Kimball v. State

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedApril 14, 2010
Docket562
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Kimball v. State, (Vt. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Kimball v. State, No. 562-8-08 Wrcv (Eaton, J., Apr. 14, 2010)

[The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from the original. The accuracy of the text and the accompanying data included in the Vermont trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.] STATE OF VERMONT WINDSOR COUNTY, SS

│ Tomas E. Kimball │ │ SUPERIOR COURT v. │ Docket No. 562-8-08 Wrcv │ State of Vermont │ │

FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW, AND ORDER

Petitioner Tomas Kimball seeks post-conviction relief on the ground that he received ineffective assistance of counsel during his trial for sexual assault on a minor and furnishing alcohol to a minor. A merits hearing was held on December 15th and 16th, 2009. Petitioner was present and represented by attorney Melvin Fink. The State of Vermont was represented by State’s Attorney Robert Sand. The court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law based on the credible evidence presented at the hearing.

Findings of Fact

The underlying incident took place in January 2003. Petitioner was sharing his house with his girlfriend, April Zullo. She invited a friend of hers named E.D. to come over to the house. E.D. was thirteen years old at the time. The friendship between Zullo and E.D. was based on a prior relationship between Zullo and E.D.’s father.

At the house, petitioner furnished alcohol to E.D. and sexually assaulted her. Zullo participated in the assault by holding E.D.’s hand and touching her vagina. It was not reported at the time.

Some months later, Zullo became pregnant by petitioner, but they broke up before the child, M.K., was born. Zullo and petitioner then became embroiled in a bitter custody dispute in New Hampshire. Zullo wanted sole custody of the child and made a number of accusations against petitioner in connection with the family court case. Zullo also persuaded E.D. to come forward and speak with police about the January 2003 sexual assault. E.D.’s subsequent disclosure, which took place in approximately April 2005, led to the underlying criminal proceedings.

Petitioner was charged in June 2005 with sexual assault on a minor and furnishing alcohol to a minor. He was represented throughout the proceedings by several different assigned counsel. Attorney Matthew Branchaud took over the case about six months before the jury trial. He had been admitted to practice in 2005, and this was his first jury trial. Another attorney from Branchaud’s office provided some assistance during the first day of trial but was not an active trial participant. Branchaud’s theory of the case was that the allegation of sexual assault was fabricated by or with the help of Zullo in order to further Zullo’s interests in the child- custody dispute. Zullo was a central figure in the case. She purported to be an eyewitness to the assault as well as a co-perpetrator. She also had a close relationship with E.D.

As part of the defense, it was imperative to explain why Zullo would fabricate the incident. Branchaud’s trial strategy was to show that Zullo had gone to great lengths in the past in order to portray petitioner as a sexual deviant and gain an advantage in the family-court case. Specifically, she had accused petitioner of improperly touching M.K. and expressing sexual desire towards M.K. and other underage children. Zullo had alleged other misconduct as well, and had also encouraged E.D. to come forward at a late hour to report the sexual assault. Branchaud thought that the jury would see these allegations as incredible and therefore conclude that Zullo not only fabricated the allegations of sexual assault against E.D., but also persuaded E.D. to take part in the scheme. The theory was to show that Zullo was making up allegations against petitioner so he would be denied any role in M.K.’s life.

Rather than try to exclude other incidents of misconduct, Branchaud hoped to implement his strategy by encouraging Zullo to testify to so many different and outrageous allegations that she lost her credibility with the jury. He formulated this strategy with petitioner’s input and assent. Both felt that they could create reasonable doubt about the whole event by discrediting Zullo.

E.D. was the central witness at trial. She described the sexual acts and the furnishing of alcohol. Zullo then testified under a grant of immunity about her role in the incident. Finally, there was another witness, named Christopher Armstrong. He was a friend of petitioner’s who testified that petitioner had bragged to him about having sex with E.D. Petitioner did not testify in his own defense.

The jury returned guilty verdicts on both counts on June 1, 2006. District Court Judge Theresa S. DiMauro presided over the jury trial.

Petitioner then negotiated a resolution of several pending dockets. The plea agreement contained a waiver of any direct appeal from the trial convictions. Petitioner was accordingly sentenced in November 2006 to serve 8 to 20 years on the sexual-assault conviction. He also received concurrent sentences of 1 to 2 years on the furnishing- alcohol conviction and 1 to 5 years on another lewd-and-lascivious-conduct conviction (to which petitioner had pled no contest as part of the global resolution).

Petitioner now claims that he received ineffective assistance of counsel in several respects. He contends that Branchaud failed to (1) interview a witness in a timely fashion, (2) fully pursue past untruthful statements made by Zullo, (3) object to Zullo’s testimony about petitioner’s sexual misconduct towards M.K., (4) object to Zullo’s testimony that she was physically assaulted and perhaps raped by petitioner, and (5)

2 adequately explain to him what it meant to waive his direct appeal of these issues as part of his plea agreement.

Petitioner retained George Ostler, Esq., as an expert witness in support of his post-conviction claims. Ostler has extensive experience in criminal law. He graduated from Dartmouth in 1977 and from Vermont Law School in 1983. He has practiced criminal law since his graduation from high school. He mostly does criminal defense work, and the majority of that work is in New Hampshire.

The state’s expert was former Windham County State’s Attorney Dan Davis.

Ostler reviewed the trial transcript, the trial counsel’s file, the pleadings, the transcript of the motion hearings, and a statement made by the witness whom Branchaud allegedly failed to interview (Justin Backus). Ostler feels that he was able to review what was necessary in order to formulate his opinion that errors affecting the outcome of the trial were made in several respects.

One of the charges against petitioner was sexual assault. Ostler believes those cases are among the most difficult to try in criminal law. They are complicated and require a high degree of competence. While not directly stated, Ostler’s testimony can be fairly understood to question the propriety of an attorney with no prior jury experience undertaking a sexual assault on a minor trial as his first jury case.

Ostler was critical of Branchaud’s performance in some general areas, such as the effectiveness of the opening statement and the closing argument. In particular, Ostler was critical of Branchaud’s choice to reference petitioner’s alleged misconduct with M.K. in the opening statement, and to describe the subsequent medical examination of M.K. as having been “inconclusive.” Ostler felt that was dangerous. Yet Ostler’s general concerns about these topics fell short of an opinion that Branchaud’s performance in these areas fell below acceptable professional standards.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Kimball v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimball-v-state-vtsuperct-2010.