State of Missouri v. Allen John Dale Anderson

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 4, 2022
DocketWD84486
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
State of Missouri v. Allen John Dale Anderson, (Mo. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT STATE OF MISSOURI, ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) WD84486 ) ALLEN JOHN DALE ANDERSON, ) FILED: October 4, 2022 Appellant. ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of Dekalb County The Honorable Roger M. Prokes, Judge Before Division One: Janet Sutton, P.J., and Alok Ahuja, and Karen King Mitchell, JJ. Following a bench trial in the Circuit Court of Dekalb County, Allen

Anderson was convicted of one count of statutory rape in the second degree, child

molestation in the second degree, sexual misconduct, and unlawful possession of

drug paraphernalia. Anderson was sentenced to a total of 15 years’ imprisonment,

and ordered to pay a $1.00 fine. He appeals. He argues that the State failed to

present sufficient evidence that he penetrated the Victim’s genitalia with his penis,

as necessary to support his conviction of second-degree statutory rape. Anderson

also contends that the circuit court erred in overruling his motion to suppress his

pretrial statements to law enforcement, because he was interrogated in violation of

his Sixth Amendment right to counsel. We affirm.

Factual Background The Victim was born in 2007. On August 2, 2018, she gave her mother a note

stating: Mom I am [writing] this because I thi[n]k you should give the dog to someone [e]lse because [Anderson] tried to make his bad spot fit in my bad spot I am sorry I didn’t tell you this sooner it was to protect [the Victim’s younger sibling]. After reading the note, Mother brought the Victim and her note to the

Cameron Police Department, where the Victim spoke with Dekalb County Sheriff’s

Deputy Tracy Neill. The Victim told Deputy Neill that Anderson “did things to her

that she did not like” and “hurts her” “really, really badly.” According to Deputy

Neill, the Victim stated that Anderson “puts his no-no in her no-no.” The Victim

stated that the abuse would occur on more than half of the nights when she was

staying at Anderson’s residence. She stated that the last incident occurred on the

last occasion when she stayed at his home, at the end of July 2018.

Deputy Neill obtained a search warrant for Anderson’s residence, and

scheduled an interview of the Victim at a Child Advocacy Center in St. Joseph. The

search warrant was executed the next day, August 3, 2018. In Anderson’s

residence, police found several types of smoking pipes, a scale, a glass pipe with

white residue, and a bag of a crystal substance. A laboratory analysis indicated

that the paraphernalia contained methamphetamine. The Cameron Police

Department arrested Anderson on the same day.

On August 6, 2018, the Victim was interviewed at the Child Advocacy Center. A video recording of the Victim’s forensic interview was played for the jury. In the

interview, the Victim stated that Anderson “tried to do what grown-ups do to me.”

She stated that Anderson would enter her room at night wearing only his

underwear, get under the covers of her bed, and remove the Victim’s pants and

underwear. The Victim stated that Anderson “rub[bed] his bad spot between mine

or kind of st[u]ck it in mine but it would never work . . . the rubbing part did [work]

but the sticking part didn’t.” When asked if Anderson’s “bad spot” went partway inside her, the Victim replied, “[n]o it doesn’t but it does hurt.” The Victim also

2 described how Anderson would “pull me against him or . . . turn me backwards and

try to stick it up me . . . try to push it.” The Victim also recounted that Anderson

rubbed his “bad spot” on her “bad spot” while they were face-to-face. During the

interview, the Victim labeled the male and female genitalia on two anatomically

correct diagrams as the “bad spot[s].” The Victim reported that the abuse began

when she was ten years old, approximately seven to eight months before her

forensic interview, and that the last incident had been the week before the

interview, when she last stayed at Anderson’s home.

Anderson was arraigned on August 7, 2018. Sheriff Kasey Keesaman was

serving as the court’s bailiff. After Anderson’s arraignment, Sheriff Keesaman went

to the holding cell where Anderson was detained and asked to speak with him.

Sheriff Keesaman read Anderson his Miranda1 rights and handed him a waiver

form. The waiver form indicates that Anderson read his rights aloud. Anderson put

a check mark next to the explanation of each of his individual rights, including next

to the statements that he had a right “to talk to a lawyer and have him/her present

with [Anderson] while [he was] being questioned,” and the statement that he had a

right to an appointed attorney if he could not afford one. Anderson signed the

waiver form, attesting that I have read this statement of my rights or this statement of my rights have [sic] been read to me and I understand what my rights are. Keeping these rights in mind I do not want a lawyer present at this time. I am willing to make a statement and answer questions. I understand and know what I am doing. No promises, threats or pressure of any kind has been used against me. Sheriff Keesaman testified that he began the interview by telling Anderson

that he could refuse to answer any specific question, or that he could stop the

interview entirely at any time. Sheriff Keesaman described Anderson as “very calm

1 See Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966).

3 and polite, and he was very lucid during the interview.” The interrogation was

approximately an hour long. Sheriff Keesaman testified during the suppression

hearing that Anderson did not request an attorney at any time during the

interview, and that he would have terminated his interrogation immediately if

Anderson had done so. Sheriff Keesaman also testified that he saw that Anderson

had a blank application for public defender services during the interrogation.

Sheriff Keesaman testified that in his lengthy career he had observed that not all of

the defendants who received a public defender application actually completed the

form, and some chose instead to hire private counsel.

During his interview, Anderson described several sexual incidents involving

the Victim, although he claimed that he had never initiated sexual contact with her.

Thus, Anderson stated that on one occasion, he awoke with his pants down, and the

Victim lying naked next to him. He described another occasion where he woke up to

the Victim “lying belly to belly with him. His penis was erect, they both had their

clothes on.” Anderson said that he was uncertain if anything sexual happened

during either of these events. Anderson told Sheriff Keesaman that there had also

been multiple occasions in which he had fallen asleep, and woke up to the Victim

putting his hand down her pants and “manipulating his fingers on her vagina.” During his interview Anderson also admitted that he used

methamphetamine on the weekends when the Victim was not with him.

The State charged Anderson with statutory rape in the second degree;

statutory sodomy in the second degree; child molestation in the second degree;

sexual misconduct involving a child under 15; incest; and unlawful possession of

drug paraphernalia.

Anderson waived his right to a jury trial. Following a bench trial, the court

found him guilty of second-degree statutory rape, second-degree child molestation, sexual misconduct, and possession of drug paraphernalia. The court acquitted

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State of Missouri v. Allen John Dale Anderson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-v-allen-john-dale-anderson-moctapp-2022.