Peter Warren Charles v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedAugust 20, 2024
Docket0575232
StatusUnpublished

This text of Peter Warren Charles v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Peter Warren Charles v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peter Warren Charles v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Beales and Lorish Argued at Richmond, Virginia

PETER WARREN CHARLES MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0575-23-2 JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES AUGUST 20, 2024 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CHESTERFIELD COUNTY M. Duncan Minton, Jr., Judge

Todd M. Ritter (Hill & Rainey, Attorneys at Law, on brief), for appellant.

Aaron J. Campbell, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Following a jury trial, the Circuit Court of Chesterfield County convicted Peter Warren

Charles of abduction under Code § 18.2-47. On appeal, Charles argues that the evidence was

insufficient to support his conviction. He also contends that the trial court erred by “failing to

directly answer a jury question regarding the definition of legal ‘excuse’ contained in the instruction

defining the crime of abduction.” In addition, Charles argues that the trial court erred by “excluding

the defense presentation of a certain photograph of the alleged victim to counter [the]

Commonwealth’s theory that the alleged victim was handcuffed involuntarily.”

BACKGROUND

“In accordance with familiar principles of appellate review, the facts will be stated in the

light most favorable to the Commonwealth, [as] the prevailing party at trial.” Scott v.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). Commonwealth, 292 Va. 380, 381 (2016). In doing so, we must “discard the evidence of the

accused in conflict with that of the Commonwealth, and regard as true all the credible evidence

favorable to the Commonwealth and all fair inferences to be drawn therefrom.” Parks v.

Commonwealth, 221 Va. 492, 498 (1980) (internal quotation marks omitted).

In late 2020, J.S.1 was 18 years old, was struggling with heroin addiction, had no money,

and did not have a permanent home. In November of that same year, J.S. met Peter Warren Charles

online and he offered to let her move into his house. J.S. accepted, and she agreed to abide by the

ground rules of her staying in his home that Charles set for her. Charles expected J.S. to respect his

property and to avoid certain areas of the house. J.S. had a cell phone that could access the internet,

but Charles would cut off internet access in his home periodically when he believed J.S. was

misbehaving. In addition, J.S. testified at trial that she allowed Charles to place handcuffs on her

hands during days when she was alone “to make him feel safer about me being at the house while

he was at work.”

At trial, J.S. also described the security cameras that Charles had installed inside his home.

Through the cameras, Charles could see and hear J.S. in the house, and they could speak to each

other. One of the cameras was installed in J.S.’s bedroom. Charles also showed J.S. the numerous

firearms that he kept in the house.

On weekday mornings, Charles drove J.S. to a methadone clinic to treat her heroin

addiction. On Fridays, she received two doses of methadone in a lockbox to take home for the

weekend. Charles held onto the lockbox, and he dispensed the methadone to J.S. when she asked.

Charles also gave J.S. alcohol and Xanax pills to help alleviate the symptoms of her heroin

addiction.

1 We use initials, instead of the victim’s name, in an attempt to better protect her privacy. -2- In late December of 2020, J.S. left Charles’s house for two days to stay with a friend for

Christmas. She returned to Charles’s house because, she testified, “all my stuff was there.” Upon

her return, J.S. testified, “Things were a little more tense between us because he had really wanted

me to come back and didn’t want me to leave again.” She noted that Charles “was keeping an eye

on me more than usual.” On Thursday, December 31, 2020, Charles took J.S. to get her methadone

for the long holiday weekend.

According to J.S.’s testimony, once the two returned home from the clinic that New Year’s

Eve evening, they began arguing about the methadone. J.S. then “made a decision in my head that I

wanted to leave,” and she wanted to “go to the same friends that I had gone for Christmas.” She

recounted, “I packed a bag,” but then “me and Peter [Charles] got into an argument about it.” She

told Charles that she wanted to leave at that time. However, she testified, “He [Charles] said

no.” J.S. confirmed that she physically tried to leave the house after telling Charles that she

wanted to leave, but then stated, “He stepped in between me and the door.”

Later that same evening, Charles told J.S. to go into the bathroom, and then he locked her

inside. J.S. testified that Charles “had me handcuffed and then tied a rope to the handcuffs” and

that the rope ran under the bathroom door and was tied to Charles’s bed. She then described,

“He handcuffed me and he slept in front of the bathroom door on the lower floor.” While she

was in the bathroom, J.S. testified, she “[a]rgued with Peter [Charles] some” about “letting me

out.” When the attorney for the Commonwealth asked, “At some point were you allowed to

leave the bathroom,” J.S. answered, “Yes, the – the next morning.” On redirect examination, J.S.

explained why she could not leave the bathroom that night: “I couldn’t leave because I had the

handcuffs on which were roped under the door to his bed. I couldn’t leave because the doors

were locked, and I couldn’t leave because he was outside of the door.”

-3- The following morning, New Year’s Day, Charles remained physically close to J.S. and

told her she could not leave the house. Early that evening, J.S. testified that she then went to an

upstairs window and hung outside the window a piece of paper that stated, “911.” J.S. explained

that she did so because “I was scared and I knew that I felt as if I didn’t do it, then something really

bad could possibly happen.”

Shamaine Winston testified at trial that she drove past Charles’s house, and she saw a young

female holding a sign that said “911” outside the second floor window. Winston recalled that the

girl pointed to the sign and indicated to Winston to be quiet by holding her finger over her lips.

Concerned, Winston then called 911 from her driveway and the police then arrived at Charles’s

house a short time later.

J.S. testified that sometime after J.S. held up the 911 sign, Charles told her that he was going

to go to the store to buy cigarettes, but he would not let J.S. come with him. J.S. testified that she

allowed him to put the handcuffs on her so that he would go get cigarettes, but she felt like she

“couldn’t say no.”

The Commonwealth introduced video evidence at trial from one of Charles’s security

cameras. The footage showed Charles and J.S. talking at the top of the stairs in Charles’s home. In

one video, J.S. said, “Lock me up, please get cigarettes.” J.S. pointed to the handrail at the top of

the stairs and said, “Right here.” Charles then patted J.S. down as she removed an outer shirt and

her pants. J.S. again told Charles, “Please get cigarettes.” J.S. held her hand out to the handrail and

said, “Really tight.” After Charles handcuffed J.S., he checked the floor around her and said, “I just

don’t get, like, you want to go back to the homeless life when I’ve--” J.S. interrupted by saying,

“Rather than be here,” and she repeatedly told him to get cigarettes.

As depicted on the security camera footage, J.S.

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