State of Missouri v. Christopher Goers

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 27, 2014
DocketED100354
StatusPublished

This text of State of Missouri v. Christopher Goers (State of Missouri v. Christopher Goers) 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. Christopher Goers, (Mo. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION TWO

STATE OF MISSOURI, ) No. ED100354 ) Respondent, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of St. Louis County vs. ) ) Hon. Steven H. Goldman CHRISTOPHER GOERS, ) ) Filed: Appellant. ) May 27, 2014

Christopher Goers appeals from the judgment on his convictions by a jury of two

counts of statutory sodomy committed against his daughter, M.G., when she was five.

Goers challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, comments made during the State’s

closing argument and the admission of certain evidence. We affirm.

M.G. was 18 at the time she testified at trial. By her own and all other accounts,

M.G. had a close relationship with Goers and spent a lot of time alone with him while she

was growing up, both at their family home when her mother was working or out of town

with M.G.’s two sisters and at the family cabin where M.G. and Goers often went alone.

M.G. testified that Goers touched her inappropriately the first time when she was about

five years old at their home. Goers made M.G. take a shower with him. They were both

naked. Goers touched M.G.’s vagina and asked her if it felt good. He told her to wash

his penis and showed her how to do so using her hand. His penis was erect. M.G.

testified about several other times Goers touched her inappropriately at their home when she was older, around the ages of 14 and 15. Goers never touched her inappropriately

when they were away at the family cabin. She never told anyone about any of these

incidents because Goers told her not to and she did not want her sisters to know.

Goers and M.G.’s mother divorced when M.G. was 15, and he moved out.

Shortly thereafter, M.G. moved in with Goers and his girlfriend. M.G. testified that there

were a lot of people living at her mother’s house and a lot of tension, so she chose to

move out because she did not want her sisters to move in with Goers and have something

happen to them; she also testified that she had more freedom at her father’s house than at

her mother’s and that one of the reasons she left her mother’s house was to see more of

her boyfriend. She stayed with Goers for several months, then Goers said he needed to

move to St. Charles and she could come with him. M.G. testified that she did not want to

be alone with him “all the way out there,” but she also admitted that she knew he was

going to be living with his mother and her husband. According to M.G., Goers grounded

her for a month when he learned she was not going to move with him, during which time

she could not see her boyfriend.

M.G. testified that, around this time, she had been thinking a lot about how Goers

had touched her inappropriately. She decided to tell her boyfriend about it. He suggested

they talk to a school counselor, which they did the next day. She felt it was a safe time to

tell the counselor. M.G.’s mother was called and joined them at school. After their

conversation with the school counselor, M.G. was interviewed at home by the police and

children’s services about her allegations. She also gave written statements. M.G. stayed

with her mother thereafter and did not tell Goers she had left.

2 The police had M.G. call Goers a few days after that, and the phone conversation

was recorded. The audio recording made on the recording device was transferred to a CD

and then deleted from the device itself; the police also video recorded the call. The audio

CD and the video on DVD were admitted at trial and played for the jury during

examination of the witnesses; the jury also listened to the CD and watched the DVD

repeatedly during deliberations. It is undisputed that Goers’s end of the conversation is

almost entirely inaudible on both recordings. 1 M.G.’s voice is very clearly understood.

All of those privy to the conversation testified about it: M.G. and Goers; the officer in the

room during the call, who also listened again to the entire conversation on the recording

device shortly after the call ended (before it was transferred to CD and deleted) and could

clearly hear both parties; M.G.’s mother who was also in the room and could hear parts of

what Goers said; and Goers’s girlfriend who was near him while he was talking. Piecing

the testimony together with what is clearly audible from the CD, the conversation went as

follows:

The phone call started with a brief discussion of when M.G. would pick up her

things. Then M.G. said she wanted to talk to Goers about why she did not want to move

with him. She said she did not want the same thing Goers did to her when she was

“little” to happen to her sisters, to which Goers said “what?” M.G. said “with you

touching me, I didn’t want the same thing to happen to [my sisters].” Goers said “ok” or

“whatever.” M.G. said “ok” a couple of times and then “bye.” Goers said that M.G.

really hurt him and asked why she did this. M.G. said she did not want it to happen to

her again either. Goers responded that “happened years ago” or something to that effect.

Goers said M.G. had told others she was not moving with him because of her boyfriend, 1 Only the CD has been made part of the record on appeal.

3 and M.G. said “no I didn’t.” Then he told her to do whatever she wanted and accused

M.G. of making up an excuse for not wanting to move with him, to which she responded

“that is the truth.” Goers asked if she was serious and then said if that is the truth, then

why did M.G. move in with him in the first place. M.G. then repeated that she did not

want it to happen to her sisters. Goers then asked M.G. who she told, and she said

“nobody.” Then Goers said this was our last goodbye, and M.G. said goodbye.

M.G. and her parents testified about M.G.’s medical conditions to varying degrees

of specificity. By all accounts, M.G. had cancer before the age of five and had surgery at

that time and again as a teenager. She was also diagnosed with ADHD and put on

medication, including sleeping pills, around age five or six. At some point after the

incidents of abuse when she was five and before the alleged incidents of abuse as a

teenager, M.G. experienced sleepwalking, night terrors, heard voices, hallucinated and

was diagnosed with a non-specific psychotic disorder. She treated with a psychiatrist and

took medicine for her psychological issues, but those medicines did not affect her

memory or perception of reality.

Goers testified in his defense, denying all of M.G.’s allegations. His motions for

acquittal at the close of the State’s case and at the close of all evidence were denied. Ten

counts were submitted to the jury, two involving the shower incident, seven relating to

the incidents when M.G. was a teenager and one incident involving her sister. The jury

deliberated for 12 hours and returned a guilty verdict on the two counts of statutory

sodomy in the first degree with respect to the shower incident that occurred when M.G.

was five. They were unable to reach a verdict on the remaining eight counts, and the trial

4 court declared a mistrial on those. Goers’s motion for new trial was denied, and he was

sentenced to 20 years on each count to run concurrently.

In Point I, Goers argues that the evidence was insufficient to support his

conviction. Our review of this claim is limited to determining whether there is sufficient

evidence from which a reasonable juror might have found the defendant guilty beyond a

reasonable doubt.

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State v. Thompson
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State of Missouri v. Christopher Goers, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-v-christopher-goers-moctapp-2014.