State v. Haynes

2025 UT App 75
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedMay 22, 2025
DocketCase No. 20220420-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2025 UT App 75 (State v. Haynes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Haynes, 2025 UT App 75 (Utah Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

2025 UT App 75

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

STATE OF UTAH, Appellee, v. JIMMY JOSEPH HAYNES, Appellant.

Opinion No. 20220420-CA Filed May 22, 2025

Third District Court, Salt Lake Department The Honorable Matthew Bates No. 201912835

Andrea J. Garland and Brock Van De Kamp, Attorneys for Appellant Derek E. Brown and Michael Gadd, Attorneys for Appellee

JUDGE AMY J. OLIVER authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES RYAN M. HARRIS and JOHN D. LUTHY concurred.

OLIVER, Judge:

¶1 A jury convicted Jimmy Joseph Haynes on one count of rape of a child, three counts of aggravated sexual abuse of a child, and one count of sodomy upon a child. Haynes appeals his convictions, asserting that the trial court erred in denying his motions to dismiss and that his trial attorneys (Counsel) rendered constitutionally ineffective assistance. In connection with his ineffective assistance claims, Haynes filed a motion requesting a remand under rule 23B of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure for entry of factual findings necessary to establish his claims. We reject Haynes’s claims of error by the trial court and of ineffective assistance that are based on the record. We also determine that Haynes has not met his burden under rule 23B on the ineffective State v. Haynes

assistance claims for which he requests a remand. Accordingly, we affirm Haynes’s convictions.

BACKGROUND 1

The Abuse

¶2 In 2004, eleven-year-old Emma moved from California to Utah to live with Haynes—who was a friend of Emma’s late father—and his wife, Ashley. 2 Initially, Emma’s relationship with Haynes was positive, and she began calling him “dad.” 3 Eventually, however, Haynes began “tickling” Emma underneath her bra and underwear. Emma initially “just brushed it off” and tried to “assume[] that it was an accident.” When Emma would “try to tickle back,” Haynes would challenge her to “find out where he’s ticklish at.”

¶3 One morning in August 2007, just before Emma’s fourteenth birthday, Haynes and Emma were alone in the house. Haynes, wearing only a towel around his waist, came into Emma’s bedroom and woke her up. He told her to come into his bedroom, and Emma, thinking she was in trouble because Haynes “came off kind of aggressive,” did as she was told. By the time

1. “On appeal from a jury trial, we review the record facts in a light most favorable to the jury’s verdict and recite the facts accordingly,” and “we present conflicting evidence only as necessary to understand issues raised on appeal.” State v. Speights, 2021 UT 56, n.1, 497 P.3d 340 (cleaned up).

2. Emma and Ashley are both pseudonyms.

3. While Haynes and Ashley were not Emma’s biological or adoptive parents, Emma regarded them as her parents and called them “dad” and “mom.”

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Emma entered his bedroom, Haynes had taken off the towel and was getting under the sheets. He told her to get into bed with him, and as she did, he said he would show her where he was ticklish and grabbed her hand, putting it on his penis. Haynes moved her hand over his penis, then pulled up Emma’s tank top and bra and began sucking on her breasts. Emma was “nervous” and “just did whatever he told” her, biting one of her fingers so she would not cry. Next, Haynes pulled her pajama shorts and underwear down around her legs and began licking her vagina. Haynes then penetrated Emma’s vagina with his finger. Kicking her shorts and underwear all the way off her, Haynes climbed on top of Emma and penetrated her vagina with his penis. When he finished, he told her to go back to bed. Before Haynes left for work, he came into her bedroom, asking if she had any birthday money left, and gave her fifteen dollars.

¶4 Emma showered and went to her best friends’ (the Twins) house up the street. Emma struggled to tell the Twins what had happened because she “just kept crying.” Eventually, Emma told the Twins, their older sister, their mother, and their grandmother what had happened. When they suggested she call the police, Emma refused, not wanting to risk being sent back to California. Emma also blamed herself for the assault because she “was wearing short shorts.” A few days later, the Twins’ older sister gave Emma a pregnancy test.

¶5 After that day, Haynes began acting differently with Emma, reading her journals, forbidding her from hanging out with the Twins, and getting upset when he found out she had a boyfriend. His behavior around Emma escalated into violence, with him slamming her against the cupboards one time and breaking her vanity mirror on another occasion. Emma “was scared of” Haynes and tried to avoid being alone with him. Sometimes, if they were momentarily alone and people were in other rooms of the house, Haynes “would just randomly come up

20220420-CA 3 2025 UT App 75 State v. Haynes

and grab [Emma’s] face and kiss” her. The kissing kept Emma in fear that Haynes would rape her again.

¶6 One day in 2009, Haynes “started yelling” at Emma when her school sent home a notice about her numerous absences. Haynes pushed Emma out of their front door and told Ashley, “if you don’t get that little fucking bitch out of here, I’m going to kill her.” Emma was then sent to live with her aunt in California.

The Disclosure and Investigation

¶7 While in California, Emma began therapy after having nightmares about the abuse, cutting herself, and attempting suicide. Emma disclosed Haynes’s abuse to her therapist, who in turn reported it to the police. When officers contacted Emma, she told them she did not want to press charges because she “wanted to go home,” which she still considered to be in Utah with Haynes and Ashley. The officers asked Emma to write a statement to that effect. The note stated, “I, [Emma], feel nothing should be done with this case, I will not break up my family, or have anything happen to them. I’m not willing to discuss what happened sexually to me.”

¶8 In early 2010, a social worker from California called Ashley and disclosed that Emma had been sexually abused in Ashley’s home but did not say by whom. Ashley then called Emma, but when Emma revealed it was Haynes who had abused her, Ashley hung up the phone because she didn’t want to believe Emma. After that, Ashley cut off contact with Emma for the next few years, even when Emma messaged her on Facebook, “I still care about you guys. What happened wasn’t my fault. I shouldn’t be the one getting blamed for what [Haynes] did to me . . . . I still love you . . . . I want my family back.” Ashley continued to ignore Emma, even after Emma moved back to Utah in 2012 to live with her sister.

20220420-CA 4 2025 UT App 75 State v. Haynes

¶9 In 2014, Ashley’s father had an eightieth birthday party and wanted Emma to attend. Ashley reached out to Emma and invited her to the party, and they began talking about the details of the abuse for the first time. Emma’s description of how Haynes had kissed her changed Ashley’s mind, and she then believed Emma’s account. Ashley—no longer married to Haynes but still friends with him—confronted Haynes at a backyard barbecue that day about the abuse allegations. Haynes said nothing in response and “just walked in the house.”

¶10 Emma eventually reported the abuse to the police in Utah. Officers interviewed Haynes, who denied the abuse but admitted that he often played a tickling game with Emma and that he broke her vanity mirror. Haynes also suggested Ashley “was coaching” Emma to make these accusations.

The Charges and Motion for Pre-trial Detention

¶11 In 2020, the State charged Haynes with one count of rape of a child, three counts of aggravated sexual abuse of a child, and one count of sodomy upon a child.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 UT App 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-haynes-utahctapp-2025.