Perry v. Commonwealth

390 S.W.3d 122, 2012 WL 5274733, 2012 Ky. LEXIS 168
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 2012
DocketNo. 2010-SC-000833-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 390 S.W.3d 122 (Perry v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perry v. Commonwealth, 390 S.W.3d 122, 2012 WL 5274733, 2012 Ky. LEXIS 168 (Ky. 2012).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court by

Justice NOBLE.

Appellant, Bobby Perry, was tried on two counts of first-degree sodomy, and was convicted of one count. The jury recommended a sentence of 45 years, which the trial court imposed. This Court reverses and remands for a new trial and proceedings in accordance with this opinion.

I. Background

Among the most gut-wrenching cases this Court is required to review are child sexual assault cases. It is difficult to conceive how an adult human being could conceive of such acts, and carry them out against children. If true, the allegations of this case are such behavior. However, even an accused child molester is entitled to a fair trial, because otherwise we face a failure in the system of justice that must apply to everyone. Inherent in receiving a fair trial is the reasonable ability to make a defense.

In few cases are there so many allegations of abuse against so many people. C.P. alleges that he was sodomized by his adoptive father up to four times between the ages of ten and possibly up to around age 13, which are the acts that form the basis for this case. He also alleges that he was sexually abused by “a man on the railroad tracks,” by a “homeless man in a dumpster,” by a man named “Lance,” by his two brothers, by his birth mother, by a young man named “Cody” who was in placement with him, by a stranger who let him use the phone when he ran away from another placement, by a girl named “Charmaine,” and by his adoptive mother. He claims he attempted to rape two girls named “Molly” and “Diane.” He made all these allegations around the same time he accused the Appellant, who is his uncle and adoptive father.

There is no physical evidence of any of the claims, and there are no witnesses. Each allegation is fairly detailed. The path that led to this Court is complicated, and timing is difficult to discern from the record.

C.P. was given up for adoption by the birth mother and father after the father was convicted and sent to prison. The appellant, Bobby Perry, is the brother of the birth father. His wife, Ernestine, is the mother of the birth mother, and thus is C.P.’s grandmother and adoptive mother. The Perrys adopted C.P. when he was an infant. They have no children together, but C.P. has two brothers, one of whom lived in the Perry household while the other lived with the birth mother. C.P. is fully aware of who his birth parents are, and saw the birth mother and sibling on occasion.

At some point, C.P. began running away from home and was out of control. The adoptive parents called the police for help to deal with his misbehavior. He was placed under orders by the district court, and when he failed to comply, he was placed with the Diocesean Catholic Children’s home, a residential treatment facili[125]*125ty for children with emotional and behavioral problems, in June 2007. There, he was given therapy with his family until he said he wanted no further contact with them. In November, 2007, he was arrested and charged with attempted rape of a girl named “Molly.” At that time, he made no claim that he had been sexually abused by the Appellant. However, he first confessed to police that he had attempted to rape Molly, but later denied it when talking to therapists and counselors. He now claims he lied to the counselors because he thought that would keep him out of jail. While the charge was pending, he told a therapist that he had been sexually assaulted by a man on the railroad tracks, a story about which he would later tell several different versions. He ended up pleading guilty to an amended charge of fourth-degree assault on the attempted rape of Molly.

After a few months at Diocesean, he began exhibiting self-harming behaviors, and was given an in-patient placement in the North Key Community Care facility. He spent thirty days in-patient at North Key, and then was placed in the Children’s Home of Northern Kentucky. After about four months, he ran away. It was during this time that he would later claim he had a sexual encounter with an adult male who let him use the phone. Later, in March of 2009, C.P. was placed in the Ramey-Estep Home in Ashland, Kentucky, which was run as a “boot camp.” While there, C.P. had problems with another child named “Cody,” of a sexual nature. He then told a therapist that he had been sexually abused by the Appellant in 2005, when he was 11 years old, and blamed his behavior with Cody on being abused himself. He mentioned two occasions Appellant had abused him to the therapist, claiming the second one occurred when he was 13. Later at trial, he described four occasions of sodomy and claimed they ended around age 12 or maybe after he turned 13.

After C.P. was charged with attempted rape as a juvenile in November of 2007, he was ordered to be interviewed by the Children’s Advocacy Center of Covington in early 2008 because he was sexually acting out. At that time, he was questioned about whether he had ever been sexually abused. Specifically, he was asked whether anyone had ever asked him to touch their bodies. He replied that one kid had asked, but that he didn’t do it. He denied that anyone hit him at home, or that anyone had hurt him. He denied that anyone had ever touched him inappropriately. When asked whether he had seen anyone’s “private part,” he replied that he had seen and touched “Charmaine,” a “girl [he] went out with.” He expressed concern about the pending attempted rape charge. Later, in therapy, he told about the man on the railroad tracks abusing him, but at a date subsequent, he told another therapist that he had made it up because he thought it might help him with the attempted rape charge. Later, after accusing the Appellant, C.P. was interviewed by a psychiatrist, whom he told that he had been abused by a man on the railroad tracks, and that the abuse had lasted for months. And finally, at trial, he testified that the sexual encounter on the railroad tracks really did occur and gave descriptive details, but claimed only one occasion.

The accusations against the Appellant came near the end of C.P.’s stay at Ra-mey-Estep, when he was due to be returned to his adoptive parents’ home. Instead, he was placed in foster care, where he remained as of the date of the trial.

After prosecution in this case began, C.P. was again interviewed at the Child Advocacy Center of Covington in 2009. The recording of this interview is not in the record, but it was discussed extensive[126]*126ly by the attorneys and the trial court at a hearing regarding admissibility of the contents of the recording. At this interview, in marked contrast to his interview the year before, according to argument of counsel and the avowals at trial, C.P. spoke freely about various sexual contacts. He described four instances of sodomy with the Appellant. He claimed that his adoptive mother, who is also his maternal grandmother, had frequent vaginal, anal and oral sex with him prior to the time he claimed Appellant sodomized him. He described her taking him shopping to buy fancy lingerie for their enjoyment. Yet at trial, the tenor of his testimony against Appellant was that his “mom” did not know about the sodomy with Appellant and that it would not occur when she was around.

During the interview, he mentioned the railroad tracks incident again, but indicated it was consensual rather than forced. He described having sex in a dumpster with a man named “Champ” for five dollars. He claimed to have sexual contact with “Cody” at Ramey-Estep.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
390 S.W.3d 122, 2012 WL 5274733, 2012 Ky. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-commonwealth-ky-2012.