Michael Carvese Williams v. State of Alabama

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 10, 2023
DocketCR-2022-0543
StatusPublished

This text of Michael Carvese Williams v. State of Alabama (Michael Carvese Williams v. State of Alabama) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael Carvese Williams v. State of Alabama, (Ala. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

REL: FEBRUARY 10, 2023

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.

Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals OCTOBER TERM, 2022-2023 _________________________

CR-2022-0543 _________________________

Michael Carvese Williams

v.

State of Alabama

Appeal from Jefferson Circuit Court, Bessemer Division (CC-16-665, CC-16-666, CC-16-667, CC-16-668, CC-16-669, CC-16- 670, CC-16-671, CC-16-672, and CC-16-673)

KELLUM, Judge.

The appellant, Michael Carvese Williams, was convicted of two

counts of rape in the first degree, see §13A-6-61, Ala. Code 1975; three

counts of the sexual abuse of a child under the age of 12, see § 13A-6-69.1,

Ala. Code 1975; two counts of sodomy in the first degree, see § 13A-6-63, CR-2022-0543

Ala. Code 1975; one count of enticing a child for immoral purposes, see §

13A-6-69, Ala. Code 1975; and one count of facilitating the travel of a

child for an unlawful sexual act, see § 13A-6-125, Ala. Code 1975.1 The

circuit court sentenced Williams to 20 years in prison for each rape

conviction, 10 years in prison for each sexual abuse conviction, 20 years

in prison for each sodomy conviction, 10 years in prison for the enticing

conviction, and 10 years in prison for the facilitating conviction. The

circuit court ordered that the sentences run concurrently with the

exception of the sentences for the rape convictions, which the court

ordered were to run consecutively.

Williams does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to

support any of his convictions, thus, we give only a brief rendition of the

facts presented at trial. A.W. testified that at the time of trial she was

18 years old.2 In the summer of 2015, A.W. was 11 years old and was

living with her mother, stepfather, and her brothers in Edgewater. (R.

272.) Williams was her stepfather's brother and would often visit when

1The State moved that the nine charges be consolidated; Williams did not object and that motion was granted. (R. 3.) 2Pursuant to Rule 52, Ala. R. App. P., we are using the victim's initials. 2 CR-2022-0543

her parents were not at home. The first time he touched her, A.W. said,

Williams "put [her] hand in his private area and made [her touch him].

Once stuff started coming out, that is when he stopped." (R. 276-77.) At

this time, she said, Williams told her that if she told anybody he was

"going to kill my momma and my stepdad." (R. 282.)

In another instance, she said, she was in her room and Williams

came in and tried to make her watch pornography on his cellular

telephone. "[Williams] told me to look at a couple of videos to show me

how to do the nasty. So, he -- I didn't want to watch the video. I told him

no. So, he put his phone back up. After that, he put me on my bed and

he pulled my pants down. He tried to eat my stuff [her privates, she

explained] but [she] wouldn't let him." (R. 278.) A.W. said that he then

put his penis in her butt but "pulled it out and then he stopped." (R. 279.)

Another time, A.W. said, her mother and stepfather were getting

ready to go out and Williams was going to go with them. She said that

Williams came back and told her to go into the living room and get on the

couch. A.W. testified: "When I laid down, he told me he isn't going to

stick it in too far because he didn't want to pop my cherry." (R. 284.)

A.W. said that he put his penis in her vagina and that she told him to

3 CR-2022-0543

stop because it hurt and that he stopped once "the white stuff came out."

(R. 285.) She said that she bled and went to the bathroom to clean

herself.

The last time, A.W. testified, Williams took her to a park late at

night. A.W. testified: "Cars were flying by -- passing by. So he turned

around and we got back in the car. And once we got in the car, he tried

to put his hands in my pants. And he used his fingers but he didn't stick

his fingers all the way in me. He rubbed my -- my private." (R. 289.)

A.W. testified that her grandmother was notified by a friend that

A.W. had been at a nearby park with an adult man late at night. When

her grandmother confronted her, she said, she "just broke down" and she

told her family what Williams had done to her. (R. 291.)

The jury convicted Williams of the nine counts charged in the

indictment. Williams filed a timely notice of appeal.

I.

Williams first argues that the circuit court erred in allowing the

State to present evidence of prior bad acts pursuant to Rule 404(b), Ala.

R. Evid. Specifically, he argues that the circuit court erred in allowing

4 CR-2022-0543

two witnesses to testify that when Williams was 18 years old he had been

arrested and charged with the rape of a 12-year-old.

The record shows that the State filed notice that it intended to

present Rule 404(b), Ala. R. Evid., evidence. The notice read that the

State intended to present "any incidents of [Williams], being an adult,

engaging in sexual intercourse with minors around the age of 11 or 12

years old." (C. 51.) Williams moved in limine that the court bar the State

from presenting any Rule 404(b) evidence. He argued that the probative

value of the evidence was substantially outweighed by the danger of

unfair prejudice, that there was no purpose to be served in admitting the

evidence, and that the evidence was barred by § 15-19-5, Ala. Code 1975,

because, he said, he had been granted youthful-offender status for the

prior offense. 3 (C. 157.) This motion was discussed at a pretrial hearing.

(R. 5-24.) The following discussion occurred:

"THE COURT: Next is a motion in limine by the defense. I think this follows a notice of Rule 404(b) evidence by the State. Although the State was not specific in its 404(b) notice of what it intends to offer, the defense in their motion seems

3Section 15-19-5, Ala. Code 1975, provides, in pertinent part: "No statement, admission or confession made by a defendant to the court or to any officer thereof during the examination and investigation [to determine whether a defendant is treated as a youthful offender] shall be admissible as evidence against him or his interest." 5 CR-2022-0543

to be saying it expects the State to offer the defendant's prior plea of guilty and conviction for youthful offender in an underlying case where the charge is rape in the second degree. Is that what the State wishes to offer?

"[Prosecutor]: In part, Your Honor. But what we actually want to offer is the conduct, not the conviction necessarily, but the conduct to show motive. The State did put in its motion specifically as our 404(b), that [Williams] being an adult involving with sexual intercourse with minors around the age of 11 or 12. It is that conduct to prove motive which is always admissible to show an unnatural attraction for little girls. I have lots of caselaw. If you want him to go first or argue the caselaw showing that the conduct is admissible and not necessarily the adjudication of the case -- not the guilty plea but the conduct of the unnatural attraction to little girls is always admissible to prove motive.

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