Government of the Virgin Islands v. Kelvin Derricks

810 F.2d 50, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 1181
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJanuary 21, 1987
Docket85-3089
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 810 F.2d 50 (Government of the Virgin Islands v. Kelvin Derricks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Government of the Virgin Islands v. Kelvin Derricks, 810 F.2d 50, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 1181 (3d Cir. 1987).

Opinion

SLOVITER, Circuit Judge.

I.

Kelvin Derricks, who was a St. Thomas police officer at the time of the events in question, appeals from his conviction of one count of official oppression under 14 V.I.C. § 703. The charge arose out of the complaint of Marilyn Stires that Derricks threatened her with arrest, jail, a fine and inability to work again if she did not engage in sexual activities with him. Derricks, who admitted that he had engaged in sex with Stires after she had been picked up by the police who believed she had been smoking marijuana, claims that the government’s evidence was factually and legally insufficient to make out a case of oppression.

II.

Although there were different factual scenarios presented, the following facts are generally agreed upon. Derricks, who was not in the street crime unit, volunteered to ride with his friends, Officers Charleswell and Matthews, on August 31, 1981. In the early morning of September 1, 1984, they noticed Marilyn Stires sitting in a car parked outside a restaurant. Charleswell suspected that Stires was smoking a marijuana cigarette. Derricks, who was not in uniform, approached the car, showed his badge, and ordered Stires out of the car. The other officers searched the car but did not find the marijuana cigarette. Derricks then searched the car and, while Stires could not observe his movements, found a plastic bag filled with marijuana. Stires denied that the marijuana belonged to her.

All three officers testified that Charles-well, who was in charge, decided that there was not sufficient evidence to arrest Stires; instead, Stires was to be taken to the station house where a “contact card” would be filled out. Derricks rode to the station with Stires in her car. According to Stires’ testimony, Derricks, both during the ride *52 and at the station where he began filling out what he said was an arrest form, told her that she was going to jail for eight or ten years and that she would have to pay a twenty-five thousand dollar fine, told her that she would never work again, and asked her if she had a boyfriend and if she “liked to go to bed.”

Although Stires was never placed under arrest, she believed she was and testified that she did not feel free to leave the police station and that Derricks would not allow her to call her lawyer. Derricks continued to make sexual references, told Stires that if she “said the right things” she could “get out of this”, and also said that the last “white blond I did this to, did fellatio.” App. at 30.

After forty-five minutes in the police station, Derricks rolled the supposed arrest report into a ball, placed it in Stires’ pocketbook, and told her that she was going to be friendly and that he was going to forget about the whole thing. Derricks then told her that they were going to take a drive and that if her friend who was waiting for her at the police station did anything to interfere, she was going to jail.

According to Stires, Derricks then drove her from the station in an unmarked police car, stopped the car, kissed her and fondled her sexually, and then drove her to his apartment. There, after she used the bathroom, she found Derricks lying nude on the bed flipping a small gun back and forth between his hands. She testified that she did not feel free to leave. Derricks directed her to lie down, undressed her, and had sexual intercourse with her. Derricks gave a markedly different story than did Stires, testifying that it was Stires who had initiated the sexual encounter and that he displayed no gun.

Derricks was charged with one count each of kidnapping, kidnapping for ransom, solicitation of an emolument, gratuity, or reward for doing an official act, and official oppression. The kidnapping charges were dismissed by the court during the trial, and the solicitation count was dismissed after the jury was unable to reach a verdict. Derricks was convicted by the jury on the official oppression charge.

III.

The Virgin Islands statute proscribing official oppression, 14 V.I.C. § 703, provides in relevant part:

Whoever, being a public officer, or person pretending to be a public officer, and under the pretense or color of any process or other legal authority—

(1) arrests any person or detains him against his will;
(4) does any other act, whereby another person is injured in his person, property or rights—
without regular process or other lawful authority therefor, commits oppression and shall be fined not more than $200 or imprisoned not more than 1 year, or both.

Section 703 was patterned almost verbatim after New York Penal Law § 854 (amended and recodified 1965, current version at New York Penal Law § 195.00 (McKinney 1975)). See Revision Note to 14 V.I.C. § 703. In enacting this statute, the Virgin Islands legislature used broad language, enlarging upon the earlier provision penalizing certain abuses of authority by public officers. 1

There is not much case law extant on the scope of oppression statutes, and of course, the cases will be governed by the language of the applicable statute. The only case that we have found where a police officer was convicted for oppression for detaining and driving around an arrestee to pressure and persuade her to engage in sexual intercourse with him, Emerson v. State, 662 *53 S.W.2d 92 (Tex.Ct.App. 1983), arose under a Texas statute framed in language different than 14 V.I.C. § 703, and hence is not helpful to our inquiry.

We have found only one reported Virgin Islands case interpreting section 703, and that arose in a different factual context, where police officers used unnecessary force in arresting a traffic violator. See Government of the Virgin Islands v. Len-hardt, 7 V.I. 406 (1969). However, it is instructive that the Municipal Judge in that case stated, “Oppression can be defined as the exercise of authority or power in a burdensome, cruel or unjust manner.” Id. at 407.

Derricks argues that the facts, even if Stires’ story were true, do not constitute official oppression. However, the facts fit precisely into the language of the statute.

Derricks was “a public officer” and acted “under color of ... legal authority” since he rode with other officers, showed a badge, accompanied Stires to the police station, and took information from her in the roll call room at the direction of the officer in charge. Even if he did not arrest her, as she believed, she claimed that he detained her against her will at the station, on the subsequent drive, and in his apartment by his actions, his show of authority, and his display of a gun. That makes out a violation of subsection (1). Similarly, Derricks’ unwelcome sexual contact, as well as the detention of Stires, both of which were effected by his show of legal authority and his display of a gun, constituted an “act” whereby Stires was injured in her person, within the meaning of subsection (4).

Derricks makes a number of arguments why these facts do not constitute oppression, but we find none of them, persuasive.

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Bluebook (online)
810 F.2d 50, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 1181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/government-of-the-virgin-islands-v-kelvin-derricks-ca3-1987.