Daniel Dewayne Wrede v. Commonwealth

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 18, 2006
Docket0330051
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
Daniel Dewayne Wrede v. Commonwealth, (Va. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Benton, Humphreys and Petty Argued at Chesapeake, Virginia

DANIEL DEWAYNE WREDE MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0330-05-1 JUDGE JAMES W. BENTON, JR. JULY 18, 2006 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH Stephen C. Mahan, Judge

Vania M. O’Keefe, Assistant Public Defender (Office of the Public Defender, on brief), for appellant.

Donald E. Jeffrey, III, Assistant Attorney General (Robert F. McDonnell, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

A jury convicted Daniel Dewayne Wrede of abduction with intent to defile, rape, forcible

sodomy, and two counts of object sexual penetration. Wrede contends the trial judge erred in

admitting into evidence a recorded telephone message left by the complaining witness and in

instructing the jury that it could consider character evidence about Wrede in determining his guilt or

innocence. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the convictions.

I.

This case arises from a sexual encounter between Daniel Dewayne Wrede and the

sixteen-year-old daughter of Wrede’s romantic friend. The contested issue at trial was whether

the sexual acts were consensual.

Prior to trial, the admissibility of a recorded telephone message was the subject of a motion

in limine. The prosecutor informed the judge that the teenager had left a message for her boyfriend

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. after the sexual encounter. The prosecutor argued that the recorded statements were admissible

under several theories: “an excited utterance about what’s going on and her present sense

impression of what’s happening, it goes to the recent complaint exception under . . . [Code

§] 19.2-[2]68.2 to establish corroborative evidence of the fact of a complaint.” The prosecutor also

proffered that the purpose for offering the recorded statements was to let the jury hear the tone of

the teenager’s voice and her demeanor, explaining “It’s not what she’s saying. It’s how she’s

saying it . . . that she’s trying to maintain composure at the time right near or after the event.”

Wrede’s attorney argued that the recorded statement was hearsay. The attorney further

argued that it “was not admissible under the state-of-mind exception,” was not an excited utterance,

and “wouldn’t even meet the recent complaint exception for rape or sexual assault because the

actual statement doesn’t . . . state a sexual assault or rape.”

The trial judge ruled that the prosecutor could refer to the occurrence of the phone calls and

that Wrede’s counsel could “object to the use of the tape if the Commonwealth attempts to use it” at

trial. After the trial judge ruled on this and other motions, the trial began. The trial judge later

terminated the trial when he granted Wrede’s motion for a mistrial. The trial judge rescheduled the

trial and began a new trial a month later.

At the second trial, the teenager testified that Wrede, aged thirty-three, forced numerous

sexual acts on her the night of October 29, 2003, when her mother was at work. The teenager

was home alone and let Wrede into the house. The teenager testified that Wrede immediately

began hugging and kissing her after he entered the house. He smelled of alcohol and appeared

intoxicated. She told him to stop touching her. Instead, Wrede pushed her onto her mother’s bed

and got on top of her. When she screamed for help, Wrede slapped her repeatedly. As she

attempted to escape, Wrede grabbed her, punched her, and dragged her by her hair. She testified

that, over the course of the night, he slapped and punched her, performed cunnilingus, penetrated

-2- her vagina with his penis, forced her to perform fellatio, put his fingers in her anus, inserted a

dildo into her vagina, and forced her to use the dildo on herself.

During an interlude, Wrede had her lay on the bed with him as he dozed. He kept his

arms and a leg over her to prevent her from leaving the room. Later, Wrede made her shower

with him. During the shower he began to cry and said, “I can’t believe I did this.” When they

left the shower, Wrede cried and hugged her, telling her he did not want to hurt her. Wrede

dressed and left.

The teenager called her boyfriend, leaving two recorded messages when he did not

answer. She made the first call as soon as Wrede left her house. Without objection, she testified

that her first message said, “Something happened and I really need you to come get me.” The

teenager dressed for school, but before she went to school, she called her boyfriend a second

time less than an hour later. She testified without objection that she “left another message saying

. . . something happened and [she] really need[ed] to talk to [him].”

The teenager’s boyfriend testified that he deleted the first message, but not the second.

He described the teenager’s tone of voice in the two messages:

Q: And how did she sound on the first message?

A: The first message she was crying, very distraught. The second message she was calm at first, and as she spoke she got a little more agitated; and towards the end she sounded like she was on the verge of crying.

Q: On the first message when she was crying, how did she sound compared to what she normally sounds like to you?

A: Umm --

Q: How was she different?

A: She was, I would say, opposite of her normal demeanor. I mean, she’s not --

Q: What’s her normal demeanor?

-3- A: Well, you could say collected and calm. She doesn’t get bothered very easily, and she was clearly not in a good state at the time.

Q: Had you ever heard her like that before?

A: No.

* * * * * * *

Q: Did you listen to the second message then?

A: Yes.

Q: And how did she sound then?

A: Calm at first and as the message progressed she got more and more upset.

Q: Had you heard her sound like that besides the first phone call ever before?

A: I mean, I heard her cry before but not that upset.

On motion of the prosecutor, without objection by Wrede’s attorney, the trial judge

admitted in evidence the audio recording of the second message:

Hey me. Um, it’s around seven o’clock. I’m getting ready to leave for school soon. Um. Yeah, something really, uh, big happened, and um, something you definitely, you know, be . . . it you wouldn’t expect. But, um, it’s pretty serious, and uh, and nobody knows. It’s just me. And I just want, you know, to talk to you first, and you know get some advice and stuff. And I just really need somebody to talk to and help me out. Um, I was going to see if you’d come get me from, you know, like before I went to school, but . . .

And your cell phone is I guess off. But um, if you could like, I have a game today, and um, we leave or are supposed to meet around three, and it’s at Bayside. But if there is like any way that you could make it out here to come get me, um, that would really be great.

And uh, I’m gonna try and keep my composure today but um I really need to see you. Okay. I love you Sweetie. Happy two years. Bye.

-4- Both the teenager and her boyfriend testified that when they met at school that afternoon,

she told him what happened. He took her home, where she reported the assaults to her mother.

Wrede testified that he did not realize that the teenager’s mother would be at work when

he went to the house. He said that after the teenager let him in the house, he noticed a

half-empty wine cooler in the kitchen.

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