People of Michigan v. James Patrick Oconnell

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 5, 2015
Docket321939
StatusUnpublished

This text of People of Michigan v. James Patrick Oconnell (People of Michigan v. James Patrick Oconnell) 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. James Patrick Oconnell, (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED November 5, 2015 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 321939 Oakland Circuit Court JAMES PATRICK O’CONNELL, LC No. 2013-247621-FC

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: METER, P.J., and WILDER and RONAYNE KRAUSE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendant appeals as of right his jury trial convictions of two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct (CSC), MCL 750.520b(1)(a) and (2)(b) (victim under 13 years of age and defendant 17 years of age or older), and two counts of second-degree CSC, MCL 750.520c(1)(a) and (2)(b) (victim under 13 years of age and defendant 17 years of age or older). The trial court sentenced defendant to 25 to 50 years’ imprisonment for each first-degree CSC conviction and 15 to 22 years’ imprisonment for each second-degree CSC conviction. We affirm.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

This case arises from allegations that defendant sexually abused the victim, a minor, during his volunteer work at St. Augustine Lutheran Church and preschool.

A. TRIAL TESTIMONY

The victim was seven years old at the time of trial. She recalled attending preschool at St. Augustine sometime between the ages of two and five. Defendant was the person “who cleaned stuff.” She testified that defendant “did a bad thing” while she attended the preschool. According to the victim, defendant would kiss her “at St. Augustine maybe and maybe when we went to his house.” When asked whether there were adults around when it happened at St. Augustine, the victim said, “I forgot.” When asked specifically what she did with defendant, she testified that he would lick her “privacy place.” The victim did not recall how old she was the first time that defendant did this, but she thought she might have been two or three years old. The victim testified, “I do remember the garage and when nobody was around in the building and sometimes he would scratch my privacy place under the marble table.” She went to the garage alone with defendant. The victim stated that sometimes she would go on walks with

-1- defendant and he would “scratch” her privacy place sometimes on her bare skin and sometimes on top of her clothes. The victim did not remember how many times defendant licked her privacy place, but she thought it happened every day.

The victim was afraid to tell her parents because she thought they would be mad at her. The first time that the victim’s mother asked her if anyone had touched her, the victim did not tell her mother. However, the second time her mother asked, the victim told her mother. The victim told her mother that defendant “licks her pee pee place.” The victim also testified that she and her mother went to defendant’s house once and, while her mother was downstairs, defendant licked her privacy place in his bedroom. The victim also saw defendant’s privacy place and licked it while they were by the woods at St. Augustine. When asked about the incidents in the garage, the victim testified that she would lie on a blue plastic box that was by a window so defendant could see if anyone was coming. The victim testified that defendant gave her a book and marbles.

The victim’s mother testified that the victim began attending St. Augustine when she was four years old. The victim attended St. Augustine on Tuesday and Thursdays, and her father would drop her off and pick her up during the first year. The second year, the victim attended St. Augustine on Mondays, Wednesday, and Fridays, and the victim’s mother did more of the dropping off and picking up. At that time, the victim’s mother began having more interactions with defendant. She understood that defendant was partly a maintenance person and partly a teacher’s aide. Defendant would be around the children, talking to them and hugging them. The victim’s mother did not realize at the time that he was a volunteer. One day, the victim’s mother observed the victim and other children hanging on defendant’s legs. She also recalled defendant picking up the victim and hugging her, which made the victim’s mother uncomfortable because of the victim’s age. Defendant was friendly and would tell the victim’s mother about things he was doing with the children or the school. He also invited the victim’s mother to his house several times to see an eagle statue that he had carved. In hindsight, the victim’s mother believed that defendant’s behavior was predatory. Defendant also asked if he could take the victim to the movies. Defendant told the victim’s mother that she should sign up the victim to help with the garden at the school in the summer and that the victim’s mother did not have to stay. In 2012, the victim’s mother went to pick up the victim from Vacation Bible School and the victim was out in the garden with defendant. The incident, along with “some other things,” led the victim’s mother to ask the victim if anyone had ever touched her. Sometime before Vacation Bible School, the victim’s mother and the victim stopped at defendant’s house to see the eagle statue. At one point, the victim’s mother used the bathroom and left the victim alone with defendant for a few minutes.

The victim’s mother twice asked the victim whether anyone had ever touched her. The first time, sometime after Vacation Bible School in 2012, the victim’s mother asked the victim if anyone had ever touched her in her privacy place. She did not mention defendant’s name, but she did ask because of what she observed with defendant. The victim did not disclose anything. In the fall of 2012, when the victim no longer attended St. Augustine, defendant stopped by the victim’s family’s house to drop off a book as a gift for the victim. Defendant said that he stopped by other children’s houses and brought them books as well. Subsequently, while they were out of town, defendant stopped by their house and left a marble in their mailbox.

-2- In May 2013, the victim’s mother was discussing summer camps with her coworker and the coworker pointed out that sometimes people who do inappropriate things with children tell the children to lie. After that conversation, the victim’s mother decided to again ask the victim if anyone had ever touched her in her privacy area. The victim said “don’t be angry,” and the victim’s mother said that she would not be angry and asked if it was another child. The victim shook her head no and then said that it was defendant. When the victim’s mother asked what she meant, the victim stuck out her tongue and pointed at it. After the victim’s mother called her father and the victim’s father, they took the victim to the police station. The victim’s mother did not pepper the victim with questions. Within the following week, the victim went to the Care House for an interview.

The victim’s father testified that he saw defendant occasionally when he dropped off or picked up the victim. He understood defendant to be actively involved at the church, mainly with maintenance. He would observe the victim say goodbye to defendant and talk with him. The victim’s father did not have any concerns or suspicions about inappropriate behavior involving defendant until defendant visited their home unexpectedly. At that time, he was not really suspicious, but he thought the visit was odd. The second red flag was when defendant visited their home for a second time, but they were not home. The victim’s father recalled talking with defendant about issues they were having with rodents in their basement, but he did not ask defendant to come over and do any work.

Diana Allen attended St. Augustine and met defendant there. In approximately 2007 or 2008, Diana Allen and her grandchildren attended a spring or fall cleanup at the church. Diana Allen left her granddaughter, who was four years old, on the playground.

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People of Michigan v. James Patrick Oconnell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-james-patrick-oconnell-michctapp-2015.