Kitchens v. State

898 P.2d 443, 1995 Alas. App. LEXIS 28, 1995 WL 359841
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJune 16, 1995
DocketNo. A-5165
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 898 P.2d 443 (Kitchens v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kitchens v. State, 898 P.2d 443, 1995 Alas. App. LEXIS 28, 1995 WL 359841 (Ala. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Chief Judge.

Rick L. Kitchens was convicted by a jury of two counts of sexual assault in the first degree, AS 11.41.410(a)(1) (nonconsensual sexual penetration), one count of sexual assault in the second degree, AS 11.41.420(a)(1) (nonconsensual sexual touching), one count of burglary in the first degree, AS 11.46.300(a)(1), and one count of robbery in the second degree, AS 11.41.510(a)(1). Superior Court Judge Karl S. Johnstone sentenced Kitchens to a total term of sixteen years with four years suspended. Kitchens appeals, contending that the trial court erred [445]*445in restricting Ms examination of a defense ■witness. Kitchens also claims that his composite sentence is excessive. We affirm Kitchens’ convictions but remand for reconsideration of the sentence.

FACTS

Kitchens’ convictions stem from an incident of sexual assault reported by N.L. N.L.’s version of events differs markedly from Kitchens’; we turn to N.L.’s version first.

1. N.L.’s Version

In September of 1992, N.L. lived in an apartment in Anchorage with her fiance, M.W. The couple planned to spend several days in M.W.’s hometown in Texas, where they intended to announce their engagement. M.W. left for Texas on September 14 or 15. N.L. initially made arrangements to depart Anchorage on an early morning flight on September 17. When that flight was can-celled shortly before its scheduled departure, N.L. rebooked herself on a flight leaving early the next morning, September 18.

On the evening of September 17, several hours before she was due to leave, N.L. received a telephone call. The call was from a man N.L. had spoken to on the telephone several times during the past summer. The first time the man had called, N.L. got the impression that he was Zane Vaughn, an assistant wrestling coach at N.L.’s former Mgh school whom N.L. had met several years previously when she was in school and whom she had dated once shortly after graduating; N.L. had a casual conversation with the man. The same man had called N.L. three or four more times during the summer, apparently just to talk. During the subsequent telephone conversations, the man said notMng to indicate that he was not Zane Vaughn, and N.L. continued to assume that he was indeed Vaughn.

When the same man called N.L. on September 17, she again thought that he was Vaughn. After N.L. told him that she was leaving for Texas later that night to join her fiance, the caller offered her a ride to the airport. N.L. accepted the offer and asked the caller to pick her up shortly after midnight. The caller told N.L. to leave her door unlocked.

At about 11:30 p.m., N.L. took a shower. As she walked from the bathroom to her bedroom, she noticed a man seated on the living room couch. N.L. closed her bedroom door and quickly put on a bathrobe. She heard a knock on the bedroom door. When she put her head out to say that she would be out as soon as she finished dressing, N.L. encountered a man wearing wMte gloves and a knit scarf over his face. The man grabbed N.L., covered her mouth with his hand, and told her not to scream. He demanded money, threatening to snap N.L.’s neck if she did not cooperate. N.L. gave him approximately $200, wMch he placed into a brown nylon bag that he had brought with him. The man proceeded to sexually assault N.L., forcing her to engage in fellatio and genital intercourse. N.L.’s assailant then fled the apartment, threatening to kill her if she reported the incident.

N.L. did not immediately report the rape to the authorities or to her fiance, M.W. She took a taxi to the airport, caught her scheduled flight, and, upon arrival in Texas, pretended that nothing unusual had happened. Although N.L.’s reluctance to report the rape stemmed to a limited extent from her assailant’s death threat, her primary reason for failing to report the incident promptly was her fear of M.W.’s jealous and controlling nature: N.L. was afraid M.W. would not believe that she had been raped and would suspect her of having an affair with another man.

Almost three weeks after the alleged rape, on October 5,1992 — after N.L. and M.W. had returned to Anchorage — an anonymous caller telephoned N.L. and M.W.’s apartment. The caller hung up as soon as M.W. answered the telephone. This prompted N.L. to tell M.W. about the rape. Even though M.W. did not believe N.L., he called the police, who came to the apartment and interviewed her.

N.L. had not gotten a good look at her assailant. Although the man differed somewhat from her memory of Zane Vaughn, N.L. believed she had been raped by Vaughn, and she reported this to the officer [446]*446who interviewed her. During the police interview, N.L. received a call from the man she believed to be Vaughn. A portion of the conversation was recorded on N.L.’s answering machine, and the police managed to trace the call to the number from which it originated. At the end of the conversation, N.L. told the caller to call her again two days later, on October 7.

Subsequent investigation established that the call had come from a telephone listed in Kitchens’ name. The investigation also disclosed that Zane Vaughn had not been in Anchorage on the date of the alleged rape. After obtaining a warrant, the police recorded the October 7 call to N.L. Following a script that the police had given to her, N.L. attempted to elicit incriminating statements from her caller. Although the caller became suspicious in the course of the call, he ultimately acknowledged: “You know I raped you, you know it was force, but you loved it.” Acting pursuant to a second warrant, the police searched Kitchens’ apartment; they seized a brown nylon bag that N.L. identified as the bag that her assailant had used to carry her stolen cash, as well as a pair of shorts with an emblem on them that N.L. identified as having been worn by her assailant.

2. Kitchens’ Version

We turn next to Kitchens’ version of events. At trial, Kitchens testified in his own defense, admitting that he had engaged in sexual intercourse with N.L. at her apartment, but claiming that the act was consensual.1 Kitchens’ theory of defense was that N.L. had fabricated her charge of rape in order to avoid having M.W. learn of her relationship with Kitchens.

According to Kitchens, he had become acquainted with N.L. during the spring of 1992, when she and M.W. had visited an outdoor show where Kitchens worked at a booth for his employer, an automobile parts supplier. Kitchens claimed that, at the show, N.L. had asked him about a problem she was having with her car. He could not give her an answer without referring to information in his company’s parts computer, so he took N.L.’s number and told her he would call her later.

Kitchens claimed that, when he called N.L. back, he struck up a conversation with her. This led to further calls, and eventually he and N.L. became good friends over the telephone. Kitchens estimated that he had spoken to N.L. hundreds of times over the telephone during the summer of 1992. During these conversations, N.L. would frequently discuss her personal life with Kitchens, would confide in him about problems she was having with M.W., and would seek his advice.

Kitchens testified that when N.L. told him of her impending trip to Texas, he offered her a ride to the airport and arranged to meet her at her apartment. According to Kitchens he had visited the apartment once before, in August.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
898 P.2d 443, 1995 Alas. App. LEXIS 28, 1995 WL 359841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kitchens-v-state-alaskactapp-1995.