State v. Cardus

949 P.2d 1047, 86 Haw. 426, 1997 Haw. App. LEXIS 193
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 19, 1997
Docket19260
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 949 P.2d 1047 (State v. Cardus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate 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 v. Cardus, 949 P.2d 1047, 86 Haw. 426, 1997 Haw. App. LEXIS 193 (hawapp 1997).

Opinion

ACOBA, Judge.

We hold that the “consent” of an imprisoned person who, under the terms of Hawai'i Revised Statutes (HRS) § 707-731(l)(c) (1993) is subjected to sexual penetration by a person employed in a state correctional facility, is “ineffective consent” as defined in HRS § 702-235(3) (1993), and therefore not a defense to that charge of sexual assault in the second degree defined in HRS § 707-731(l)(c). We find support for our holding in the analogous section of the Model Penal Code and'Commentaries (Official Draft and Revised Comments 1980) (MPC) and in construing HRS § 707-731(l)(c) in para, mate-ria with the other statutes relating to sexual assault.

We further hold that the words “subject to” in the phrase “subject to sexual penetration” in HRS § 707-731(l)(e) do not render that provision unconstitutionally vague. The first circuit court (the court) ruled in effect that consent is not a defense to a HRS § 707-731(l)(e) charge and that HRS § 707-731(l)(c) was not vague. Because we conclude the court was correct and we discern no reversible error in other points raised on appeal by Defendant-Appellant Gilbert Car-dus, Jr. (Defendant), we affirm the August 29, 1995 judgment of his conviction and sentence for violating HRS § 707-731(l)(c).

I.

A.

The facts adduced at trial are not in dispute. Defendant was employed as an Adult Corrections Officer (ACO) at the 0‘ahu Community Correctional Center (OCCC), a state *429 correctional facility, at the time of the incident. Melanie Arneson (Arneson) was a pretrial detainee imprisoned at OCCC Module 11. 1 Defendant and Arneson became friends through their acquaintance with Anthony Bo-los (Bolos). Bolos was Arneson’s boyfriend. Bolos had also been an inmate at OCCC and knew Defendant as an ACO.

While Arneson was incarcerated, Bolos sent her a letter proposing marriage. Unbeknownst to Bolos, Arneson never received the letter. The OCCC administrative staff had retained the letter because it contained money, an apparent violation of prison rules. When no response was made to his proposal, Bolos sent a second letter to Arneson, terminating their relationship. Arneson received this letter.

Upset, Arneson spoke to Defendant about Bolos. Arneson testified Defendant asked “if there was any way he could help [her] contact [Bolos][.]” Arneson responded by requesting Defendant to “find how [sic] what’s going on.” Defendant called Bolos at a telephone number supplied by Arneson but was unsuccessful in persuading Bolos to speak to him.

Defendant subsequently went to Bolos’s residence but received no response. Bolos indicated he heard someone knocking but did not answer. Defendant offered to return to Bolos’s home the next day. As a result, Arneson prepared a letter for Bolos and asked Defendant to deliver it. Defendant delivered the letter by sliding it under Bo-los’s door.

On April 2, 1993, Defendant was assigned to work in Module 11. That day, Arneson was assigned to work in the Module 11 kitchen. Following lunch, and during “lockdown” of the prisoners, Arneson hid in a cubbyhole so she could remain in the kitchen and talk to Defendant.

With Defendant standing in front of her, Arneson proceeded to engage in fellatio with Defendant. At trial, Arneson testified that Defendant made a remark about her “giving him oral sex.” She further testified as follows:

[Prosecutor]: In what context, in what way did this thing about you giving him oral sex come up?
[Arneson]: It was, like, for [Defendant] doing favors he did, like, what was he going to get in return, but then, in a way, I also began to look at [Defendant] in another way. I did begin to like him, but I also felt obligated to him because of the favors that he did for me, because I know what he did, he could have lost his job.
[[Image here]]
[Prosecutor]: How did you feel at that time when [Defendant] approached you knowing that you had talked about favors for favors in the past and you felt some attraction?
[Defense counsel]: I object. That’s not really leading but suggests the answer that he wants.
The Court: Overruled.
[Prosecutor]: Thank you.
The Court: Answer the question.
[Arneson]: Part of me felt obligated; yet part of me, I wanted to do it being incarcerated for about a month then, and prior to being incarcerated, I wasn’t having sex with [Bolos]. So I guess you could say in a way I did want it.
[[Image here]]
[Prosecutor]: Did you also feel obligated?
[Arneson]: Yes, I did.

(Emphases added.)

During recross-examination, Arneson indicated she was a voluntary participant in the encounter:

[Defense counsel]: Like you told us a couple times already, this was like something that just kind of happened; the desire was there to do it, and all the little things just sort of fell into place?
[Arneson]: Yes.
[[Image here]]
*430 [Defense counsel]: It wasn’t [Defendant] saying this is a perfect place; you were the one who said this is a perfect place and he said, yes, referring to how everything just sort of fit together, correct?
[Arneson]: Basically, yes.

Subsequently, Arneson informed her cellmate and another inmate about the occurrence, but instructed them not to say anything about it. A few days later, a Sergeant Sanders asked Arneson about the incident. Because she and her cellmates had agreed not to reveal what had happened and she sought to protect Defendant, Arneson denied the incident had taken place.

Two days later, however, Arneson approached Sergeant Sanders and admitted she had engaged in sexual conduct with Defendant. Arneson reported the incident because her “conscience got to [her]” and, because of her concern “that something could [otherwise] happen to” her fellow inmates.

Consequently, an investigation was initiated ' by the Honolulu Police Department (HPD).

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Bluebook (online)
949 P.2d 1047, 86 Haw. 426, 1997 Haw. App. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cardus-hawapp-1997.