Kays v. Commonwealth

505 S.W.3d 260, 2016 Ky. App. LEXIS 177, 2016 WL 5956995
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 14, 2016
DocketNO. 2014-CA-001924-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 505 S.W.3d 260 (Kays v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kays v. Commonwealth, 505 S.W.3d 260, 2016 Ky. App. LEXIS 177, 2016 WL 5956995 (Ky. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

NICKELL, JUDGE:

Casey Kays stands convicted of one count of rape1 and one count of sodomy,2 both in the third degree. Conviction followed an October 2014 trial where jurors chose the maximum sentence of five years on each charge, terms to be served consecutively for a total of ten years. The Jefferson Circuit Court sentenced Kays in conformity with the jury’s decision.

Charges stemmed from Kays having sex with A.J.,3 a teenage girl who had been his student and a player on the high school volleyball team he coached. Kays now challenges the final judgment alleging a juror was erroneously struck for cause; text and Facebook messages should have been excluded due to lack of authentication; his ex-wife should have been barred from testifying about confidential marital conversations; and, jurors should have received more sentencing information. Having reviewed the record, the briefs and the law, we affirm.

FACTS

A.J. was a bright student. Teachers recognized her leadership qualities by voting her “Student of the Month.” In 2013, Kays was her civics teacher at The Academy at Shawnee High School in Jefferson County, Kentucky. According to A. J., Kays was one of the cooler teachers. A.J. wanted to play volleyball her sophomore year—a decision her mother supported—and joined the team because Kays was the coach. Kays communicated with the players via a Face-book page named “Shawneevball.”

Initially, A.J. and Kays had a “normal” student-teacher relationship. That changed [263]*263at the end of A.J.’s freshman year. On the last day of school, A.J.—then fifteen—sent Kays—then thirty-eight—a Facebook message saying she had feelings for him. Kays gave A.J. his phone number. Soon they were texting twenty to fifty times a day and a “serious” relationship blossomed in a few weeks.

The pair talked bn the phone hours at a time—often well into the night. They text-ed and engaged in live video chats on Facetime, all of which included explicit talk of sexual acts and a plan to get together to have sex. A.J. sent Kays nude photos of herself; Kays sent A.J. an image of his penis. On at least one occasion there was talk of Kays buying A.J. a ring. Kays also talked to A.J. about his wife and spoke often of hiding their' relationship from his wife, an assistant principal at a local middle school. Kays' pet name for A. J. was “Babygirl.” When the relationship with Kays began, A.J. was dating Jacob, a boy she had been seeing off and on for two years; Kays was jealous of Jacob.

Kays testified he may have been in the throes of depression or a midlife crisis when his relationship with A.J. began. Texting with A. J. was “fun and exciting”— something he looked forward to daily. At trial, he acknowledged sending A.J. highly personal messages and admitted doing so Was probably wrong and crossed boundaries. He denied they exchanged nude photos or that he ever had sexual contact with her. The most he admitted was kissing A.J. three times while in his car—something he knew was inappropriate. At some point A.J. gave Kays two hickeys, prompting an online thread between the two about Kays buying cosmetics to hide the marks on his neck.

A.J.’s mother—describing herself as “overprotective”—suspected Kays was involved with her daughter after several disturbing signs during the first week of volleyball practice in mid-July 2013. Mother was to drive A.J. to and from daily practice—the gym was only a few blocks from their home. One day, A.J, did not come home on her own and did not answer her phone. Worried, mother messaged the Shawneevball Facebook page—controlled by Kays—expressing concern for her daughter’s whereabouts. She received no response from the Facebook page, but within five minutes A.J. called saying Kays had driven her and other players to the Louisville waterfront. Mother thought this “crossed the line” because Kays had not received parental permission for the trip. Kays drove A.J. home a couple of other times even though mother had forbidden him from doing so. After 10:00 p.m. one night, Kays scheduled volleyball practice for early the next morning, saying he knew the girls had nothing better to do; mother thought this odd—how would he know the girls’ plans?

Knowing Kays was not to drive her home from practice, and knowing mother was awaiting a phone call to pick her up, A.J. came home another afternoon waving bus passes and saying she had ridden the TARC bus. Mother knew this to be a lie because their home is mere blocks from the school and her daughter would never ride a city bus. Mother suspected A.J. was hiding a relationship with Kays, but had no proof.

Later that afternoon, A.J. was not in her room, the house, or the surrounding block. When mother returned home from running an errand, she asked A.J. where she had been. A.J. said she had been in her room— sleeping—the whole time. When mother told her that was untrue, A. J. said she had walked to the store to buy candy, but mother knew she had no money, and, knew she would not walk to the store alone. At that point, A.J. claimed she had resumed seeing a boy she had not mentioned in [264]*264almost a year—the boy had supposedly gotten his driver’s license and driven a good distance to visit A.J. for fifteen to twenty minutes. Mother knew this story was false and called her daughter’s bluff, bluntly asking if she was having a relationship with Kays.

A.J. initially denied any relationship with Kays, but then broke into tears and admitted she and Kays were romantically involved and had been intimate, but gave no specifics. Mother called police on July 19, 2013.

The next morning, mother demanded specifics. A.J. said she and Kays had unprotected intercourse in his car one time and on another occasion Kays performed oral sex on her, again in his car, just around the corner from her home. Mother called police again on July 20, 2013.

Not knowing whether there was proof of a relationship, but strongly hoping there was, mother logged on to Facebook posing as A.J. and sent Kays a message. He responded, producing a thread of messages between mother as “A.J.” and Kays in which he directed “A.J.” to delete all messages and “[d]eny everything,” suggested alibis “A.J.” should give mother, inquired about the status of “AJ.’s” cell phone and punishment, and professed his love and desire for “A.J.” During this thread, which was introduced at trial, Kays asked “A.J.” whether he should reply to mother’s Facebook message of a few days before about A.J. not returning home from volleyball practice. The pair decided a reply to mother was best, so Kays sent a message to mother apologizing for his late response. Mother replied, thanking Kays for providing his phone number and directed him not to drive A.J. anywhere without her permission.

On July 20, 2013, Patrolman Jorge Soto-Perez responded to mother’s calls about the sexual assault on A.J. He spoke first with mother who provided general details A.J. had revealed to her. Soto-Perez then spoke privately with A.J. Initially, A.J. was not forthcoming with information, but finally opened up to him—a father himself who told her about sexual predators—saying Kays loved her, was her boyfriend, and had sex with her in his vehicle. At that point, Soto-Perez called the Crimes Against Children Unit (CACU) and Det. Rico Williams took over the case. CACU investigates sexual and physical abuse, and exploitation of children under sixteen years of age.

As part of his investigation, Det.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
505 S.W.3d 260, 2016 Ky. App. LEXIS 177, 2016 WL 5956995, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kays-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-2016.