David Francis Aitken v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedDecember 9, 2022
DocketA22A1264
StatusPublished

This text of David Francis Aitken v. State (David Francis Aitken v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David Francis Aitken v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

FIFTH DIVISION MCFADDEN, P. J., GOBEIL and LAND, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

December 9, 2022

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A22A1264. AITKEN v. THE STATE.

MCFADDEN, Presiding Judge.

After a jury trial, David Francis Aitken was convicted of multiple counts of

child molestation and aggravated child molestation for acts against J. P. and R. B. He

argues on appeal that his trial counsel was ineffective in three respects, but as to one

of his assertions he has not shown deficient performance and, as to the other two, he

has not shown prejudice arising from those asserted deficiencies. Aitken also argues

that the trial court erred in his response to the state’s allegedly improper closing

argument, but we find no error because the closing argument fell within permissible

bounds. So we affirm.

1. Facts. “Because this case requires an assessment of . . . whether trial counsel’s

performance resulted in prejudice to [Aitken], we lay out the evidence in detail and

not only in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict[ ].” Talley v. State, 314 Ga.

153, 154 (1) n. 2 (875 SE2d 789) (2022).

In 2006, Aitken became involved in the skateboarding community in Atlanta.

He started a skateboard company, sponsored teams for skaters (including pre-teens

and teenagers), and built a skateboard park near his loft apartment. Skaters regularly

spent time and stayed the night at Aitken’s loft. There skaters, including those who

were underage, drank alcohol and smoked marijuana at the loft. Aitken sometimes

offered skaters what he called a “hangover pill.” Conflicting evidence was presented

about whether that pill was a probiotic or was Xanax, a prescription medication that

has a sedative effect and can make a person feel drowsy and lethargic and have poor

muscle control, especially when combined with alcohol.

(a) R. B.

R. B. joined one of Aitken’s skateboard teams in 2006 when he was ten years

old, and he began spending time and sometimes sleeping over at the loft. Although

R. B. later left the team for a better sponsorship opportunity, he continued to spend

time with Aitken at the loft. R. B. testified that, while there, he smoked marijuana and

2 drank alcohol provided by Aitken, including a “house drink” he described as “a

smaller Corona filled to the brim with tequila and lime” that the drinker would

“chug.”

R. B. testified that, when he was around 12 years old, he fell asleep at the loft

after drinking and smoking. No other skaters were at the loft that night. (Indeed,

Aitken sometimes told others to leave when R. B. came over.) R. B. awoke to a

camera flash and found his blanket pulled away from him. The blanket then was

placed back on him. Because it was dark, R. B. could not see who had pulled the

blanket off of him. He did not know what to do or how to feel about this incident, and

he did not say anything about it the next day.

R. B. testified that, soon after this first incident, when R. B. was still 12 years

old, he had been drinking alcohol and smoking marijuana with Aitken and one of

Aitken’s friends at the loft, and Aitken told him to take a “hangover pill.” R. B. was

drunk and the pill made him feel like he did not have control over his body. He fell

asleep on a couch but awoke as Aitken’s friend was leaving. Aitken and R. B. then

began play wrestling on the couch. Aitken pinned R. B. down, pulled down his pants,

and performed oral sex on him, causing the boy to ejaculate. Aitken also put R. B.’s

3 hand on his penis. R. B. was shocked. He testified that the incident “didn’t feel real”

and that he “didn’t want it to be real.”

R. B. testified that he returned to Aitken’s loft “to continue doing the

skateboarding and [because he] liked the part of the drinking and smoking weed.”

Another incident occurred a short time later. R. B. had been drinking the “house

drink” earlier in the day and Aitken told him to take a “hangover pill,” which Aitken

left on the bathroom counter. R. B. did not take the pill. After falling asleep in

Aitken’s bed, R. B. awoke to find Aitken touching his penis, beneath R. B.’s clothing,

with his hand. R. B. moved slightly and saw Aitken pull back and “just watch [him].”

R. B., who was very intoxicated, fell back to sleep. The next morning, Aitken became

very angry after he saw that R. B. had not taken the “hangover pill.”

In 2009, when he was 13, R. B. drank to excess while staying at a house that

Aitken had rented for a skateboarding competition in Florida. After that incident, R.

B. spent less time around Aitken, and in 2011 R. B. stopped going to Aitken’s loft

after his mother discovered that he had taken a significant amount of marijuana from

there.

4 As he entered his teens, R. B.’s demeanor changed. He began acting out to his

parents and abusing alcohol, and he got into legal trouble for running away from

home. He also suffered from anxiety and depression.

During an emotional conversation with his girlfriend in the spring of 2012,

when R. B. was 16 years old, he revealed that Aitken had molested him. R. B. told his

girlfriend that he thought Aitken’s actions were the root of his issues with anxiety and

depression. R. B. then told his father what had happened. In June 2012 he filed a

police report and later gave a forensic interview in which he described the abuse.

After R. B.’s outcry, rumors began to circulate in the skateboarding community

that Aitken had molested a skater. In 2014, R. B. ran into two other skaters (including

the other victim, J. P.) at a restaurant, and when the conversation turned to those

rumors, a tearful R. B. revealed that he was the person who had been molested.

R. B. had no further communication with Aitken after his outcry. He continued

to struggle behaviorally and abuse alcohol, and he spent some time in a rehabilitation

program. His treatment records from that program show behavior that, in the opinion

of an expert in child sexual disclosures and forensic psychotherapy, was consistent

with child sexual abuse.

5 At trial, Aitken denied R. B.’s allegations of abuse. Defense counsel presented

evidence and elicited testimony challenging aspects of R. B.’s outcry, such as the

timing of the alleged incidents, the way R. B. behaved and interacted with Aitken at

the loft, and other details of his reports of abuse. Defense counsel also presented

evidence and elicited testimony challenging R. B.’s credibility on other points, such

as his high school grades, his reasons for leaving a private school, the extent of his

drug and alcohol use, and the circumstances surrounding the incident in which R. B.

took marijuana from Aitken.

(b) J. P.

J. P. met Aitken in 2006, when he was around 11 years old. At that time J. P.

was already a competitive skater with sponsors. He did not skate on Aitken’s teams,

but he spent a lot of time with friends at Aitken’s loft.

J. P. testified that drinking occurred most of the time he was at the loft, and he

and some other persons present at the loft testified that Aitken gave J. P. marijuana,

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