JACKSON PRIDEMORE v. STATE OF FLORIDA

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedAugust 5, 2020
Docket19-1555
StatusPublished

This text of JACKSON PRIDEMORE v. STATE OF FLORIDA (JACKSON PRIDEMORE v. STATE OF FLORIDA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JACKSON PRIDEMORE v. STATE OF FLORIDA, (Fla. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT

JACKSON PRIDEMORE, Appellant,

v.

STATE OF FLORIDA, Appellee.

No. 4D19-1555

[August 5, 2020]

Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, Palm Beach County; John S. Kastrenakes, Judge; L.T. Case No. 17-CF-008009- AMB.

Carey Haughwout, Public Defender, and Breanna Atwood, Assistant Public Defender, West Palm Beach, for appellant.

Ashley Moody, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Allan R. Geesey, Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.

GROSS, J.

Jackson Pridemore appeals his conviction for one count of sexual battery on a person less than 12 years of age. We affirm the conviction and write primarily to address Pridemore’s claims that the trial court improperly (1) admitted evidence of a collateral crime into evidence and (2) allowed the state to publish a suicide note authored by the victim in the case.

The charges arose from the state’s contention that Pridemore sexually abused his then-girlfriend’s daughter (“the victim”), over the course of several years when the girl was between the ages of 7 and 11.

Williams Rule Evidence/Child Hearsay Evidence

Prior to trial, the state filed notices of intent to offer child hearsay evidence and Williams 1 rule evidence at trial. Regarding the child hearsay

1 Williams v. State, 110 So. 2d 654 (Fla. 1959). evidence, the state sought to introduce a handwritten suicide note written by the victim, in which she disclosed that Pridemore sexually abused her. As for the Williams rule evidence, the state sought to introduce the testimony of a prior victim, who said that Pridemore molested her when he was in a dating relationship with her mother. 2

The trial court held a four-day hearing on the state’s motions. The following facts emerged at the hearing.

Child Hearsay Evidence

The victim’s stepmother (the “stepmother”) testified that the victim had been living with her, the victim’s father, and the victim’s sister for three years, since June 2016. Prior to that, the victim lived with her mother.

In early 2017, when the victim was twelve years old, the stepmother noticed that she was acting out and getting into trouble, which was unusual. Curious about the victim’s behavior, the stepmother examined her room and discovered a suicide note in a binder underneath her bed. The suicide note was not addressed to anyone, but it had names and notes underneath it. The stepmother testified that the suicide note seemed “very familiar,” explaining that the victim had just watched 13 Reasons Why, a Netflix series about a girl who killed herself and made tape recordings addressed to different people.

Concerned that the victim was going to kill herself, the stepmother discussed the suicide note with her. The victim told her that it was not a suicide note and that it was more like a diary to allow her to express her feelings. The stepmother returned the note to the victim.

About a month and a half later, the stepmother went through the victim’s room a second time and discovered the same suicide note sticking out of the binder, but this time more had been added to the note. These additions said that a crime had been committed against the victim. The note stated in pertinent part:

This next person might take up the whole page so listen up because I want everyone to know.

2The state also sought to introduce the prior victim’s recorded interview, in which she discussed the sexual abuse committed by Pridemore. After the Williams rule hearing, the trial court limited that evidence to the prior victim’s testimony alone, so the admissibility of the recorded interview is not at issue in this appeal.

2 Jackson: . . . it was impossible to live with you. You know what you did, you told me that if I told anyone I would be taken away from my mom, but guess what I won’t be here to get taken away from my mom. You raped me for about 3 years and I was so scared to tell anyone. I told 2 people before death but I never said who. . . . You were the most disgusting man I’ve ever met. . . . The 3 years of continuous rape are still in my mind and I have nightmares about it a lot. You made me think that if I was sexually [indiscernible] in a relationship it made it true, and no I never had sex besides rape but that doesn’t count. You made me very sensitive to the word[;] every time I heard it a trigger was sent through my body[.] [I]t made me not able to stop thinking [a]bout it. It made me think that its ok for a 13 year old to grab my ass or kiss me, but it isn’t. You changed my whole life, I bet you everyone who is reading this long page is like damn how was she not so fucked up, but I was and I still am. I wasn’t a good liar or hider, but I bet you my parents never saw this coming. It ways [sic] me down all the time. When I hear about any other rape story[,] I think about it.

So that’s it. I bet you that half of y’all didn’t think I was a good liar or hider, but you didn’t see that coming. I hope you all move on and have a better life without me. Except you Jackson. I hope you go to prison.

The victim was at her mother’s house at the time, so the stepmother went there to discuss the note. The two women showed the victim the letter. The victim had a complete breakdown; she cried uncontrollably and tried to hide her face. The stepmother asked the victim “[i]f it was true,” and the girl said, “Yes.”

A counselor at a child advocacy center interviewed the victim in June 2017. During the interview, the victim detailed how Pridemore had raped her approximately seven times over a three- to four-year period, beginning when she was seven years old, at a time when Pridemore was dating her mother.

Williams Rule Evidence

The prior victim’s mother dated Pridemore before he began his relationship with the victim’s mother. At one point, he lived with the mother and the prior victim. In March 2013, several years after the mother and Pridemore had broken up, the prior victim, then eleven years old, told

3 her mother that “[Pridemore] touched me.” Her mother asked the prior victim, “what do you mean he touched you?” The prior victim was crying and told her that Pridemore “pulled her pants down touched her [private] and then pulled them back up.” When she asked the prior victim “how long,” the prior victim said it had “been about a year” before she had reported it to her, explaining that she was afraid to tell her. The prior victim’s mother confirmed that she was over the relationship at that point and did not make up the allegation to get back at Pridemore for breaking up with her.

A woman who works for a child protection team testified that she interviewed the prior victim in 2013. A DVD of her recorded interview was admitted into evidence. During this interview, the prior victim disclosed that Pridemore had pulled her underwear down and touched her vagina.

The prior victim told the team member that on the night of the incident, there was a birthday party at her house. Her mom told her to go upstairs and go to bed. The prior victim went upstairs to the bedroom she shared with her mother and laid down to watch TV. About thirty minutes later, Pridemore walked into the room and she could hear him washing his hands. She pretended that she was asleep, but was squinting so she could see what he was doing. Pridemore walked over to the bed and said her name softly a few times to see if she was asleep and waved his hand in front of her. He then walked over to the edge of the bed, pulled the blankets off of her, pulled her underwear down, and then touched her on the outside of her vagina. He did not touch her anywhere else. Pridemore washed his hands again and then left the room.

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