Commonwealth v. Carolino

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 12, 2024
Docket1230945
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Carolino, (Va. 2024).

Opinion

PRESENT: All the Justices

COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA OPINION BY v. Record No. 230945 JUSTICE CLEO E. POWELL DECEMBER 12, 2024 PATRICK AUSTIN CAROLINO

FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Following a bench trial, Patrick Austin Carolino was convicted of strangulation pursuant

to Code § 18.2-51.6. After hearing the matter en banc, a majority of the Court of Appeals

reversed the judgment, holding that the trial court erred in admitting collateral propensity

evidence for the sole purpose of attacking Carolino’s credibility in violation of McGowan v.

Commonwealth, 274 Va. 689 (2007) (“McGowan”). Concluding that Carolino failed to preserve

his argument that the evidence constituted improper impeachment on a collateral matter, we

reverse.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Commonwealth’s Evidence

At trial, the evidence established that Carolino and Hannah Ford were in a romantic

relationship from April 2018 to May 2019. They lived together through February 2019, and their

relationship was “on again/off again” during the final three months.

On April 15, 2019, Ford and Carolino went out to dinner and began to argue. They drove

to Carolino’s apartment and continued arguing in his bedroom. Carolino put his arm around

Ford’s neck, pressed his other hand on the back of her head, and pushed her head toward the

ground. Ford testified that, although the incident did not last long and she did not lose consciousness, she could not breathe for 15-20 seconds, felt pressure in her head, and

experienced spotted vision. Ford recalled that Carolino was angry during the incident and said,

“[Do] you see what it feels like to die.” Ford feared that she would “pass out or die” if Carolino

did not relieve the pressure.

After the incident, Ford spent the night with Carolino. Ford did not report the incident to

the police immediately1 because she still had feelings for Carolino, did not want to get him in

trouble, and was “scared to report anything.”2 The next morning, Ford had burst blood vessels in

her eyes and she photographed her injuries. The photographs were admitted into evidence.

Ford’s neck was tender and sore, it hurt to swallow, and her voice was affected. Ford went to

work and disclosed the incident to her supervisor, who testified that Ford was “visibly

distraught” and her eyes were red “like the blood vessels had been popped.” The supervisor

stated that their conversation prompted her to contact a security company to advise that someone

dangerous might come to the store.

Robert Mendez, Carolino’s roommate, testified that on the morning after the incident,

Ford’s eyes “looked as if they were allergies or bloodshot, maybe a broken blood vessel.” When

Mendez asked Ford about her eyes, she told him that she had allergies. Mendez also testified

that, around the general time of the incident, Carolino told him that if Ford were placed in a

chokehold, she would know how to respond in self-defense.

1 On cross-examination, Ford testified that she called Carolino’s probation officer twice in May 2019 to report that Carolino had used drugs, but did not report the strangulation over the phone. On May 17, 2019, Ford met with Carolino’s probation officer in-person and told her that Carolino was “violent” and she “was scared.” The same day, Ford reported the strangulation to the police. 2 Carolino and Ford continued to date each other until May 2019.

2 Jennifer Knowlton, a sexual assault nurse examiner, 3 qualified as an expert in the signs

and symptoms of strangulation. Knowlton testified that some of the common signs and

symptoms of strangulation include petechial and subconjunctival hemorrhages in the eye, pain or

soreness in the neck and throat, difficulty swallowing, and trouble speaking. Knowlton

acknowledged that ruptured blood vessels in the eye can also be caused by reactions to

medication, excessive coughing, straining, and rubbing one’s eye to alleviate allergies.

B. Carolino’s Evidence and Cross-examination

After the Commonwealth rested, Carolino made a motion to strike, arguing that Ford’s

testimony was unreliable because she waited a month to report the incident to the police and was

biased because Carolino was dating other women. The trial court denied the motion.

Carolino testified that, on the night in question, he and Ford argued about Carolino dating

other women. Carolino denied that there was a physical fight between them and expressly

denied choking Ford. Carolino claimed that Ford continued to contact him after that night and

tried to interfere with his other relationships.

On cross-examination, the Commonwealth asked:

Q: Ms. Ford – have you ever – you said you didn’t choke her. Have you ever been physical with her?

A: Aggressively physical, no. Sexually physical, sure. Yes.

Q. Okay. Never been aggressively physical.

Defense counsel objected that the line of questioning was beyond the scope of direct and “going

into prior bad acts.” The trial court stated that it had not “heard enough” yet to rule on the

objection. When the Commonwealth stated that it wanted to show Carolino a series of

3 Knowlton did not treat Ford for her injuries.

3 photographs, which depicted dark and widespread bruising on Ford’s buttocks arising from an

incident in which Carolino had allegedly used a belt to whip Ford, defense counsel objected and

argued that the photos were not relevant because the belt-whipping incident had occurred a year

prior to the instant offense and Ford previously stated that the belt-whipping was consensual.

Defense counsel also objected to the evidence as prior bad acts, propensity evidence, and outside

the scope of direct. Without seeing the photographs, the trial court overruled the objections and

permitted the Commonwealth to present the photographs. Carolino explained that the

photographs documented an incident when Ford “begged” him to whip her, and he did. The

Commonwealth offered the photographs into evidence and defense counsel again objected to

them as not relevant, proof of “a prior bad act from a year prior to this incident,” and propensity

evidence. The trial court asked the Commonwealth whether the photographs represented

Carolino being physical with Ford and the Commonwealth responded affirmatively. The trial

court admitted the photographs over the objections. Carolino reiterated that he “never

aggressively assaulted [Ford]. I’ve never – I’ve never done anything to [Ford] that she didn’t ask

me to do or did not want me to do.”

C. The Commonwealth’s Rebuttal Evidence

The Commonwealth called Ford as a rebuttal witness. 4 She testified that the photographs

depicted an incident in the summer of 2018 when Carolino beat her with a belt. Ford explained

that Carolino was “angry with [her] about having sex with someone else.” Ford testified that she

“allowed” Carolino to beat her and explained: “I was intimidated by him because he expressed

to me repeatedly that he wanted to hurt me. And I just was – I – I didn’t want to have to wait

and see when he was going to do it.”

4 Defense counsel did not object during Ford’s rebuttal testimony.

4 The trial court asked Ford whether the belt-whipping was consensual, and she stated it was

not. When the trial court asked why Ford told the police that she “allowed” Carolino to beat her,

Ford explained that in

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Commonwealth v. Carolino, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-carolino-va-2024.