Kenneth Howard Williams v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 7, 2018
DocketA18A0279
StatusPublished

This text of Kenneth Howard Williams v. State (Kenneth Howard Williams v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenneth Howard Williams v. State, (Ga. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

FIFTH DIVISION MCFADDEN, P. J., RAY and RICKMAN, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules

June 7, 2018

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A18A0279. WILLIAMS v. THE STATE.

RAY, Judge.

A jury convicted Kenneth Williams of two counts of child molestation (OCGA

§ 16-6-4 (a)) and one count of aggravated sexual battery (OCGA § 16-6-22.2). He

filed the instant appeal from the denial of his motions for new trial. For the reasons

that follow, we affirm Williams’ convictions for child molestation. We are

constrained by a 2015 decision of the Georgia Supreme Court to reverse his

conviction for aggravated sexual battery and remand the case for a new trial on that

issue.

On appeal from a criminal conviction, the defendant no longer enjoys a

presumption of innocence, and we view the evidence in the light most favorable to

the jury’s verdict. We neither weigh the evidence nor judge the credibility of the witnesses, but determine only whether the jury was authorized by the evidence to find

the defendant guilty of the crimes charged. Laster v. State, 340 Ga. App. 96, 97 (796

SE2d 484) (2017).

The evidence adduced at trial showed that in 2013, E. H., who was four years

old at the time and staying at her grandmother and Williams’ house, contacted her

mother via FaceTime, crying and asking to come home. Williams was E. H.’s step-

grandfather. In the car on the way home, E. H. told her mother that she had a “secret”

with Williams, whom she called “Poppy.” E. H. said that Williams had been touching

her privates. At trial, E. H. responded affirmatively when asked if Williams touched

her “in” her privates, but also testified that he only touched her on the outside of her

privates and that her panties were “up” when he touched her. Specifically, E. H. told

her mother, “Poppy touches my hoo-hoo and I touch his wee-wee.” These were words

that E. H.’s family used, respectively, to refer to the vagina and the penis. E. H. later

made a consistent report about the touching to her father, and was upset and crying

when she did so. E. H.’s behavior was matter-of-fact and normal when she relayed

this information to her mother. The mother said E. H. was “adamant” that the

touching had happened. At some point in 2013, E. H. told her mother that Williams

“had put his finger inside her vagina.”

2 After E. H. made outcry to her mother, Williams told his wife, E. H.’s

grandmother, about a number of incidents occurring between September 2012 and

July 2013 in which E. H. approached him, squeezed his penis or testicles, sometimes

punched his testicles, and took his finger to touch her vagina. The grandmother

testified that Williams demonstrated for her how he touched E. H. at the top of her

vagina, on the outside, and agreed that it was “undisputed” that this had happened.

The grandmother testified that Williams never said specifically that he did not put his

finger inside E. H.’s vagina. The grandmother took notes on these incidents in an e-

mail that she eventually sent to E. H.’s mother and from which she was questioned

at trial. When asked if E. H. “would touch his penis and he would touch her vagina,”

the grandmother said Williams had told her that it did not happen on each visit, but

“[i]f it happened, it only happened once” each time E. H. visited.

Jill Hesterlee, a registered nurse and forensic interviewer, interviewed E. H. in

August 2013 at the Carroll County Child Advocacy Center. It was a recorded video

interview, which was tendered into evidence and played for the jury. During the

interview, Hesterlee showed E. H. drawings of male and female subjects, and had her

identify various body parts. E. H., pointing at the genitals on the drawings, said that

“Poppy” (Williams) touched her and she touched him, more than once, in places that

3 were not okay, but that “he said it was okay” and “we don’t want grammy to see

because it was just our secret.” E. H. also told Hesterlee that she and Williams pulled

their pants and underwear down, and that he touched her vagina “with his fingers.”

When Hesterlee asked E. H. whether Williams touched her “hoo-hoo” (vagina) on the

outside or the inside, E. H. responded, “both” and “both, sometimes.” Asked what this

felt like, E. H. responded, “It tickles a little bit and it feels so good . . . it feels good

in and out.” E. H. said she did not want Williams to stop. Hesterlee then asked, “So

he does his finger in and out?” E. H. nodded affirmatively.

E. H. told a counselor, whom she was seeing at the time of trial, that she felt

bad for not telling Williams “no” when he touched her, that she wanted the touching

to stop, and that she did not feel comfortable.

1. Williams contends that the evidence is insufficient to sustain his conviction

for aggravated sexual battery1 because no rational trier of fact could have found the

element of penetration beyond a reasonable doubt. He argues that E. H.’s testimony

was inconsistent, and that her statements in a forensic interview “were not very clear”

and were “the product of suggestive questioning.”

1 Williams does not contest the sufficiency of the evidence as to his convictions for child molestation.

4 “A person commits the offense of aggravated sexual battery when he or she

intentionally penetrates with a foreign object the sexual organ or anus of another

person without the consent of that person.” OCGA § 16-6-22.2 (b). The Code section

defines “foreign object” as “any article or instrument other than the sexual organ of

a person.” OCGA § 16-6-22.2 (a). A finger is considered a foreign object under

OCGA § 16-6-22.2 (a). Hardeman v. State, 247 Ga. App. 503, 504 (2) (544 SE2d

481) (2001).

Although E. H. gave some conflicting testimony, there was some evidence, as

outlined above, that Williams’ finger went into E. H.’s vagina. See Kirkland v. State,

334 Ga. App. 26, 27-28, 33 (3) (778 SE2d 42) (evidence sufficient to sustain

defendant’s conviction for aggravated sodomy where relatives of child victim

testified that child told them defendant made her engage in oral sex, but victim, who

was four years old when testifying at trial, only nodded affirmatively to related

questions, said she forgot, or refused to answer). There also was evidence that E. H.

did not consent, in that she told one of her counselors that she did not want Williams

to touch her and wanted him to stop.2 Any issues of inconsistency or credibility of

testimony are for the jury, not this Court, and the jury was authorized by the evidence

2 The issue of “consent” is more fully discusssed in division 2 herein.

5 to conclude that aggravated sexual battery occurred. Pearce v. State, 300 Ga. App.

777, 779-780 (1) (686 SE2d 392) (2009).

2. Williams argues that the trial court erred by instructing the jury, in regard to

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Kenneth Howard Williams v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenneth-howard-williams-v-state-gactapp-2018.