Ritter v. State

16 P.3d 191, 2001 Alas. App. LEXIS 22, 2001 WL 43766
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJanuary 19, 2001
DocketA-6983
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 16 P.3d 191 (Ritter 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
Ritter v. State, 16 P.3d 191, 2001 Alas. App. LEXIS 22, 2001 WL 43766 (Ala. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

This appeal presents us with two important questions of law.

The first question concerns the proper seope of a Cooksey plea-a plea of no contest, with the defendant preserving the right to raise a dispositive issue on appeal. Specifically, we are asked to decide whether a Cook-sey plea can be valid when the issue preserved for appeal is the sufficiency of the evidence at grand jury. Subject to a potential exception that we explain below, we hold that the sufficiency of the evidence at grand jury is not a dispositive issue, and thus it is not a proper basis for a Cooksey plea.

The second question concerns the proper interpretation of AS 1141420(a@)(4). This portion of the second-degree sexual assault statute prohibits certain health care workers from engaging in sexual contact with their patients if the health care worker knows that the patient "is unaware that a sexual act is being committed". Ritter argues that only those patients who are unconscious (or, for some other reason, have no physical perception of being touched) can be deemed "unaware" for purposes of this statute. The State argues that the statute also includes patients who physically perceive the touching but who are "unaware" that the touching is for a sexual purpose and not a proper treatment purpose. With certain qualifications that we explain below, we agree with the State that AS 1141.420(a)(4) covers sexual contact with patients who are aware of the touching but who are unaware that the touching exceeds the legitimate bounds of treatment.

Facts and procedural history of this case

Andy N. Ritter was a massage therapist in Barrow. The State charged him with six counts of unlawfully engaging in sexual contact with several of his female clients by touching their breasts and genitals, and by

*193 pressing his penis against their bodies. When the State presented Ritter's case to the grand jury, the State argued that Ritter's conduct constituted second-degree sexual assault under two different theories.

First, the State contended that the cireum-stances of the massage (the fact that the women were naked, and that they were alone with Ritter in the building) constituted "implicit" coercion, and thus any sexual contact was "without consent" as that term is defined in AS 11.41.470(8)(A). 1

Alternatively, the State contended that even though the women might have expected to be touched on their breasts and, conceivably, on their genitals during their massages, they did not expect the touching to be sexual in nature, and therefore Ritter was guilty of second-degree sexual assault under AS 1141.420(a)(4). This portion of the statute declares that a "health care worker" (a term which includes massage therapists 2 ) commits the crime of second-degree sexual assault if, during the course of the victim's professional treatment, the health care worker "engages in sexual contact with a person who the offender knows is unaware that a sexual act is being committed".

After Ritter was indicted, he filed a motion to dismiss the charges, arguing that both of the State's theories of prosecution were invalid. With regard to the State's "without consent" theory, Ritter noted that although the women testified that the touching made them uncomfortable, none of them testified that they did not consent to the touching or that, if they had any reservations about it, they did anything to manifest their lack of consent. He further argued that the State's theory of "implicit coercion" was not supported by the record. With regard to the State's "lack of awareness" theory, Ritter noted that the women were at all times awake and in control of their faculties, and that they all knew that they were being touched on their breasts and/or genitals. Under such cireumstances, Ritter argued, there was no evidentiary basis for the State's allegation that the women were "unaware" that sexual contact was occurring.

The superior court denied Ritter's motion to dismiss the indictment, and the parties prepared to go to trial. However, on the day that Ritter's trial was to commence, Ritter and the State announced that they had reached a plea agreement. Under this agreement, Ritter would plead no contest to one of the six counts of second-degree sexual assault (a count of his choice). In exchange for this plea, the State would dismiss the remaining five counts and would promise not to pursue any other charges arising from the same incidents. The State would also agree that Ritter could appeal his conviction, renewing his argument that the superior court should have dismissed the indictment.

This last provision of the plea bargain (the agreement that Ritter could appeal his conviction and renew his attack on the indictment) meant that Ritter's proposed plea was a Cooksey plea-a plea governed by the supreme court's decisions in Cooksey v. State 3 and Oveson v. Anchorage 4 . In order for Ritter's plea agreement to be valid under Cooksey and Oveson, the issue preserved for appeal had to be dispositive of the litigation. As this court clarified in Miles v. State 5 , an issue is "dispositive" for Cooksey purposes only if "resolution of the issue in the defendant's favor would either legally preclude the gerernment from pursuing the prosecution or would leave the government without sufficient evidence to survive a motion for judgement of acquittal at the conclusion of the government's case." 6

The obvious problem with Ritter's Cooksey plea is that motions to dismiss a grand jury indictment are generally not dispositive under Miles. Even if the court agrees with the *194 defendant and dismisses the indictment for lack of sufficient evidence, for erroneous legal instructions to the grand jury, or for any other procedural flaw, the State is almost always free to present the case to the grand jury again. As we explained in Ryan v. State 7 , an attack on an indictment is not dispositive unless a ruling in the defendant's favor would preclude reindictment. 8

Superior Court Judge Michael I. Jeffery recognized this problem when the parties proposed the Cooksey plea. But when the judge questioned whether Ritter's motion to dismiss the indictment was "dispositive", both the defense attorney and the prosecutor assured him that the attack on the indictment would be dispositive if Ritter could show that both of the State's theories of prosecution were flawed-the "without consent" theory and the "unawareness" theory. Based on the attorneys' arguments, Judge Jeffery concluded that the issues preserved for appeal were, in combination, dispositive, and so he accepted Ritter's plea as a valid Cooksey plea.

A year and a half later, after Ritter was sentenced and while his appeal was pending, Ritter filed a motion to withdraw his plea.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 P.3d 191, 2001 Alas. App. LEXIS 22, 2001 WL 43766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ritter-v-state-alaskactapp-2001.