Collins v. State

2009 OK CR 32, 223 P.3d 1014, 2009 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 32, 2009 WL 5125471
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 17, 2009
DocketF-2008-654
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 2009 OK CR 32 (Collins v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins v. State, 2009 OK CR 32, 223 P.3d 1014, 2009 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 32, 2009 WL 5125471 (Okla. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinions

OPINION

CHAPEL, Judge.

T1 LaToris DeWayne Collins was tried by jury and convicted on two counts of Rape in the First Degree, in violation of 21 0.$.Supp. 2006, §§ 1111 & 1114 (Counts I and IV); and two counts of Kidnapping, in violation of 21 O.8.8upp.2004, § 741 (Counts III and V), all After Two or More Previous Felony Convictions, in the District Court of Oklahoma County, Case No. CF-2006-6326.1 In accordance with the jury's recommendation, the Honorable Virgil Black sentenced Collins to imprisonment for twenty (20) years on each of the four counts, with Counts I and III to run concurrently, but consecutively to Counts IV and V, which also run concurrently with each other. Counts I and IV are subject to the 85% Rule, pursuant to 21 0.8.Supp.2002, § 18.1(10).

2 C.M. first met LaToris Collins outside an Oklahoma City night club, in the early morning hours of August 26, 2006. C.M. was in her van, smoking marijuana laced with crack cocaine. C.M. testified that at some point her lighter ran out of fluid, and she approached a white Cadillac and asked to borrow a lighter. Collins and a man identified as his cousin were in the car and invited C.M. inside to smoke crack cocaine with them. The cousin eventually returned to the club, leaving Collins and C.M. in the car.

[1016]*1016C.M. testified that she smoked approximately five dollars worth of crack with Collins.

T8 After an alert from Collins' radar detector, Collins suggested the pair circle the block in order to avoid the police, and C.M. agreed. Rather than going around the block, however, Collins drove straight ahead and on to I-85. Noting the change in course, C.M. twice asked Collins to pull over and let her out of the car. Collins refused and began driving faster.

T4 Collins eventually pulled off the interstate and parked at a convenience store, because his car was overheating. While Collins was in the store, C.M. remained in the car. C.M. testified that she could have left, but that she stayed because she hoped to get more drugs from Collins. They eventually arrived at Collins' house, and C.M. followed Collins into his bedroom. Upon entering the bedroom, Collins told C.M. that she owed him for the drugs she had already used. Collins also told C.M. that he had been to prison, that he had a gun, and that he would use it if she did not comply with his demands. Collins then told C.M. to remove her clothes.

115 After C.M. removed her clothes, Collins performed oral sex on her and ordered C.M. to perform oral sex on him. At this point C.M. reached for a curtain above the bed, in an attempt to escape through the window, and Collins responded by punching her in the nose. C.M. then performed oral sex on Collins, at one point biting his penis in an effort to end the sexual assault. After that, Collins forced C.M.'s legs open and vaginally raped her. During the rape, C.M.'s husband called her on her cell phone, which C.M. had concealed near her head in hopes of dialing 911. When he heard the ringing, Collins took C.M.'s phone, bent it so that it no longer worked correctly, and threw it in a nearby basket.

T6 After raping C.M., a more docile Collins offered to drive her back to the club where her van was parked. As the two walked off Collins' porch, however, C.M. bolted to a neighbor's house and asked to use the phone. There C.M. called her husband to come and get her. When her husband arrived, she relayed to him the story of what had happened. C.M.'s husband then called the police, and the couple waited outside Collins' home until officers arrived.

T7 C.K. first met Collins on September 2, 2006, one week after the rape of C.M., at the Oklahoma City apartment of an acquaintance known to C.K. only as "Therman." CK. went to Therman's apartment to meet her friend, April, for a shopping trip to the mall. Shortly after being introduced, Collins asked C.K. if she could help him with some grocery shopping, as he had recently had prostate surgery and needed assistance. After C.K. got into Collins' car, Collins told C.K. that he had to go back to his house to get some money. When they arrived at Collins' house, C.K. stood in the doorway while Collins retrieved his money. Rather than going to the grocery store, however, Collins then drove to a nearby liquor store and ordered C.K. to go in and buy him a bottle of Kentucky Deluxe bourbon.

18 After the trip to the liquor store, Collins told C.K. that he again needed to return to his home, to get more money for the grocery store. C.K. grudgingly agreed. Upon arriving at the house, C.K. entered, and Collins invited her into his bedroom to see his collection of suits. C.K. went into the bedroom to look at the clothes, and after briefly listening to Collins brag about his fashion collection, C.K. asked to be returned to her car. Instead, Collins locked the bedroom door. Collins then showed C.K. an old picture of himself, wearing what appeared to be a prison uniform. Collins bragged that he had been in prison for murder and asked C.K. how much she would charge to allow him to "eat [her] pussy." C.K. was shocked and confused by this request and declined, saying she would only do such things with her boyfriend or husband. Collins then accused C.K. of "playing him." After C.K. attempted to answer a call from her thirteen-year-old son, Collins took C.K.'s cell phone, laying it on the floor behind him. CK.'s phone would continue to ring while Collins sexually assaulted her.

T9 Now acutely aware of her situation, C.K. began to ery and told Collins again that she wanted to leave. In response, Collins called C.K. a "stupid bitch" and threatened [1017]*1017to "fuck [her] up." Collins then told C.K. that if she did not remove her clothes and stop erying, he was going to get his gun and put it in her mouth.2 C.K. removed all of her clothes, and Collins pushed her onto the bed and vaginally raped her.3

{10 After the rape, Collins asked C.K. to get him a glass of water. C.K. complied, and Collins politely thanked her.4 Going back outside, Collins asked C.K. to grab a garden hose, in order to help him put water in his car, which was overheating. C.K. again complied, but when Collins returned to the house to get something, she took off and ran several blocks back to Therman's apartment complex, where her car was parked. C.K. first went to Therman's apartment and angrily asked why anyone would let her leave with Collins. C.K. then got in her car and returned home. She reported the rape to police the next day.

T11 Collins appeals from his convictions and sentences, raising three propositions of error.

112 In Proposition I, Collins claims that the joinder of all the charges against him in a single trial was improper and unfairly prejudiced his right to a fair trial. Collins entered a plea of "not guilty," without objecting to the joinder of the charges or filing a motion to sever, waiving all but plain error review.5

{13 Collins contends that joinder of the crimes involving C.M. with those involving C.K. into a single trial did not meet the criteria for joinder set out in Glass v. State.6

He claims that this joinder prejudiced him, because the State used testimony from an arguably more credible witness, C.K., to bolster the testimony of an arguably less credible witness, C.M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2009 OK CR 32, 223 P.3d 1014, 2009 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 32, 2009 WL 5125471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-state-oklacrimapp-2009.