State of Maine v. Donovan

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 20, 2002
DocketKENcr-94-393
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Maine v. Donovan (State of Maine v. Donovan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Maine v. Donovan, (Me. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT

CRIMINAL ACTION

KENNEBEC, ss. DOCKET NO. CR- 94-393 SR, A co bee | A) _ Uf

ONALD L. GARERS STATE OF MAINE x LAN LIQRARY v. oa DECISION AND ORDER JAN DANIEL DONOVAN, Defendant

This matter is before the court on the petitioner's Post-Judgment Conviction Motion for DNA Testing and the State's Motion to Dismiss the petitioner's motion. As both motions address the same topic, namely whether the petitioner has the right to have certain exhibits submitted for DNA analysis, they will be considered together.

I. Facts and Procedural History.

The petitioner, Daniel Donovan (Donovan), was convicted on February 5, 1996, after a jury trial of the offenses of Gross Sexual Assault (GSA), Assault, Criminal Mischief and Violation of Bail Conditions. It is the conviction for GSA, for which the petitioner received a sentence of 20 years, all but 15 years suspended, and 6 years probation, that he seeks to affect by this motion. In this regard he alleges, and the record supports, that the evidence at trial included the following:

On June 24, 1994, Robyn Reed (Reed), the petitioner's live-in companion, fled their home in Monmouth after she claimed to have been assaulted and her auto damaged by the petitioner. She returned to the house, however, at about 4:00 a.m. with a police escort. Upon arrival, the officer found the petitioner and Gary Marsella sleeping. After Donovan was awakened, Reed elected to remain at their house.

At about 4:28 a.m., the police dispatch center received a 9-1-1 call from an "open

line" which the Monmouth Police believed to have come from the petitioner's residence, although they had no confirmation of its origin. From their vantage point nearby, the Monmouth police officers could hear an argument taking place inside the petitioner's home. Once it was confirmed that the call had come from that residence, one officer approached the house and asked to be let in. From the inside of the house he could hear Donovan say several times, "You came here for this." T.T., p. 109. The officer could also hear "what sounded like somebody being hilt (sic) against a wall or against the floor." Id. He also heard a female crying and asking that the police be let in.

The petitioner let the officer in whereupon the latter was advised that Reed had left by another door. The officer went to that door and found Reed outside on the porch crying, "shaking out of control," wearing ripped panties and holding her bra top up with one hand. T.T., pp. 111-112. She told the officer that, "he raped me" and that he would not let her leave. T.T., pp. 111, 135.

The officer, now joined by his chief, wrapped a blanket around Reed, and took her to their police cruiser. They then forcibly re-entered the house where they found the petitioner lying on his bed. They placed him under arrest and advised him that he was charged with rape to which the petitioner replied that he did not rape Ms. Reed. In the meantime, Gary Marsella, also a resident in the house, had come downstairs and joined the group. During this time, the defendant told the police they were stupid for having left Reed at his residence, and that "she was his problem." T.T., p. 119.

The petitioner was transported to the Kennebec County Jail where the sweatpants he had been wearing were taken from him.

In the meantime, Reed had been taken to the Kennebec Valley Medical Center where she was interviewed by the investigating officer who found her to be "visibly

shaken" and unable to talk. T.T., p. 123. While there, however, at about 7:00 a.m., hospital staff took Reed's bra, panties and the blankets wrapped around her, but no examination via "the rape collection kit" was performed because Reed "refused the examination" although the attending nurse told her, "that the longer she waited to have an examination the harder it would be to collect evidence, to find evidence to collect.” T.T., pp. 150, 152, 155. The nurse did observe that Reed had recent abrasions and scratches on her neck and chest. She also had blood stains on the inside of both her legs, although the source of the blood was not determined. Reed left the hospital at approximately 9:15 a.m.

At about 12:40 p.m., Reed returned to the emergency room where she was seen by the same nurse. She was still upset and complained of abdominal pain. T.T., p. 157. She was wearing a sweatsuit, apparently the same outfit the hospital had given her when she left earlier that day. T.T., pp. 156-157. These clothes were collected from her and turned over to a police officer. She was then given a "johnny" and participated in a rape examination for the purposes of collecting evidence.1_ During this examination, in addition to the bruises and scratches previously observed, a bruise was noted in the middle of Reed's back.

The physician who performed the examination on Reed used gauze pads or

swabs from the rape kit to take samples from Reed's external genitalia. The doctor

1 From the report of the forensic chemist, which was not admitted at trial, her testimony, and that of the nurse, it is apparent that no sanitary napkin was taken during Reed's first hospital visit but was taken, instead, during this second visit. Item L94-320-18 in the report, also marked as State's exhibit 28, is the black and white torn underpants taken from Reed on her first trip to the hospital. See Motion for DNA Testing, Attachment 4; T.T., pp. 111-112, 146-149, 170, 264, 268-269, 359, 372-373, 439. No sanitary napkin is described in the report or anywhere in the trial testimony as having been seized with these torn underpants, bra or blankets when Reed was taken to the hospital from the site of the alleged rape. Item L94-320-23D, however, describes a second pair of underpants containing a sanitary napkin which, from the context of the report, apparently were seized during the second hospital visit. Nothing in the testimony or the exhibits would contradict this conclusion.

3 observed blood during the pelvic examination which he believed to be menstrual blood, noting no traumatic injuries to that part of her body.

Reed advised the doctor during the examination that her assailant had used a condom and had ejaculated during the sexual assault. The doctor also took "collections" from inside Reed's vagina which he examined microscopically on a slide and found no sperm, opining that he would not have expected to find any if a condom was used. T.T., pp. 203-204. He also offered the opinion that it would be a little unusual, “but plausible as a possibility” for there to be spillage of semen on the external genitalia under some circumstances when a condom is used. T.T., p. 205.

After the police had delivered the petitioner to jail, and Reed to the hospital, they returned to their residence and found in the top of the kitchen trash can the shirt, now ripped, which they had seen Reed wear on their first encounter with her that morning. The Monmouth police chief returned another time to the same house later that morning with Reed after her second visit to the hospital. The purpose of this visit was to search for other physical evidence, including a condom. The chief reexamined the kitchen garbage bag where he had found Reed's ripped shirt. There he found an opened plastic condom package and a white plastic flip top cap, such as one might find on a catchup bottle, inside of which was a used condom. In this regard, Reed had told the chief that the condom used in the assault might be in one of the trash cans in the house.

Reed testified that the petitioner had used a condom during the sexual assault, that he always used a condom during intercourse and always threw them in the toilet

after they had been used.

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State of Maine v. Donovan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-maine-v-donovan-mesuperct-2002.