State of Arizona v. Ricky Lee Sabin

146 P.3d 577, 213 Ariz. 586
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedNovember 15, 2006
Docket2 CA-CR 2005-0181
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 146 P.3d 577 (State of Arizona v. Ricky Lee Sabin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Arizona v. Ricky Lee Sabin, 146 P.3d 577, 213 Ariz. 586 (Ark. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

ECKERSTROM, Presiding Judge.

¶ 1 Ricky Lee Sabin appeals his conviction following a bench trial of sexual conduct with a minor and continuous sexual abuse of a minor, class two felonies. The sole victim of both offenses was K., Sabin’s sixteen-year-old daughter, who died from a single, self-inflicted gunshot wound on April 30, 2004. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.

Background

¶ 2 We view the evidence and the reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to supporting the convictions. State v. Ramsey, 211 Ariz. 529, ¶ 2, 124 P.3d 756, 759 (App.2005). Responding to a report of a possible suicide, officers of the Maraña Police Department were dispatched to the Sabin residence. The first officer to arrive, Joshua Corn, immediately encountered two teenagers, Ron and Ashley, outside the house. Both of them were “visibly distraught and upset.” After Corn entered the house through the patio door, he discovered K.’s body in a hallway bathroom and a .357 revolver in her lap.

¶ 3 Detective Richard Palma interviewed both Ron and Ashley a few hours later. Ron, who had been K.’s boyfriend since September 2003, stated that he had been talking to K. on the telephone that afternoon when he heard a gunshot and the line went silent. He and Ashley, a mutual friend of Ron and K., immediately drove to the Sabin residence. When they arrived, Ron entered the house through a rear door, called to K, and ultimately found her body in the bathroom. Ron called 911. Ron told Palma that he had “no clue why” K. would have committed suicide, that their relationship was fine, that K. had not been depressed, and that she had not been struggling with difficulties at school or at home. When Palma asked Ron if K. had kept a diary, Ron responded that it was “possible.”

¶ 4 Ashley told Palma that, although she did not know what would have immediately precipitated the suicide, K. “had trouble with her dad.” When pressed to explain the “trouble,” Ashley said that Sabin had “raped” and “sexually molested” K. since she was seven or eight years old.

¶ 5 The police then searched K.’s bedroom and discovered her diary. At trial, Officer Corn read aloud select passages from the diary wherein K. stated she had been sexually abused by both her father and grandfather and that if she ever found out she was pregnant by her father, she would immediately kill herself. Officers did not obtain a search warrant until after they had searched K.’s bedroom and had discovered the diary.

¶ 6 Maraña Police Detective John Santoro interviewed Ashley a second time a few hours later at the main station of the Maraña Police Department. During that interview, Ashley described the details K. had divulged to Ashley about the extent of, and manner in which, Sabin had chronically abused her. Ashley told Santoro that K. had said she had tried to resist Sabin and that the abuse would happen as often as a couple of times per week. According to Ashley, K. had stated that Denise, K.’s mother, had learned about the abuse the previous fall during a *590 “family discussion” and had considered divorcing Sabin. During this discussion with Santoro, Ashley confirmed that K. had kept a diary although Ashley had never seen it.

¶ 7 Several hours later, Detective Santoro and Bradley Roach, a deputy county attorney, interviewed Sabin at a police substation. Before proceeding, Santoro advised Sabin that he was not under arrest and that the police simply wanted to “find out what [had] happened” to K. After Santoro read Sabin the Miranda 1 warnings, Sabin agreed to continued questioning. Sabin initially told the police that he and K. “had a pretty good, great relationship” and that they were “very close.”

¶ 8 Santoro then told Sabin that police had discovered K.’s diary and “found some things she wrote in it that ... concerned [them].” Sabin responded that K. had recently grown “more and more defiant.” But, when Roach asked Sabin about “a real big family discussion around like September, October or maybe even November of last year,” Sabin admitted he had sexually abused K. since she was seven or eight years old. For the next hour, Sabin offered details of the systematic abuse that had started as “fondling” and escalated over the years to include masturbatory acts and both oral and vaginal intercourse. The officers arrested Sabin at the conclusion of the interview.

¶ 9 On May 3, 2004, Ron volunteered to provide a second statement to police. Ron revealed that K. had told him Sabin had been molesting her for nearly ten years. Ron described the abuse as follows:

I remember her telling me that he held her, he held her down with one hand and he would just forcefully throw her down[,] rip her clothes off and just do whatever he felt like. He would, he would sexually do these things and he would anally do these things ... [E]verything that you could possibly think of ... was done.

When asked if Sabin had “penetrated [K.] with his penis,” Ron responded, ‘Tes ... I asked her specifically how many times and she said over three hundred times.”

¶ 10 Thereafter, a Pima County grand jury indicted Sabin on one count of continuous sexual abuse of a child, two counts of sexual conduct with a minor under fifteen, one count of sexual abuse of a minor under fifteen, and five counts of sexual conduct with a minor. The same indictment charged Denise with child abuse, obstructing a criminal investigation, and failing to report Sabin’s sexual abuse of their daughter. 2 Sabin moved to suppress both K.’s diary and his confession, contending the diary was the product of an illegal search and his confession was its fruit. Sabin also moved to suppress K.’s statements to Ron and Ashley on the ground that then-admission would violate his Sixth Amendment right to confront a witness against him. Finally, he argued that the state lacked a corpus delicti for the crime.

¶ 11 Following a two-day hearing, the trial court granted defendants’ motion to suppress K. ’s diary because it had been seized by the police in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article II, § 8 of the Arizona Constitution. 3 But, the trial court rejected Sabin’s contention that his confession was the fruit of an illegal search, finding his statements would be admissible at trial. The trial court also found that K.’s statements to Ashley and Ron were admissible because they were not testimonial and therefore did not violate the Sixth Amendment standards recently articulated by the Supreme Court in Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36, 124 S.Ct. 1354, 158 L. Ed.2d 177 (2004). Finally, the court rejected as premature Sabin’s contention that the state had failed to provide the corpus delicti.

¶ 12 After the trial court granted Sabin’s motion to suppress the diary, the state dismissed all but two of the charges. In January 2005, the grand jury issued another indictment, charging Sabin with continuous sexual abuse of a minor for committing three *591

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Bluebook (online)
146 P.3d 577, 213 Ariz. 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-arizona-v-ricky-lee-sabin-arizctapp-2006.