State of Tennessee v. Roger Glenn Dile

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 24, 2009
DocketM2008-00389-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Roger Glenn Dile (State of Tennessee v. Roger Glenn Dile) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Tennessee v. Roger Glenn Dile, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs May 13, 2009

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. ROGER GLENN DILE

Direct Appeal from the Criminal Court for Davidson County No. 2006-C-2490 Cheryl A. Blackburn, Judge

No. M2008-00389-CCA-R3-CD - Filed September 24, 2009

A Davidson County jury convicted the Defendant, Roger Glenn Dile, of rape of a child, a Class A felony; attempted rape of a child, a Class B felony; and two counts of aggravated sexual battery, a Class B felony. The trial court imposed a total effective sentence of thirty-two years to be served at 100% as a child rapist. The Defendant appeals, contending: (1) the evidence, as a matter of law, was insufficient to support his convictions because the proof at trial fatally varied from his indictments; (2) the trial court erred when it failed to merge one of his aggravated sexual battery convictions into his rape of a child conviction; and (3) the trial court erred when it set the length and alignment of his sentences. After a thorough review of the record and relevant authorities, we affirm the judgments of the trial court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgments of the Criminal Court Affirmed

ROBERT W. WEDEMEYER, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which DAVID H. WELLES and ALAN E. GLENN , JJ., joined.

J. Michael Engle (at trial), Nashville, Tennessee, and Jeffrey A. DeVasher (on appeal), Nashville, Tennessee, for the Appellant, Roger Glenn Dile.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Michael E. Moore, Solicitor General; Leslie E. Price, Assistant Attorney General; Victor S. Johnson, III, District Attorney General; J.W. Hupp Assistant District Attorney General, for the Appellee, the State of Tennessee.

OPINION

I. Facts

A. Indictment

In September 2006, a Davidson County grand jury issued an indictment charging that the Defendant “on a date between April, 2005 and May, 2005,” committed two counts of rape of a child, one count of attempted rape of a child, one count of aggravated sexual battery, and two counts of providing pornography to a minor. After the trial court determined that the counts charging the Defendant with providing pornography to a minor were filed outside of the applicable limitations period, those counts were removed from the indictment. The four remaining counts of the indictment remained unchanged.

During a pre-trial hearing, the State informed the trial court and defense counsel that the date of the charged offenses may have been earlier than the date set out in the indictment. The State said the indictment was based on information gathered by the Department of Children’s Services, which had interviewed the victim’s mother but not the victim. According to the State, the victim’s mother, Sandy Delk, was not a reliable witness and, as a result, would not be relied upon at trial to establish the date of the conduct. Further, all adult witnesses likely to know relevant dates were uncooperative. The victim, who was seven at the time of the offenses, recalled only that the offenses occurred in two different houses, located on Oneida Street and Marshall Street. The victim did not know the dates on which she moved into either house. She could recall only that she lived briefly in the Oneida Street house and for six weeks to two months in the Marshall Street house.

The State explained that, due to the victim’s uncertainty and the lack of a reliable adult witness, the proof showed only that the various instances of conduct occurred between December 2004 and April 2005. As a result, the State would be unable to prove that the offenses occurred specifically between April and May of 2005, as the indictment alleged. In order to give defense counsel adequate time to prepare for the State’s proof that the alleged conduct occurred between December 2004 and May 2005, the trial court continued the Defendant’s trial for six months. Ultimately, the trial took place in September 2007, nine months after the pre-trial hearing. The State did not amend the indictments against the Defendant to reflect an earlier offense date.

B. Jury Trial

At trial, the State presented the following proof: K.D.,1 who was nine years old at the time of trial, testified she lived with her paternal grandmother, her six-year-old sister, and her three-year- old brother at the time of trial. K.D. said she no longer saw her mother, Sandy Delk, with any frequency.

Upon being shown a picture of a house on Oneida Street, K.D. said she lived in the house with her maternal grandmother, whose married name is Debbie Delk Dile (hereinafter referred to as “Dile”); the Defendant, who was her grandmother’s boyfriend and is now her husband; and her baby cousin “Bryant.” Upon being shown a picture of a house on Marshall Street, she identified it as the house where she was staying when police interviewed her on May 15, 2005, about the conduct at issue. She said that, at the time, her younger brother, mother, and younger sister lived at the Marshall Street house. She said her grandmother and the Defendant lived at the Marshall Street house “half the time.” She testified she began staying at the Marshall Street house only shortly

1 Given the nature of the crimes, we will refer to the victim by her initials to protect her privacy.

2 before the May 15 interview. She said that, after the May 15 interview, she never lived with her grandmother and the Defendant again.

Recalling the period in which she lived in the Oneida Street house with Dile and the Defendant, she said the Defendant took care of her when her grandmother, Dile, went to work. The first incident of “secret” activity between herself and the Defendant occurred when Dile was working and the Defendant was watching K.D. K.D., fully clothed, went into Dile’s room to retrieve a pair of pants. While there, the Defendant entered and told her to get on the bed. The defendant then removed K.D.’s pants and underwear, and began to “lick” K.D.’s “private,” while he moved his hand in and out of her vagina and around her anus. The Defendant instructed K.D. to tell no one of the sexual contact. K.D. said other “secret” conduct followed this first contact.

K.D. testified that, while she was bathing in a bath tub at the Oneida house, the Defendant, already undressed, entered the bathroom, lowered himself into the bath tub, and began to wash K.D.’s vagina using his hand and a rag. She testified that, while they were in the bath tub, the Defendant placed his hand both inside and outside her vagina, and he rubbed her breasts. She testified that she was old enough to bathe herself and that she had not asked the Defendant to help her bathe.

K.D. next testified that, during the Spring, while she still lived in the Oneida house, she and the Defendant dropped off Dile at a tanning salon. The Defendant and K.D. waited in the cab of the Defendant’s El Camino truck while Dile tanned. After several minutes, the Defendant unzipped his pants and placed his penis in K.D.’s view. The Defendant then pushed K.D.’s head toward his penis, instructing her to “suck it.” K.D. refused, but the Defendant continued to urge her to proceed. After a few minutes of his requests, K.D. told the Defendant she would scream if he continued to push her head toward his penis. At that point, Dile emerged from the tanning salon, and the Defendant reassembled himself before she reached the truck. The Defendant instructed K.D. again to not tell anyone what he asked her to do.

K.D. recalled that, at some point, she began staying at the Marshall house, and on the third day she stayed at the Marshall house, her family began loading a U-Haul truck in order to move some family members into a newly rented home. On this day, K.D.

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