Jose Sanchez v. Commonwealth of Kentucky

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 2023
Docket2022 SC 0385
StatusUnknown

This text of Jose Sanchez v. Commonwealth of Kentucky (Jose Sanchez v. Commonwealth of Kentucky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jose Sanchez v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, (Ky. 2023).

Opinion

RENDERED: DECEMBER 14, 2023 TO BE PUBLISHED

Supreme Court of Kentucky 2022-SC-0385-MR

JOSE SANCHEZ APPELLANT

ON APPEAL FROM WAYNE CIRCUIT COURT V. HONORABLE VERNON MINIARD, JR., JUDGE NOS. 17-CR-00062 & 17-CR-00020

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLEE

OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE LAMBERT

AFFIRMING IN PART, REVERSING IN PART, AND VACATING

Jose Sanchez (Sanchez) was convicted of five counts of first-degree rape

and four counts of third-degree rape. He now appeals his convictions and

resulting sentence of seventy years’ imprisonment as a matter of right.1 After

thorough review we affirm Sanchez’s convictions and sentence, but we reverse

and vacate the trial court’s imposition of public defender fees against him.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The victim in this case, Jane,2 alleged that Sanchez had repeatedly raped

her over the course of several years. Sanchez had been her mother’s live-in

1 Ky. Const. § 110.

2 The victim is this case was a minor when the crimes against her were

committed, and we therefore refer to her using a pseudonym to protect her privacy. boyfriend since Jane was an infant, and although he was not Jane’s biological

father, he was the only father figure in her life and she called him “dad.”

Jane, who was twenty years old at the time of the trial, testified that her

first memory of being sexually abused by Sanchez occurred when she was in

kindergarten. While in the family home, Sanchez made her get on a bed with

him, wrapped her in a blanket, and began touching her legs and vagina. As

Jane got older the abuse continued to escalate, and he raped her for the first

time when she was nine or ten years old. Jane explained that on that occasion

Sanchez had taken her with him on a day trip for work because he needed her

to translate; neither of Jane’s parents spoke English and she frequently

translated for both of them. At some point during the drive, he pulled the car

over and made her get out and lay down on the ground. He took off her clothes

and his pants and underwear and got on top of her. She tried to fight him off,

but he was able to put his penis in her vagina.

Taking Jane on trips to abuse her became common practice. Jane

testified Sanchez would pull over in different areas, referred to respectively by

Sanchez as “the bridge,” “the woods,” “the river,” and “our secret hideout,” and

rape her. He would also assault her in the family home during the day when

no one was home or at night when everyone was asleep.

Jane’s mother became very ill from chronic kidney disease sometime

around 2012. Her mother was unable to work or care for Jane’s younger

2 brothers, Adam and Ben3. Adam was born sometime around 2006, and Ben

was born in 2014. Jane’s mother had a very difficult pregnancy with Ben due

to her illness, and he was born premature with numerous health issues,

including heart and lung complications that required surgical intervention.

Ben was also born with a cleft palate necessitating that he be fed with a feeding

tube. Jane stepped into a caregiving role for both her mother and her younger

brothers, in particular Ben, and missed so much school doing so that she

became homeschooled in the sixth grade.

During this time, the rapes continued. Jane testified she never wanted

to comply with Sanchez’s demands, but if she refused him, he would withhold

things from the other members of the family. For example, he would withhold

medical care for her mother and Ben, or clothing and food. Jane was afraid to

report what Sanchez was doing to her because he was the family’s sole

breadwinner, and she did not know how they would survive if she reported

him. Sanchez would also frequently bribe Jane with money, clothing, or the

ability to go out with her friends in exchange for complying with his sexual

demands.

At some point when Jane got older, Sanchez bought her a cellphone. He

would frequently text her demanding sex. Jane testified that when she was

younger, she would delete the messages he sent her because of their vile

nature. But, in 2016, fourteen-year-old Jane began to consider reporting the

3 We use pseudonyms to refer to Jane’s brothers as they were also minors

during the events at issue. 3 abuse. She therefore stopped deleting the messages and took photographs and

video recordings of Sanchez to use as evidence against him.

Jane ultimately filed a police report against Sanchez on November 29,

2016, and he was arrested the same day. While at the police station, Jane took

screenshots of text messages Sanchez sent her and printed them directly to the

police station’s printer. Later, Jane was forensically interviewed and medically

examined at a local children’s advocacy center (CAC). During her forensic

interview, Jane used the text messages, which ranged from June 20, 2016, to

November 29, 2016, to write down the dates she believed rapes had occurred

based on the content of the texts. The sheets of paper Jane used to write these

dates and texts down were entered into evidence at trial. Of note, Jane stated

several times that during that time Sanchez would rape her up to three days

per week.

Sanchez’s cellphone was confiscated by law enforcement upon his arrest,

and it was later forensically searched pursuant to a search warrant by

Detective Mike Littrell (Det. Littrell), a detective with the attorney general’s

digital forensics office. The messages extracted from Sanchez’s phone were

from November 19, 2016, to November 29, 2016. Of the forty-one messages

extracted from Sanchez’s phone exchanged between himself and Jane, twenty-

two matched the messages captured by the screenshots taken from Jane’s

phone. Det. Littrell explained that if a message appeared on Sanchez’s phone

but did not appear in the screenshots from Jane’s phone it could mean that

Sanchez either typed the message and never sent it or that Jane deleted it once

she received it. 4 Jane’s physical exam at the CAC was performed by a physician aided by

Judy Withers (Nurse Withers), a sexual assault nurse examiner. Jane’s

physical exam revealed she had genital warts, and the findings were

“consistent with sexual abuse,” although Nurse Withers explained during

cross-examination that any time a child reports sexual abuse, the CAC’s

medical staff will make a finding that the exam is consistent with sexual abuse.

At trial, the Commonwealth presented both the original screenshots

taken from Jane’s phone and a translation of those texts by a Spanish-English

translator that was stipulated to by the parties. The translated text messages

spanned fifty-one pages, and Jane read from them extensively. For our

purposes, we limit the recitation of those texts to the dates corresponding to

the counts ultimately submitted to the jury. For each of the nine charges, the

jury was instructed on first-degree rape, third-degree rape, and two theories of

first-degree sexual abuse, one based on forcible compulsion and one based on

Jane’s and Sanchez’s respective ages.

For Count 1, occurring on or about June 20, 2016, Jane identified June

20 at the CAC based on the following text exchange:

At 2:25 pm: Sanchez: [Jane] what are you doing? Jane: Nothing, why?

At 9:53 pm: Sanchez: [Jane] yes or no? Later on and if not I won’t pay for your cell phone minutes.4

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Nery J. Ruiz v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
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Hoff v. Commonwealth
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Johnson v. Commonwealth
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Spicer v. Commonwealth
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Kays v. Commonwealth
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Jose Sanchez v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jose-sanchez-v-commonwealth-of-kentucky-ky-2023.