State v. Adam Lake

90 A.3d 186, 2014 WL 1998922, 2014 R.I. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 16, 2014
Docket2012-254-C.A
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 90 A.3d 186 (State v. Adam Lake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Adam Lake, 90 A.3d 186, 2014 WL 1998922, 2014 R.I. LEXIS 66 (R.I. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

Justice ROBINSON,

for the Court.

The defendant, Adam Lake, appeals to this Court from a judgment of conviction after a jury found him guilty of two counts of first-degree child molestation sexual assault. The justice of the Superior Court who had presided over the trial sentenced the defendant to two concurrent terms of forty years imprisonment, with twenty-five years to serve and fifteen years suspended, with probation.

On appeal, defendant contends that the trial justice abused her discretion in denying his motion for a new trial because, in defendant’s view, she overlooked and misconceived material evidence; defendant further asserts that the verdict failed to truly respond to the evidence and failed to do substantial justice between the parties.

For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the Superior Court’s judgment of conviction.

I

Facts and Travel

The complaining witness, Avis, 1 was born on December 8, 1997. In early July of 2009, when she was eleven years old, Avis disclosed to her twelve-year-old sister Marion that defendant, their stepfather, had sexually molested her multiple times. Marion thereafter revealed Avis’s accusations to Wendy, who is the mother of both girls.

On August 14, 2009, a Providence County grand jury indicted defendant on three counts of first-degree child molestation sexual assault in violation of G.L.1956 § 11-37-8.1; the charged offenses were alleged to have occurred between August 1, 2008 and May 31, 2009. Counts One and Three both alleged “penile/vaginal penetration,” and Count Two alleged “penile/anal penetration.”

In due course, a jury trial was held over four days in January of 2012. We summarize below the salient aspects of what transpired at trial.

A

The Testimony at Trial

1. The Testimony of the Complaining Witness

At the time of trial, Avis, who was then fourteen years old, testified that she had known defendant since she was four years old — initially as a family friend when her mother, Wendy, began dating him and later when he became her stepfather, after the couple married in 2005. She added that defendant would babysit for her and her five siblings when Wendy was out of the house. Avis testified about the vaginal *188 intercourse which she alleged she had been subjected to by defendant on multiple occasions; she also testified as to incidents of anal penetration, although she acknowledged that those incidents had occurred “rarely.” Her testimony then focused on three particular incidents when defendant had sexually molested her, and those were the incidents referenced in the three counts of the indictment.

With respect to Count One, Avis stated that defendant sexually molested her for the first time at her home on Holton Street in Providence; 2 it was her testimony that, on that occasion, all of her brothers and sisters were home and her mother was away from home. Avis testified that she had been lying on her side next to defendant on his bed tickling his back when defendant said to her: “Have you ever had sex with anyone before?” She further testified that, after she replied in the negative, he said: “You’re going to find out.” She stated that defendant then “turn[ed] around and [grabbed]” her by her shoulders so that she was lying on her back and that he proceeded to pull down her pajama pants and underwear. She further described, with specificity, how defendant then engaged in vaginal intercourse with her. Avis stated that she was crying and that she told defendant that he was hurting her. She explained, however, that she did not yell out for help because she “didn’t know how to react” and that she was “shocked.” Avis stated that defendant then told her that, if she told anyone about what happened, he would take her away; and she acknowledged that she believed defendant’s statement to that effect.

Avis then testified with respect to another incident of sexual molestation (Count Two) that occurred while she was still living on Holton Street. Avis initially testified that defendant penetrated her vaginally on that occasion; however, she then changed her testimony and said that the intercourse was either vaginal or anal but that she could not remember which it was. After having her memory refreshed by her testimony at defendant’s bail hearing, Avis stated that defendant had penetrated her anally.

Avis testified that the incident that gave rise to Count Three occurred when she was living on Harold Street in Providence in March of 2009. It was Avis’s testimony that she had been with Marion in the bedroom which they shared when defendant entered the room and asked Marion to leave so that he could talk to Avis. She testified that defendant then engaged in vaginal intercourse with her in a manner similar to what had taken place on the first occasion that she testified about at trial.

Avis acknowledged that, at some point after the just-described incident had taken place, she responded in the negative to a question posed by Marion as to whether anything was “happening” between her and defendant. She testified that Marion asked her the same question once again after defendant had moved out of the home in May of 2009 and that she then admitted that defendant had penetrated her vaginally “multiple times.” 3 She further testi *189 fied: “I figured that I was sick and tired of him sexually abusing me and I felt gross, grossed out helpless, and desperate for help.” She stated that she had not previously revealed the sexual molestation to anyone when defendant had left 4 the home on other occasions because she had been “scared” due to defendant’s threats and because she “knew he was going to come back. He always did.” However, it was Avis’s testimony that, after defendant and her mother had a “big argument” in May of 2009, she had the “instinct that he wasn’t coming back.”

Avis testified that, shortly after she told Marion about the sexual molestation and even though she had asked Marion not to do so, her sister nonetheless revealed Avis’s allegations of sexual molestation to their mother, Wendy, who then confronted her. She further testified that Wendy was “screaming and crying and mad” and proceeded to drive her to Hasbro Children’s Hospital for an examination. 5 She stated that, in the days after that, she had “a lot of mixed emotions” and that she was “crying and relieved at the same time.”

2. The Testimony of the Sister of the Complaining Witness

Avis’s older sister, Marion, testified that in March of 2009 defendant entered the bedroom which she shared with Avis and asked Marion to leave and tend to her siblings so that he could talk to Avis. Marion further testified that she wanted to hear what they were talking about and that, therefore, she listened through the bathroom wall.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 A.3d 186, 2014 WL 1998922, 2014 R.I. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-adam-lake-ri-2014.