Brian Leland Artis v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedNovember 6, 2024
Docket1703232
StatusUnpublished

This text of Brian Leland Artis v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Brian Leland Artis 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 Leland Artis v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Raphael and White Argued at Richmond, Virginia

BRIAN LELAND ARTIS MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1703-23-2 CHIEF JUDGE MARLA GRAFF DECKER NOVEMBER 6, 2024 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CHESTERFIELD COUNTY David E. Johnson, Judge

Kevin E. Calhoun for appellant.

Matthew P. Dullaghan, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Brian Leland Artis appeals his convictions for one count each of soliciting prostitution

with a minor and “[a]iding [the] prostitution” of a minor and two counts of indecent liberties

with a child by a person in a custodial or supervisory relationship in violation of Code

§§ 18.2-346.01(i), -348, and -370.1. He challenges the trial court’s limitation of his

cross-examination of the teenaged victim, as well as the sufficiency of the evidence to prove all

three categories of convictions. We hold that the trial court’s admissibility ruling was not error.

We conclude further that, to the extent Artis preserved his sufficiency challenges for appeal, the

evidence proved his guilt of those crimes. As a result, his convictions are affirmed.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). BACKGROUND1

In the fall of 2020, when K.H. was sixteen years old, she was a resident in a group home,

which was divided into girls’ and boys’ sections.2 Artis was on the staff at the home, where he

worked as a director. He primarily “tend[ed] to the boys[’] part of the home,” but he was also

present in the girls’ part of the home at times. When he was there, “it [was] expected that

everybody would listen to . . . the instructions that he gave to the girls.”

While K.H. was at the group home, Artis would say “weird stuff” to her. He told her she

was “sexy,” and he “offered that [she] could run away with him.” At some point while K.H. was

there, her phone was taken away, and she “got mad.” As a result, she “decide[d] to take [Artis]

up on th[e] offer” to run away. While K.H. was still in the group home, Artis told her that he

would “basically buy [her] everything” and “pay for everything for [her]” after she left. He also

said, though, that “nothing is free in this world” and K.H. “might as well keep him happy.”

On October 17, 2020, K.H. met Artis outside the group home. He drove her to a

Chesterfield hotel, and once there, he “start[ed] . . . touching” her. Artis and K.H. had sexual

intercourse, and he spent the night. The next day, he bought her a cell phone, and he later

communicated with her by phone. K.H. “agree[d] to have sex with” Artis because she “needed

the money” and other things he provided, including food, “hygiene stuff, the hotel, [and] the

phone.” Artis also bought her “Black and Milds,” “edible[]” “weed,” and alcohol.

While K.H. was at the hotel, Artis visited her every other day, had sexual intercourse

with her “multiple times,” and performed oral sodomy on her. K.H. did not know anyone else in

1 “On appellate review of the sufficiency of the evidence to support a criminal conviction, this Court ‘reviews the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, as the prevailing party at trial, and considers all inferences fairly deducible from that evidence.’” Thornton v. Commonwealth, 78 Va. App. 321, 328 (2023) (quoting Commonwealth v. Herring, 288 Va. 59, 66 (2014)). 2 The victim and another minor are identified using initials to protect their privacy. -2- the area and said that without Artis’s financial support, she would have been “[o]n the streets.”

She stayed at the hotel for about a week.

K.H. decided to leave the hotel because she was uncomfortable having sex with Artis. At

her request, he drove her to Alexandria, where she “end[ed] up in another group home.” She

later ran away from that home with a second girl, R.K. The teens were living “in the streets”

with “nowhere to stay.” In mid-November 2020, K.H. contacted Artis for help. He picked up

both girls and drove them back to the Chesterfield hotel.

When K.H. returned to the hotel, Artis again wanted to have sex with her and sent her

texts to that effect. K.H., however, did not want to have sex with him. Artis texted to K.H., “We

gonna need some alone time . . . if I get what I’m saying.” He suggested that R.K. could “take a

walk and have a smoke or whatever[,] just not inside the room.” K.H. was successful in using

R.K. as an excuse to avoid having sex with Artis during her November stay in the Chesterfield

hotel.

Texts between K.H. and Artis on November 21, 2020, show Artis asked whether she

“t[old] someone where [she] w[as] staying or put something on [Insta]gram because [the] State

Police came to [the group home].” Artis said “someone told them somebody from [the home]

helped [K.H.] get away the first time” and may also have helped her “get back to Richmond.”

He further texted that he was “going to be fucked” and “need[ed K.H. and R.K.] to get out of the

hotel.”

Shortly thereafter, Detective Christopher Lee of the Chesterfield County Police

Department interviewed K.H. and R.K. at the hotel in the course of investigating possible sex

trafficking. He learned that they were both juveniles and their hotel room was being paid for by

an “adult man associated with a group home.” With K.H.’s permission, Detective Lee reviewed

the text messages she identified as having been sent by Artis.

-3- The detective interviewed Artis, who said that “he was operating for this hotel situation

under an organization that was called New Walk Ministries.” Artis provided the detective with

telephone numbers for two different phones he used, one of which was for New Walk Ministries.

He confirmed that he worked at the group home, on the boys’ side, and knew K.H. from

“sometimes go[ing] to the girls’ home.” He admitted paying for the Chesterfield hotel room. He

claimed, however, that he did so in conjunction with his work for New Walk Ministries and did

not know who was staying in the room. Artis later admitted knowing that K.H. was one of the

people staying in the room in November 2020, but he continued to deny knowing she was there

in October.

The detective executed a search warrant for Artis’s home and car. Inside the car, police

found condoms and a key to the Chesterfield hotel room K.H. occupied in November.

Artis was indicted for one count of soliciting prostitution with a minor and two counts

each of aiding in the prostitution of a minor and indecent liberties with a child by a person in a

custodial or supervisory relationship. In a jury trial, Artis was acquitted of one of the counts of

aiding the prostitution of a minor and convicted of the remaining offenses. He was sentenced to

five years for each offense, for a total of twenty years, with ten years suspended.

ANALYSIS

Artis suggests that the trial court erred by limiting his cross-examination of K.H. and by

rejecting his challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence to support his convictions.

I. Admissibility of Impeachment Evidence on Cross-Examination of K.H.

Artis argues the trial court improperly limited his ability to cross-examine K.H. about her

drug use specifically as it impacted her memory.

While cross-examining Detective Lee, defense counsel asked about his conversations

with K.H. Lee testified she “told [the police] that she had been smoking weed.” The detective

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