State of Missouri v. Rashidi Don Loper

CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 13, 2020
DocketSC98295
StatusPublished

This text of State of Missouri v. Rashidi Don Loper (State of Missouri v. Rashidi Don Loper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri 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. Rashidi Don Loper, (Mo. 2020).

Opinion

SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI en banc STATE OF MISSOURI, ) Opinion issued October 13, 2020 ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) No. SC98295 ) RASHIDI DON LOPER, ) ) Appellant. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ST. LOUIS CITY The Honorable Thomas C. Clark II, Judge

Rashidi Don Loper (hereinafter, “Loper”) was convicted after a jury trial of first-

degree attempted rape, second-degree domestic assault, first-degree domestic assault, two

counts of armed criminal action, and victim tampering against E.S.L., with whom he had a

romantic relationship. Loper raises five points of evidentiary error on appeal. 1 This Court

holds the circuit court committed no error regarding Loper’s claims and affirms the circuit

court’s judgment.

Factual and Procedural Background

Loper does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support his convictions.

Loper and E.S.L. were involved in an on-and-off romantic relationship beginning in 2009.

1 This Court has jurisdiction. Mo. Const. art. V, sec. 10. On April 3, 2015, Loper went to see E.S.L. even though they had no contact during the

prior six months. E.S.L. admitted Loper into her apartment. E.S.L. went to her bedroom,

laid down on her bed, and pulled the covers over her head. Loper pulled the covers off of

E.S.L. and pulled her legs toward him. E.S.L. told Loper she did not want to have sex with

him. Loper pulled down his pants, exposed himself, and started pulling down E.S.L.’s

pants. E.S.L. attempted to fight off Loper by kicking him and pulling at her pants. Loper

grabbed E.S.L. by the throat and choked her until she lost consciousness.

E.S.L. woke up naked and submerged in water in her bathtub with the shower

running. E.S.L. had a severe cut on her wrist “to the point it was barely attached to [her]

arm.” E.S.L. found a kitchen knife lying between her legs. E.S.L. pulled herself out of the

bathtub, wrapped her wrist to try to stop the bleeding, and called 911. E.S.L. initially told

Officer Wesley Pierce (hereinafter, “Officer Pierce”) and a paramedic she cut her wrist,

although she could not remember doing it. After receiving medical treatment, E.S.L.

remembered Loper had been present and she realized she had not cut her wrist.

E.S.L. had significant swelling to her face and tiny bruises and hemorrhaging in the

whites of her eyes, which suggested she had been strangled. E.S.L. had ligature marks

around her neck consisting of a pattern of vertical lines that could have been caused by a

landline telephone cord. Investigators found trails of blood throughout the apartment,

including one leading out of the bathroom and into the living room where the telephone

cord, which had blood on it, was located. There was blood on E.S.L.’s mattress.

Loper was arrested and charged with several counts: (I) first-degree attempted rape;

(II) first-degree domestic assault for strangling E.S.L. with a telephone cord; (III) armed

2 criminal action correlating to count II; (IV) first-degree domestic assault for cutting

E.S.L.’s wrist; (V) armed criminal action correlating to count IV; (VI) felony kidnapping; 2

and (VII) victim tampering for actions Loper took after he was arrested to dissuade E.S.L.

from assisting in his prosecution. E.S.L. later helped secure Loper’s pretrial release. Loper

and E.S.L. resumed their relationship and got married, but they were separated at the time

of trial.

E.S.L. testified at trial how Loper came to her apartment and how she fought him

off as he attempted to rape her. E.S.L. described Loper choking her, losing consciousness,

and waking up in the bathtub with injuries. Defense counsel cross-examined E.S.L. about

two prior instances in which she allegedly attempted suicide after breaking up with Loper,

which E.S.L. denied.

Officer Pierce testified an unidentified hospital doctor told him E.S.L.’s wrist injury

was not self-inflicted, which prompted him to refer the case to Detective Kara Lindhorst

(hereinafter, “Detective Lindhorst”), a detective with the domestic assault response team

(hereinafter, “DART”). Detective Lindhorst testified about her investigation and how the

characteristics of power and control were manifested in this case. Dr. Erin Quattromani

(hereinafter, “Dr. Quattromani”) treated E.S.L. at the hospital and opined E.S.L.’s wrist

injury was not self-inflicted given the depth and length of the injury and E.S.L.’s reporting

she did not inflict the cut herself. Other medical personnel testified about E.S.L.’s injuries

resulting from being strangled and choked. Michelle Schiller-Baker (hereinafter, “Schiller-

2 This charge was dismissed prior to trial. 3 Baker”) testified as an expert in the general behaviors and characteristics of domestic

assault victims. Schiller-Baker explained how power and control worked in domestic

violence cases involving strangulation and sexual assault. Schiller-Baker did not testify

regarding the specifics of the parties’ relationship or the facts of the case.

Loper testified about his tumultuous relationship with E.S.L. and how they both

engaged in domestic violence. Loper admitted he went to E.S.L.’s apartment on the day

of the offenses. Loper testified they began having sex, but he stopped during the act

because he realized he should not cheat on his current girlfriend. Loper claimed E.S.L.

became irate and began fighting him as he tried to leave. Loper stated he “pushed her by

her throat … like pushed her back to get her off of [him].” Loper stated at that point he

left the apartment. Loper denied using force during sex, cutting E.S.L.’s wrist, or choking

her until she lost consciousness.

The jury found Loper guilty as charged on all counts, except for count II, in which

it found Loper guilty of second-degree domestic assault for choking E.S.L. with his hands

instead of strangling her with a telephone cord. Loper was sentenced to a term of fifteen

years’ imprisonment for first-degree domestic assault and three years’ imprisonment for

the associated armed criminal action offense, seven years’ imprisonment for first-degree

attempted rape, five years’ imprisonment for second-degree assault and three years’

imprisonment for the associated armed criminal action offense, and three years’

imprisonment for victim tampering. Loper’s sentences were ordered to run concurrently,

except for the first-degree attempted rape, which was ordered to run consecutively, for a

total of twenty-two years’ imprisonment. Loper appeals.

4 Standard of Review

Loper raises five points challenging the circuit court’s rulings admitting or

excluding certain evidence. The circuit court “has broad discretion to admit or exclude

evidence during a criminal trial, and error occurs only when there is a clear abuse of this

discretion.” State v. Hartman, 488 S.W.3d 53, 57 (Mo. banc 2016) (internal quotation

omitted). An abuse of discretion occurs only if the circuit court’s ruling admitting or

excluding evidence “is clearly against the logic of the circumstances then before the court

and is so unreasonable and arbitrary that it shocks the sense of justice and indicates a lack

of careful, deliberate consideration.” State v. Blurton, 484 S.W.3d 758, 769 (Mo. banc

2016) (internal quotation omitted). “This Court will reverse the [circuit] court’s decision

only if there is a reasonable probability that the error affected the outcome of the trial or

deprived the defendant of a fair trial.” State v.

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