Kidd v. State

955 S.W.2d 505, 330 Ark. 479, 1997 Ark. LEXIS 619
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 6, 1997
DocketCR 97-586
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 955 S.W.2d 505 (Kidd v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kidd v. State, 955 S.W.2d 505, 330 Ark. 479, 1997 Ark. LEXIS 619 (Ark. 1997).

Opinion

Robert L. Brown, Justice.

AppeEant Larry Joe Kidd was convicted of raping a fourteen-year-old girl and sentenced to forty years in prison. He appeals on two grounds: (1) trial court error in aEowing into evidence Kidd’s comments which were unduly prejudicial and concerned other bad acts; and (2) trial court error in permitting privEeged confidential communications between Kidd and his wife into evidence. The two points are meritless, and we affirm.

The facts in this case are assembled from trial testimony. The fourteen-year-old victim testified that the events occurred in her mobile home in Searcy. On April 28, 1996, she went to bed at about 11:00 p.m. During the night, she heard a person enter her room but assumed it was her mother. A man wearing a ski mask put a piEow over her face and told her to keep quiet. She fought and scratched at the man’s face underneath the mask. The man began to choke her and told her that if she fought any more, he would cut her ear off. He bound her wrists and covered her rnouth with duct tape. After doing that, he removed the bottoms of her pajamas and underwear and had sexual intercourse with her against her wiE. She testified that during the rape, the man raised the mask over his eyes, which aEowed her to see that he had a fairly close-cut beard. She also testified that the man wore surgical gloves and removed one of them so he could scrape underneath her fingernails with his fingernail. He said at the time: “I got to get this out from under you so they don’t know who I am.” The victim said that she struggled with the man throughout the rape.

Once the man left, the victim removed the duct tape from her mouth and called 911 for police assistance though her hands were still bound. The call was forwarded to Deputy Sheriff Randy Still at 3:43 a.m. on the morning of April 29, 1996. The victim waited in the living room of her mobile home until Deputy Still arrived. According to Deputy Still, the victim’s hands were bound in front, and she was bleeding from the vaginal area. He first checked on the condition of the victim’s mother, who had not been harmed. The victim later told the deputy sheriff that her attacker was a heavy-set man with a close-cropped beard who had bad body odor. She added that he was wearing work boots, a pair of dark pants, and a black ski mask.

The victim was taken to the White County Medical Center for a sexual-assault examination. Dr. Christopher Melton, who performed the examination, testified that there were signs of trauma to the victim’s neck and that the presence and location of blood were consistent with the victim’s hymen being torn. In his opinion, she had been subjected to a sexual assault.

After the victim returned from the hospital but on the same day, Kidd, who was a neighbor, came to the front door of the mobile home and told the mother of the victim that he was “all doped up” and that he needed medical attention because he had just fallen through a window. Although she could not see Kidd standing outside of her mobile home, the victim testified that she recognized his voice as that of the man who had raped her.

At the crime scene, Deputy Still found tool marks on the front door of the mobile home, indicating that it had been pried open. He further found a footprint outside of the victim’s window. Later that day, Detectives Curtis Goodrich and Bill Lindsey of the White County Sheriffs Department went to Kidd’s home, where they found him leaving his garage. He had scratches on his face. Kidd agreed to go to the sheriffs department to answer questions, and he did so, accompanied by his wife, Paula Kidd. Once there, he waived his right to counsel and gave a statement. He also gave the detectives permission to search his residence and allowed them to take samples of his hair, blood, and saliva.

In the first statement Kidd gave on April 29, 1996, he denied any culpability for the rape. He told the detectives that he was taking Prozac and Buzbar for an anxiety condition and was under the care of a physician. He stated: “About two years ago, I was having problems. I hated women, and I thought about rape.” Upon searching Kidd’s home, the detectives discovered a broken window, which Kidd said caused the scratches on his face because he slammed his head through it that morning. Detective Goodrich testified that he saw no evidence of blood on the broken glass. The detectives later were given dark work pants and work boots by Paula Kidd. A black ski mask was subsequently recovered from Kidd’s residence.

On June 19, 1996, Detective Goodrich and Detective Lindsey questioned Kidd a second time. Kidd again denied having raped the victim and stated that he hardly knew her. When told by Detective Goodrich that the victim had said her attacker had a bad problem with body odor, he admitted that he had such a problem. Detective Goodrich then related to the jury: “I asked him while he was standing by the victim’s bed, did he have an erection or did he have to have foreplay to get an erection, and he stated he couldn’t remember.” When asked by the detective whether he told anybody about raping the girl, Kidd said that he had told his preacher that he could have done it. He also stated that he thought about rape and killing in the past and that he had followed people home after work. He added that he had previously been accused of rape in the 1980s on a North Dakota Indian Reservation. He stated that he had had sexual relations with the girl on the reservation but later found out that she was a prostitute and wanted nothing further to do with her. According to Kidd, she accused him of rape as a result. He stated that he was arrested and questioned by police officers but later released.

Edward Valman, chief forensic serologist at the Arkansas State Crime Laboratory, testified that he received the victim’s rape kit and found semen, but not sperm, on the vaginal swab. Kermit Channell, section chief of the State’s DNA Laboratory, stated that he tested the vaginal swab but found only DNA consistent with the victim because there were no sperm cells. He testified that the finding of semen without the presence of sperm cells was consistent with the semen’s having been deposited by a person who had had a vasectomy.

Paula Kidd, Kidd’s former wife, testified that Kidd had had a vasectomy soon after they were married approximately seven years earlier. She further testified that during the early morning hours of April 29, 1996, she was awakened at about 1:30 a.m. by a storm. Kidd was in bed at that time. She said that she woke up again at 3:00 a.m. but noticed that he was not in bed and was nowhere in the house. 1 At 5:00 a.m., Kidd had returned to bed, when she received a telephone call from her sister. Her sister, who was also a neighbor, told her about the rape. Hours later, she noticed that Kidd’s face had several scratches that were not there at 1:30 a.m. She also testified that Kidd took a shower that day at 6:00 a.m., which was very unusual because he typically did not get out of bed until 10:00 a.m. She stated that she found his blue work pants and work shirt and a wash cloth in the clothes washer, which was unusual, too, because she normally did the laundry and because he had plenty of clean clothes to wear to work.

I. Prejudicial Statements

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Bluebook (online)
955 S.W.2d 505, 330 Ark. 479, 1997 Ark. LEXIS 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kidd-v-state-ark-1997.