Alexander v. People

60 V.I. 486, 2014 WL 323063, 2014 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 10
CourtSupreme Court of The Virgin Islands
DecidedJanuary 29, 2014
DocketS.Ct. Criminal No. 2012-0020
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 60 V.I. 486 (Alexander v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. People, 60 V.I. 486, 2014 WL 323063, 2014 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 10 (virginislands 2014).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

(January 29, 2014)

Swan, Associate Justice.

Jensen Ken Alexander was convicted of several crimes including rape and murder which he committed at Mandahl Beach in St. Thomas. Alexander asserts a number of evidentiary errors during the trial and additionally challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to convict him. Because we find that no reversible error was committed during trial, and that the evidence was sufficient to convict on all charges, we affirm.

[491]*491I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Jensen Ken Alexander and Katanio Peets operated a small tourist attraction with their turtles at the Drake’s Seat historical site. While working at Drake’s Seat in the early afternoon of October 13, 2009, Alexander and Peets happenstancely encountered D.S. and Dennis Richardson. Richardson and D.S. invited Alexander and Peets to Mandahl Beach where Richardson and D.S. had been camping for the past three days. All four spent the remainder of the day at Mandahl Beach drinking, playing dominoes, and socializing. At some juncture, D.S. and Alexander went further down the beach to a secluded area to swim by themselves. (J.A. at 223.)

While at the beach, an altercation ensued between Alexander and Richardson allegedly because Alexander fondled D.S.’s crotch. During the verbal altercation, Richardson broke a window on Alexander’s truck. Alexander threatened that Richardson would pay for what he had done. Alexander called the police. {Id. at 227.) The police responded to the disturbance and ordered everyone to leave the beach. Peets and Alexander departed the beach. (J.A. at 168.) However, D.S. and Richardson could not find the keys to Richardson’s vehicle and decided to remain on the beach until morning. The police returned to the beach and instructed D.S. and Richardson to leave the beach because it was not safe and offered them transportation. (J.A. at 232-33.) D.S. and Richardson declined the offer, remained on the beach, and slept in their two-person tent.

Late that night, Peets and Alexander returned to Mandahl Beach on their way to a nightclub because Alexander thought he had left his cell phone on the beach. There are two divergent versions of what occurred next. D.S. testified that she awoke on the morning of October 14, 2009 to find Alexander on top of her in the tent, and Peets lying on top of a seemingly lifeless Richardson. (J.A. at 172.) She further testified that Alexander cut off her bathing suit with a knife and told her menacingly, “you will fuck me bitch.” (J.A. at 170.) D.S. made eye contact with Peets and begged him for help, but Peets did not respond to her directly. {Id. at 172.) Peets stated to Alexander, “[l]et her go. I think we’ve killed him. Let her go.” {Id.) However, Alexander proceeded to drag by her hair a completely naked D.S. out of the tent. After Alexander dragged her out of the tent, D.S. testified that Peets was nowhere to be found and that Alexander, by knife point, proceeded to sexually and physically assault her for the next hour. (J.A. at 176.)

[492]*492On the other hand, Peets testified to his version of the facts, recounting that when he and Alexander drove onto the beach, D.S. and Richardson exited their tent upon hearing the vehicle. Peets further testified that an argument ensued between Alexander, Richardson and D.S. During the argument, Alexander exclaimed that “someone is gonna pay for [his] windshield now.” (J.A. at 64.) The argument became very contentious, prompting Alexander to brandish a knife at D.S. (Id.) Peets testified that during this verbal altercation, he tried to act as peace maker and calm everybody down. D.S. attempted to retreat into the tent and Alexander proceeded to follow her. When Richardson attempted to assist D.S., Peets restrained Richardson and informed him that Alexander had a knife and would harm him. Alexander pulled D.S. out of the tent by her hair. (Id.) Peets testified that he screamed for Alexander to release her. Alexander, however, proceeded to cut off D.S.’s bathing suit with a knife. Richardson pleaded with Peets to help him to do something about the situation. (Id.) Peets stated that at this juncture he had enough of the situation and retreated to Alexander’s vehicle intending to leave and seek help. When Peets looked behind him, he saw Alexander and Richardson engaged in a fracas.

Peets sat in the vehicle and attempted for about five to seven minutes to start the ignition without keys because the truck’s keys had been stolen during a prior forced entry into the vehicle. (J.A. at 68.) When Peets succeeded in starting the vehicle, the scene became quiet; therefore, he proceeded to locate the others. He saw Richardson’s lifeless corpse on the ground and said to Alexander “I think you kill him. Let’s go. Let’s go.” (J.A. at 547.) Alexander did not respond. Peets testified that he did not see Alexander raping D.S. (Id. at 70-71.) Peets left the beach without Alexander, and as he left the beach Peets saw D.S. walking “back and forth.” (Id. at 547-48.)

Peets returned to the beach sometime later and saw Alexander shirtless, wearing boxer shorts, and covered in blood. (Id. at 551.) He saw D.S. run toward the bushes near the water completely naked. (Id. at 552.) After he persuaded Alexander to enter the vehicle, Peets remarked; “you know that man dead right?” To which Alexander responded that he did not know he was stabbing him that hard. As they drove away from the beach, Alexander gave his knife to Peets who threw it outside the vehicle. (J.A. at 553.)

[493]*493D.S. testified that she was able to escape from Alexander’s onslaught of sexual assault and physical abuse when he was briefly distracted. She ran from the scene and jumped into a salt pond where she was able to swim out to sea and emerge on the other side of the beach. D.S. climbed onto shore and went down a nearby road until she came to the home of Brenda Walwyn. Naked and barefoot, she approached the house and knocked on the door. Walwyn allowed D.S. into her home, gave her some clothing, and called the police. (J.A. at 325-28.) D.S. was taken to Schneider Regional Medical Center where a rape exam was conducted upon her. (J.A. at 431.)

Alexander and Peets were subsequently arrested for the incidents of October 14 which resulted in the rape of D.S. and the murder of Richardson. Alexander was also taken to the hospital for injuries he received during his altercation with Richardson. Peets consummated a plea agreement with the People in which he pled guilty to being an accessory after the fact to the crimes committed by Alexander in exchange for his testimony against Alexander. Alexander was charged in an eight-count Information with the following: Count I, first degree murder in the killing of Richardson; Count II, aggravated rape in the first degree; Count III, aggravated rape in the first degree; Count IV, first degree rape; Count V, first degree rape; Count VI, first degree assault; Count VII, first degree assault; and Count VIII, carrying or using a dangerous weapon during the commission of a rape.1

After a jury adjudged Alexander guilty of all counts, he was sentenced to life imprisonment without parole for Count I, first degree murder.2 For Count II, aggravated rape in the first degree, he received 25 years imprisonment to be served concurrently with his sentence for Count I.3

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 V.I. 486, 2014 WL 323063, 2014 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-people-virginislands-2014.