Ranalli v. State

398 S.E.2d 420, 197 Ga. App. 360, 1990 Ga. App. LEXIS 1317, 1990 WL 201348
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 23, 1990
DocketA90A0791
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 398 S.E.2d 420 (Ranalli v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ranalli v. State, 398 S.E.2d 420, 197 Ga. App. 360, 1990 Ga. App. LEXIS 1317, 1990 WL 201348 (Ga. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

Sognier, Judge.

Brian Richard Ranalli was convicted of burglary, kidnapping with bodily injury, rape, two counts of aggravated child molestation, and cruelty to children, and sentenced to two life terms plus 80 years. He appeals.

1. Appellant first raises the general grounds, contending that the *361 State presented only circumstantial evidence against him and did not exclude every other reasonable hypothesis. Construed to support the verdict, the evidence adduced at trial established that the victim, a six year old girl, was abducted from her bedroom at approximately 3:00 a.m. on October 19, 1988 by a man who entered her Cobb County home through an unlocked garage door. Saying that he was taking her to play hide and seek, the perpetrator carried the victim outside the home to a spot underneath a tree in an adjacent yard, where he ordered her to remove her underwear, forced his penis into her mouth, kissed her breasts and vagina, and twice inserted his penis into her vagina. When she screamed in pain, he stuffed her underwear into her mouth. He also slapped her and told her that he had been paid by her father to do these acts. The victim testified that when the attacker released her, she saw him run toward a nearby house. She ran home and woke her parents, who, upon finding their child dirty, bruised, and bleeding profusely from her vagina, called police and an ambulance. Testimony from the victim’s parents and the treating physicians established that the victim’s perineal wall between her vagina and rectum had been completely torn, that she underwent surgery to repair the damage, that she continues to have vaginal discharges and pain upon urination, and that she contracted venereal diseases that will recur for the rest of her life.

Both after the attack and at trial, the victim, who witnesses testified was alert and rational after the attack, was able to describe her assailant as a white man slightly under six feet in height with brown hair and a mustache. She stated he was wearing a dark shirt with white cursive writing, blue jeans, shoes with laces, and light colored socks with horizontal stripes at the top, and that she found in his pocket and tossed away a white and gold cigarette package that had a picture of a camel on the front. During a search of the area the next day, investigators found a pack of Camel Lite cigarettes, which matched the victim’s description, under the tree where the victim had been taken.

It was established that appellant and his girl friend, Connie Young, shared a house with Donna Alexander one block from the victim’s home. Young testified that when appellant left for his job with Scapes, a commercial landscaping company, on the morning of October 18, he was dressed in a dark blue sweatshirt with “Scapes” written on the front in white cursive writing, blue jeans, tennis shoes, and white tube socks with colored stripes on the top. She met him at a bar after work, but left after several hours because they argued about their relationship. He telephoned her from another bar at 11:00 p.m. to inform her he was coming home, but she testified he did not return until 2:00 a.m. They again argued, and appellant went to bed but got up a few minutes later and dressed in the same clothes he had been *362 wearing earlier. Appellant then left the house around 2:15 or 2:30, leaving his wallet behind. Young recalled that he returned at about 3:30 or 3:45 a.m., and that when he got into bed with her his body was cold. In response to her query, appellant stated that he had been out jogging. Young testified that appellant did not go to work the next day, but did report to work on October 20. Testimony from appellant’s coworkers established that when he arrived on the 20th, appellant got an advance on his paycheck, borrowed a car, and disappeared. Additional testimony was adduced that appellant was slightly over six feet tall, and that at the time of the attack he had a mustache.

Donna Alexander testified that after hearing news reports of the attack on the victim, she became suspicious because she was aware appellant had been out of the house during the time the incident occurred. When she discovered blood and caked dirt on the clothes appellant had been wearing that night, she alerted Young. In response to an anonymous phone tip from a caller Alexander identified as her mother, Cobb County detectives canvassed the houses on appellant’s street on October 20. When they visited appellant’s home, Alexander and Young gave them the clothes appellant had been wearing on October 18. A subsequent search of appellant’s belongings pursuant to a search warrant yielded several adult magazines and an open pack of Camel Lite cigarettes, which Young testified was the brand appellant smoked. Appellant was arrested at his brother’s home in Detroit five days later.

At trial, FBI Agent William Sievers, who arrested and interviewed appellant, testified that appellant admitted leaving his house around 2:30 a.m. on October 19, and said he had gone for a walk to the nearby home of an acquaintance. Appellant informed Sievers that on several occasions in the past he had exposed himself to young girls, that he had a “bad person” inside him who had recently reappeared, and that he did not know whether he had perpetrated the attack on the victim. Evidence of appellant’s prior guilty plea to two charges of indecent exposure to young girls was admitted into evidence, as was evidence that appellant had told the arresting officer at the time that the “bad part” of him was that “young girls turned him on.”

A forensic serologist testified that blood found on appellant’s clothing was consistent with that of the victim, and a fluid sample taken from the tissue surrounding the victim’s vagina tested positive for sperm. A forensic microanalyst testified that fibers found on appellant’s clothing were consistent with those taken from the victim’s clothing, dirt taken from the clothing of both was consistent with a soil sample taken from underneath the tree where the attack occurred, and a pubic hair found on the victim could have come from appellant.

*363 Since the victim did not identify appellant at trial, we must consider whether the circumstantial evidence supported the jury’s verdict. “To warrant a conviction on circumstantial evidence, the proved facts shall not only be consistent with the hypothesis of guilt, but shall exclude every other reasonable hypothesis save that of the guilt of the accused. . . . This does not mean that the state must exclude every possible hypothesis showing innocence, but any reasonable hypothesis showing innocence. (T)he question of whether every other reasonable hypothesis has been excluded is generally a question for the jury.” (Citations and punctuation omitted.) Bird v. State, 178 Ga. App. 687, 688 (344 SE2d 468) (1986). Contrary to appellant’s assertions, the State was not required “to prove that it was impossible for the offense to have been committed by [any of the other persons the police once considered suspects], or that it might not, by bare possibility, have been done by another. [Cit.]” Schmalz v. State, 177 Ga. App. 634, 635-636 (341 SE2d 11) (1986). Here, as in Schmalz, “the evidence points inexorably toward [appellant] and him only.” Id. at 636.

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Bluebook (online)
398 S.E.2d 420, 197 Ga. App. 360, 1990 Ga. App. LEXIS 1317, 1990 WL 201348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ranalli-v-state-gactapp-1990.