State Ex Rel Juvenile Department v. Smith

58 P.3d 823, 185 Or. App. 197, 2002 Ore. App. LEXIS 1881
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedNovember 27, 2002
Docket98-0325-JA; A106007
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 58 P.3d 823 (State Ex Rel Juvenile Department v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel Juvenile Department v. Smith, 58 P.3d 823, 185 Or. App. 197, 2002 Ore. App. LEXIS 1881 (Or. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

*199 KISTLER, J.

The state alleged that youth had committed 21 acts that, if he were an adult, would constitute coercion, menacing, sexual abuse, rape, and sodomy. The trial court found that youth was within its jurisdiction based on 12 of the acts but that the state had failed to prove the remaining nine acts. Youth appeals. We affirm.

Since 1995, two families have lived next to youth and his family in Ashland. The Helveys moved in in February 1995. Youth was 10; the Helveys’ son was five and their daughter was “[t]wo going on three.” Ms. Helvey explained that youth’s behavior became “extremely invasive” in the few months that they lived next door. She testified that youth “spied on us a lot.” “He sat upstairs in his house and looked in the windows of our house. We found him underneath the window from our bedroom.” One time, youth got inside the Helveys’ home even though it was locked. Another time, Ms. Helvey stopped youth as he was leading her two-year-old daughter over into his yard. She decided that things were “getting out of hand” when she found that youth had tied her five-year-old son to a chair and left him sitting on the side of the house. The Helveys moved away in June. 1

The Linsdays moved in the same month that the Helveys left. The Linsdays have 11 children. Ten are adopted; eight are special needs children. Many of the Linsdays’ children had few friends other than youth, and youth came over to the Linsdays’ house frequently. During that time, the Linsdays had some concern that youth was acting inappropriately. They were concerned that he would put the children on his lap in the swing. “[S]ometimes [they] felt that he was just playing too roughly and not being careful enough, and we would talk to him about that. He was talked *200 to a lot of times about that.” The Linsdays, however, allowed youth to come over to play with their children in their yard and allowed their children, with some restrictions, to go over and play in youth’s yard. At youth’s house, many of the activities focused on a pigeon coop that youth maintained with the help of “T,” a man who had taken an interest in youth. 2

On Tuesday, April 14, 1998, one of the Linsdays’ children, C, told his mother that he needed to talk with her. When his mother asked what he needed, he said, “Oh, nothing.” The same conversation took place the next day. On Thursday, C once again told his parents that he had something important to tell them and began acting increasingly upset. His parents said that, if he could not share the information with them, he needed to take a quiet time in his room. After 30 minutes, C came out and said, “Mommy, I need to talk to you.” When his mother asked if he wanted to talk to both her and his father, he said, “111 just tell you right now, and you can tell Daddy.” C’s mother took him where he could speak with her privately, and C told her that “some things had happened with [youth] in the pigeon coop that were inappropriate.”

When C was talking to his mother, he had his head down and “[h]e was just pounding his hands down[.]” He kept saying: “And I need to — I need to tell you this and it’s — and it’s not easy, and you’re not going to be happy. And I don’t want to get [youth] in trouble. I don’t want to get [youth] in trouble.” C was crying, and his mother was trying to calm him down. Although she was “hoping against hope” that C was just going to tell her about something minor, she soon learned that “it was something sexual and that it was — that it was going to be a big problem.” As C spoke, his mother learned “several details about what happened and about some threats and about some threats of physical violence.”

C’s parents did not say anything to the other children that night. On Friday, the police arrested youth, and the Linsdays took C to see his therapist. Ms. Linsday explained *201 that “[t]he story that we gave the children that day and that weekend was that some inappropriate things had happened with [youth] and [C] and that [youth] had to go to a special place to talk about these things.” On Monday, after C learned that youth was not coming back, he told his mother other things that youth had done. On Monday, he told his parents that he thought youth had done “some yucky things with the little kids.” Ms. Linsday spoke individually with the other children, all of whom disclosed that youth had sexually molested them.

At trial, the court heard testimony from Ms. Linsday, from the children, and also from the various medical professionals and officers who spoke with the children. Youth and his family testified. Youth also called an expert witness who criticized the way that the case had been investigated. After considering that evidence, the trial court found that the state had not proved its case regarding one of the Linsdays’ children and one of the Helveys’ children. It found, however, that the state had proved beyond a reasonable doubt that youth had abused seven of the Linsdays’ children. Because youth argues on de novo review that the state failed to prove any of the allegations, we summarize the evidence concerning those seven children. As the trial court did in its findings, we start with C and then turn to A, Z, V, E, S, and G.

C was 12 years old when he told his mother that youth had sexually abused him. The Linsdays adopted C when he was seven. Before being adopted, he had lived with two foster families for much of his life. He has severe diabetes and, because of his biological mother’s actions when he was an infant, had “a lot of abandonment issues.” When he first came to the Linsdays, C had difficulty following directions and managing his anger. He acted out and was aggressive with the other children. From 1993 through 1997, C went through substantial therapy. He was hospitalized in 1996 and 1997 for intestinal blockages and also for psychiatric problems. His therapist testified that C’s behavior changed markedly when he was discharged from the hospital in 1997. She explained that, when he came home, he was “very different. He was probably one of our — he was — he was a model student.” At that point, his therapist questioned whether he belonged in a program for troubled students but concluded *202 that it was appropriate for him to remain in the program while he made the transition back into public school. 3

In February 1998, C began going over to youth’s house to play with him. Youth was 13, and the two boys spent time together in youth’s pigeon coop. As noted, on Thursday, April 16,1998, C told his mother that youth had threatened and sexually abused him over the past few days. The next day, he spoke with two detectives and told them about three days that week when he went over to youth’s pigeon coop. C said that, on Tuesday, youth was not acting like himself. He started talking about his girlfriends nonstop, saying he wanted to sleep with them, and showing C pictures from his wallet that C did not want to see.

On Wednesday, the same thing happened. Youth began talking about his girlfriends and saying that he wanted to sleep with C’s sisters. He asked C if he wanted to see youth’s penis. Youth then asked about seeing C’s penis.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 P.3d 823, 185 Or. App. 197, 2002 Ore. App. LEXIS 1881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-juvenile-department-v-smith-orctapp-2002.