Blash v. State

697 S.E.2d 265, 304 Ga. App. 542, 2010 Fulton County D. Rep. 2154, 2010 Ga. App. LEXIS 570
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 22, 2010
DocketA10A0283
StatusPublished

This text of 697 S.E.2d 265 (Blash v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blash v. State, 697 S.E.2d 265, 304 Ga. App. 542, 2010 Fulton County D. Rep. 2154, 2010 Ga. App. LEXIS 570 (Ga. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

BARNES, Presiding Judge.

A jury convicted Joshua Blash of one count of rape and two counts of aggravated sodomy involving two victims. He appeals, contending the evidence against him was insufficient and enumerating 11 additional errors. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

We view the evidence on appeal in the light most favorable to the verdict, and no longer presume the defendant is innocent. We do not weigh the evidence or decide the witnesses’ credibility, but only determine if the evidence is sufficient to sustain the convictions. Brown v. State, 293 Ga. App. 633 (667 SE2d 899) (2008). We construe the evidence and all reasonable inferences from the evidence most strongly in favor of the jury’s verdict. Id.

1. Blash contends the evidence against him was insufficient, because hair from which the State obtained his DNA was not found on the first victim, only in the room where she was assaulted, and because the second victim did not identify him until several years after the assault. He also asserts that the trial court erred in allowing an expert in sexual assault examination to testify regarding the ultimate issue in the rape charge, which was whether the victim had been penetrated.

Viewed most strongly in favor of the verdict, the evidence at trial established that in August 2001, a woman heard her cats making strange noises on her screened-in porch and went out there to find a man climbing through the screen he had just cut. The man immediately began striking the victim in the face with his fists and threatening to kill her. He knocked her down, dragged her into her house, and began pounding her head against the floor, but she continued to fight and managed to kick him off her briefly. She ran into her yard but the assailant came after her and knocked her to the ground again. He pulled her shorts and underwear to the side and put his mouth on her vagina, “saying horrible things,” while the victim continued screaming for help. An elderly neighbor across the street came out of her house and said she had called 911, but the man kept fighting the victim and trying to pull her back inside her house. Twenty minutes after the man began assaulting the victim, a male neighbor finally came to the yard and the assailant ran off. The victim described the man as young, slim, about her height of five feet eight inches, with a medium complexion.

Three months later and a mile and a half away, an elementary *543 school teacher was violently assaulted in her classroom trailer by a young man wearing a bandana tied over his face. The man came into the trailer and sprayed a fire extinguisher at the victim, then punched her in the face, breaking her nose and knocking her to the floor. The two fought, and the victim remembered having her hands in her assailant’s hair. After he threatened to kill her and slammed her head onto the floor, the victim blacked out and came to standing in the doorway of another trailer asking for help. She was wearing her pants but no underwear, and was taken to the hospital for treatment of multiple injuries.

A nurse who was declared an expert in sexual assault examinations testified about the victim’s injuries. The orbits of the victim’s eyes were red and the whites of her eyes were bloody. Her right ear was black and blue, her nose was full of dried blood, the front and right side of her face were “very much traumatized by blunt force,” her nose was cut, she had a bite mark on her hip, and her knees were scraped. The victim suffered numerous injuries around her labia and rectum, including bruising and discoloration, as if someone had used blunt force trauma to try to penetrate her. The nurse also found skin and blood inside the victim’s labia majora.

The nurse indicated in her written report that the victim’s vagina and rectum had been penetrated, based on the blunt force trauma in that area. Although she could not testify for certain that the victim had been penetrated because she found no internal injuries, the external injuries established “the potential to have had penetration.” This testimony was not a comment on the ultimate issue as to whether rape and aggravated sodomy occurred, but was permissible testimony that the victim’s injuries were consistent with penetration. See Gray v. State, 291 Ga. App. 573, 578 (2) (662 SE2d 339) (2008). Further, the witness was properly tendered and accepted as an expert in the subject of sexual assault examinations. Rodriguez v. State, 281 Ga. App. 129, 131-132 (2) (635 SE2d 402) (2006).

A crime scene investigator who processed the scene found fire extinguisher spray and blood on the floor of the second victim’s trailer. He also found four separate clumps of hair on top of the spray, which he bagged separately. After the state crime laboratory found no DNA evidence in the victim’s rape assault kit, the investigator sent the hair to the crime laboratory for DNA testing. As a result of that testing, in October 2006 crime lab personnel gave the detective Blash’s name as a suspect. The detective obtained a search warrant for Blash’s DNA, which matched the DNA found on the hair in the trailer where the second victim was assaulted, and Blash was indicted.

That detective had also been involved in the investigation of the *544 August 2001 assault at the first victim’s house, and always thought the two crimes were connected, because both were “blitz-type attack[s],” the general physical description and age of the attacker were similar, and the locations were close to each other. When the detective received the lead from the crime lab in October 2006, he located the first victim in south Florida and sent a photographic lineup to local law enforcement there, which included a picture of Blash taken in 2002. The victim identified Blash in the lineup and again in court, explaining that she would never forget the face of the man who said he was going to kill her, which she saw in her nightmares.

Blash argues that the State failed to present evidence of penetration, an essential element of rape and aggravated sodomy. The victim blacked out during the attack, and therefore could not testify regarding this element, but as noted earlier, the sexual assault examination nurse was properly qualified as an expert and testified that the victim’s external injuries established the potential for penetration. The jury was authorized to conclude, based on the nurse’s testimony and the medical evidence, that penetration had occurred.

We conclude that the evidence as outlined above was sufficient for a rational trier of fact to find Blash guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of aggravated sodomy of the first victim and rape and aggravated sodomy of the second victim. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U. S. 307 (99 SC 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979).

2. Blash contends the trial court erred in denying his request to have two jurors struck for cause. One juror said his mother had been a rape victim and his cousin had been accused of rape, but that these factors would not affect his ability to be fair and impartial. The other juror knew the second victim as a customer in the hair salon where the juror worked, but was not a friend and had never discussed the crime with her. The juror also said her acquaintance with the victim would not affect her ability to be fair and impartial to both sides.

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Related

Jackson v. Virginia
443 U.S. 307 (Supreme Court, 1979)
Gray v. State
662 S.E.2d 339 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2008)
Rodriguez v. State
635 S.E.2d 402 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2006)
Clark v. State
593 S.E.2d 28 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2003)
Brown v. State
667 S.E.2d 899 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2008)
Foote v. State
553 S.E.2d 644 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
697 S.E.2d 265, 304 Ga. App. 542, 2010 Fulton County D. Rep. 2154, 2010 Ga. App. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blash-v-state-gactapp-2010.