Commonwealth v. M.G.

75 S.W.3d 714, 2002 Ky. App. LEXIS 994
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 10, 2002
DocketNos. 2000-CA-002095-DR, 2000-CA-002098-DR
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 75 S.W.3d 714 (Commonwealth v. M.G.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. M.G., 75 S.W.3d 714, 2002 Ky. App. LEXIS 994 (Ky. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

HUDDLESTON, Judge.

The Commonwealth appeals from a Warren Circuit Court opinion and order reversing a juvenile adjudication and disposition in which Warren District Court found that M.G. had committed first-degree sexual abuse and ordered him into the custody of the Department of Juvenile Justice (DJJ) for placement in a secure residential treatment facility for juvenile sexual offenders. Finding that the district court deprived M.G. of his constitutional right to confrontation by ejecting him from the courtroom during the testimony of his alleged victim and that the procedure constituted clear error, the circuit court remanded for a new adjudication. Likewise, the circuit court cited the fact that both P.A.M. and his lawyer were excluded from this critical stage of the juvenile proceedings against him as the basis for reversing an identical disposition imposed on P.A.M. after the district court found that he committed first-degree sodomy. This Court granted discretionary review. Because the same issue is raised in both cases, the two appeals have been consolidated.

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[716]*716M.G. was seventeen years old when the alleged offense occurred on March 20, 1999. R.W., the alleged victim, was ten years old at the time. M.G. resided with his older sister (his legal guardian) and her husband, Angela and Carl J.1 (R.W.’s uncle), and their two young sons. Angela was expecting their third child. According to her testimony, R.W. would visit with the J.’s about three times a week to spend time with their sons while Carl was working and Angela was housecleaning. On those occasions, she would spend the night at their home.

On the evening in question, the J.’s left home for about an hour to get dinner, leaving R.W. with M.G. for the first time without adult supervision. R.W. testified that she was sitting in a recliner in the living room when M.G. came in the room and sat on the couch. M.G. then threw pillows at her and as she removed the pillows from the floor, he grabbed her by the arm and sat her down beside him. When R.W. attempted to move away, M.G. continued holding her arm. Allegedly, M.G. then led her back to his room where he kissed her on the lips and touched her “middle spot,” or vagina, through her clothing. At that point, the J.’s returned and M.G. told R.W. to open the door for Angela. As R.W. exited the room, M.G. told her not to tell anyone what had just happened, and she agreed because she “was scared.”

When the J.’s entered the home, “everything seemed normal” so they sent R.W. to bed and began to watch a movie. Shortly thereafter, M.G. went into the bedroom, where R.W. and her cousins were sleeping, to play with the Sony Playstation. A few minutes later, R.W. emerged from the bedroom, saying, “[M.G.] won’t quit touching me and he keeps on kissing me.” M.G. denied the accusation.

On July 14, 1999, a Bowling Green Police Department detective filed a petition charging M.G. with second-degree unlawful imprisonment and first-degree sexual abuse as a result of his alleged abuse of R.W. Due to his age at the time of the offense, M.G. appeared before the juvenile session of the district court where he entered a plea of not guilty. The J.’s appeared with M.G. at his preliminary hearing on July 26, 1999, at which time their rights as enumerated in Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS) 610.060 were read and explained to them. Both M.G. and Angela signed a disclosure form indicating that they were aware of and understood his rights.

At the adjudicatory hearing held on August 16, 1999, three witnesses testified, namely Carl, Angela and R.W. Admittedly, the J.’s had no firsthand knowledge of the events which gave rise to the charges. Their testimony consisted of observations and statements which R.W. made concerning what allegedly happened to her. At the conclusion of their testimony, the Commonwealth requested that the court conduct an interview with R.W. and the court granted that request. Before R.W. testified, however, the court ordered everyone to leave the courtroom with the exception of one bailiff, the prosecutor and M.G.’s lawyer. Defense counsel objected at the beginning of R.W.’s testimony, but only with respect to whether the Commonwealth had established that “sexual contact” did occur. The court then called the alleged victim and proceeded to question her outside the presence of M.G. R.W.’s account of the incident revealed that M.G. [717]*717had attempted to kiss her and had touched her vaginal area with his hand through her clothing. Counsel for both sides were then permitted to question R.W. While the record is silent on this point, apparently M.G. returned to the proceeding after R.W. had testified. No other witnesses were presented.

Ultimately, the court found M.G. guilty of first-degree sexual abuse, but dismissed the unlawful imprisonment charge. In addition, the court ordered M.G. to undergo a mental health assessment pursuant to KRS 635.510(2), the results of which were considered at his disposition hearing. M.G. was subsequently committed to the custody of DJJ for placement in a secure residential treatment facility for juvenile sexual offenders.

On appeal to the circuit court, M.G. challenged the process alleging several errors, most significantly the court’s abrogation of his constitutional right to be present and confront the witness against him. In response, the Commonwealth argued that the issues had not been properly preserved. Relying on the holding in Dean v. Commonwealth,2 the circuit court disagreed with this contention, concluding that the right to confrontation is a personal one that cannot be waived by the action or inaction of counsel. The circuit court dismissed the remaining claims of error as being without merit. We granted the Commonwealth’s request for discretionary review in order to answer the question of whether a defendant can waive his right to be present during his accuser’s testimony and determine whether the issue is preserved for review despite the lack of a contemporaneous objection.

On April 15, 1999, elementary school officials removed J.M., P.A.M.’s then eight-year-old brother and alleged victim, from the classroom for exhibiting inappropriate sexual behavior. School officials then called Judy Brown, a child abuse investigator employed by the Department of Community Based Services, who interviewed J.M. and his sister P.M. at the school in the presence of Deena Holland, the family resource director for the school, and Susan Rice, an adult who had apparently known the children for some time and was “present to support” them.

During the interviews, J.M. accused his brother of engaging in sexual contact with him on two or more occasions during the previous months. Specifically, J.M. accused P.A.M. of masturbating in his presence and of inserting his penis into J.M.’s anus. When Brown questioned J.M.’s sister P.M. regarding these allegations, she became upset and called J.M. a liar. At this point, Brown contacted her supervisor and the police department to request assistance. Officer Anton Kahlil Flesher responded to the call. Upon his arrival, Flesher and Brown interviewed J.M. together, again in the presence of Holland and Rice. Brown’s supervisor contacted Kim Vincent, a colleague of Brown’s, to interview P.A.M., J.M. and their father at the police station.

Later that day, Flesher located P.A.M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 S.W.3d 714, 2002 Ky. App. LEXIS 994, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-mg-kyctapp-2002.