State of Minnesota v. Eric John Henderson-Bey

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 2, 2015
DocketA13-165
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Minnesota v. Eric John Henderson-Bey (State of Minnesota v. Eric John Henderson-Bey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Minnesota v. Eric John Henderson-Bey, (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A13-0165

State of Minnesota, Respondent,

vs.

Eric John Henderson-Bey, Appellant.

Filed February 2, 2015 Affirmed Hudson, Judge

Dakota County District Court File No. 19HA-CR-11-1922

Lori Swanson, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and

James C. Backstrom, Dakota County Attorney, Stacy St. George, Assistant County Attorney, Hastings, Minnesota (for respondent)

Zachary A. Longsdorf, Longsdorf Law Firm, PLC, Inver Grove Heights, Minnesota (for appellant)

Considered and decided by Hudson, Presiding Judge; Peterson, Judge; and Larkin,

Judge.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

HUDSON, Judge

Appellant challenges his convictions of engaging in a pattern of harassing conduct

and criminal sexual conduct, arguing that (1) the evidence is legally insufficient to support the jury verdicts; (2) the district court abused its discretion by denying his motion

to sever and by trying the offenses against both victims together; (3) the district court

abused its discretion by not excusing a juror for cause; and (4) he is entitled to a new trial

because the prosecutor committed misconduct in opening and closing remarks. He also

raises several arguments in a pro se supplemental brief. We affirm.

FACTS

After the state alleged that appellant Eric John Henderson-Bey had sexual contact

with O.W and C.W., the minor children of his girlfriend, L.W., a jury found appellant

guilty of one count of first-degree criminal sexual conduct, see Minn. Stat. § 609.342,

subds. 1(h)(iii), 2 (2008); three counts of second-degree criminal sexual conduct, see

Minn. Stat. § 609.343, subds. 1(a), 1(g), 1(h)(iii) (2008), and one count of engaging in a

pattern of harassing conduct, see Minn. Stat. § 609.749, subd. 5(a) (2008).

At trial, C.W., who was then 21, testified that in sixth grade, in 2003, she lived in

St. Paul with appellant, L.W., and three younger siblings, including O.W., her youngest

sister. She testified that appellant had sexual contact with her on the day before her 12th

birthday that year, calling her into a room when her mother was out, playing a

pornographic video, and penetrating her vagina with his fingers. Appellant touched her

again later that summer, grabbing her and placing his tongue in her mouth, and that

during that year, on multiple occasions, he told her to go to the basement, where he had

sexual intercourse with her. She testified that she “just wanted to die” when it was

occurring, but that she was afraid to tell anyone because appellant told her that if she told

her mother, he would do the same thing to her younger sister. She stated that she later

2 told her mother about the abuse and that her mother confronted appellant. Appellant

denied the abuse, which stopped for about four months before beginning again. The

incidents ended in 2005 when she was 14 because she left the home and moved to Illinois

to live with her great aunt.

C.W. further testified that in 2009, after speaking to a police investigator about an

incident in which appellant physically abused her younger brother, she told the

investigator about the sexual abuse. The next summer, she discovered that O.W. had

come across a paper that C.W. had written for a school assignment, which described the

abuse. The two talked about it, and O.W. started crying, so C.W. asked whether anything

like that had happened to her, and O.W. told C.W. that she didn’t want to go into details.”

C.W. testified that she became concerned when she came across a notebook that O.W.

had written in, so C.W. then contacted the police and spoke to a police investigator.

O.W. testified that in 2008, when she was 12 and living in St. Paul, appellant came

into her room when she was sleeping, pulled the covers off and her pajama pants down,

and touched her breasts and the inside and outside of her vagina with his fingers while

also touching his penis. O.W. testified that he told her not to tell anyone because her

mother would have a difficult time, and she did not tell L.W. because L.W. had not

intervened when she had learned what had happened to C.W. She testified that the abuse

happened about six times, until appellant moved out, but when the family moved to West

St. Paul, it happened once again on a couch in the same manner. O.W. told her great-aunt

on a trip to Chicago in 2008, but nothing came of it. O.W. found C.W.’s notebook in

2010 in C.W.’s old bedroom, and O.W. wrote about five pages in it herself, describing

3 her own abuse. Those pages were admitted into evidence. O.W. testified that, in the fall

of 2010, she told a police investigator that appellant had touched her, but she did not

describe the full extent of the abuse because she feared her mother would get angry with

her.

Cross-examination revealed some inconsistencies in O.W.’s testimony. O.W.

agreed that she told her sister that appellant had touched her leg but that she did not say

where. O.W. acknowledged that when she talked to the investigator, she did not then say

that appellant inserted his hand in her vagina, placed his mouth on her vagina, or was

touching himself. She admitted that in an interview, she told a social worker that

appellant had touched her on the inner thighs, but that there was no penetration, and he

did not touch her breasts. On redirect, O.W. said that in the St. Paul house, appellant

touched her on the vagina with his mouth.

J.W., the girls’ great-aunt, testified that C.W. told her that appellant had raped her

from ages 11 to 14 and that O.W. told her that appellant had sexually touched her as well.

She testified that she did not tell their mother about the incidents with O.W. because

L.W. had not intervened when informed about the incidents with C.W.

A West St. Paul police investigator testified that C.W. told her that appellant had

started touching and kissing her on the day before her 12th birthday, and the behavior

eventually escalated until she got her period, when he started having intercourse with her.

The investigator testified that O.W. was very reserved and initially did not want to talk,

but then she started opening up. But the investigator acknowledged that O.W. did not tell

her that appellant performed oral sex on her or was masturbating while he touched her.

4 Appellant testified and denied that he abused C.W. or O.W. He testified that he

was strict and required the children to do chores, which the defense alleged presented a

motive for fabricating charges against him.

After the jury found appellant guilty of five of six counts, the district court

sentenced appellant to 38 months on the pattern-of-harassing-conduct offense and a

concurrent sentence of 280 months on the first-degree criminal sexual conduct offense.

This appeal follows.

DECISION

I

When considering a claim of insufficient evidence, this court conducts “a

painstaking analysis of the record to determine whether the evidence, when viewed in a

light most favorable to the conviction,” was sufficient to allow the jurors to reach their

verdict. State v. Caine, 746 N.W.2d 339, 356 (Minn. 2008) (quotation omitted). This

court will not disturb the verdict if the jury, acting with due regard for the presumption of

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