Ryan Scott Perrigin a/k/a Ryan Perrigin v. State of Mississippi

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedJanuary 10, 2023
Docket2021-KA-00858-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Ryan Scott Perrigin a/k/a Ryan Perrigin v. State of Mississippi (Ryan Scott Perrigin a/k/a Ryan Perrigin v. State of Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ryan Scott Perrigin a/k/a Ryan Perrigin v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2021-KA-00858-COA

RYAN SCOTT PERRIGIN A/K/A RYAN APPELLANT PERRIGIN

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/27/2021 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. LEE J. HOWARD COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: LOWNDES COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: MARK ANDREW CLIETT RHONDA R. HAYES-ELLIS ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: SCOTT STUART DISTRICT ATTORNEY: SCOTT WINSTON COLOM NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 01/10/2023 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

BEFORE CARLTON, P.J., GREENLEE AND McCARTY, JJ.

McCARTY, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. A defendant was indicted for two counts of sexual battery of a person less than

fourteen years old. The testimony at trial was that he met a little girl at his daughter’s

birthday party. On two separate occasions after the party, he sexually assaulted the child.

After hearing from the victim and both the defendant’s children, a jury found him guilty.

Finding no reversible error, we affirm.

FACTS

¶2. One summer, one of Ryan Perrigin’s children was having a birthday party at his

girlfriend’s house. At the party were two of Perrigin’s other children, Bella and Carl. Bella was twelve and Carl was fifteen. Bella’s friend Anna was also twelve and came with her

friend to the birthday party.1 Perrigin was forty years old.

¶3. The children all went swimming along with Perrigin. At some point during the party,

Perrigin commented on Anna’s belly-button ring, saying he thought it was “sexy.”

¶4. Over the course of the night, Perrigin took all three kids with him to his mother’s

house. There, he gave his children Bella and Carl a marijuana blunt. Perrigin then took

Anna upstairs.

¶5. According to Anna, after they smoked marijuana together, “[w]e took a shower, and

we had sex.” When she was later asked what physically took place between the twelve-year-

old and forty-year-old, Anna said, “He put his penis in my vagina.” Perrigin sexually

assaulted Anna a second time the same day.

¶6. This was not the only time Perrigin and Anna were alone. Sometime later after the

birthday party, Perrigin took his son Carl with him to Anna’s grandfather’s house, where the

girl was staying. Perrigin asked his teenage son if he wanted to participate in what Carl

called “a threesome” with the twelve-year-old girl. Feeling “grossed out,” Carl refused and

left and waited in the bathroom.

¶7. But he saw what happened. “I peeped through the door to see if they were done, but

they weren’t done, and so I closed the door,” Carl would later say.

1 We do not use the names of minors in this sexual battery case, and the names of Anna, Bella, and Carl are pseudonyms to shield their identities.

2 ¶8. As summer ended and school began, Carl told his school counselor he knew his father

had sexually assaulted Anna. Concerned, the school counselor reached out to Anna to

confirm if what Carl said was true. Anna told her it was, and the authorities were alerted.

¶9. Perrigin was ultimately indicted for two counts of the sexual battery of “[a] child

under the age of fourteen (14) years of age, if the person is twenty-four (24) or more months

older than the child.” Miss. Code Ann. § 97-3-95(1)(d).

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶10. Both of Perrigin’s children and the victim testified against him during trial. Anna told

the jury about the times she had been assaulted by Perrigin. Bella corroborated key points

from Anna’s story; first, that Perrigin had commented on her friend’s belly-button ring;

second, that Perrigin had taken the children to his mother’s house; third, that he provided

marijuana to the three kids; and last, that he had gone off alone with Anna. Carl recounted

that he had seen his father attack Anna.

¶11. The jury next heard from the school counselor, who corroborated that Carl had come

to her in distress complaining that he was not getting along with his father, and proceeded

to say that his dad had sexually assaulted Anna. On cross-examination, Carl admitted that

he had been diagnosed as bipolar and took medication to treat it. “I can act out on my

medicine,” he conceded.

¶12. The school counselor and investigator explained what next happened as they learned

about the allegations regarding Perrigin. In particular, the counselor said Anna “stated to me

3 that Ryan Perrigin had on several occasions had given her weed and also ecstasy pills and at

that point had sex with her.”

¶13. Perrigin’s theory of the case was set out in his lawyer’s opening statement. At its core

was that the victim could not be trusted and that Perrigin did not have the opportunity to

commit the crimes of which he was charged. In part it was that Perrigin’s son Carl had

“devised a plan . . . to get back at his father” for being disciplined. The defense called two

witnesses to develop this theory and dispute the charges.

¶14. The first was Latasha Ponder, the defendant’s wife. After a nine-year relationship,

the two married nineteen days before the trial. She testified that Anna had not been

originally invited to the birthday party, but arrived with Bella. She explained her husband

had indeed said “in his opinion belly button rings are sexy.” However, he had only said that

to her, she explained, and not directly to the victim. She did concede the whole group was

outside, and “[e]verybody on the deck heard the conversation.”

¶15. Latasha elaborated that the home they were in—an older manufactured one—

basically had no privacy, as there were no doors to the bedrooms. She said the girls took the

main bedroom while she slept in the living room and Perrigin went to work, and would have

heard if anyone had left. On cross-examination, she agreed she was surprised to find out her

now-husband had been using marijuana with the children. She had not believed it at first

because she had never seen him use drugs. She did not believe Perrigin had used drugs with

the victim or that he had attacked her.

4 ¶16. Latasha’s mother, Brenda Langford, was Perrigin’s other witness. Brenda lived next

door to her daughter and testified that Perrigin had been kind to her and helped her with her

medications. The first time she met the victim was at the birthday party. She did not witness

anything inappropriate from Perrigin directed toward Anna and never heard anything either.

However, Langford admitted her memory was not perfect, and she could not recall if her

husband was still alive at the time of the alleged assault.

¶17. The jury convicted Perrigin on both counts, and he was sentenced as a habitual

offender, due to prior convictions, to serve consecutive terms of twenty-five years in custody.

DISCUSSION

¶18. On appeal, Perrigin urges three arguments warrant reversal. First, he argues the

weight of evidence is not enough to sustain the conviction. Second, he claims his lawyer was

ineffective in representing him at trial. Last, Perrigin protests that prior statements by Anna

were improperly introduced through the testimony of the school resource officer and the

investigator in violation of his right to confront her at trial.

I. The verdict was not against the weight of the evidence.

¶19. Perrigin ultimately argues the verdict was against the weight of the evidence because

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Related

Bell v. State
928 So. 2d 951 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2006)
Elkins v. State
918 So. 2d 828 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2005)
Penny v. State
960 So. 2d 533 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2006)
Rebecca Lynn Jones v. State of Mississippi
154 So. 3d 872 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2014)
Bradford v. State
102 So. 3d 312 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Ryan Scott Perrigin a/k/a Ryan Perrigin v. State of Mississippi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-scott-perrigin-aka-ryan-perrigin-v-state-of-mississippi-missctapp-2023.