Kreps v. Commonwealth

286 S.W.3d 213, 2009 Ky. LEXIS 148, 2009 WL 1819479
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 2009
Docket2007-SC-000814-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 286 S.W.3d 213 (Kreps v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kreps v. Commonwealth, 286 S.W.3d 213, 2009 Ky. LEXIS 148, 2009 WL 1819479 (Ky. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Justice ABRAMSON.

Raymond Kreps appeals as a matter of right from an October 16, 2007 Judgment of the Graves Circuit Court convicting him of two counts of rape in the second degree *215 and two counts of rape in the third degree and sentencing him to five years on each count to run consecutively for a total of twenty years in prison. The Commonwealth alleged and the jury found that on four different occasions from January 2005 till June 2005, Kreps had sex with a minor child, A.S., who became fourteen years old in February 2005. Kreps alleges on appeal that the trial court erred by (1) permitting the Commonwealth to introduce his taped police statement, which was made in the course of plea discussions and was inadmissible per KRE 410; (2) allowing evidence of his two prior felony convictions and his two pending charges in Livingston County to be introduced via the aforementioned recorded statement; and (3) failing to conduct a hearing to determine the admissibility of A.S.’s prior false allegation of sexual misconduct against another individual. Convinced that Kreps’s taped police statement was made in the course of plea discussions with an attorney for the prosecuting authority and should have been excluded per KRE 410, we reverse Kreps’s convictions and remand for a new trial.

RELEVANT FACTS

In July 2004, Kreps, who was thirty-eight years old at the time, and his new wife, Renee, allowed thirteen-year-old A.S. to move into their residence in Fulton, Kentucky. Renee Kreps had previously been married to A.S.’s grandfather and had remained close to A.S. and A.S.’s mother, Terra Anderson, even after the death of Terra’s father two years previously. During the summer of 2004, Renee learned from Terra that A.S. was “out of control” and agreed to be a guardian for A.S. so that she could have a more stable environment. Seven months after A.S. began living with Renee and Raymond Kreps, in February 2005, Renee was involved in a serious car accident and had to be transferred to the Oakview Rehabilitation Center indefinitely in order to recover from her injuries. A.S. continued to live with Kreps after Renee’s accident, and she continued to see her mother, Terra, frequently.

Approximately a year after A.S. began living with Kreps, on July 1, 2005, Amy Timmons, a social worker, received information from an anonymous caller that fourteen-year-old A.S. was pregnant due to her sexual relationship with Kreps. Tim-mons then contacted Kelly Drew of the Graves County Sheriffs office, and the two traveled to Kreps’s residence to conduct an interview. Although no one was home initially, Timmons and Drew learned from Dennis Gibbs, who pulled into the driveway as they were about to leave, that Renee Kreps was still at the rehabilitation center and A.S., A.S.’s mother, and Kreps were currently at Kreps’s houseboat in Green Turtle Bay. Gibbs also told Tim-mons and Drew that he had been living with Kreps since his wife’s car wreck and that he was now romantically involved with Kreps.

Soon after receiving this information, Timmons and Drew interviewed Renee Kreps at the rehabilitation center. Renee confirmed that A.S. had been staying with them since July 2004, that A.S. continued to see her mother regularly, and that she did not believe there was an inappropriate relationship between Kreps and A.S. On July 12, 2005, Timmons and Drew traveled to Green Turtle Bay and conducted three separate, individual interviews with Kreps, A.S., and Terra at Kreps’s houseboat. All three denied that a sexual relationship existed between A.S. and Kreps and that A.S. was pregnant.

Following these initial interviews, A.S. and her mother left Kreps’s houseboat and began staying with Jeff and Dallas Fed- *216 ders, who were Terra’s neighbors and family friends. In a later police interview, Terra stated that once she and A.S. were at the Fedderses, she and Dallas made A.S. take a pregnancy test, but then deceived A.S. into believing that she was pregnant so she would admit the truth about her relationship with Kreps. 1 Terra stated that A.S. eventually admitted that she had had sex with Kreps and that she had previously lied about it. However, after Terra told A.S. that she would have to report Kreps and after A.S. discovered that she was not pregnant, AS. insisted that she had only admitted to having sex with Kreps because her mother and Dallas would not leave her alone and were threatening her.

The Fedderses eventually notified the McCracken County Sheriffs office about this incident, which led to Officer Drew conducting a second interview of A.S. and Terra on July 21, 2005. It was during this second interview that Terra revealed her involvement in giving A.S. a fake pregnancy test and in getting A.S. to admit that she had had sex with Kreps. During A.S.’s interview, she initially denied that she had had sex with Kreps, but eventually, after Officer Drew questioned her further, brokedown and admitted that she and Kreps did have a sexual relationship. At the end of this interview, A.S. made a written statement detailing four instances when she and Kreps had sex during the period from January 2005 till June 2005.

Two weeks later, on August 4, 2005, Kreps voluntarily went to the Graves County Sheriffs office in order to answer questions regarding his relationship with A.S. Officer Drew and Kentucky State Police Officer George Bell conducted Kreps’s interview, a tape of which was played for the jury during Kreps’s trial. During this interview, Kreps eventually confessed to having sexual intercourse with A.S., admitting that they had sex on the den floor of his residence, in a van a couple of miles away from his residence, and in his truck while it was parked in his driveway. Kreps explained that A.S. was “fourteen going on thirty-one” and that she had been coming on to him since she moved into his residence.

On October 27, 2005, the grand jury returned an indictment charging Kreps with two counts of rape in the second degree (Class C felony) for engaging in sexual intercourse with A.S. in January and February 2005, when A.S. was thirteen years-old, and two counts of rape in the third degree (Class D felony) for engaging in sexual intercourse with A.S. in May and June 2005, when A.S. was fourteen years-old. Kreps pled not guilty to these charges, and his trial began on July 10, 2007. At trial, the Commonwealth relied on the testimonies of Amy Timmons, Officer Drew, Officer Bell, and A.S. A.S. testified that when she moved in with Renee and Kreps, she started flirting with Kreps and he eventually flirted back. She stated that after several months, she and Kreps began having a sexual relationship. She revealed that the first time they had sex was when Renee had left in the early morning to commence her paper route. A.S. acknowledged that she had a crush on Kreps and that she had wanted to sleep with him, but also admitted that now, she understood it was inappropriate for Kreps *217 have sex with her. A.S. also testified that she did not get along with Dennis Gibbs because she was protective of Kreps and his time with her.

In response, the defense relied on the testimony of Kreps and Dennis Gibbs. Gibbs testified that A.S. had a crush on Kreps and constantly behaved inappropriately around him. Gibbs also stated that he and A.S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
286 S.W.3d 213, 2009 Ky. LEXIS 148, 2009 WL 1819479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kreps-v-commonwealth-ky-2009.