State v. Derek Bishop

2012 MT 259, 291 P.3d 538, 367 Mont. 10, 2012 Mont. LEXIS 335
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 2012
DocketDA 11-0325
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2012 MT 259 (State v. Derek Bishop) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Derek Bishop, 2012 MT 259, 291 P.3d 538, 367 Mont. 10, 2012 Mont. LEXIS 335 (Mo. 2012).

Opinion

JUSTICE MORRIS

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Derek Joel Bishop (Bishop) appeals from his conviction for attempted sexual intercourse without consent, a felony, in the Twenty-Second Judicial District, Carbon County. The District Court sentenced Bishop to Montana State Prison (MSP) for a term of 15 years, with five suspended. Bishop appeals from the final judgment, including the court’s decision to grant the State’s motion in limine to exclude certain evidence.

¶2 We review the following issues on appeal:

¶3 Whether the District Court violated Bishop’s right to due process in excluding evidence of alleged sexual conversations between T.B. and Bishop and photos of third parties allegedly sent by T.B. to Bishop.

¶4 Whether Bishop’s defense counsel provided ineffective assistance of counsel by not requesting a lesser-included offense instruction for sexual assault.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶5 Bishop, 37 years old, and T.B., 16 years old, worked together at Yellowstone Perk for two years. Yellowstone Perk operates an underage music venue in Billings, Montana. T.B. and Bishop did not associate outside of work, but considered each other friends. Bishop had a notion that he and T.B. had a long flirtation.

¶6 T.B., Bishop, and their boss Don Hurley (Hurley) went to Roberts, Montana, for the four-night, five-day Bull Pen Rally (Rally) in July 2010. Hurley, T.B., and Bishop operated a concessions trailer at the Rally for Yellowstone Perk. The Rally consisted of a concert series and festival.

¶7 Hurley, T.B., and Bishop arrived at the Rally on Wednesday, July 13, 2010. Hurley drove with T.B. in his motor-coach. Bishop drove Hurley’s SUV and pulled the concessions trailer. T.B. slept the first night in Hurley’s motor coach, but moved to the concessions trailer on Thursday night to avoid disturbing Hurley with her music player. Bishop slept in Hurley’s SUV.

¶8 T.B. and Bishop closed the concessions trailer after midnight on Friday night of the Rally. T.B. changed into shorts at the port-a-potties and inserted a tampon due to the fact that she had just started menstruating. T.B. felt tired and wanted to go to bed. Bishop sat on T.B.’s sleeping bag in the concessions trailer and talked to her before she fell asleep. T.B. told Bishop, “If I fall asleep, you need to leave.” T.B. fell asleep.

*12 ¶9 T.B. next remembers waking up to discover Bishop kneeling over her and kissing her stomach. T.B.’s pants were pulled down and her shirt was pulled up. T.B. pushed Bishop away and asked him what he was doing. Bishop said, “I’m sorry,” and “I never meant to hurt you.” Bishop then left the concessions trailer.

¶10 T.B. went to the port-a-potties and cried there for several hours. She noticed that she was “sore down there” and that her tampon had shifted positions. T.B. returned to the concessions trailer and fell asleep. Bishop woke T.B. early the next morning to start making coffee for customers. Bishop continued to apologize.

¶11 T.B. called her sister’s boyfriend, Raleith, who lived in Lockwood. T.B. informed Raleith that she had been attacked by someone she did not know near the port-a-potties. Raleith immediately drove to Roberts. He called T.B.’s sister, Crystal. Raleith left T.B. in the security tent and notified T.B.’s family and the police.

¶12 Crystal believed T.B.’s story about the attack at the port-a-potties and told their mother about the incident. T.B.’s mother confirmed T.B.’s recounting of the incident, but did not believe T.B.’s contention that she did not know her attacker. T.B.’s parents went to the Rally to pick up their daughter.

¶13 Two police officers questioned T.B. at the Rally, but she did not feel comfortable talking to them there. The officers drove T.B. to Red Lodge to conduct the interview. T.B.’s parents met them there. T.B. told her parents before she went into the interview room that the attack had taken place near the port-a-potties. She declined to name her attacker. T.B. changed her version of the incident during the interview with the police officers. T.B. named Bishop as her attacker and told the police officers that the attack had taken place inside the concessions trailer.

¶14 T.B. drove to Billings where she underwent a four-hour Sexual Abuse Nurse Examiner (SANE) exam. The SANE nurse found a hickey on T.B.’s neck and a small tear just inside her vagina.

¶15 Police went to the Rally to interview Bishop. They took Bishop to Joliet for questioning. Bishop admitted that T.B. had been asleep on and off throughout the night. He claimed that he and T.B. had been playing, touching, and tickling. Bishop admitted to kissing T.B.’s body and pulling down her shorts so that he could “look” and “go halfway.” Bishop claimed, however, that he had not been aroused during this encounter.

¶16 The State charged Bishop with felony sexual intercourse without consent, and in the alternative, felony attempted sexual intercourse without consent. Bishop’s defense focused on his claim that the *13 encounter had been consensual. In this regard, Bishop intended to introduce conversations between Bishop and T.B. of an alleged sexual nature as evidence of previous sexual conduct between them.

¶17 For example, Bishop wanted to testify regarding a conversation in the days before the incident at the Rally that he claimed to have had with T.B. that had sexual content. He also sought to introduce what he claims were photos of semi-clothed women at the Rally that T.B. had sent to him on her cell phone at some point before the incident. Bishop claimed that T.B. had added captions to the photos that relayed something to the effect that T.B. would like to have sex with the women in the photos.

¶18 The State argued that Bishop’s impressions regarding T.B.’s sexual preferences were irrelevant to a charge of attempted sexual intercourse without consent under M. R. Evid. 401-02. The State filed a motion in limine, pursuant to M. R. Evid. 401-03, to exclude alleged conversations of a sexual nature, Bishop’s impressions regarding T.B.’s sexual preferences, and other categories of related evidence at trial. The State also sought to exclude as irrelevant and prejudicial the photos of the women at the Rally. The State further argued that the rape shield law, § 45-5-511, MCA, supported exclusion of all of these categories of evidence.

¶19 The District Court granted the State’s motion in limine with respect to any prior sexual abuse of T.B., a photograph of T.B. from the SANE exam, and criminal histories or improper character evidence of any witness. The court reserved ruling on evidence concerning T.B.’s alleged sexual preferences and sexual history, as well as photos of the women at the Rally allegedly sent by T.B. to Bishop on T.B.’s cell phone.

¶20 The court heard from both parties on the day of the trial. The court ruled that Bishop could not present evidence regarding T.B.’s and Bishop’s alleged conversations about sex or conversations about T.B.’s alleged previous sexual encounters with third parties that Bishop claimed to have discussed with T.B. The court also ruled that Bishop could not present evidence regarding the photos of the women at the Rally.

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Related

State v. Roger A. Hantz
2013 MT 311 (Montana Supreme Court, 2013)

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Bluebook (online)
2012 MT 259, 291 P.3d 538, 367 Mont. 10, 2012 Mont. LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-derek-bishop-mont-2012.