Copeland v. State

70 P.3d 1118, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 100, 2003 WL 21246215
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedMay 30, 2003
DocketA-7400
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 70 P.3d 1118 (Copeland v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Copeland v. State, 70 P.3d 1118, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 100, 2003 WL 21246215 (Ala. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

In the summer of 1996, Mark E. Copeland began a sexual relationship with a thirteen-year-old girl, J.S. Copeland was thirty-nine years old at the time. Sometime that fall, J.S.'s parents began to suspect that something was amiss. When they searched J.S.'s room and read her diary, their fears were confirmed. They then forbade J.S. to see Copeland.

J.S. secretly continued her relationship with Copeland, skipping classes and leaving school to engage in trysts with him. In December 1996, frustrated by the restrictions that her parents were placing on her, J.S. ran away from home. Copeland arranged for J.S. to stay at a series of residences, all owned by acquaintances of his. Then, in March, Copeland (using an assumed name) rented an apartment for J.S. J.S. lived in this apartment for six months (and continued her sexual relationship with Copeland when he visited her). Finally, in September 1997, the apartment manager contacted the police.

*1120 Copeland was indicted for kidnapping and eleven counts of second-degree sexual abuse of a minor (i.e., engaging in sexual penetration with a child between the age of thirteen and sixteen) 1 Copeland's first trial ended in a hung jury on all counts except one count of sexual abuse of a minor. (Copeland was acquitted of this count.) At his second trial, Copeland was acquitted of kidnapping but convicted of the lesser offense of contributing to the delinquency of a minor. 2 Of the ten remaining counts of second-degree sexual abuse of a minor, Copeland was convicted of nine and acquitted of one. For these crimes, Copeland received a composite sentence of:11 years' imprisonment with 3 years suspended-8 years to serve.

In this appeal, Copeland challenges five different evidentiary rulings made at his trial. He also contends that his sentence is excessive. For the reasons explained here, we affirm Copeland's convictions and his sentence.

The partial disclosure of J.8.'s diary to the defense

When J.S.'s parents read her diary and discovered that it contained evidence that their daughter was engaging in sexual relations with Copeland, they turned the diary over to the police. The police perused the diary, identified what they believed to be the relevant portions, and turned those portions over to the district attorney's office. Following Copeland's indictment, the district attorney's office provided Copeland's defense attorney with a copy of what they had.

Suspecting that other portions of the diary might contain exeulpatory or explanatory material, Copeland's attorney asked the superior court to compel production of the entire diary. Before Copeland's first trial, Superior Court Judge Niesje J. Steinkruger examined a photocopy of the complete diary. Based on her in camera examination, Judge Steinkruger ordered additional pages of the diary to be produced to the defense, but she declined to order production of the diary in its entirety.

During Copeland's second trial, his attorney renewed his request for production of the complete diary. This issue arose because J.S. testified that she had altered certain portions of the diary at Copeland's instruction. Copeland's attorney asserted that, if a document expert examined the diary, the examination would prove that J.S. was lying about altering the diary. Superior Court Judge pro tem Sigurd E. Murphy ruled that a document examiner would be allowed to examine the diary for physical alteration (or lack of physical alteration), but the expert would be ordered not to disclose the contents of any pages that the court had not released. (The record contains no indication that Copeland's attorney ever pursued this opportunity to have a document expert examine the diary.)

Copeland's attorney also asked the court to compel production of anything in the diary relating to J.S.'s dissatisfaction with her life at home; the defense attorney argued that these passages might be relevant to the kidnapping charge. Judge Murphy subsequently ordered production of several other pages, but still not the entire diary.

On appeal, Copeland argues that more of the diary should have been disclosed to him. He notes that, on one of the diary pages he received, J.S. wrote: "I keep telling people that things happened with him and me when I was down there, but nothing did happen. I need to stop lying." Copeland suggests that there must be other pages that contain similar statements relevant to J.S.'s eredibility. However, we have examined the diary and we agree with Judges Steinkruger and Murphy that there are no other portions that bear on this issue.

Copeland also argues that Judges Stein-kruger and Murphy had no authority to bar him from seeing any portion of the diary because J.S. (the author of the diary) never personally asserted a right to privacy in the diary. Rather, it was the district attorney's office that invoked J.S.'s right to privacy. Copeland contends that, absent a personal request for privacy from J.S. herself, the *1121 superior court had no authority to prevent Copeland from obtaining the diary.

But this argument works both ways. It was obvious that J.S. could claim a right of privacy in her diary, and Copeland's attorney never asserted that J.S. was willing to waive that right of privacy, nor did he ask the superior court to pose this question to J.S.

In any event, we conclude that this issue is moot. In Spencer v. State, 642 P.2d 1871 (Alaska App.1982), this Court confronted this same argument: that a trial judge committed error by invoking a victim's right to privacy when the victim had not personally asserted that right. In Spencer, we concluded that any arguable error was harmless, since the trial judge had correctly concluded that the excluded information was not relevant. Id. at 1376.

We reach the same conclusion in Copeland's case. When the superior court declined to give Copeland access to the complete diary, the court did not rely on the theory that, even though the exeluded portions were relevant, they were protected by an overriding right of privacy. Rather, the superior court concluded that these portions were not relevant. Having examined these portions of J.S.'s diary, we agree.

Next, Copeland argues that, given J.S.'s testimony that she altered certain portions of the diary, both the defense attorney and the jury were entitled to inspect the entire physical document to see if there was evidence of physical tampering. But as we explained above, when this issue surfaced at Copeland's trial, Judge Murphy offered to let a document examiner (chosen by the defense) examine the entire diary. This was a reasonable way of reconciling the competing interests-allowing the defense to investigate the possibility of physical alteration while at the same time preserving J.S.'s privacy in the content of the diary, to the extent that this content was irrelevant. Copeland chose not to pursue Judge Murphy's offer.

We therefore conclude that Judge Murphy committed no error when he revealed only parts of J.S.'s diary to the defense.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mark N. Wayson v. William E. Stevenson
514 P.3d 1263 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2022)
Morgan H. Smith v. Scott L. Smith, Jr.
Alaska Supreme Court, 2021
Kollander v. Kollander
400 P.3d 91 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2017)
Surrells v. State
151 P.3d 483 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2006)
Ned v. State
119 P.3d 438 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 P.3d 1118, 2003 Alas. App. LEXIS 100, 2003 WL 21246215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/copeland-v-state-alaskactapp-2003.