Daniel Ricardo Lane Adams v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 11, 2025
Docket2208231
StatusUnpublished

This text of Daniel Ricardo Lane Adams v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Daniel Ricardo Lane Adams v. Commonwealth of Virginia) 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 Ricardo Lane Adams v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges Huff,* Ortiz and Raphael Argued at Norfolk, Virginia

DANIEL RICARDO LANE ADAMS MEMORANDUM OPINION** BY v. Record No. 2208-23-1 JUDGE STUART A. RAPHAEL FEBRUARY 11, 2025 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH A. Bonwill Shockley, Judge

Samantha Offutt Thames, Senior Appellate Attorney (Virginia Indigent Defense Commission, on briefs), for appellant.

Tanner M. Russo, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Daniel Ricardo Lane Adams appeals his conviction for raping a college student in her

bedroom. Adams challenges the trial court’s rulings striking one juror while seating another. He

objects to two jury instructions that addressed the use of force and consent. And he claims that

the prosecution failed to prove that the sex was against the victim’s will or accomplished through

force, threat, or intimidation. Finding none of those claims meritorious, we affirm his

conviction.

BACKGROUND

We recite the facts in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the party that

prevailed at trial. Camann v. Commonwealth, 79 Va. App. 427, 431 (2024) (en banc). “Doing

* Judge Huff participated in the hearing and decision of this case prior to the effective date of his retirement on December 31, 2024. ** This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). so requires that we ‘discard’ the defendant’s evidence when it conflicts with the

Commonwealth’s evidence, ‘regard as true all the credible evidence favorable to the

Commonwealth,’ and read ‘all fair inferences’ in the Commonwealth’s favor.” Id. (quoting

Commonwealth v. Cady, 300 Va. 325, 329 (2021)).

A. The incident

In the final days of her junior year at Virginia Wesleyan University, E.R. attended an

on-campus cookout hosted by a graduating senior. After consuming a few alcoholic seltzers,

E.R. met Adams, who introduced himself as “DJ.” Adams told her that he was a 23-year-old

student at the Harvard Business School.1 The two exchanged “Snapchat information.”2 E.R.

then left the cookout to join some friends at her neighbor’s house. While there, she smoked “two

hits” of marijuana but did not drink any more alcohol.

When Adams appeared at that gathering, he and E.R. struck up a conversation and

eventually left the party together. They walked to E.R.’s on-campus townhouse that she shared

with a few housemates. Adams and E.R. engaged in consensual sex in her second-floor

bedroom, but the sex was interrupted when E.R. received a FaceTime call from her sister.

After talking to her sister in the hallway, E.R. returned to the bedroom, where Adams was

still in her bed. E.R. told Adams that she was not interested in intercourse. She said he could

spend the night and the two could “just cuddle,” “kiss,” and “hold each other.” The two began

kissing, but Adams took things further. He got on top of E.R. and “started touching [her] body”

1 Adams later told the detective who interviewed him that he was a college student at Florida International University. 2 E.R. described Snapchat as a “communication app where you can send texts or . . . photos with text. [I]t’s something that a lot of kids on college campuses use to talk to each other.” Users exchange usernames, not phone numbers. -2- like “he was going to have sex with [her].” E.R. told him, “I don’t want to have sex. I’m too

tired.”

Adams paused momentarily but was undeterred. He “grabbed [E.R.’s] legs harder,”

“pushed them open,” and “pushed” his penis inside her vagina. Adams was rough and violent.

He held her hands above her head in “an X shape,” crossed at the wrists, while he penetrated her.

At times, he choked her with one hand while squeezing her wrists together with the other. His

thrusts were “so hard” that they made her head repeatedly hit the headboard. No pillow was

there to cushion the blows. The intercourse was entirely different from the consensual sex

before. E.R. lay frozen in fear. She “was groaning in pain,” but with Adams squeezing her

throat, she could not scream and could only barely breathe. Finally, after ejaculating inside her,

Adams rolled over and fell asleep.

E.R. pretended to be asleep until she had a chance to escape without awakening him. She

was “terrified” and “wanted to get the hell out of there.” She hurried outside barefoot,

encountering two friends who were returning home from studying. E.R. asked if she could stay

with one of them. One friend offered her an extra room in her on-campus townhouse, and E.R.

accepted. As her friend made up the guest bed, E.R., visibly shaken, revealed that she had just

been raped.

E.R.’s mind was racing, and she could not sleep. She worried about having left the

stranger who had just raped her alone in her bedroom. E.R. walked back to her house and told

Adams to leave, telling him she “had a friend who needed [her] help.” Adams asked to stay but

eventually left. E.R. waited by her car in the parking lot until Adams departed. Then she walked

back to her friend’s house for the rest of the night. (She did not sleep in her own bed again for

the rest of the semester.)

-3- When E.R. returned home the next morning (Friday), she found “blood and semen stains”

on her bedsheets. Scared from that reminder of what she had experienced, E.R. washed the

sheets. When Adams tried to message E.R. “over snapchat,” she blocked him and removed his

contact information. But to her horror, she saw him twice that day—first at an on-campus “field

day,” and again at a party that she hosted with her roommates. E.R. insisted to her friends that

he could not join the party, but Adams did not listen when told he could not stay. E.R. was

“petrified” to see him there. Her friend testified that she had never seen E.R. look so shaken.

That Monday, E.R. reported the rape to a campus counselor. Taking the counselor’s

advice, E.R. went to the Chesapeake Women’s Clinic for a SANE examination. Photographs

from the SANE examination captured the bruises on “the outside of [her] right thigh,” “right

arm,” and “collarbone,”3 injuries that she did not have before the incident. E.R. reported the rape

to police a few weeks later. Adams was indicted on one charge of rape in violation of Code

§ 18.2-61.

B. Voir dire

During voir dire, Adams asked if any member of the venire would have “any extreme

hardships” that would prevent them from sitting on the jury for multiple days. Juror 3098 raised

his hand. He said he was in a probationary period at work and could miss only one day for jury

service. Despite instructions on the “jury duty” form about his right to miss work, Juror 3098

was not sure if his employer would give him any additional days off. The prosecutor told Juror

3098 to assume that his employer would be understanding and then asked, “[w]ould you be able

to sit here knowing that that’s going on and listen to all the evidence[,] or would you be thinking

about missing your job?” Juror 3098 responded, “a bit [of] both.”

3 The SANE examination also captured pictures of E.R.’s “face, . . . chest, . . . butt, [and] . . . vagina.” -4- The Commonwealth moved to strike Juror 3098 for cause, arguing that the juror’s

concern about missing work would inhibit his ability to pay attention to the trial. Granting the

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