State v. Delehoy

2019 S.D. 30
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 22, 2019
Docket#28682-a-GAS
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 2019 S.D. 30 (State v. Delehoy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Delehoy, 2019 S.D. 30 (S.D. 2019).

Opinion

#28682-a-GAS 2019 S.D. 30

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

****

STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA, Plaintiff and Appellee,

v.

DEVON ANTHONY DELEHOY, Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FOURTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT BUTTE COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA

THE HONORABLE MICHAEL W. DAY Judge

MARTY J. JACKLEY Attorney General

ERIN E. HANDKE Assistant Attorney General Pierre, South Dakota Attorneys for plaintiff and appellee.

TIMOTHY J. BARNAUD Belle Fourche, South Dakota Attorney for defendant and appellant.

CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS ON MARCH 25, 2019 OPINION FILED 05/22/19 #28682

SEVERSON, Retired Justice

[¶1.] Devon Delehoy was charged with kidnapping, assaulting, and raping

his girlfriend Kari Vaughn. During his trial, the jury heard a recording of a phone

call between Vaughn and Delehoy over Delehoy’s objection. Vaughn’s friend,

Chalsey Shepherd, had recorded the call on her cellphone. During the call, Delehoy

incriminated himself. Shepherd played the recording for the jury. Unbeknownst to

the circuit court or parties, the entire recording was not played. Delehoy moved for

a judgment of acquittal, a mistrial, or a curative instruction. The court denied a

mistrial or a judgment of acquittal but directed the jury to disregard the entire

recording and Shepherd’s testimony. The jury found Delehoy guilty of simple

assault and kidnapping and not guilty of rape or aggravated assault. Delehoy

appeals. We affirm.

Background

[¶2.] Delehoy and Vaughn began dating in January 2017. Their

relationship was tumultuous from the beginning. On June 27, 2017, at

approximately 2:00 a.m., Vaughn met Delehoy at Common Cents in Belle Fourche

to pay for Delehoy’s fuel. After the two left Common Cents together, Delehoy drove

Vaughn toward Spearfish, then back toward Belle Fourche, and then through Belle

Fourche. Vaughn testified that she asked Delehoy where they were going, and he

replied that he was “going to take [her] out here and kill [her].”

[¶3.] Ultimately, Delehoy stopped the vehicle, approximately thirty or forty

miles outside of Belle Fourche. Vaughn testified that Delehoy placed his face close

to hers and began screaming in her face and ear. He struck her on the back of the

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head, which caused her to go in and out of consciousness and caused her lip to bleed.

She claimed she faked a seizure to stop the attack. The attack stopped, and

Delehoy began driving, traveling north. But he stopped driving north and turned

the vehicle around, driving back toward Belle Fourche. Vaughn testified that

Delehoy played “chicken” with semi-trucks and nearly hit one head-on.

[¶4.] Delehoy again stopped his vehicle off the side of the road. He let

Vaughn exit the vehicle to urinate. (She testified she did not believe she could run

fast enough to escape.) When she reentered the vehicle, she noticed Delehoy had

exposed his erect penis. Vaughn testified that she did whatever she could to

appease him and removed her clothes. She further testified that after the parties

engaged in sexual acts for thirty or forty minutes, Delehoy began crying and

apologizing.

[¶5.] Vaughn testified that she was able to convince Delehoy to let her drive

them to Belle Fourche. Once they reached her apartment, she asked him to let her

prepare a bag of food for him to take to their homeless friend. Delehoy agreed and

left with the food.

[¶6.] A few hours later, Vaughn went to the Crow Peak Motel (Motel) where

she and her friend Shepherd worked. Vaughn told Shepherd what had happened,

and according to Vaughn, Shepherd suggested Vaughn call Delehoy so the two could

record his statements. Vaughn placed the call on speakerphone, and Shepherd used

her phone to record the conversation between Vaughn and Delehoy. During the

call, Delehoy made certain admissions.

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[¶7.] After the call between Vaughn and Delehoy ended, Delehoy called the

Motel pretending to be law enforcement, and the manager of the Motel contacted

the local police. After an officer arrived, Vaughn relayed what had happened

between her and Delehoy. Ultimately, the South Dakota Division of Criminal

Investigation assigned Agent Elbert Andress to investigate.

[¶8.] Agent Andress met with Vaughn at the Spearfish Police Department.

During the interview, the agent observed that Vaughn had a small cut on her lip

and a bump on the back of her head. Agent Andress took photographs. Vaughn

told Agent Andress that she did not believe Delehoy had raped her. She also told

Agent Andress that she had photographs on her phone of her injuries from a

previous incident between her and Delehoy and claimed she would deliver her

phone to him so he could download everything. (She did not deliver her phone to

Agent Andress; it was taken from her in an unrelated drug arrest.) After

interviewing Vaughn, the agent arranged for a sexual assault kit to be completed

with Vaughn at the hospital.

[¶9.] Agent Andress also interviewed Delehoy. He advised Delehoy of his

Miranda rights and began with basic biographical questions. Delehoy admitted

that he was with Vaughn and that the two had gone to Common Cents. He also

admitted that they drove around Belle Fourche. Delehoy denied ever driving north

through Belle Fourche but then admitted that they did drive north. He claimed

that they were tired and pulled over. He admitted the two had sex. Delehoy also

admitted that the two had argued and that he hit Vaughn. He, however, claimed he

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only swatted at her hand when she attempted to grab the wheel. Agent Andress

recorded his interview with Delehoy, and it was later played for the jury.

[¶10.] Agent Andress also interviewed Shepherd. She informed the agent

that she had recorded a phone conversation between Vaughn and Delehoy. Agent

Andress recorded the recording while Shepherd played it from her phone. Agent

Andress did not seize and duplicate (dump) Shepherd’s phone memory to obtain the

original recording because he did not want to inconvenience her.

[¶11.] Agent Andress arrested Delehoy, and Delehoy was later indicted for

two counts of second-degree rape, one count of second-degree kidnapping, one count

of aggravated assault, and two counts of simple assault. All counts were charged as

domestic violence crimes. The State filed a part II information alleging Delehoy to

be a habitual offender. Delehoy pleaded not guilty, and a jury trial was held March

5–8, 2018.

[¶12.] During the jury trial, Delehoy objected to the State’s attempt to admit

Agent Andress’s recording of Shepherd’s recording, asserting the evidence lacked

sufficient foundation because it was a recording of a recording. The court ruled the

evidence inadmissible because there was not “a proper foundation for the

recording.” During Shepherd’s testimony, the State again attempted to establish a

foundation for the admission of Agent Andress’s recording of Shepherd’s recording.

Delehoy objected based on hearsay and lack of foundation. The court refused to

admit Agent Andress’s recording of Shepherd’s recording based on a lack of

adequate foundation.

-4- #28682

[¶13.] However, during a recess, the State learned that Shepherd had the

original recording stored in her email account. The State offered Shepherd’s

original recording for admission.

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Bluebook (online)
2019 S.D. 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-delehoy-sd-2019.