State v. Brockel

733 So. 2d 640, 1999 WL 223089
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 30, 1999
Docket98-KA-1089
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 733 So. 2d 640 (State v. Brockel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Brockel, 733 So. 2d 640, 1999 WL 223089 (La. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

733 So.2d 640 (1999)

STATE of Louisiana
v.
Christopher BROCKEL.

No. 98-KA-1089.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

March 30, 1999.

*641 Mark A. Marino, Destrehan, for Defendant/Appellant.

Harry J. Morel, Jr., District Attorney, Howat Peters, Jr., Assistant District Attorney, Hahnville, for Plaintiff/Appellee.

Panel composed of Judges SOL GOTHARD THOMAS F. DALEY, and SUSAN M. CHEHARDY.

*642 DALEY, Judge.

Defendant Christopher Brockel appeals his conviction of aggravated rape. On appeal, he assigns three errors of the trial court. First, he argues that his Sixth Amendment right to confrontation of witnesses was violated by the victim's placement facing away from defendant while she testified. Second, he contends that the trial court erred in its denial of his motion for continuance based upon the State's untimely compliance with discovery. Third, he argues that the trial court erred in denying his Motion to Quash Indictment based upon the State's amendment of the Bill of Indictment. We affirm.

On November 8, 1996, the St. Charles Parish Grand Jury issued an indictment charging defendant, Christopher Brockel, with one count of aggravated rape of the minor child J.J. in violation of LSA-R.S. 14:42(A)(4). Defendant was arraigned on February 19, 1997, and entered a plea of not guilty. On September 8, 1997, the state amended the indictment to allege that the rape occurred between July 1, 1994 and July 22, 1996.[1]

On October 22, 1997, defendant was arraigned as to the amended bill of information, and maintained his plea of not guilty. On the same day, defendant filed a motion to quash the indictment. The motion was argued and denied that day.

Prior to the commencement of trial, the state informed the court it would not seek the death penalty. Defendant was tried by a jury of twelve on December 2 and 3, 1997. On December 3, the jury returned a verdict of guilty as charged. On February 19, 1998, defendant filed a motion for new trial. The motion was argued and denied that day. On March 18, 1998, the trial court sentenced defendant to a mandatory term of life imprisonment at hard labor without benefit of parole, probation or suspension of sentence. Defendant made an oral motion for appeal that day. The motion was granted on March 26, 1998.

FACTS

On July 22, 1996, nine-year-old J.J. reported to her mother, Gwendolyn ("Wendy") Sims, that defendant, Christopher Brockel, had performed sexual acts on her. These acts were alleged to have occurred at a trailer home in Montz, where J.J. lived with her two sisters, her mother, and defendant Chris Brockel, Ms. Sims' live-in boyfriend. Ms. Sims telephoned police, and three deputies from the St. Charles Parish Sheriff's Office were immediately dispatched to the victim's home. Sergeant William Faucheaux briefly interviewed J.J. and her mother. Defendant was not at the residence when police arrived, but was arrested that day.

Sergeant Ardine Boyd of the juvenile division met with J.J. and Ms. Sims at the sheriff's office on the morning of July 23, 1996. Boyd interviewed J.J., and transcribed her statement.[2] Sgt. Boyd testified that J.J. told her of one occasion on which defendant attempted to insert his penis into her anus.[3] When asked whether defendant touched other parts of her body, the child responded that he had pinched her breasts "a couple of times."

Sgt. Boyd arranged for J.J. to be examined by Dr. Scott Benton at Children's Hospital in New Orleans. The doctor, who was accepted by the trial court as an expert in forensic pediatrics and child sexual abuse, testified that he saw J.J. on July 31, 1996. He physically examined the child. The doctor testified that J.J.'s hymen was not in the normal range for a child her age. It was markedly narrowed posteriorly. Additionally, the hymen contained two areas of abnormality, which the doctor described as clefts. It was Dr. Benton's opinion that the clefts were the remnants *643 of a tear. He testified that J.J. could not have been born with these abnormalities. Nor did he believe they were caused by an accident, since neither J.J. nor her mother reported such an incident. It was Dr. Benton's opinion that she had sustained blunt penetrating trauma.

Although the doctor could not say exactly what penetrated J.J.'s vagina, he testified that the injury to her hymen was consistent with penetration by a penis. According to Benton, a child of J.J.'s age whose hymen was penetrated would feel a great deal of pain. The doctor testified that he found no evidence of injury to the anus, but that there is not always physical evidence when a child's anus is penetrated.

J.J. was eleven years old at the time of trial. After questioning the child out of the jury's presence, the judge found her competent to testify. J.J. testified that she has known defendant since she was three or four years old. She stated that he tried to "stick his penis" in her "back side" on two occasions. The first incident happened in her bedroom, while her mother was away caring for an elderly neighbor. According to J.J., defendant forced her to pull down her pants and lie on the bed. Defendant put his penis inside her and she felt a strong, sharp pain.

J.J. testified that the second incident happened in the kitchen, about two weeks before she reported the abuse to her mother. On that day her mother, Ms. Sims, was at a nearby store, and J.J.'s sisters were playing in the yard. She testified that defendant again forced her to remove her pants, then he approached her from behind, bent her over the kitchen table and put his penis inside her. When defendant heard her sisters enter the trailer, he went into another room and pretended he had been watching television. J.J. testified that defendant threatened to kill her family if she should report the abuse. His threats prevented her from notifying her mother immediately. Both J.J. and Ms. Sims testified that defendant often punished the children by hitting them with a stick or a board. The victim testified that defendant never tried to put his penis into her vagina, but that defendant had at times touched her vagina and had put his penis in her behind.

On April 15, 1997, J.J. was interviewed by Amalee Gordon, a Gretna Police officer with the Child Advocacy Center. The videotaped interview was admitted at trial, and was viewed by the jury. In that interview, J.J. stated that defendant had molested her over a period of a few years. At times he touched her vagina with his hand. On one occasion defendant attempted to place her hand on his penis.

J.J. stated that she was unsure of the date of the bedroom incident, but that it probably happened the summer after she completed the third grade. She told Gordon that she was face down on her bed, and defendant pulled down her pants and tried to put his penis in her behind. During the kitchen incident, defendant bent her over the kitchen table, and tried to put his penis in her behind.

Ms. Sims testified that she has had a live-in relationship with defendant since 1993, and that they have lived in St. Charles Parish since 1994. Prior to that time, they lived in St. John the Baptist Parish. Before the move to St. Charles Parish, Ms. Sims suffered an accident that incapacitated her for some time and that the defendant had assisted her around the house and with the children. She testified that on July 22, 1996, J.J. told her that defendant had been molesting her since the day of the accident. Ms. Sims stated that defendant was controlling with her and her children, and that the girls were afraid of him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
733 So. 2d 640, 1999 WL 223089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brockel-lactapp-1999.