State v. Ho K. Duong

257 P.3d 309, 292 Kan. 824, 2011 Kan. LEXIS 259
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedAugust 12, 2011
Docket101,700
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 257 P.3d 309 (State v. Ho K. Duong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Ho K. Duong, 257 P.3d 309, 292 Kan. 824, 2011 Kan. LEXIS 259 (kan 2011).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

*825 Beier, J.:

Defendant Ho K. Duong was charged with aggravated indecent liberties with a child, and his first trial ended with a hung jury. Duong was convicted by the jury at his second trial, and the district judge departed from Jessica’s Law and sentenced him to 61 months in prison and lifetime postrelease supervision with lifetime electronic monitoring. On this direct appeal, Duong asserts four trial errors and one sentencing error: (1) The prosecutor’s comments in closing argument denied him a fair trial; (2) the district judge erred by failing to give the jury an eyewitness identification instruction; (3) the district judge erred by giving the jury an erroneous Allen-type instruction; (4) cumulative errors denied him his right to a fair trial; and (5) the journal entry of judgment was in error because of its provision for lifetime electronic monitoring.

We affirm Duong’s conviction and vacate the electronic monitoring portion of his sentence.

Factual and Procedural History

S.S. took her two children, 6-year-old A.C. and his 10-year-old sister, to the Wichita public library. Upon their arrival, the three used the public restrooms on the third floor. A.C. went into the men’s restroom alone.

A.C. would testify later to the following: There was no one else in the restroom when he entered it. A.C. walked up to a urinal and pulled his pants half-way down to urinate. While A.C. was urinating, a man entered the restroom and stood at the urinal next to A.C. A.C. testified that the man reached over and used both of his hands to “wiggle” A.C.’s penis. A.C. eventually pulled the man’s hands away, pulled up his pants, and left the restroom. No one else had entered the restroom during the incident.

A.C.’s mother was waiting for him when he emerged from the restroom. She noticed that A.C. looked “kind of shaken,” and he immediately told her that a man had touched him in the restroom. After further inquiry, A.C. said that the man had grabbed his “private.”

Jessica Gagnon was working that day in the nearby children’s reading room, and she heard A.C. tell his mother about the man in the restroom. S.S. asked Gagnon to call for security, and Gagnon *826 complied. After making the call, Gagnon stood with A.C. and S.S. near a staircase outside the restroom. While Gagnon was there, defendant Duong exited the men’s restroom, and A.C. immediately-said, “That’s him.” S.S. told Duong to stop. Duong complied.

Library Security officer Winthrop Stanley arrived at the scene, and Gagnon returned to her post in the children’s reading room. She had not seen anyone other than Duong exit the men’s restroom during the time she stood with A.C. and S.S.

A.C. told Stanley what had happened, and Stanley called for a police officer to come to the library. After collecting identification from S.S. and Duong, Stanley took them and A.C. downstairs to wait for tire police. At that point, Stanley had not seen anyone else exit the men’s restroom, but he did not check whether anyone else was still inside it.

Wichita Police Officer Nathan Toman was one of the officers dispatched to the library. Toman did check the inside of the men’s restroom, but he did not do so until 20 to 40 minutes after Stanley arrived at the scene. Toman found no one else inside the restroom.

Wichita Police Sergeant Kelly Mar interviewed both A.C. and Duong shortly after the incident was reported. During his interview, Duong initially stated that nobody else was in the restroom when he first entered. Duong repeatedly said he did not even notice the little boy. More than three-quarters of the way into Duong’s interview with Mar, he changed his account, claiming that “many people” were in the restroom. Specifically, he said that there were two or three other men in the restroom, but he was unable to give a description of any of them. Duong also claimed that the men were still in the restroom when he left it.

The centerpiece of Duong’s defense at trial was misidentification. The jury heard that Mar had asked A.C., “If you saw this man would [you] recognize him?” and A.C. had replied, “Probably.” A.C. told Mar that the man was not wearing anything on his head. At trial, he did not remember if the man had a hat. A.C.’s description of the color of the man’s shirt also varied slightly, from “red” to “light red” to “reddish-pinkish.” Gagnon testified at trial that Duong was wearing a “funny” newsboy cap and a bright pink or fuchsia shirt.

*827 Duong did not seek and the district judge did not give the jury a cautionary eyewitness instruction, as set out in PIK Crim. 3d 52.20. The district judge did give an Allen-type instruction, as set out in PIK Crim. 3d 68.12.

During closing argument, the prosecutor made the following statements without a defense objection:

“The facts surrounding the disclosure of this abuse lend to the credibility of State’s theory of this case. [A.C.] told right away, he told immediately, the immediacy of his disclosure only adds to [A.C.’s] credibility. He came right out of that bathroom and he said mom, that guy in there tried to touch me. It’s so credible because of that.
“So look at yourselves, you are a combination of men and women of different ages and different occupations and some of you have kids of your own or siblings that you’re taking care of, how do you — how do you analyze the credibility of the stuff that people tell you every single day in your lives? ... You use your common sense in how you evaluate [A.C.’s credibility] and I suggest that he is credible.
“Why is he credible? Because of consistency, corroboration, and this child has no motive, there is such a lack of motive for this kid to falsify or distort. This is a stranger case. This isn’t a sexual abuse allegation arising out of a child custody scenario, where two people are getting divorced or anything like that. There’s no ill will here on the part of this kid or even on the part of [A.C.’s] family to make this thing up against this guy. He’s an absolute stranger to their family, there’s no motive on [A.C.’s] part to make this up.
“[A.C.] is consistent. He has never wavered on whether or not he was touched in the bathroom. Yeah, he says to his mom that guy tried to touch me in there, but think about it, how does a child communicate that first disclosure and then when you have a detailed interview of the child, he is absolutely consistent that he was actually touched on his penis .... He has never wavered on his identify of the person that did this to him.
“What about, you know, you talk about [A.C.’s credibility], talk about — talk about the defendant’s credibility. His undulating statement at the early part of the interview. Did you see a boy in that bathroom? No boy at all. He didn’t see any boy. You know, it’s deny, deny, deny, deny, until maybe three-quarters or maybe even little further into the interview and it’s just like on TV, you know, the detective presses to get clarity, do you think that this detective was overreaching with this defendant in an unfair way?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 P.3d 309, 292 Kan. 824, 2011 Kan. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ho-k-duong-kan-2011.