LaBrake v. State

152 P.3d 474, 2007 Alas. App. LEXIS 17, 2007 WL 293134
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedFebruary 2, 2007
DocketA-9189
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 152 P.3d 474 (LaBrake 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
LaBrake v. State, 152 P.3d 474, 2007 Alas. App. LEXIS 17, 2007 WL 293134 (Ala. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Timothy Jude LaBrake appeals the superi- or court's dismissal of his petition for post-conviction reliéf. For the reasons explained here, with one exception, we agree with the superior court that LaBrake failed to present a prima facie case for post-conviction relief- and we therefore affirm the superior court's dismissal of LaBrake's petition in all respects but one. The one exception is that, for the reasons explained below, we conclude that LaBrake presented a prima facie case that he is entitled to reinstate his earlier sentence appeal.

Background facts and procedural history of this litigation

In 1999, LaBrake was indicted on two counts of second-degree sexual abuse of a minor, 1 based on allegations that he engaged in sexual contact with a fourteen-year-old girl, J.M. The State alleged that this sexual abuse occurred after J.M.'s parents allowed LaBrake to take J.M. and her ten-year-old *477 sister to a mining camp outside of Manley Hot Springs.

Here is a summary of the State's case, as revealed by the record:

The parents of J.M. and her sister entrusted LaBrake with the task of driving the two girls to Manley Hot Springs. The plan was for the girls to spend time at a mining claim that was owned by Larry and Linda Cotton, who were long-time friends of the family. (LaBrake was working a mining claim nearby.) LaBrake took the girls to his own mining claim rather than to the Cottong' claim. When the Cottons heard LaBrake's vehicle and came by his camp, LaBrake refused to relinquish the girls to the Cottons. An altercation ensued, and the Cottons ultimately contacted the authorities.

Sometime later, while LaBrake and the girls were spending the night in his camper, LaBrake engaged in sexual contact with J.M. When LaBrake was later interviewed about this incident, he told investigators that fourteen-year-old J.M. had "come on to him" and that he had allowed himself to be seduced. LaBrake acknowledged that he had touched J.M.'s thigh and that he might have rubbed her genitals; he was not sure. LaBrake further stated that if J.M.'s younger sister had not awakened and interrupted this activity, he probably would have had sexual intercourse with J.M.

When Larry Cotton was interviewed by the troopers, he described how LaBrake told him that he had placed his hand between J.M.'s legs, that he had touched the top of her breast, and that if J.M.'s younger sister had not awakened, he would not have stopped. - LaBrake also told Cotton that he was thinking about committing suicide, and that he would have to go to jail for what he had done with J.M.

At the grand jury hearing, J.M. testified that LaBrake had touched her genitals, and J.M.'s younger sister testified that she had awakened to see LaBrake "messing" with her sister's genitals and breasts. In addition, Linda Cotton testified that LaBrake had told her and her husband that he had touched J.M., and that he knew it was wrong, but that he had only "felt of" J.M. (as opposed to engaging in intercourse with her).

, Second-degree sexual abuse of a minor is a class B felony carrying a maximum term of imprisonment of 10 years. 2 LaBrake was a first felony offender. Under Alaska's pre-2005 sentencing law, LaBrake would not face a presumptive term of imprisonment if he was convicted. Rather, he would be sentenced under former AS which set a ceiling of 4 years to serve (the presumptive term for a second felony offender convicted of the same offense) unless the State proved one or more of the aggravating factors listed in AS 12.55.155(c) or extraordinary cireumstances as defined in AS 12.55.165.

(See Surrells v. State, 151 P.3d 483 (2006); and Dayton v. State, 120 P.3d 1073, 1079-1081 (Alaska App.2005)-eases in which we fully analyzed this sentencing statute.)

LaBrake's case was ultimately resolved with a plea bargain. Under the terms of this plea agreement, LaBrake pleaded no contest to one of the counts, and the State dismissed the other. The parties agreed that LaBrake would receive no more than 4 years to serve (i.e., the ceiling set by AS 12.55.125(k)(2) in the absence of aggravating factors or extraordinary circumstances), although LaB-rake agreed that the State would be free to ask the superior court to impose additional suspended imprisonment.

In advance of LaBrake's sentencing, the State filed notice that it was proposing two aggravating factors under AS 12.55.155(c). The first of these aggravators was (c)(5): that LaBrake knew or should have known that J.M. was a particularly vulnerable vie-tim. The second of these aggravators was (c)(18)(B): that LaBrake was being sentenced for one of the sexual felonies defined in AS 11.41.410-458, and that he had engaged in other conduct prohibited by AS 1141.410-460 involving another viectim-to wit, his own daughter.

This second aggravator was based on the fact that LaBrake was investigated in 1985 by the police in Sheridan, Wyoming on suspi *478 cion that he had sexually abused his daughter. This investigation was commenced after his daughter (who was not quite three years old at the time) reported that LaBrake had put his "pee-pee" on her "pee-pee". Following this police investigation, LaBrake left Wyoming for several years. He returned to Wyoming in 1998. Four years later, in 1997, LaBrake's daughter (who was now fourteen years old) began spending weekends at his house. In 1998, the Wyoming police received information that LaBrake had taken suggestive photographs of his daughter while she was wearing lingerie. The police searched LaBrake's bedroom and seized a Polaroid camera and seventeen photographs.

In August 1999, after the Alaska State Troopers received the report that LaBrake had sexually abused J.M. at the mining claim, Trooper Susan Acquistapace interviewed LaBrake about the Wyoming allegations (as well as the Alaska allegations). According to Acquistapace's account of that interview, LaBrake admitted that he had fondled his daughter when she was a toddler, and that he had purchased lingerie for her when she was a teenager and had taken photographs of her wearing the lingerie. In other words, LaBrake apparently admitted that he engaged in conduct which, if performed in Alaska, would have constituted second-degree sexual abuse of a minor under AS 1141.436(a)(8) and, potentially, exploitation of a minor under AS 11.41.455(a).

LaBrake's defense attorney, Robert Noreen, did not file an opposition to these two proposed aggravating factors.

(As indicated above, the presence or absence of these aggravators did not alter the superior court's sentencing authority in LaB-rake's case. Even in the absence of aggravating factors, AS 12.55.125(k)(2) allowed the court to sentence LaBrake to any term of imprisonment up to the 10-year maximum for a class B felony, so long as the "time to serve" component of this sentence did not exceed 4 years. Ordinarily, the State's proof of aggravators would have authorized the superior court to impose more than 4 years to serve, but LaBrake's plea bargain capped the "time to serve" component of his sentence at 4 years.)

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Bluebook (online)
152 P.3d 474, 2007 Alas. App. LEXIS 17, 2007 WL 293134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/labrake-v-state-alaskactapp-2007.