State v. Doe

647 P.2d 1107, 1982 Alas. App. LEXIS 295
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJuly 16, 1982
Docket5716
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 647 P.2d 1107 (State v. Doe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Doe, 647 P.2d 1107, 1982 Alas. App. LEXIS 295 (Ala. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinions

OPINION

COATS, Judge.

Jane Doe1 was indicted on several charges that involved sexual misconduct with her children.2 As the result of a nego[1108]*1108tiated agreement she pled guilty to a charge of lewd and lascivious acts committed towards a child.3 Imposition of her sentence was suspended for four years pursuant to a number of conditions.4 The State of Alaska brought this sentence appeal. We conclude that the trial judge erred in not imposing a period of incarceration.5

The charge for which Jane Doe was sentenced arose against a background of a long history of sexual abuse of her children by her second husband, John Doe. It is necessary for us to discuss this background of sexual abuse in order for us to explain our reasons for disapproving the sentence that was imposed.

In 1964, Jane Doe married and had two children. Alice was born in December of 1964, and Bob was born one year later. Following a divorce in 1970, Jane Doe married her present husband, John Doe, in 1974. Prior to their marriage, Jane and John had a child, Charles, in 1971. In 1977, Alice and Bob were adopted by John.

Alice Doe testified that her father, John Doe, first had intercourse with her at age five.6 She said that her father continued to have frequent intercourse with her until, at the age of fifteen, she confided in a school counselor, and ultimately criminal charges were brought against her father and mother.

Alice testified that her mother first found out that Alice was having intercourse with her father when Alice, then in the third grade, told her mother. According to Alice, she and her mother and her father had a conference about her father’s sexual activities with her. Alice stated that as a result of this conference she got in a lot of trouble with her father, and her mother threatened to spank her if anything similar happened again. According to Alice, her father continued to have intercourse with her with increasing frequency as she got older, and her mother was aware of this activity. When Alice was in the sixth grade, her mother, believing that Alice might be pregnant by her father, had Alice tested for pregnancy. The test indicated that Alice was pregnant, but Alice had a miscarriage. John continued his sexual activities with Alice. Alice testified that her father had her engage in cunnilingus and fellatio. When she refused to have vaginal sex with her father, he would force her to have anal intercourse.

Bob Doe, age fourteen at the time of this case, related a similar history of sexual abuse. Starting at age seven, Bob was made to participate in oral sexual acts with his father. Bob stated that his father also had anal intercourse with him.

The pattern of sexual acts ultimately involved the entire family. During many of [1109]*1109these sexual acts, pictures were taken with an instant camera. The specific charge against Jane Doe arose out of an incident where Alice’s father had Alice put on a “dildo” and Alice then had intercourse with her mother. Apparently during this incident Alice’s brother Bob was present along with John. Alice also testified about one incident where she had sexual contact with her mother and about another time when her father had sexual intercourse with both her mother and her. Bob Doe testified that he had sexual relations with his mother on several occasions.7

The trial court found that John Doe was the primary instigator of the sexual relations involving the children and that Jane Doe was merely a follower in these activities. This finding is supported by an overwhelming amount of evidence. The evidence indicates that Jane Doe was a submissive and dependent woman who acquiesced to her husband’s unconventional sexual demands and who sacrificed her children’s welfare because of her own inner needs of security.8

It is difficult to precisely determine the extent of Jane Doe’s knowledge of and participation in the family sexual activities. However, the record does indicate that her involvement was extensive. The record supports the finding that she knew about Alice’s sexual involvement from the time that Alice was in the third grade. The extensive record of sexual acts, photographs, and Jane’s admitted participation demonstrate her involvement.9

One last issue of sexual involvement worth noting concerns some pictures of nudity and sexual play taken by Jane or her children. The fact of this picture-taking is significant because it occurred during the six months when John was away working on the North Slope. From the state’s point of view, this episode casts doubt on Jane’s assertion that all of the family’s sexual activities occurred because of the forceful insistence of her husband. It is clear, however, that such pictures were specifically requested by John in letters and probably in phone calls. When the state asked, “How could he have had such control over you?” Jane replied, “I don’t know — because he’s my husband, he called, we talked on the phone, he had the letters and he had the money.” Thus, Jane contended that John continued to exercise control over her even [1110]*1110at long distance. She insisted, however, that the family did not engage in the “sex act” when John was absent.

In imposing a suspended imposition of sentence, the trial court noted that Jane Doe had committed a serious offense. However, the court emphasized a number of factors that were strongly in her favor. Mrs. Doe had no prior criminal record. The court found that her husband was the person primarily responsible for the sexual acts with the children and found Mrs. Doe acted under strong provocation. He found that there was little chance of Mrs. Doe ever again committing similar acts and therefore concluded that she did not present a danger to the public. The trial court also concluded that a sentence of imprisonment was not necessary to express community condemnation of the offender and reaffirm societal norms.10 However, in considering reaffirmation of societal norms he expressed “some trepidation that I might not be properly weighing that factor....” In carefully weighing this factor, the trial court found that imprisonment of Mrs. Doe would not further her children’s best interests. The court emphasized that community condemnation of the offender and the reaffirmation of societal norms could be adequately expressed by an appropriate sentence for the dominant offender, John Doe. He also emphasized that Mrs. Doe would encounter community condemnation throughout her life from people who were aware of her offense.

We agree that it was appropriate for the trial court to consider the welfare of Mrs. Doe’s children in considering whether to impose a jail sentence. The concern of the trial court was amplified in the psychiatric report from Dr. David Coons:

The primary risk in a family incest case is that the intervention can become more destructive to everyone, including the children, than the disease. Unless there is no other alternative, total disruption of the family is generally the worst possible result. The goal is usually to preserve either the whole of the family or the largest fragment of the family possible. That is why I would again emphasize that the children must be actively included at some point in the evaluation of this case and Mrs. Doe’s case.

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State v. Doe
647 P.2d 1107 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 1982)

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Bluebook (online)
647 P.2d 1107, 1982 Alas. App. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-doe-alaskactapp-1982.