Brian Gene Smith v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 31, 2023
Docket0180221
StatusUnpublished

This text of Brian Gene Smith v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Brian Gene Smith v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brian Gene Smith v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges O’Brien, Causey and Friedman UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Norfolk, Virginia

BRIAN GENE SMITH MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0180-22-1 JUDGE FRANK K. FRIEDMAN JANUARY 31, 2023 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF NEWPORT NEWS Christopher Papile, Judge

Charles E. Haden for appellant.

Ken J. Baldassari, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

A jury convicted Brian Gene Smith of four counts of aggravated sexual battery of a victim

under thirteen years old, two counts of aggravated sexual battery by a stepparent, and two counts of

forcible sodomy. By final order entered February 11, 2022, the Newport News Circuit Court

sentenced him to 200 years’ imprisonment with 168 years suspended. On appeal, Smith challenges

the sufficiency of the evidence. He also asserts that the trial court abused its discretion by failing to

strike two prospective jurors for cause. For the following reasons, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

Voir Dire Issues

A grand jury indicted Smith on four counts of aggravated sexual battery of a victim under

the age of thirteen, two counts of aggravated sexual battery by a stepparent, and two counts of

forcible sodomy. During voir dire, prospective juror K.M. told the trial court that she was

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. scheduled to work on one of the days set for trial. She stated that her company was “short of

employees” and she was “not sure if anybody c[ould] cover [her] shift or not.” In response to the

trial court’s inquiries, K.M. explained that she worked at a retail store and agreed to contact her

employer and ask if another employee could cover her shift.

After the trial court addressed another prospective juror’s concerns about understanding

the English language, K.M. stated that she did not “have jury duty in [her] country” and that she

“underst[ood] most of the stuff but like stuff I don’t get it. I’m trying.” The prosecutor asked:

“If you’re not understanding something, would you have any problem raising your hand and

asking?” K.M. did not verbally answer this question. The defense later moved to strike K.M. for

cause “based upon the language issue.” The trial court declined to strike K.M. for cause, noting

that the court was “comfortable with her ability to understand at this point.”

Defense counsel asked the prospective jurors if they were a parent or stepparent. Many

prospective jurors answered in the affirmative, including J.H. Defense counsel asked J.H. if it

was “possible you might not be able to give my client a fair and impartial trial based upon the

fact that you are a parent and the alleged victim in this case is the stepdaughter of my client?”

J.H. responded: “It’s possible. I don’t know what he did.”

The defense subsequently moved to strike J.H. for cause; the prosecutor noted that

defense counsel did not ask J.H. whether he would be able to follow the law and the evidence

and give Smith a fair and impartial trial. The trial court declined to strike J.H. and stated that the

court would “follow up” with J.H. The trial court subsequently reminded J.H. of his answer to

defense counsel’s previous question and asked if J.H. would “be able to listen to the evidence

and the law as I instruct you at the end of the trial and give both sides a fair and impartial trial?”

J.H. answered: “Yes.” The defense did not renew its motion to strike J.H. for cause. Both J.H.

and K.M. were removed from the panel with peremptory strikes.

-2- Evidence Relating to the Sexual Abuse

Smith married A.R.’s mother, Yvonne, in 2008, when A.R. was nine or ten years old.

A.R. testified that sometime in 2009 or 2010, Smith began coming into her bedroom late at night

and touching her breasts over and under her clothing. Smith touched her “almost every night for

years,” unless there were guests in the house. A.R. remembered that Smith usually came to her

room between 2:00 and 3:00 a.m. “because whenever he would leave, the first thing [she] saw

was the clock.”

Smith stopped touching A.R.’s breasts at night for a brief period when she received a

bunk bed for her eleventh birthday, because he could not reach her when she slept in that bed.

After several months, however, Smith and Yvonne removed the bunk bed and Smith resumed

touching A.R.’s breasts. A.R. began sleeping with her arms crossed. She recalled a specific

night when Smith pulled A.R.’s arms away from her chest. A.R. kept her eyes closed and

pretended that she was still asleep; she then felt Smith’s penis in her hand.

A.R. recalled another night when Smith entered her room and pulled her arms away from

her chest. When he tried to touch her breasts, she kicked him in the chest. Smith asked why she

kicked him, and A.R. asked why he was trying to touch her. Smith claimed that he was trying to

tuck her in, but he had been pulling the covers off her. After that night, A.R. began setting

“booby-traps” to alert her when he entered her room. She noticed that if she “moved and looked

up” when she heard him open her bedroom door, he would “immediately close the door and go

back to bed” and she would be “safe.” She unsuccessfully tried to place a motion-activated toy

in front of the door to wake her up when he entered the room; she also arranged items into a

maze on the floor to cause him to trip.

When A.R. was thirteen years old, she “got in trouble somehow” and Yvonne ordered her

to lower her pants so that Smith could spank her. A.R. started hyperventilating and suffered a

-3- “panic attack” because she did not want to expose any part of her body to Smith. When Smith

and Yvonne asked what “was wrong” with her, she screamed, “Why won’t you quit touching

me?” After Yvonne stated that Smith was not touching A.R. at that time, A.R. “explained what

had been going on” and Yvonne “confronted” Smith about it. He “denied everything” and stated

that “he was just trying to make sure [A.R.] was sleeping okay.” A.R. tried to tell Yvonne that

Smith was touching her while she was sleeping and she did not like it. A.R. testified that she

“was terrified of [Smith and Yvonne] because [she] didn’t know what trouble [she] could have

gotten into as a kid.” After this confrontation, Smith stopped touching A.R.’s breasts at night.

When A.R. was fifteen years old, Smith caught her sneaking a boy into the house. Smith

also found nude photos of A.R. on her phone. Smith threatened to show the nude photos to

Yvonne. A.R. testified that she was terrified of getting in trouble because Yvonne “raised [her]

to always be this perfect little child and never make mistakes.” A.R. was afraid that if she got in

trouble, she “would get kicked out of the family.”

As Smith and A.R. “negotiated” her punishment, he “ask[ed] for certain sexual favors”

from her. He asked to perform cunnilingus on A.R. until she “came” but she refused. Smith

ultimately decided that he would perform cunnilingus on her for one minute. He directed her to

shower, shave her “genital region,” and lie on his bed wearing nothing but a towel. Smith

proceeded to perform cunnilingus on A.R., putting his tongue on and inside her vagina. She was

“screaming and crying and just wanting it to be over.” As soon as she saw “the minute switch”

on the clock, she told him to stop and pushed him off. She could not look at his face, but saw

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