People of Michigan v. Gordon Emmett Reniff

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 13, 2017
Docket335727
StatusUnpublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Gordon Emmett Reniff (People of Michigan v. Gordon Emmett Reniff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People of Michigan v. Gordon Emmett Reniff, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED June 13, 2017 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 335727 Allegan Circuit Court GORDON EMMETT RENIFF, LC No. 14-019037-FC

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: GADOLA, P.J., and TALBOT, C.J. and GLEICHER, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

A jury convicted defendant, Gordon Reniff, of four counts of criminal sexual conduct (CSC) for offenses committed against his granddaughter, TC. The trial court granted Reniff’s motion for new trial, ruling that his counsel had performed ineffectively. Judicial review of a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel involves a two-pronged inquiry: did counsel’s performance fall below constitutionally adequate standards, and if so, did counsel’s errors prejudice the defense? In this case we need not evaluate the trial court’s multiple findings of deficient performance because the record is devoid of any evidence that would support a finding of prejudice. We reverse the order granting a new trial and reinstate Reniff’s convictions.

I

TC, age 15 at the time of Reniff’s 2015 trial, testified that Reniff repeatedly penetrated her with his penis between 2012 and May 2014. She also described acts consistent with second- degree CSC. TC revealed the abuse in 2014 when she reported to a school counselor that she believed she was pregnant.

During the 2012-2014 time frame, Reniff regularly collected TC from school on Fridays and she spent weekends at his home. TC’s frequent visits with Reniff ostensibly revolved around TC’s responsibility to care for two horses he had procured for her in 2012. Reniff testified that he had obtained the horses specifically for TC’s use, and conditioned this gift on her agreement to help with horse-related chores. TC loved the horses “[l]ike all the way to the moon and back.”

TC described in considerable detail multiple episodes of sexual intercourse and other sexual contacts with Reniff that followed his acquisition of the horses. Other witnesses provided corroborative testimony. For example, TC’s mother testified that TC had five urinary tract

-1- infections during the two-year period when the sexual contacts were alleged to have occurred, and none thereafter. TC’s mother additionally recounted that in September 2013, Reniff became irate and threw a kitchen chair when TC refused to kiss him. TC’s sister and step-brother voiced their suspicions that TC had slept in Reniff’s bedroom on more than one occasion. Reniff’s long-time girlfriend, Karen VanderZand, recalled having seen Reniff and TC lying on a mattress in a shed, their clothed bodies touching, with Reniff’s arm around TC’s waist and his face toward her hair.

When TC first disclosed the abuse in 2014, she told a school counselor that Reniff had threatened to take away the horses if she ever revealed their sexual activity. The prosecutor presented expert testimony from an experienced child sexual abuse therapist regarding delayed disclosures, and from a child abuse pediatrician who performed a vaginal examination and concluded that the findings were consistent with penetration.

The prosecutor also presented evidence that in 2015, TC attempted suicide by cutting her wrist. TC explained the reasons for her act as follows:

I figured my life is haunting me. Why I say that, because that’s not what I wanted for my Grandpa. . . . I wanted a sweet Grandpa that would help me with my horse, even if he bought all of the food because I am – I – I can’t get a job. I can’t afford money. I got frustrated with that. I could do nothing about it. . . . I could not stop thinking about it. Like, it was so horrible. I –I could not do it anymore. I am like, “Whatever. I can’t do this anymore.”

Defense counsel unsuccessfully objected to the introduction of this evidence based in part on his inability to obtain TC’s medical and counseling records regarding the suicide attempt before the trial.

Reniff’s defense centered on his claim that TC had fabricated the abuse immediately after he threatened to take away her horses, and that he was incapable of having an erection due to erectile dysfunction first diagnosed in 2006. In support of this defense, one of Reniff’s daughters testified to witnessing Reniff threaten TC to sell the horses because TC refused to accompany him to do horse-related chores; TC spoke to the school counselor the next day. Reniff detailed his medical ailments, including emphysema, an irregular heartbeat, a weak left arm and slurred speech following a stroke, and high blood pressure. He claimed that in 2006, he sought treatment for his inability to have an erection at the VA Hospital in Battle Creek. Because of his heart problems, Reniff could not take medication for this problem. Instead, the VA prescribed a penile pump. He tried the device several times but was dissatisfied with it. Reniff asserted that he and VanderZand had not had sexual relations in more than four years, the last time being in 2011 or 2012.1 He denied ever having intercourse with TC or engaging in any sexually inappropriate conduct with her.

1 VanderZand testified that she and Reniff last had relations in 2014, during the time that the abuse of TC was occurring.

-2- The jury convicted Reniff of two counts of first-degree CSC I, MCL 750.520b(1)(b), and two counts of second-degree CSC, MCL 750.520c(1)(b). The court sentenced Reniff to 15 to 45 years’ imprisonment for each of the CSC I convictions and 5 to 15 years’ imprisonment for each of the CSC II convictions.

Reniff’s replacement counsel filed a motion for a new trial and a Ginther hearing,2 asserting that Reniff’s trial counsel, Jeffrey Hampel, had performed ineffectively in several significant ways. Hampel supported the motion with his own affidavit, averring that he had failed to question TC about her threat to “get” Reniff if he took away her horses, did not understand that he could have requested the trial court to review in camera records regarding TC’s suicide attempt, and incorrectly concluded that he could not introduce Reniff’s VA records related to his complaints of erectile dysfunction.

During the subsequent Ginther hearing, Reniff’s counsel presented testimony focusing and expanding on the three areas of professional deficiency identified in Hampel’s affidavit. This evidence included testimony that Hampel had instructed Reniff’s family members and close friends that they were responsible for finding a medical expert who could testify regarding Reniff’s impotence. Hampel’s failure to investigate Reniff’s impotency defense figured prominently in the trial court’s opinion to grant a new trial. Notably, however, at the Ginther hearing counsel presented no evidence tending to show that Reniff was unable to achieve an erection during the time frame in which he allegedly molested TC. While Reniff’s medical records document a 2006 complaint of impotence, the examination conducted at that time was apparently negative for any structural abnormalities. During the Ginther hearing, no expert testimony was presented addressing whether Reniff was likely impotent in 2012-2014. Nor did counsel request that the court review TC’s medical or counseling records related to her suicide attempt.3

In a bench ruling, the trial court found that Hampel had conducted his defense of Reniff in a manner falling “outside the wide range of professionally competent assistance.” Regarding prejudice, the court articulated:

The fact that the victim - - the victim’s credibility is a key issue in this case [makes it] difficult for this Court to come to a decision that there was a reasonable probability that the outcome would have different in the absence of the deficient performance.

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People of Michigan v. Gordon Emmett Reniff, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-gordon-emmett-reniff-michctapp-2017.