State v. Gordon

880 A.2d 825, 2005 R.I. LEXIS 173, 2005 WL 2095663
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedSeptember 1, 2005
Docket2004-148-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 880 A.2d 825 (State v. Gordon) 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. Gordon, 880 A.2d 825, 2005 R.I. LEXIS 173, 2005 WL 2095663 (R.I. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

ROBINSON, Justice.

A jury found defendant, David Gordon, guilty of first-degree arson, conspiracy, and insurance fraud in connection with a fire that destroyed the home of Lorraine L. Holman in Foster on June 5, 1996. 1 The trial justice denied the motion for a new trial. 2 On December 6, 2002, Gordon was sentenced to serve an eighty-year term of imprisonment on the first-degree arson conviction, forty years of which were to be suspended, with probation. He was also sentenced to serve concurrent sentences of ten years of imprisonment on the conspiracy conviction and one year of imprisonment on the insurance fraud conviction.

Gordon has appealed to this Court, contending that the trial justice committed reversible error: (1) by affording him what he alleges to have been insufficient time to prepare his case and insufficient access to discovery materials once the court had decided to direct him to proceed to trial pro se; 3 (2) by refusing to allow private counsel to enter an appearance on his behalf after the trial began; (3) in qualifying a particular prosecution witness as an expert; (4) in failing to provide him with additional financial resources in connection with his defense; and (5) in permitting the prosecution to cross-examine him in an allegedly unlimited manner. 4 After reviewing the record and defendant’s legal arguments, we discern no reversible error, and we affirm the judgment of conviction.

I

Facts and Travel 5

In November of 1995, Lorraine Holman, a school bus driver, lived alone at 7 Maple Rock Road in Foster, having been divorced from her husband of almost thirty- *829 three years. According to Holman’s testimony she was, as of that time, a law-abiding citizen.

Holman testified that she regularly attended services at Saint Paul’s Church in Foster and that one day she saw an announcement in the church bulletin indicating that an inmate at the Adult Correctional Institutions (ACI) was seeking a pen pal. She further testified that she became interested in responding because she hoped that perhaps she “could make a bad person good * * Holman contacted a priest affiliated with the church and inquired about the announcement in the bulletin. She testified that the priest advised her to provide as little personal information as possible in her letters to the inmate and to use the church’s address to receive mail from him. Holman then began corresponding by mail with the inmate (viz., defendant Gordon), using her confirmation name of Theresa as a sort of alias.

Holman further testified that, in his letters to her, Gordon began to pressure her to let her guard down. She went on to testify that she eventually gave in to that pressure by revealing who she was and where she lived. She testified that she later began visiting Gordon at the ACI on a regular basis and that he made her “feel like a special person.”

She further testified that Gordon started to question her and that his questioning proceeded “slowly at first * * She said that he asked her about “how [she] lived, where [she] lived, what [her] home was like.” She added that the questioning “increased as the visits went on.”

Holman also testified that, when Gordon learned that she owned her own home and that it was insured, he would make what she called “wisecracks” such as the following: “Bet you’ve got a lot of money, bet you’ve got a pretty big savings account.” She also testified that on one occasion he told her: “A house like that should be burned down to the ground.” She added that she had shrugged that remark off as a joke.

Holman told the jury that Gordon then began to pressure her to take out a home equity loan so that the two of them could “buy a business, run a business, start that way.” After Holman succeeded in securing a loan commitment for $25,000, she had a change of heart and told Gordon that she couldn’t go through with the loan. She testified that Gordon responded by becoming “very verbally vicious * * *.” Although defendant’s verbal tirade caused Holman to become upset and frightened, she testified that she nonetheless continued to visit him at the ACI and that, on April 10, 1996, the day that defendant was released from prison, she gave him a gift of $25,000 towards the purchase of a business.

Holman testified that defendant told her that he was interested in buying a variety store in Woonsocket; but that (according to him) “more money was needed for the business.” She further testified: “That’s when the talk of the fire became more intense.”

According to Holman’s testimony, defendant suggested several ways in which she could start a fire in her home. He told her that she could leave a pile of newspapers next to some candles and blame the cat for knocking over a candle or she could start an electrical fire by not turning off appliances such as the electric coffee maker, the clothes dryer or the crock pot. Holman further testified that one day defendant brought her to a flea market to look for electrical appliances that could be used to start a fire.

Holman then testified that, on June 5, 1996, at some point between the time that she normally awoke (5 a.m.) and the time *830 that she usually left the house (between 6:25 and 6:35 a.m.), defendant telephoned her and informed her: “This is the day. This is it.” She further testified that defendant told her to leave the coffee pot running and to switch on the dryer before she left for work, and he also admonished her not to take anything out of the house. He told her: “Do not whatsoever take anything out of that house, not one single thing.”

Nevertheless, according to Holman’s own testimony, she did remove one item before she left the house — namely, a photograph of defendant that was on a nightstand in her bedroom. Holman testified that she could not recall whether she had let her cat go outside and that she was “probably so nervous” that she did not think of the cat. 6 She added that she locked the door behind her when she left and that defendant also possessed a key to the lock.

As she was returning home later that day, Holman was stopped by the fire chief. He told her that her house was on fire, and he then drove her in his car to her property. Later, Holman unsuccessfully attempted to contact defendant Gordon from her daughter-in-law’s home in Chepachet.

On the day after the fire, Holman returned to her property to meet with a representative of the insurance agency. She testified that Gordon was there when she arrived and that one of the first things he said to her was: “I told you not to take anything out of that house; nothing.” She testified that, when she denied having deviated from his instruction, Gordon responded by saying: “Oh.

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Bluebook (online)
880 A.2d 825, 2005 R.I. LEXIS 173, 2005 WL 2095663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gordon-ri-2005.