Coree McGaugh v. State of Arkansas

2023 Ark. App. 457, 678 S.W.3d 410
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 18, 2023
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2023 Ark. App. 457 (Coree McGaugh v. State of Arkansas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coree McGaugh v. State of Arkansas, 2023 Ark. App. 457, 678 S.W.3d 410 (Ark. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Cite as 2023 Ark. App. 457 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II No. CR-22-674

Opinion Delivered October 18, 2023

COREE MCGAUGH APPEAL FROM THE YELL COUNTY APPELLANT CIRCUIT COURT, NORTHERN DISTRICT [NO. 75NCR-20-30] V. HONORABLE JERRY RAMEY, JUDGE STATE OF ARKANSAS APPELLEE AFFIRMED

STEPHANIE POTTER BARRETT, Judge

Coree McGaugh was convicted by a Yell County Circuit Court jury of one count of

rape and sentenced to thirty years in the Arkansas Department of Correction. On appeal,

McGaugh argues that the circuit court erred (1) in denying his directed-verdict motion; and

(2) in not declaring a mistrial when the jury informed the court that it was split 11–1, and

the remaining juror was not willing to change his or her mind. We affirm.

McGaugh’s victim was his eight-year-old daughter, MC1, who, after a lesson on

personal safety at her elementary school in April 2019, reported to her counselor that her

father had been abusing her sexually for the past several months. The counselor reported

the allegations to the Child Abuse Hotline, and Brittney Reed, an investigator with the

Arkansas State Police Crimes Against Children Division, interviewed MC1, who disclosed

the sexual-abuse allegations to Reed. MC1 was taken to The Hamilton House, a Child Advocacy Center in Fort Smith, for a medical examination as well as a forensic interview.

Jennifer Canavan conducted a forensic interview with MC1 at The Hamilton House, and

MC1 underwent a sexual assault nursing examination (SANE) with Malea McCormick.

McCormick testified at trial about her findings from MC1’s examination. She stated

that there was an area of whiteness on the hymen, which could indicate sexual abuse; but

she also said that the majority of exams of children seen for sexual-assault exams with

disclosures of sexual abuse do not have definitive findings because that part of the body heals

from injury quickly. Although MC1 did not have any injuries to her anal area, McCormick

stated that a lack of injury did not rule out sexual penetration. McCormick collected oral,

vaginal, and rectal swabs from MC1; her underwear; and a blood-stain card for DNA

purposes.

Jennifer Beaty-West, the DNA supervisor for the Arkansas State Crime Laboratory,

testified that she received seven items in this case—vaginal swabs, oral swabs, rectal swabs, a

cutting from the inner crotch of underwear, and a blood sample, all from MC1; a known

oral sample from McGaugh; and a tape lift of MC1’s underwear. Beaty-West explained that

in cases involving a female victim and an alleged male perpetrator, there is a secondary testing

method called Y-STRs, which specifically looks at male DNA, but that the testing was only

able to narrow down the DNA to a paternal line. She testified that male DNA was found

on the vaginal, oral, and anal swabs but not enough to obtain a Y-STR profile to make a

comparison to a known sample. However, the inner-crotch sample of MC1’s underwear

contained sperm cells, and the tape lift of MC1’s underwear indicated the presence of DNA

2 from two males: one was too limited to make a comparison, but the second was identified as

consistent with McGaugh’s Y-STR profile, meaning that neither McGaugh nor his paternally

related male relatives could be excluded as a contributor of that Y-STR profile.1 Beaty-West

stated that while she could never say conclusively how DNA evidence arrived on an item, a

more direct, aggressive contact with a direct transfer of bodily fluids would more likely leave

DNA behind.

MC1 testified that she had been living with her father in April 2019; at that time, she

was eight years old and in the second grade. She said that she went to see her school

counselor after the personal-safety lesson and told her that her father had been raping her

for three to four months. MC1 testified that her father had been through a breakup with a

girlfriend, and he first “fingered” her after she returned from weekend visitation at her

mother’s house. She said that a day or two after that incident, they had intercourse in her

bedroom; her father made her take her clothes off, he took his clothes off, and then he put

his penis into her vagina while she was lying on the bed and he was standing in front of her.

She said that her father would bribe her with food, toys, video games, or allowing her to go

to her friends’ houses if she would have sex with him. MC1 said that those encounters

occurred often, but she did not tell anyone about them until April 2019 because she did not

have the confidence to say anything until that time. She testified that she had intercourse

1 Beaty-West testified that Ronald McGaugh gave an oral sample at a later time that was compared to the Y-STR profiles obtained from the underwear, and he was excluded as a contributor.

3 with her father the night before she told the counselor what was happening, and she had not

bathed or changed her underwear before going to school the next day. MC1 denied that she

was making up the allegations against her father.

On cross-examination, MC1 admitted that prior to April 2019, she saw her mother

only on the weekends; it bothered her because she had a hard time telling her mother

goodbye; she wished she could see her mother more often; her mother wanted MC1 to come

live with her; and MC1 had told her mother that she wanted to move in with her. MC1 also

admitted that life was tough with her father because she had to clean the house and help

take care of her younger twin siblings; that she did not like having to do chores at her father’s

house and had more fun at her mom’s house; and that she had told her father she wanted

to live with her mom.

After the State rested, McGaugh moved for a directed verdict on the basis that

McGaugh was never identified by MC1 as the person who had raped her. The State

countered that McGaugh had been identified as MC1’s father by several witnesses, and MC1

had referred to her father as the person who had raped her. Although the circuit court stated

that it had no doubt there was enough testimony set forth that McGaugh was the person

referenced in the allegations, it allowed the State to reopen its case, and MC1 identified

McGaugh in the courtroom and as the person who had raped her. After that identification,

McGaugh moved for directed verdict again, arguing that McGaugh was not timely identified

as the person who had raped MC1. The circuit court denied the motion, finding that there

had been sufficient evidence presented during the trial that McGaugh was the person against

4 whom the allegations had been made; furthermore, allowing the State to reopen its case and

have MC1 identify McGaugh as the person who had raped her addressed that issue.

McGaugh then moved for a direct verdict on the basis that the State had failed to

prove its case, arguing, “And that the State has failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt

that Coree McGaugh committed rape by engaging in sexual intercourse or deviant sexual

activity with another person, namely [MC1], who is less than 14 years of age.” This motion

was denied by the circuit court.

Carla McGaugh, McGaugh’s mother, testified that she and MC1 had a close mother-

daughter type of relationship, but she had not spoken to her since the night before MC1

accused her father of raping her. Carla said that MC1 was responsible for helping to pick

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Related

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2023 Ark. App. 457, 678 S.W.3d 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coree-mcgaugh-v-state-of-arkansas-arkctapp-2023.