State v. Fortes

922 A.2d 143, 2007 R.I. LEXIS 59, 2007 WL 1469445
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 22, 2007
Docket2006-83-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 922 A.2d 143 (State v. Fortes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Fortes, 922 A.2d 143, 2007 R.I. LEXIS 59, 2007 WL 1469445 (R.I. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

Justice ROBINSON for the Court.

The defendant, Sonny Fortes, appeals to this Court from a judgment of conviction after a jury found him guilty of two counts of first-degree sexual assault, in violation of G.L.1956 § 11-37-2, and of one count of burglary, in violation of G.L.1956 § 11-8-1. The defendant was sentenced to concurrent terms of thirty years, twenty years to serve and ten years suspended with probation with respect to the sexual assault charges; in addition, he was sentenced to a term of thirty years, five years to serve and twenty-five years suspended with probation with respect to the burglary charge.

The defendant’s sole argument on appeal is that the trial justice erred in letting stand certain comments made by the prosecutor in her closing argument to the jury. *145 According to defendant, those comments (1) were neither supported by the evidence nor by the reasonable inferences that could be drawn therefrom and (2) were unfairly prejudicial to defendant.

For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of conviction.

Facts and Travel

The defendant and the complaining witness, Laura Fortes, had a tumultuous relationship that lasted for thirteen years and produced four children. The couple married in November of 1999. While they were together, defendant lived with Mrs. Fortes and their children in a townhouse on Providence Avenue in the Bullocks Point Complex in Riverside, Rhode Island.

Mrs. Fortes testified that in May of 2002 she asked defendant to move out because he had become verbally and physically abusive to her. Mrs. Fortes specifically testified that she had been hospitalized after one abusive incident, in the course of which defendant pulled out a clump of her hair and fractured her nose and an eardrum. In addition, according to Mrs. Fortes, defendant made threatening statements to the effect that “he could kill [her] and get away with it because he is mentally ill.”

Mrs. Fortes filed for divorce in June of 2002; she testified that defendant’s behavior then became worse because he was furious with her for filing for divorce. At some point during the spring of 2002, Mrs. Fortes had defendant’s name removed from the lease on their townhouse. Then, in September of 2002, defendant and Mrs. Fortes attempted to reconcile; from that time, defendant stayed with his family at the townhouse on and off through December of 2002. According to Mrs. Fortes, defendant generally stayed for periods of two to three weeks, at which point they would begin to fight and defendant would leave again.

In January of 2003, Mrs. Fortes became ill, and defendant offered to move back into the townhouse to care for their children. She testified that she accepted defendant’s offer but made it clear to him that, once her health improved, he would have to move out again. After defendant left at the end of January of 2008, Mrs. Fortes had new locks and bolts put on the front and back doors to her home and she had the windows nailed shut. Mrs. Fortes testified that she felt that those measures were needed, because defendant had broken into the townhouse on several previous occasions in the Summer and the Fall of 2002, a time when they were not living together. Mrs. Fortes acknowledged that she had never filed a police report with respect to those alleged breaking and entering incidents.

According to Mrs. Fortes, despite the above-described security precautions, defendant managed to enter the townhouse on February 6, 2003. Mrs. Fortes testified that she had gone to bed at approximately 10 p.m., at which time her two older children were sleeping in their bedroom, one of her daughters was sleeping beside Mrs. Fortes in her bed, and the youngest child was sleeping in a youth bed in Mrs. Fortes’s bedroom. She further testified that she was awakened at some point by defendant, who smelled of alcohol and who was “tugging at [her] sheets.” Mrs. Fortes testified that defendant then had sexual intercourse with her. She stated that she “just laid there” because he was angry with her and she did not want to anger him further. Mrs. Fortes further testified that, after defendant had intercourse with her, he pulled her hair and swore at her; he told her that he could kill her and that nothing, including the police or nails on the windows, could stop him. *146 According to Mrs. Fortes, defendant became loud enough to awaken the children at some point after 3 a.m.

Mrs. Fortes testified that she did not know how defendant gained entry into the townhouse on the night when the above-described incident occurred, but she stated that she had not given him permission to be there. After defendant left, Mrs. Fortes put her son back to bed, returned to her own bed with the daughter who had been sharing that bed with her, and lay there crying. According to Mrs. Fortes, the next morning she went to an agency called the Women’s Resource Center, where she informed a counselor as to what had happened to her. Mrs. Fortes testified that, after the counselor encouraged her to report the incident to the police, she did file a complaint against defendant. Mrs. Fortes further testified, however, that she did not want defendant to be arrested because she “still loved him, and [she] didn’t want him to get into trouble.” Instead, she wanted the police simply to talk to defendant and tell him to stay away from her.

On or around February 26, 2003, Mrs. Fortes’s son fell down some stairs, and she brought him to the hospital. Mrs. Fortes’s daughter telephoned defendant to let him know that his son had fallen, and at some point thereafter defendant arrived at the hospital. According to the testimony of Mrs. Fortes, when defendant arrived at the hospital, he had been drinking and appeared furious, threatening Mrs. Fortes as well as the doctors who were treating their son. Mrs. Fortes testified that defendant then demanded that she give him her car keys and, when she relented out of fear, he took her car and left the hospital. Mrs. Fortes took a taxi from the hospital to her parents’ house, which was located around the corner from her own home. While there, Mrs. Fortes telephoned the police, and a police officer accompanied her to her townhouse, as did a maintenance man. The police officer entered the townhouse first and told defendant, who was inside the townhouse, that he had to leave. After defendant left, Mrs. Fortes proceeded to go to the Family Court in order to obtain a restraining order against him. 1

Mrs. Fortes testified that, after she returned to the townhouse on February 26, she telephoned the police once again because she noticed that someone had tampered with her windows. Mrs. Fortes specifically noted that there were slits on the bottom corners of the screens and that there were pins in the windows.

In the early morning hours of March 2, 2003, Mrs. Fortes was again awakened to find defendant attempting to pull the sheets off her. She testified that defendant then inserted a vibrator into her vagina. Mrs. Fortes stated that she told defendant to stop and that she tried to move to avoid him while trying not to awaken her daughter, who was again sleeping beside her in her bed. According to Mrs. Fortes, defendant then engaged in intercourse with her while she cried and asked him to stop. Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
922 A.2d 143, 2007 R.I. LEXIS 59, 2007 WL 1469445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fortes-ri-2007.