Nunn v. State

845 P.2d 435, 1993 Alas. App. LEXIS 4, 1993 WL 10317
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJanuary 22, 1993
DocketA-3814
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 845 P.2d 435 (Nunn 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
Nunn v. State, 845 P.2d 435, 1993 Alas. App. LEXIS 4, 1993 WL 10317 (Ala. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Lee Roy Nunn, Jr., was convicted of second-degree sexual abuse of a minor, AS 11.41.436(a)(3)(B), following a jury trial in the Anchorage superior court. Nunn appeals his conviction; he asserts that the government presented insufficient evidence to support his conviction, and he also challenges two of the superior court’s eviden-tiary rulings. We affirm.

In the summer of 1989, Nunn’s stepdaughter, J.A.B., was attending camp. On Wednesday, June 21, one of the camp counselors noticed that J.A.B. was crying and asked her what was wrong. J.A.B. told her counselor that her stepfather had sexually abused her by having intercourse with *438 her. J.A.B. asked the counselor not to tell anyone else because J.A.B. feared that, if the authorities were notified, she would be separated from her stepfather. The camp counselor told J.A.B. that she would have to report what J.A.B. had told her, but only if it was true. J.A.B. affirmed that she had been sexually abused. About twenty minutes later, the counselor took J.A.B. to see the director of the camp. J.A.B. again confirmed the abuse.

On June 23, 1989, J.A.B. was interviewed by a social worker from the Division of Family and Youth Services. J.A.B. told the social worker that she was fearful of losing the love of her mother and stepfather, and the social worker warned J.A.B. that, if her account was true, her stepfather would go to jail. Nevertheless, J.A.B. confirmed that Nunn had had sexual intercourse with her. J.A.B. also confirmed the sexual abuse to a physician who examined her at the behest of DFYS; J.A.B. told the physician that Nunn had often had intercourse with her and that he had also penetrated her with his finger. The physician examined J.A.B. and found that she no longer had a hymen.

The matter was referred to the Anchorage Police Department. On June 27, 1989, Investigator Rodney Bennett interviewed J.A.B. and her mother. The interview with J.A.B. was videotaped. Later that same day, and again the following day, Investigator Bennett interviewed Nunn.

J.A.B.’s mother, Joan Nunn, told Bennett that, when she was informed of the allegations against her husband, she had asked J.A.B. if Nunn had touched her inappropriately. J.A.B. had said yes, but had not gone into details. Mrs. Nunn had then confronted Nunn. Nunn told her that there was some truth to J.A.B.’s allegations. Specifically, Nunn told his wife that he had touched J.A.B.’s breasts and her genitals, and that his genitals had touched hers when they lay in bed next to each other. However, Nunn did not admit to any acts of intercourse. During the last part of Bennett’s interview with Mrs. Nunn, she expressed how much she needed Nunn as a husband and a father, and how much she wished to keep the family together.

J.A.B. was embarrassed to discuss the details of the sexual abuse with Bennett. However, she told him that Nunn had touched her “in areas that he shouldn’t [have]”, and she said that this abuse had occurred “every couple of weeks or so” since she was 12 years old.

Following his interviews with J.A.B. and with Nunn’s wife, Bennett intérviewed Nunn. Nunn admitted to being “careless” and stated that he had done things “[which] would not look good.” Regarding J.A.B.’s assertions that Nunn had touched her genitals and her breasts, Nunn said he did not want to have to “qualify,” “correct” or “refute” what his daughter had said. Nunn twice admitted that what J.A.B. had said was “not without merit”. Nunn then said that he did not know what he had done. He also stated that he did not want to admit J.A.B.’s allegations because then he would have to go “head to head” with her.

Nunn stated that J.A.B. had been having difficulty in school, and that at bedtime Nunn would talk to J.A.B. to comfort her. Nunn told Bennett that the “degree to which [he and J.A.B.] had been involved in some of these discussions had gone beyond what was proper.” Nunn admitted having touched J.A.B., “not initially intentionally— but [I] did — but—[I] admittedly did.” Nunn then stated:

I allowed that sort of thing to continue too far. And — when you start that sort of thing — and you have a defect, and I guess I do — it’s, it was — I didn’t draw the line. I don’t want to say all that went into going as far as we did. It was sporadic, spontaneous when it happened, long times apart. Accidental. I’m not without fault. I allowed it to happen. I was old enough to know what was happening. [J.A.B.] wasn’t. I would say something more there, but I don’t want to say anything about my daughter. But I allowed it to go too far.... I have the greatest regrets.... [W]hat happened was ... an evolutionary thing that went *439 beyond accidental, it went uh — I’m talking too much, I’m sure.

Nunn then told Bennett that his conduct had stemmed from the fact that he and J.A.B. were close, and that “it rose out of my not controlling it.” Nunn said that he was friendly, not forceful or pushy, and that J.A.B. never objected. He said that he backed away if he felt he was going too far. Nunn then admitted that he and J.A.B. “got into a situation which I think went beyond the bounds of acceptable behavior. And I know that.” When asked to describe his side of story, Nunn said:

I’ll tell you, frankly, I ... wanted to ... come out and tell my wife that — that— [J.A.B.] and I have become too close. And I was on the verge of doing that, I don’t know how many times. And I’ve said that these girls are getting too old to run around here like that when they’re in skimpy things and maybe sending signals that you know — that had bothered me or whatever, uh — they were growing up, I was noticing — uh—I thought others would, they needed to be aware of that— and maybe that by my trying to be warm to [J.A.B.] and soliciting her warmth ... in return, that it was having an effect on me that went beyond what a father should admit to. I mean, I’ve read books where people have gone to confession ... because they had feelings like that, that were aroused in them, that were embarrassing, because their whole life they’d been taught that they shouldn’t have that. And, you know, I was right there — and I didn’t have the guts to turn it off myself, but I was that close to— trying to go to my wife and say that it’s gone too far. And I knew that if, if she were aware of it, as embarrassing as it might be, that her being involved would sort it out. I mean, that’s sort of the sense of relief that we have now.

Based upon this investigation, the Anchorage District Attorney’s Office presented the case to the grand jury. On December 22, 1989, just before the case was presented, Investigator Bennett and an assistant district attorney interviewed J.A.B.; J.A.B. repeated her allegations of sexual abuse and, using dolls, demonstrated what had happened to her. Investigator Bennett also sat with J.A.B. and Mrs. Nunn while all three were waiting to testify at the grand jury. Neither J.A.B. nor her mother said anything to Bennett indicating that their prior statements had not been true.

However, when J.A.B. testified at the grand jury, she recanted her allegations of sexual abuse. She testified that Nunn had never had intercourse with her, and she asserted that Nunn had touched her breasts only twice, both times accidentally. J.A.B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
845 P.2d 435, 1993 Alas. App. LEXIS 4, 1993 WL 10317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nunn-v-state-alaskactapp-1993.