Joseph Cook v. State of Mississippi

161 So. 3d 1057, 2015 Miss. LEXIS 192, 2015 WL 1848125
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 2015
Docket2013-KA-01240-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 161 So. 3d 1057 (Joseph Cook v. State of Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joseph Cook v. State of Mississippi, 161 So. 3d 1057, 2015 Miss. LEXIS 192, 2015 WL 1848125 (Mich. 2015).

Opinion

KITCHENS, Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. Joe Cook was convicted in the Rankin County Circuit Court for two counts of sexual battery on his girlfriend’s daughter and for one count of directing or causing a felony to be committed by the girlfriend’s son. The evidence established that, with his penis and fingers, Cook penetrated the vagina of ten-year-old S.J. and forced her brother, nine-year-old H.L., to have sexual relations with his sister. Cook was sentenced as an habitual offender to a life sentence for each of the two sexual battery counts and to twenty years for the single count of causing a felony to be committed by a minor. The three sentences were made to run concurrently. Cook claims on appeal that the children’s statements to a Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner (SANE) constituted inadmissible hearsay, that the children’s statements to their great-grandmother and to a forensic interviewer constituted inadmissible hearsay, and that the trial court erred by sentencing him as an habitual offender. Finding that Cook’s assignments of error are without merit, we affirm his convictions and sentences.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. Joe Cook was indicted on August 28, 2012, for two counts (Counts I and II) of sexual battery in violation of Mississippi Code Section 97 — 3—95(l)(d) (Rev.2014) and for one count (Count III) of directing or causing a felony to be committed by a person under the age of seventeen years in violation of Mississippi Code Section 97-1-6 (Rev.2014). Prior to trial, on March 19, 2013, the State moved to amend Cook’s indictment to charge him as an habitual offender pursuant to Mississippi Code Section 99-19-81 (Rev.2007), over the objection of Cook’s attorney. The trial court granted the State’s motion and amended Cook’s indictment on March 26, 2013, thirteen days before the commencement of trial on April 8, 2013.

¶ 3. At the time of the alleged crimes, S.J. 1 lived with her mother, her brother, H.L., and Joe Cook, her mother’s boyfriend, in Rankin County, Mississippi. S.J. testified that, on March 3, 2012, Cook, along with S.J. and H.L., 2 drove the children’s mother to work. After going to Cook’s sister’s house, Cook, S.J., and H.L. returned home to the trailer they shared with the children’s mother. According to S.J., Cook “asked us if we wanted to have some fun,” but we “didn’t know what it meant.” In the living room of the trailer, *1060 Cook produced his cellular phone and proceeded to show “sex videos” to S.J. and H.L., which depicted people “[h]aving sex.” S.J. testified that she, H.L., and Cook then went into the back bedroom shared by Cook and the children’s mother. Cook “showed us sex toys,” including one “bullet,” a black, “round metal piece with a wire to it.” Cook also showed the children images of sex toys on his cellular phone. According to S.J., Cook explained that the sex toys were used “[t]o make you feel good.” S.J. testified that Cook then removed his trousers, placed a condom on his penis, and “put his private part way in me.” Additionally, S.J. testified that Cook touched her with his finger “[o]n the outside and part way in” and told her that she “had a pretty private.” According to S.J., Cook “wanted my brother and me to have sex,” so H.L. got on top of S.J. and H.L.’s private touched S.J.’s private. S.J. testified that Cook threatened to poison S.J. and H.L. and then made them take a bath and put on different clothes before they went to pick up the children’s mother from work.

¶ 4. H.L. told a similar story at trial: he stated that Cook showed H.L. and S.J. videos which depicted “nasty stuff’ involving people with no clothes on. According to H.L., Cook and S.J. went into the bedroom “and talked.” H.L. then went into the bedroom and observed Cook placing “his thing inside my sister.” H.L. “thought I was going to throw up” and went to the bathroom. When H.L. returned to the bedroom, Cook “told me to do some things to my sister that I didn’t want to do.” H.L. responded in the negative when asked whether he had touched his private to S.J.’s private, but stated that he did touch S.J. “where her nasty thing is.” H.L. testified that Cook threatened that if he or S.J. told anyone, Cook “would kill us.”

¶ 5. S.J. testified that she told her mother the day after Cook allegedly had abused her; H.L. testified that he told his mother “[r]ight after Joe Cook went to sleep” because of Cook’s threats. Cook continued to live in the mother’s residence “for a while.” The mother testified that her children had told her of the alleged abuse, that they were “nervous and scared,” and that she had confronted Cook. Cook responded that “he had caught the children having sexual acts with each other” and that he “took care of it.” According to the mother, Cook stated that “he wanted an open family,” that “he wanted us to talk with the kids about sex so they would know more.” Specifically, Cook stated that he wanted S.J. and H.L. to observe Cook and their mother having sexual relations “just to know about the birds-and-the-bees.... ” While she “didn’t agree” with Cook’s proposal “at all,” she remained with Cook for “financial reasons” because she was “seven months pregnant about to go on maternity leave.” The mother testified that Cook did not keep the children alone after the alleged abuse.

¶ 6. The great-grandmother of S.J. and H.L. and grandmother of their mother testified that S.J. and H.L. visited her house on a daily basis and that the mother’s trailer is situated “across from my driveway” in Rankin County. The great-grandmother testified that one afternoon, S.J. requested that she (whom S.J. referred to as “Granny”) come into the bathroom. S.J. proceeded to ask Granny whether a stain in her pants was blood, whereupon Granny responded that “if you notice any more, we’ll take care of it....” According to Granny, a few days later, S.J. again called her into the bathroom, that S.J. was “very upset,” and that S.J. told Granny “that Joe had raped her.” The great-grandmother testified that she promised S.J. not to tell anyone and, after about two or three days, “told my daughter [the *1061 mother’s mother] something had happened that needed to be addressed.” This woman — the grandmother 3 of S.J. and H.L.— testified that, after her conversation with Granny, she walked next door to the trailer of the children’s mother to discuss the situation and that “[w]e agreed to go to the police department and file a report.” The mother and the grandmother reported Cook’s conduct with the children to the local police on April 23, 2012.

¶ 7. The day after the incident had been reported to the police, a detective was assigned to the case. The detective, according to his department’s standard protocol, set up interviews for S.J. and H.L. with a forensic interview specialist with the Child Education Center (CEC) in Madison, Mississippi. The interviewer 4 testified that she interviewed S.J. on May 14, 2012, and that she interviewed H.L. on May 18, 2012. On cross examination, the interviewer stated that her “training qualifies me to follow the protocol to make sure the interview is given consistently so that there can be — it can be shown whether it was a credible or incredible interview.” Also during cross examination, she stated that she is “not qualified to say” whether S.J.

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161 So. 3d 1057, 2015 Miss. LEXIS 192, 2015 WL 1848125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-cook-v-state-of-mississippi-miss-2015.