Sergie v. State

105 P.3d 1150, 2005 Alas. App. LEXIS 16, 2005 WL 272982
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedFebruary 4, 2005
DocketA-8190
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 105 P.3d 1150 (Sergie 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
Sergie v. State, 105 P.3d 1150, 2005 Alas. App. LEXIS 16, 2005 WL 272982 (Ala. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

STEWART, Judge.

Evan C. Sergie was convicted of attempted first-degree sexual assault, 1 resisting arrest, 2 interfering with the report of a domestic violence crime, 3 and two counts of fourth-degree assault. 4 On appeal, Sergie claims that neither the attempted sexual assault conviction nor the resisting arrest conviction were supported by sufficient evidence. Ser-gie also argues that the trial court erred in failing to discharge his publicly appointed counsel and by issuing a faulty jury instruction. We conclude that there is ample evidence to support Sergie’s convictions. We also conclude that the .superior court did not err in failing to discharge Sergie’s counsel. Finally, we reject Sergie’s attack on the jury instructions. Therefore, we affirm Sergie’s convictions.

Facts and proceedings

On June 2, 2001, Evan Sergie, his wife, S.S., and their two-year-old son, J.S., traveled to Dillingham to visit A.S., Sergie’s sister. After they arrived at A.S.’s house, Ser-gie went to the liquor store and bought a twelve-pack of beer and a pint of rum. Ser-gie, A.S., and S.S. spent the rest of the evening drinking together.

The next morning, the trio awoke and continued drinking. After a while, Sergie and A.S. argued. Sergie told S.S. to get J.S. dressed because he wanted to leave. S.S. prepared J.S., then returned to the living room to tell Sergie that they were ready to go. Sergie told her that everything was all right and that he and his sister had “calmed down,” so S.S. took J.S. back into the bedroom of K.S., another family member.

The trio continued drinking. Soon, A.S. and Sergie resumed arguing. This time, Sergie and A.S. pushed and shoved each other. Sergie again told S.S. to get J.S. ready to go. After S.S. had left the room, the argument ended when Sergie pushed A.S. onto the kitchen floor and then threw a chair across the room.

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Sergie then began arguing with S.S. and pushed her down. Testimony differed on what happened next. A.S. testified that she passed out after her fight with Sergie and that when she woke up, she saw S.S. lying on the floor. .Sergie had removed S.S.’s shirt and bra, and was trying to remove her pants. Sergie was also trying to pull S.S.’s legs apart. S.S. was holding onto her pants, kicking her legs, and saying “come on, come on.” A.S. testified that she then went to her phone and called the police. Sergie hung up the phone, and then told S.S. to go into the bedroom and get the baby ready to go. Ser-gie and S.S. went into the bedroom, where Sergie continued to “holler” at S.S. A.S. then called the police for a second time.

Another witness, K.S., testified that after Sergie had pushed S.S. onto the floor, Sergie told S.S. to “spread [her] legs” and he unbuttoned her pants. A.S. told Sergie to stop it, and helped S.S. get up and re-button her pants. Sergie and S.S. continued to argue. Sergie then grabbed S.S. and shoved her again. K.S. took J.S. from Sergie and carried him into A.S.’s bedroom, where she asked one of her friends to watch him. When K.S. came back out into the kitchen, she found S.S. lying on the floor with her shirt and bra off. Sergie was trying to remove S.S.’s pants. S.S. was saying “yeah, yeah, take my pants off.” K.S. testified that *1153 S.S. was not trying to keep Sergie from taking her pants off, but that she seemed upset. At that point, K.S. testified, A.S. intervened and told Sergie to stop it. A.S. then helped S.S. off the floor and helped her put her shirt back on.

S.S. testified that after Sergie had shoved her onto the floor, she got up and went to the living room. Sergie followed S.S. and shoved her again. S.S. landed on her back on the kitchen floor. S.S. passed out for “a couple seconds.” When she came to, Sergie was standing in front of her. S.S. said that her shirt had been removed, but that she was still wearing her pants. S.S. also testified that she was “holding onto” her pants, but that she did not remember why. S.S. testified that she told Sergie to “bring it on” in hopes that the “reverse psychology” would make Sergie stop.

Officers Dan Pasquariello and Kenneth Brockman arrived at A.S.’s residence at about 6:30 a.m., but Sergie was no longer present. After interviewing A.S., K.S., and S.S., the officers left to look for Sergie. They found him walking down a nearby street.

Sergie was “evasive” and “uncooperative.” Officer Brockman told Sergie that he was under arrest. Sergie sat down on the ground and refused to stand. The officers lifted him up and walked him to the patrol car. When the officers searched Sergie, he made vulgar comments about Officer Brock-man’s wife. When the officers tried to put Sergie in the patrol car, he struggled with the officers and kicked Officer Pasquariello several times.

The jury found Sergie guilty on all counts. Sergie appeals.

Sergie’s challenges to the attempted sexual assault jury instruction

At trial, Sergie proposed a jury instruction on the elements of attempted first-degree sexual assault. Under this proposed instruction, the jury could not convict Sergie of that offense unless it found both that he intended to engage in sexual penetration of S.S., and that he “intended the sexual penetration to be non-consensual.”

Superior Court Judge Fred Torrisi disagreed with the proposed instruction’s description of the second element. He ruled that “recklessly,” not “intentionally,” was the culpable mental state that applied to this element of the crime (the circumstance that the sexual penetration occurred without the victim’s consent). Judge Torrisi therefore rejected Sergie’s proposed jury instruction and instead gave an instruction modeled on the pattern jury instruction for attempted first-degree sexual assault. That instruction told the jurors that to convict Sergie they had to find that he “intended to engage in sexual penetration with another person without regard to that person’s lack of consent.”

On appeal, Sergie renews his argument that “intentionally” is the culpable mental state that applies to disregard of the victim’s consent.

Sergie acknowledges that to prove the completed crime of first-degree sexual assault, the State is required to establish that the defendant (1) knowingly engaged in sexual intercourse and (2) recklessly disregarded the victim’s lack of consent to that intercourse. 5 That is, “knowingly” is the culpable mental state that applies to the conduct element of sexual penetration, and “recklessly” is the culpable mental state that applies to the circumstance of disregard of the victim’s lack of consent. 6

However, Sergie argues that different culpable mental states apply to both the conduct and circumstance elements of attempted first-degree sexual assault. To support this claim, he relies on AS 11.31.100(a), the statute defining criminal attempt:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 P.3d 1150, 2005 Alas. App. LEXIS 16, 2005 WL 272982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sergie-v-state-alaskactapp-2005.