Scholes v. State

274 P.3d 496, 2012 WL 1242325, 2012 Alas. App. LEXIS 58
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedApril 13, 2012
DocketNo. A-10931
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 274 P.3d 496 (Scholes 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
Scholes v. State, 274 P.3d 496, 2012 WL 1242325, 2012 Alas. App. LEXIS 58 (Ala. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Christopher Scholes kidnapped a 15-year, old girl as she was walking along a path near a Juneau school. Scholes came up behind the girl and placed her in a choke-hold until she lost consciousness. When the girl regained consciousness and started to scream, Scholes threatened to kill her unless she remained quiet. Scholes then bound the girl with duct tape, carried her to his vehicle, drove her to his home, removed her clothing (by cutting it off with scissors), and proceeded to rape her repeatedly, both with his penis and with a bottle. Following these sexual assaults, Scholes drove the girl back to the sehool and left her there, blindfolded.

Based on this conduct, Scholes was convicted of kidnapping, second-degree sexual abuse of a minor, and a single count of first-degree sexual assault that encompassed the various acts of sexual penetration that Scholes inflicted on the girl.1 For these crimes, Scholes received a composite sentence of 40 years and a day, all to serve.

In this appeal, Scholes challenges various rulings that the superior court made in connection with his sentencing. With respect to the sexual assault charge, Scholes argues that the sentencing court committed error by finding two aggravating factors: deliberate cruelty, and conduct among the most serious within the definition of the offense. Scholes also challenges the superior court's refusal to refer Scholes's case to the statewide three-judge sentencing panel (for imposition of a sentence outside the normal constraints of the presumptive sentencing law). Finally, Scholes argues that his composite sentence is excessive.

For the reasons explained here, we uphold the superior court's rulings on these matters, and we further conclude that Scholes's sentence is not excessive.

Aggravating factor AS 12.55.155(c)(2)-de-liberate cruelty

Scholes was convicted of kidnapping, first-degree sexual assault, and second-degree [498]*498sexual abuse of a minor. Kidnapping is not covered by Alaska's presumptive sentencing law,2 but Scholes's other two offenses are.3

For cases where a defendant's sentencing is governed by the presumptive sentencing law, AS 12.55.155(c) contains the list of aggravating factors that, if proved, will authorize a judge to exceed the applicable presumptive sentencing range. See AS 12.55.155(a). Aggravator (c)(2) applies to cases where "the defendant's conduct during the commission of the offense manifested deliberate cruelty to another person". We have interpreted this statutory language as referring to instances where the defendant inflicts pain (whether physical, psychological, or emotional) gratuitously or as an end in itself, as opposed to inflicting pain that is ancillary to the commission of the crime.4

The superior court concluded that this aggravator was proved by an incident that occurred during the sexual assault. While the girl was bound hand and foot, Scholes took a bottle of sparkling cider (a bottle approximately the size of a wine bottle) and inserted the neck of the bottle into his victim's vaginal canal. The girl screamed in pain. Scholes asked the girl whether her pain was due to the fact that the neck of the bottle was too wide, or if the top of the bottle was "hitting the back"-i.e., pushing against the girl's cervix at the end of her vaginal canal. When the girl replied that the bottle was hitting her cervix, Scholes removed the bottle, turned it around, and thrust the wider end into his victim's body. As might be imagined, this second penetration also caused the girl considerable pain. To help her endure this pain, Scholes gave the girl a teddy bear to bite down on.

Superior Court Judge Philip M. Pallenberg found that this incident involving the bottle was proof that Scholes gratuitously inflicted pain on his victim, over and above what was ancillary to his commission of rape. Judge Pallenberg noted, in particular, that when Scholes inserted the wide end of the bottle into the girl's vaginal canal, and the girl cried out in pain, "[Scholes's] response was not to stop causing that pain; it was to give her a teddy bear to bite down on-which meant that he consciously chose to continue inflicting pain".

In his brief to this Court, Scholes argues that the bottle was simply one of the means he employed to sexually penetrate his victim, and that therefore any pain that he inflicted with this bottle was merely ancillary to his commission of the crime of sexual assault. For the reasons expressed by Judge Pallen-berg, we disagree with Scholes's characterization of his actions. Based on this record, Judge Pallenberg could reasonably find that Scholes purposely inflicted pain on his victim for its own sake. And based on this finding, we uphold Judge Pallenberg's ruling that the State proved aggravator (c)(2).

Aggravating factor AS 12.55.155(c)(10)-conduct among the most serious within the definition of the offense

Aggravator (c)(10) applies to cases where the defendant's conduct was among the most serious within the definition of the offense. The question of whether Scholes's conduct was among the worst instances of kidnapping was not at issue, because sentencing for the offense of kidnapping is not governed by the presumptive sentencing law. However, with respect to the charge of sexual assault, Judge Pallenberg concluded that the facts of Scholes's case showed that his conduct was among the most serious within the definition of that crime:

The Court: [This case is on] the high end of the seale[.] ... [A] defendant goes out and abducts [a stranger] in a public place, ... and takes them and holds them and sexually assaults them [repeatedly] for a period of time.... One could certainly come up with ... a more serious rape, one where there are more grievous physical injuries [inflicted, orl where the kidnapping lasted longer.... Certainly this is not the most serious rape ever committed. But ... that's not the standard for [this] aggravator. The [question] is: is it among the most serious within the definition of [499]*499the offense. And I think [that] when one looks at [this] forcible rape and kidnapping of a stranger who is a minor, where the assault is particularly brutal, as I think this one was, [and] where there's the gratuitous infliction of pain and the gratuitous use of violence, and some really brutal and unspeakable threats made, [as well asl multiple acts of penetration, [and] penetration with ... a large object-all of those facts, taken together, ... place this case within ... aggravator [ (c)(10) ].

(When Judge Pallenberg spoke of "brutal and unspeakable threats", he was apparently referring to the evidence that Scholes threatened to kill his victim, to burn her feet, and to insert serews into her body.)

In past cases, we have upheld findings of aggravator (c)(10) based simply on the fact that the defendant was being sentenced for a single count which encompassed conduct that could have supported multiple convictions. See Pusich v. State, 907 P.2d 29, 33 (Alaska App.1995) (a single count of manslaughter that encompassed three deaths); Curl v. State, 843 P.2d 1244, 1245 (Alaska App.1992) (a single count of sexual abuse that encompassed a series of 20 to 25 incidents of abuse). See also Monroe v.

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Related

Augustine v. State
355 P.3d 573 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2015)
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315 P.3d 694 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 P.3d 496, 2012 WL 1242325, 2012 Alas. App. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scholes-v-state-alaskactapp-2012.