Commonwealth v. Ragland

991 A.2d 336, 2010 Pa. Super. 32, 2010 Pa. Super. LEXIS 61, 2010 WL 779686
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 9, 2010
Docket2599 EDA 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 991 A.2d 336 (Commonwealth v. Ragland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Ragland, 991 A.2d 336, 2010 Pa. Super. 32, 2010 Pa. Super. LEXIS 61, 2010 WL 779686 (Pa. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

*338 OPINION BY

STEVENS, J.:

¶ 1 This is an appeal from the judgment of sentence entered by the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County after a jury convicted Lynell Ragland of endangering the welfare of a child 1 and corrupting a minor. 2 On July 31, 2008, he was sentenced to a one (1) to two (2) year term of imprisonment to run consecutively with a sentence he was already serving and five years reporting probation. 3 Appellant contends that the trial court erred in refusing to grant a mistrial when the prosecution made improper statements to the jury during closing argument that deprived him of a fair trial. We affirm.

¶ 2 The facts of this case as adduced at trial were thoroughly and comprehensively set forth by the trial court as follows:

One day in the summer of 2004, [thirteen year old L.B.] called [Appellant], who was her step-father at the time, and asked him to take her to his mother’s house for the weekend. [Appellant] agreed and picked up [L.B.] from her mother’s home around 1:00 a.m. Once in the car, [Appellant] told [L.B.] that “the gas or the water or something wasn’t working” at his mother’s house, and instead he would take her to a hotel where she could go swimming in an indoor pool.
Upon arriving at the hotel, [Appellant] checked in under the name Aaron Burnett. He took [L.B.] to the room, where he began to tell her how guys would try “to get in [her] head in order to have sex with [her].” During this conversation, [Appellant] told [L.B.] to take off her clothes. [Appellant] touched [L.B.] on her breast and her vagina with his hands, and then inserted his fingers into [L.B.]’s vagina. [Appellant] then laid on top of [L.B.], inserted his penis into her vagina, and started having sex with [her]. It lasted for a “little while,” until [L.B.] asked [Appellant] to stop. Then [Appellant] rolled over and fell asleep.... [L.B.] got off the bed and slept on the floor. [L.B.] never wanted [Appellant], her step-father to touch her or have sex with her. [Appellant] took [L.B.] home the next morning. When she arrived home, [L.B.] called her maternal grandmother ... and told her what happened.
The day after [L.B.] returned home, she told her mother about what [Appellant] did to her at the hotel. Her mother “flip[ped]” out and took her to Temple Hospital. [L.B.] was never examined by a physician because [her] mother did not want to involve the Department of Human Services (“DHS”). [L.B.]’s mother did not want DHS to remove [L.B.] from her care. [L.B.’s] mother never filed a complaint with the police.
On February 27, 2005, after the police were called to [L.B.’s home] for a domestic disturbance between [L.B.] and her mother, [L.B.] told the police that [Appellant] had taken her to a hotel in *339 the summer of 2004 and vaginally raped her. [Appellant] was no longer living in L.B.’s home and was not at L.B.’s home when the two officers arrived. The officers wrote an incident report and took [L.B.] to the Special Victims Unit (SVU).
Detective Owens of the SVU interviewed [L.B.]. Based on the information that [L.B.] provided, he investigated the hotel records. The hotel records showed that [Appellant] checked-in on July 22, 2004 under the name Aaron Burnett. Armed with the information from the [L.B.]’s interview and the hotel records, the detective obtained an arrest warrant for [Appellant] on April 1, 2005. On April 15, 2005, [Appellant] returned Detective Owens’s call, where he was informed that there was a warrant for his arrest. He told the detective that he would come to the precinct that night around 7:00 p.m., but [Appellant] never showed up. [Appellant] was finally apprehended and arrested on June 7, 2006. While in police custody, [Appellant] admitted to taking [L.B.] to the hotel, but that nothing happened between him and [L.B.].
Both counsels stipulated that DHS conducted an investigation of [L.B.] being raped by [Appellant]; the report was founded, and that [Appellant] owned two driver’s licenses: one in the name of Lynell Ragland and another in the name of Aaron Burnett.

Trial Court Opinion, 2/11/08, at 2-4 (citations omitted).

¶ 3 During closing arguments, Appellant’s defense was premised largely upon his theory that L.B. fabricated her rape allegations because she was bitter about being disciplined by Appellant. Defense counsel attempted to portray L.B. as an unruly child who had behavioral problems, was repeatedly truant, and was passed among relatives when she refused to live in her mother’s house any longer. To strengthen her attack on L.B.’s credibility, defense counsel accused L.B. of telling a “big, big tale” and flatly told the jury that L.B. was a liar who concocted the entire story:

L.B. manipulated her mother. She manipulated the police that were called to the scene. She manipulated DHS. And she manipulated the various people whose homes she went into, that she was repeatedly told or asked to leave.
L.B. came into this Courtoom and said that [Appellant] raped her. Her stepfather [sic]. That is one big lie.

N.T. Trial, 6/6/08, at 67, 71 (emphasis added). Defense counsel embellished her accusation of L.B.’s manipulation by telling the jury she personally “could have fallen over some of the things [L.B.] said.” Id. at 71.

¶ 4 Appellant’s sole claim on appeal is that the trial court erred in refusing to grant a mistrial based on prosecutorial misconduct. He questions the propriety of the following statement made to the jury in closing by the district attorney in response to defense counsel’s attack on L.B.’s credibility:

But the only thing that matters in this case is what you do, is what you say. That’s it. Because you have the final say. You know, this girl has been let down her whole life by people that were charged with taking care of her, or charged with looking out for her benefit, for her best interests. And they failed her. By returning a verdict of guilty, you could right those wrongs.

N.T., 6/6/08, at 99. After defense counsel promptly objected to this remark, the trial court immediately sustained the objection, admonishing the prosecutor, stating, “[t]his is not for sympathy purposes. It is *340 based on the evidence, not on sympathy.” Id.

¶ 5 Appellant moved for a mistrial based on the aforementioned comment by the prosecution. The trial court denied Appellant’s motion, reasoning that along with its immediate response in sustaining Appellant’s objection, “a cautionary instruction ... would correct any alleged basis for a mistrial.” Trial Court Opinion, 2/11/09, at 7. The trial court proceeded to give the jury the following instruction:

Now, as you go along, you are to use the law that I give you in order to reach a decision as to whether or not [Appellant] is or is not guilty of each charge.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
991 A.2d 336, 2010 Pa. Super. 32, 2010 Pa. Super. LEXIS 61, 2010 WL 779686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-ragland-pasuperct-2010.