPS].”
Terlaje’s trial counsel questioned Officer Dilbeck about the discrepancy
between the 2018 FWPD registration form and the DPS Registry printout—that is,
why one showed that Terlaje resided at 2400 Cypress Street and the other showed that
he lived within two blocks of that address. Officer Dilbeck explained that the DPS
record should mirror Terlaje’s latest annual registration form. Regardless, since Terlaje
reported 2400 Cypress Street as his address to the FWPD and in the 2018 FWPD
registration form, the FWPD understood that Terlaje claimed to live inside the
shelter.
8
Officer Thomas Johnson, the FWPD SORT officer who met with Terlaje for
his 2018 registration, had been in the SORT unit for only a few weeks at that time and
less than a year by the time of the revocation hearing. Officer Johnson had never used
the two-block rule. However, he had seen the term in registration documents that
officers (not DPS) uploaded to the DPS website. Officer Johnson testified that for
transients, he would ask for both a block number and a geographical location: “[I]f
they’re staying under a tree, . . . I get a description of that tree.” Had Terlaje told
Officer Johnson that he was living in his car, that information would have been noted
on the registration form’s address. It was not.
Johnson stated that as of the 2019 revocation hearing, he asked registrants
claiming shelter addresses if they lived inside or outside and for geographic details of
where those who lived outside stayed but that he probably did not ask those questions
of Terlaje. Instead, when Terlaje gave him the shelter’s address with no further
information, Johnson would have presumed that Terlaje lived inside the shelter.
In March 2019, Officer Dilbeck conducted a compliance check at the shelter to
confirm that Terlaje was living at his reported address and discovered that Terlaje was
not living there. After further investigation, Officer Dilbeck secured a warrant for
Terlaje’s arrest and discussed the matter with Terlaje’s community-supervision officer.
Evidence conflicted on whether Terlaje told a community-supervision officer
that he had been discharged from the shelter. Although Terlaje testified that he was
pretty sure that he had told one of his community-supervision officers that the shelter
9
had kicked him out, State’s Exhibit 22, the community-supervision department’s
chronological record of its contacts with Terlaje, did not show that he had done so
before his community-supervision officer brought it up on the day of his arrest.
Similarly, Terlaje’s community-supervision officer testified that even though she had
covered basic address and information update questions at every meeting with him,
Terlaje did not tell her that he had moved out of the shelter and was living in his car
until after the FWPD contacted her about his failure to update his registration, and
then only after she initiated the discussion. Even in that discussion, Terlaje lied, telling
her that he had been discharged from the shelter in November 2018, not June 2018.
The community-supervision department’s chronology of contacts with Terlaje
showed that before a warrant was issued for his arrest, he not only had several
opportunities to tell his assigned community-supervision officer but also had
numerous chances to tell field community-supervision officers who visited him at the
shelter that he had been discharged as a resident of the shelter and was instead
sleeping in his car. He never volunteered the information.
Terlaje testified that after his discharge from the shelter, 99% of the time he
slept in his car in the shelter’s parking lot or on the street near it. Officer Dilbeck
testified that the shelter did not allow people to sleep in their vehicles in the shelter’s
parking lot and that there was no parking in front of the shelter. The shelter’s vicepresident of operations testified that the shelter did not allow people to stay in their
vehicle in the shelter parking lot and that he had called the police to tow unauthorized
10
vehicles from the lot. He also testified that street parking around the shelter was
limited, with a few legal spaces during the day. Most of the spaces in front of the
shelter were “no parking” spaces, but people parked there occasionally. There were no
legal overnight parking spaces. He conceded that his workdays ended at 6:00 p.m., so
he would not know what happened at night.
The State filed a petition to adjudicate alleging that Terlaje had violated the
terms and conditions of his DFAJ by committing “the offense of SEX OFFENDERS
DUTY TO REGISTER LIFE/ANNUALLY on or about” March 12, 2019.3 The trial
court interpreted the alleged offense as “the offense of failure to register, sex offender
duty to register for life annually, and that occurred on or about the 12th day of March
of 2019 in Tarrant County, Texas,” and stated that “[t]he December [2018]
registration is the most recent and is the basis and the period under which these
accusations fall.”
Despite the conflict between Terlaje’s 2018 registration form and the printout
from the DPS website, the trial court held that the two-block rule did not satisfy “the
detailed description of the geographical location” statutorily required by homeless
registrants. See id. arts. 62.051(c)(1-a), 62.055(i). The trial court ruled that by proving
that Terlaje was no longer living inside the shelter, the State proved the alleged
3
The petition did not specify which community-supervision conditions Terlaje
had allegedly violated; Terlaje does not raise a related complaint.
11
violation of his conditions of community supervision. After adjudicating Terlaje’s guilt
and sentencing him, the trial court indicated that a higher court could clarify “the legal
issue [whether] living in a car on the premises count[s] if [the registrant is] not in the
physical location of a government-established address,” but the trial court also
indicated that the resolution of that issue “wouldn’t necessarily clear” Terlaje. The trial
court did not find Terlaje credible.
II. Discussion
In his sole point, Terlaje contends that the trial court abused its discretion by
revoking his DFAJ and adjudicating his guilt.
A. Standard of Review
In a revocation proceeding, the State must prove by a preponderance of the
evidence that the defendant violated at least one of the terms and conditions of
community supervision. Bryant v. State, 391 S.W.3d 86, 93 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012);
Rickels v. State, 202 S.W.3d 759, 763–64 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006). That is, the State
must prove that the greater weight of credible evidence creates a reasonable belief that
the defendant violated a community-supervision condition. Hacker v. State, 389 S.W.3d
860, 865 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013); Rickels, 202 S.W.3d at 764. The trial court is the sole
judge of the witnesses’ credibility and the weight to be given their testimony, and we
review the evidence in the light most favorable to the trial court’s ruling. Hacker,
389 S.W.3d at 865; Cardona v. State, 665 S.W.2d 492, 493 (Tex. Crim. App. 1984).
Regardless of the reasons given by the trial court for revoking community supervision,
12
if there is evidence supporting the court’s decision, we will not disturb it on
appeal. Lennox v. State, No. 14-99-00205-CR, 2000 WL 424022, at *2 (Tex. App.—
Houston [14th Dist.] Apr. 20, 2000, pet. ref’d) (not designated for publication); Willis
v. State, 2 S.W.3d 397, 399 (Tex. App.—Austin 1999, no pet.).
B. Substantive Law
A person commits the offense of failing to register as a sex offender if he is
required to so register and fails to comply with any requirement of Chapter 62 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure. Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 62.102(a); Febus v. State,
542 S.W.3d 568, 573 (Tex. Crim. App. 2018). The culpable mental states of
knowledge and recklessness attach to the duty-to-register element; no culpable mental
state attaches to the failure-to-comply element. Robinson v. State, 466 S.W.3d 166,
172 (Tex. Crim. App. 2015).
That Terlaje was required to register is not at issue. As a sex offender, Terlaje
had a lifetime duty to register as a sex offender and was required to update his
registration every year within thirty days of his birthday. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc.
Ann. arts. 62.001(5)(A), 62.058(a). Among other items, the registration form requires
“the address at which the person resides or intends to reside or, if the person does not
reside or intend to reside at a physical address, a detailed description of each
geographical location at which the person resides or intends to reside.” Id. art.
62.051(c)(1-a). When verifying registration, a sex offender must “ensure that [his]
registration form is complete and accurate with respect to each item of information
13
required by the form in accordance with Subsection (c).” Id. art. 62.051(g). A sex
offender “may not refuse or otherwise fail to provide any information required for the
accurate completion of the registration form.” Id. art. 62.051(k).
Terlaje was also required to report an intended address change at least seven
days in advance to the FWPD and his community-supervision officer and provide
them with the new address and his anticipated move date. Id. art. 62.055(a). Evidence
that a registered address has been vacated as of a particular day is evidence that a
registrant intended to move on that date, Gilder v. State, 469 S.W.3d 636, 640–41 (Tex.
App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2015, pet. ref’d), and evidence that a registrant was living
at a new address as of a particular date was sufficient to show an intent to move on
that date, Thomas v. State, 444 S.W.3d 4, 9–10 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014). “[W]itnesses’
testimony is circumstantial evidence that is as probative as direct evidence in
establishing [a registrant’s] intent to change his address and establish a residence . . . .”
Julian v. State, 492 S.W.3d 462, 467 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2016, no pet.)
(internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
Finally, if Terlaje did not have “a physical address assigned by a governmental
unit,” he was required to provide the proper authority with “a detailed description of
the geographical location where [he] reside[d] or intend[ed] to reside for more than
[seven] days” and to report to the FWPD at least every thirty days to confirm his
location until he had a physical address. Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 62.055(i).
14
C. Analysis
On appeal, the parties appear to agree that the alleged offense of failure to
register as a sex offender was based on Terlaje’s failure to report a change of address
after the shelter discharged him. Terlaje’s theory of the case at the revocation hearing
was and on appeal is that he never moved from the shelter. Terlaje does not challenge
the statutory requirement that he provide a “detailed description of the geographical
location” where he resided after the shelter discharged him, even though it is this
requirement upon which the trial court based its finding that Terlaje had violated the
condition of community supervision requiring that he commit no new offense.
Instead, Terlaje relies on the two-block rule. He argues that the two-block rule is a
DPS rule that he followed: he did not change his address, he remained homeless, he
slept in his car within two blocks of the shelter, as required by DPS, and he reported
the shelter’s address to the FWPD. The State responds that the trial court did not
abuse its discretion by revoking Terlaje’s DFAJ and adjudicating his guilt, that the
two-block rule the FWPD (not DPS) had applied in the past no longer applied by
Terlaje’s 2017 annual registration, that by living in his car near the shelter Terlaje was
not residing in the shelter, and that he failed to report that change of address.
4
4
We do not reach the State’s alternative theory that Terlaje had moved in with
his family in their Euless apartment after he left the shelter in June 2018. See Tex. R.
App. 47.1.
15
We hold that neither the record nor Terlaje’s brief demonstrates that the twoblock rule is a DPS mandate and that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by
revoking Terlaje’s community supervision and adjudicating his guilt for sexual assault.
The evidence sufficiently showed that in the period between June 25, 2018, and
March 12, 2019, when Officer Dilbeck discovered that Terlaje no longer resided in
the shelter, Terlaje violated Chapter 62’s registration requirements by not updating his
address in his 2018 annual verification to the FWPD. See id. art. 62.051. Even if the
trial court had believed that Terlaje was living within a two-block radius of the shelter
after leaving the shelter, Terlaje nevertheless failed to apprise the FWPD of that
change because he did not provide the FWPD “a detailed description of the
geographical location where [he] reside[d] or intend[ed] to reside for more than
[seven] days.” Id. 62.051(c)(1-a). He also failed to apprise his community-supervision
officer of his address change. See id. art. 62.055(a). Finally, in his monthly FWPD
check-ins since his discharge from the shelter, he failed to provide “a detailed
description of the applicable location or locations” where he was residing. See id. art.
62.055(i).
Terlaje premises his argument on the assumption that DPS created the twoblock rule. Nothing in the record or Terlaje’s brief supports that assumption. Instead,
the evidence shows that the two-block rule was a guideline the FWPD formerly used
for enforcing registration requirements on homeless registrants and that the FWPD
stopped using that guideline by the time Terlaje updated his registration for 2017. Our
16
own research shows no other genesis for any two-block rule. See 37 Tex. Admin.
Code Ann. §§ 37.1–.3 (listing DPS’s “Sex Offender Registration” provisions).
Terlaje highlights Officer Dilbeck’s incorrect testimony indicating that the
relevant statutes in Chapter 62 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure governing
homeless registrants had recently changed before Terlaje’s 2017 registration. While we
agree with Terlaje that the relevant provisions in Chapter 62 did not change between
2015 and 2018, they did change in 2009,5 and viewing the evidence in the light most
favorable to the trial court’s decision, see Hacker, 389 S.W.3d at 865; Cardona,
665 S.W.2d at 493, the FWPD updated its policy in 2017 to better track the statutory
language. The absence of the “transient within two blocks of” language from Terlaje’s
2017 registration form supports that inference.
Terlaje also focuses on a discrepancy between the December 12,
2018 registration form and the printout of information purporting to be from the
same date that appeared on the DPS Registry. Terlaje’s December 12,
2018 registration form filed with the FWPD provided that he was living at
2400 Cypress Street, with no detailed geographic description of where he was staying,
even though he had not lived in the shelter for more than five months. Terlaje
verified by his signature that the information was “complete and accurate,” and the
5
Act of May 31, 2009, 81st Leg., R.S., ch. 661, § 2, art. 62.051(c)(1), §§ 4, 5, art.
62.055(i), 2009 Tex. Gen. Laws 1481, 1483 (eff. Sept. 1, 2009) (current versions at
Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. arts. 62.051(c)(1), 62.055(i)).
17
form stated that it was “a true and exact copy of information sent electronically to
[DPS].” However, the DPS Registry printout provided that as of December 12, 2018,
Terlaje’s address was transient, within two blocks of 2400 Cypress Street. This
printout also claimed to be “a true and exact copy of information sent electronically
to [DPS].”
It is on this DPS Registry printout that Terlaje premises his theory that DPS
issued the two-block mandate and that we are bound by it. However, no source
Terlaje relies on in his brief transforms the DPS Registry printout to a DPS rule.
Instead, as the conflicting 2018 registration form and 2018 DPS Registry printout
both provide, they are “information” sent to DPS; that is, the conflicting documents
are mere evidence. We review the evidence in the light most favorable to the trial
court’s ruling. See Hacker, 389 S.W.3d at 865; Cardona, 665 S.W.2d at 493. We
therefore hold that the evidence supports the trial court’s implicit decision that the
two-block rule was a former FWPD guideline that was no longer in use by June 2018.
Officer Johnson’s testimony that DPS did not enter the information in the registry
only strengthens this conclusion.
In a footnote, Terlaje also argues,
Should the Court not find that the rules, practices and procedures
promulgated by DPS are preeminent, the rule of lenity would demand
that [Terlaje’s] interpretation should control. Under section 311.035 of
the Government Code, a statute or rule outside of the Penal Code or
Health & Safety Code that creates or defines a criminal offense or
penalty shall be construed in favor of the actor if any part of the statute
or rule is ambiguous on its face or as applied to the case. See Tex. Gov’t
18
Code Ann. § 311.035; see also State v. Cortez, 543 S.W.3d 198, 210 (Tex.
Crim. App. 2018) (citing United States v. Santos, 553 U.S. 507, 514, 128 S.
Ct. 2020 (2008) (“Under a long line of our decisions, the tie must go to
the defendant.”). Here, the Code of Criminal Procedure is outside of the
Penal Code and Health & Safety Code, and a rule or statute is
ambiguous as applied in this case. Under such circumstances, the United
States Supreme Court has directed that, “the tie must go to the
defendant.” United States v. Santos, 553 U.S. at 514.
We have held that neither the evidence nor Terlaje’s briefing shows that DPS
promulgated the former two-block rule. Beyond his rejected arguments that DPS
created a mandatory two-block rule, Terlaje does not offer a statutory interpretation,
nor does he identify which “rule or statute” is ambiguous as applied to this case. We
decline to make his arguments for him. See Tex. R. App. P. 38.1(i); cf. Jackson v. State,
424 S.W.3d 140, 155 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2014, pet. ref’d) (holding that appellant’s
discussing the legal requirements for the exclusion of evidence under Rule
403 without analyzing, arguing, or citing to the record to support his contention that
the trial court erred by admitting objected-to evidence presented nothing for review).
To show that he had not moved and that the FWPD knew he was homeless,
Terlaje points out that he reported to the FWPD every thirty days, as required for
registrants who are transient. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 62.055(i)(1). Terlaje
argues that reporting monthly would make no sense unless he had been told to do so
based on his homeless status. The record shows, however, that Terlaje began
reporting monthly in early 2015, soon after he moved to the shelter, and that he had
told his community-supervision officer that he was required to report to the FWPD
19
monthly as long as he lived at the shelter. Consequently, the record ties Terlaje’s
monthly reporting to his continuing to reside at the shelter, not to his alleged
homelessness after his discharge from the shelter. The record does not show that he
ever stopped reporting monthly, supporting the inference that he did not. See Hacker,
389 S.W.3d at 865; Cardona, 665 S.W.2d at 493. Thus, that Terlaje was still reporting
monthly to the FWPD after moving from the shelter—whether to his car within a
two-block radius of the shelter or to some other location or locations—did not
demonstrate that where he resided remained constant after his June 2018 discharge
from the shelter, nor did it show that he had notified the FWPD that he had been
discharged from the shelter or was homeless, nor did it show that he provided the
FWPD with a new physical address or “a detailed description of the applicable
location or locations” where he resided if he resided more than seven days at a place
which the government had not assigned a physical address. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc.
Ann. arts. 62.051, 62.055(a), (i). His continued monthly reporting to the FWPD
signaled neither the FWPD nor his community-supervision officer of the change in
his residence; it signaled no change at all.
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to revocation, we hold that
the State sufficiently proved that Terlaje had committed the new offense of failing to
register as a sex offender. First, the evidence showed that Terlaje knew he had a duty
to register as a sex offender and was aware of the related requirements. See Febus,
542 S.W.3d 573, 576. A Tarrant County community-supervision officer discussed the
20
registration rules and laws with Terlaje at length within a week of his being placed on
DFAJ, and in September 2012, he signed and initialed a DPS form reciting the
registration requirements, including those applicable to people not living at a physical
address.
Second, the State also sufficiently proved that Terlaje had failed to comply with
registration requirements of Chapter 62 by reporting that he lived at the shelter when
he did not. See, e.g., Evans v. State, No. 13-18-00658-CR, 2019 WL 3955459, at *2 (Tex.
App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg Aug. 22, 2019, no pet.) (mem. op., not designated
for publication) (holding that even if the trial court believed appellant had stayed at
the shelter that he had represented was his address for one night, the State had
sufficiently proved that appellant had violated a community-supervision condition and
sex-offender registration requirements by not registering a new address thereafter).
Neither the State nor Terlaje dispute that he was discharged from the shelter on June
25, 2018. Evidence that Terlaje was discharged from the shelter on that date and did
not stay there afterward is evidence of intent to move on that date. See Gilder,
469 S.W.3d at 640–41. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the ruling,
it showed that in the almost nine months since Terlaje had resided in the shelter, he
had numerous chances to inform the FWPD and the community-supervision
department that he no longer resided there, but he did not inform them.
Even if the two-block rule had still been in force, the trial court did not believe
Terlaje’s representations that after the shelter discharged him, he slept in his car
21
within view of the shelter, whether in front of it, across the street, or in its parking lot,
99% of the time. See Colyer v. State, 428 S.W.3d 117, 122 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014)
(noting that a factfinder has discretion to believe uncontroverted testimony). Further,
the State had no duty to prove where Terlaje resided after the shelter discharged him.
It was sufficient for the State to establish that he stopped residing in the shelter
without timely informing the proper authorities. See Thomas, 444 S.W.3d at 10–11;
Burnett v. State, 506 S.W.3d 545, 549 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2016, pet. ref’d).
Accordingly, we hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by revoking
Terlaje’s DFAJ, adjudicating his guilt, and sentencing him. We overrule Terlaje’s sole
point.
D. Correcting the Judgment
We note that although the record shows that Terlaje pled “not true” to the
alleged violation, the trial court’s written judgment incorrectly reflects that he pled
“true.” An appellate court may modify the trial court’s judgment to make the record
speak the truth if the court has the necessary data and evidence to do so. Tex. R. App.
P. 43.2(b); Bigley v. State, 865 S.W.2d 26, 27–28 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993). We therefore
modify the trial court’s judgment to reflect a plea of “Not True” to the petition to
adjudicate.

Outcome: Having overruled Terlaje’s sole point, we affirm the trial court’s judgment as
modified.

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