Poole v. State

46 So. 3d 290, 2010 Miss. LEXIS 424, 2010 WL 3169568
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 12, 2010
DocketNo. 2009-KA-00420-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by74 cases

This text of 46 So. 3d 290 (Poole v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Poole v. State, 46 So. 3d 290, 2010 Miss. LEXIS 424, 2010 WL 3169568 (Mich. 2010).

Opinion

DICKINSON, Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. After James Poole’s ex-girlfriend accused him of raping her daughter, he was indicted, tried, and found guilty on one count of statutory rape, but not guilty on a second. Poole appeals, claiming the conviction was against the overwhelming weight and sufficiency of the evidence. We disagree and affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2. In May, 1999, Janet Bridges — who was a single mother living in Amory, Mississippi, with her eight-year-old daughter, Jane1 — met James Poole. In August, 1999, according to the State’s allegations, Poole moved in with Janet and, for the next thirty-seven months, repeatedly raped Jane.

¶3. One night, several months after Poole moved in, Jane had a nightmare and got in bed with Janet and Poole. She later described what happened:2 “I don’t know what it was, but I would feel something in between my legs. That was the first time. And there were a few more times, too.” Describing the next time, Jane said, “He had come in one night, and I was already asleep, and I remember a bunch of wrestling around.” She “woke up, and he was about to leave the room, and there was something on my leg. And, you know, I said — he said, you know, go back to bed. It was a dream-” She wiped “something white” off her leg. Looking back, she believed that it was semen.

¶ 4. During 2000, Jane testified, Poole’s abuse worsened. He began inserting his fingers in her vagina, then, his penis. “At first he would just put the tip in,” Jane recalled. “Eventually, he would put it in all the way.” She remembered “a lot of bleeding” and pain. She asked Poole to stop, but he would not.

¶ 5. Jane testified that, at first, she believed Poole when he told her his conduct was just the normal “playing” fathers3 did with their daughters. But when Poole be[292]*292gan hurting her and refusing to stop, she started to realize that something was amiss because “a father wouldn’t hurt somebody.” Again she asked him to stop, but he would not. Instead, he threatened to kill her and her mother if she told anyone.

¶ 6. Janet’s job kept her away from home many evenings and on Saturdays, as did her mother’s terminal illness in 2002. Jane and Poole were often in the house alone, and during these times he would “do these things” to her. Later, Poole’s son, Jamie, moved in with them. Poole “would lock Jamie in his room and tell him that if he got off his bed, a monster would come and get him or something.” Then, Poole would “do it.”

¶ 7. When Janet was at home, she often took prescription drugs. She said that after her mother died, she did not sleep well, and she “went to the doctor and was put on prescription to help me deal with things. And so every night ... I took my medicine, and I went to bed.” Afterwards, Poole would molest Jane.

¶ 8. Jane began to undergo emotional and behavioral changes. Janet testified that Jane became “kind of withdrawn, in herself a little bit. There was [sic ] more discipline problems.... Jane all of a sudden started not being able to go to sleep. I didn’t understand why, because when she was younger you could put her to bed and she’d go to sleep.”

¶ 9. Poole, too, changed — he began acting distant and aloof, and started sleeping on the sofa. He went away for Labor Day weekend 2002, and “when he came back,” Janet said, “he was a different person. He said he was leaving.” Two weeks later, he moved in with another woman.

¶ 10. After Poole left, Janet continued to have some contact with him. Several times, she called him to ask for help with Jane’s behavioral problems. At least once, he came to her home. Occasionally, Janet dropped Jane off at Poole’s home for play dates with Jamie.

¶ 11. After Poole moved out, Jane’s behavioral and emotional problems intensified. She became violent toward both herself and others. Once she tried to attack Janet with a knife. During another fit of rage, she broke a window with her hand, severely cutting herself. At trial, Janet described several other violent incidents which resulted in a two-week stay at a psychiatric hospital, repeated doctor visits, prescriptions for various medications, a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder, and, finally, a stint at a church-affiliated boarding school in Alabama.

¶ 12. In the fall of 2004, Janet got a phone call from Jane at the school. Janet said that Jane “mentioned on the phone that she needed to tell me something.” But Jane would not say what was on her mind. Janet testified, “She was mumbling, and she just said something about Jim. I said, What are you talking about? Did he contact you over there or something? No, Mama, I’ll talk to you later.” During their next visit, when asked about the phone call, Jane replied, “Never mind, Mama. It’s okay.”

¶ 13. Under cross-examination, Janet stated that the phone call had actually been in the spring of 2004, not the fall. Again she stated that her daughter had alluded to something worrisome, but would not elaborate. Poole’s attorney asked, “And you’re saying that in this conversation she didn’t accuse my client of doing anything sexual to her. She just said to you, something happened.” Janet replied, ‘Tes.” Jane, testifying about this phone call, said, “I didn’t want to tell my mother everything over the phone, but I just told her that, you know, some stuff had happened.”

[293]*293¶ 14. Janet testified that approximately a month after Jane returned from Alabama, she took Jane to Wal-Mart. As they drove through the parking lot, Jane suddenly became agitated and “just throwed herself down on the floorboard and started crying. She — the only thing I could get out of her is, it’s him, it’s him. I said, What are you talking about, Jane? Mama, take me home. She was hysterical.”

¶ 15. Testifying about this event, Jane said after she returned from Alabama in July,4 she saw Poole “once more. We were in a parking lot somewhere, and I saw him or his car, and I remember just going to the floorboard and crying because I didn’t want him to see me.” Asked when that was, she answered, “It was after I had been to the children’s home, so '05.” She further testified, “I don’t remember if it was him or his truck, but I saw one or the other and just hit the floorboard. And my mom took me home because she didn’t know what was going on. She kept talking to me, and that’s when I told her everything.”

¶ 16. Janet testified that she went to the police “that next Monday morning, [and] filed a report.” Although no police report appears in the record, Poole’s attorney produced at trial a “statement” that she said “was included in the discovery I received from the State.... ” The statement included the following: “In June 2004, Jane told me over the phone she had something to tell me about Jim. She would say that he slowly over a period of months went from masturbating on her leg to fondling, and then on to the other.” With respect to the considerable testimony about the content of Janet’s phone call with Jane, and the statement Janet gave to the police, the record includes no objection.

¶ 17. Poole was indicted and charged with two counts of statutory rape. At his trial, Janet and Jane provided lengthy testimony. Dr. James Chaney, an OB/GYN, testified that he examined Jane on January 7, 2005. In his notes regarding the exam, Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
46 So. 3d 290, 2010 Miss. LEXIS 424, 2010 WL 3169568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poole-v-state-miss-2010.