Petersen v. State

930 P.2d 414, 1996 Alas. App. LEXIS 61, 1996 WL 727903
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedDecember 20, 1996
DocketA-5724, A-5834 and A-5893
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 930 P.2d 414 (Petersen 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
Petersen v. State, 930 P.2d 414, 1996 Alas. App. LEXIS 61, 1996 WL 727903 (Ala. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

In these consolidated appeals, the three defendants challenge the constitutionality of Alaska’s stalking statutes, AS 11.41.260 and AS 11.41.270. As explained below, we conclude that the statutes do not violate the Constitution, and thus we affirm the defendants’ convictions.

Facts of the Case: Petersen

In 1989, Gary W. Petersen began receiving massage therapy at the Gatekey health center in Anchorage. One of the therapists who treated Petersen was R.H., an apprentice therapist at the health center. Eventually, Petersen chose R.H. as his exclusive massage therapist. Later in 1989, R.H. completed her apprenticeship at Gatekey and took a job as a massage therapist at the Kanady Chiropractic Clinic. To continue receiving massage treatments from R.H., Petersen began to patronize the Kanady Clinic. By the spring of 1990, Petersen began making frequent appearances at the Kanady Clinic, sometimes showing up to visit with R.H. even when he did not have an appointment.

In June 1990, R.H. married. She sent Petersen an invitation to the wedding, but he did not attend. In late 1990, R.H. invited Petersen to a New Year’s Eve party at her home. In conjunction with this invitation, R.H. provided Petersen with her home telephone number and a map showing directions to her home. Petersen made a brief appearance at the party and then left.

On one occasion in 1991, Petersen showed up unexpectedly at R.H.’s home, telling her he had come by because he was “worried” about her. R.H. was uncomfortable with Petersen’s uninvited visit, so she told him that she was busy. Petersen left.

Several times during the winter and spring of 1991, Petersen showed up at the Kanady Clinic just as R.H. was leaving work. According to R.H., Petersen “invited himself’ to join her evening activities on those occasions (viewing ice sculptures, going to see a movie, going to a folk festival, eating dinner at a restaurant). R.H. felt “annoyed [and] intruded upon” because Petersen kept showing up at the clinic as she left work, but she allowed Petersen to come along on outings because she “felt sorry for him”.

However, R.H. grew increasingly uncomfortable as Petersen began to “show up everywhere”. Petersen began visiting the Ka-nady Clinic several times a day, generally with no appointment. R.H. also began to see Peterson at fairs and other public places, and she often found him at the Carrs grocery in Eagle River. (This store was near R.H.’s house, but Petersen lived in Anchorage.)

R.H. began telling relatives and friends of her discomfort with Petersen’s behavior. She informed her employer, Dr. Kanady, that she no longer wished to see Petersen as a patient because “his behavior was inappropriate”. R.H. eventually confronted Petersen, telling him that his behavior was making her uncomfortable and that she wanted him to start seeing a different therapist at the clinic. Dr. Kanady also met with Petersen; Kanady told Petersen that R.H. was no longer comfortable serving as his therapist, and he referred Petersen to a different massage therapist at the clinic. Despite these conversations, R.H. continued to encounter Petersen at public events and observe him outside the clinic.

On June 1, 1991, R.H. attended a rodeo with her children. She saw Petersen as she entered the gate, so she sat at the far end of *419 the bleachers to avoid him. Petersen came over to where R.H. and her children were sitting; he asked if he could sit with them. R.H. told Petersen he could not — that she didn’t want to have any contact with him, and that she wanted him to leave. Petersen nevertheless took a seat near R.H.; he came over to R.H. three times, demanding to know why R.H. would not see him as a friend and as a therapist. R.H. told Petersen she would not explain anymore; she just wanted Petersen to leave her alone. R.H. finally gathered her children and left the rodeo. Petersen left the rodeo and followed R.H. in his car, but R.H. lost him by driving faster than normal.

Later in 1991, Petersen confronted R.H. as she was leaving the Bear Paw Festival in Eagle River. Petersen (who was in his vehicle) pulled up next to R.H. as she was walking with her children. Petersen again demanded to know why R.H. refused to speak with him. This conversation ended when R.H. called to her husband for help. R.H.’s husband ran across the parking lot, kicked Petersen’s car, then grabbed Petersen and told him to stay away from R.H. and their family.

Following this encounter, R.H. spoke again to Dr. Kanady about Petersen’s behavior. On July 1, 1991, Kanady directed the clinic’s attorney to send Petersen a letter “firing” him as a patient at the clinic. 1

On the same day this letter was drafted, R.H. telephoned Petersen; Dr. Kanady, Ka-nady’s wife, and Anchorage Police Officer Paul T. Morino were in the room, listening on the speakerphone. R.H. told Petersen that she wanted him to stay away from her and that she did not want to see him, either as a patient or as a friend. Petersen said that he understood and that he would stay away.

However, Petersen continued to show up outside the Kanady Clinic and at other places where R.H. went. On a Saturday in the fall of 1991, R.H. spotted Petersen sitting in his car behind a gas station across the street from the Kanady Clinic. Petersen was watching R.H., and R.H. could see “some big camera lens or telescope of some sort” in Petersen’s car. Later that fall, R.H. encountered Petersen as she was driving from her home toward the Old Glenn Highway. R.H. drove north on the Old Glenn to lose Petersen, then circled back to the police substation in Eagle River. Despite R.H.’s evasive efforts, Petersen was able to follow her; he eventually arrived at the substation, where R.H. pointed him out to the police as the man who was following her. The officer on duty at the substation later telephoned Petersen, telling him that R.H. was fearful of him and that he should stay away from her.

In the early morning hours of January 6, 1992, R.H. and her husband noticed the taillights of a vehicle in their driveway. When they turned on the outside floodlight, they saw a car that looked like Petersen’s. The car left the driveway, and R.H. and her husband went back to bed. About twenty minutes later, R.H.’s husband heard a ear coming up the driveway. Taking a gun, he went outside and sneaked up to the car. The driver of the ear was Petersen. Petersen apparently heard the husband’s approach; he looked over his shoulder, saw R.H.’s husband, and quickly drove out of the driveway. R.H.’s husband fired two shots into a snowbank as Petersen’s car pulled away.

As a result of this incident, Petersen was convicted of trespass. On April 3, 1992, he received a suspended imposition of sentence; *420 one of his conditions of probation was that he not go to R.H.’s residence.

Two months later, on June 5, 1992, R.H. and her children attended the Renaissance Fair in Anchorage. R.H. spotted Petersen in the distance. He began circling through the crowd, moving toward R.H. and her children until he was within touching distance. R.H. began screaming for Petersen to get away from her. With the crowd now staring, Petersen backed away. R.H. took her children and left.

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Bluebook (online)
930 P.2d 414, 1996 Alas. App. LEXIS 61, 1996 WL 727903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petersen-v-state-alaskactapp-1996.