State v. Holsen

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 20, 2023
Docket1410/22
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
State v. Holsen, (Md. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

State of Maryland v. Garrett Lee Holsen, No. 1410, September Term, 2022. Opinion by Nazarian, J.

JUDICIAL AUTHORITY TO DISMISS CHARGES – VERDICTS – JURY FUNCTION

When a trial court dismisses criminal charges, it must ground its decision in a specific source of authority, such as preserving the defendant’s constitutional rights. The risk of inconsistent verdicts is insufficient to authorize a trial court to dismiss charges. Inconsistent verdicts may be remedied after the fact.

DOUBLE JEOPARDY – DISMISSAL OF CHARGES

When a trial court has no authority to dismiss a criminal charge, the dismissal does not amount to an acquittal, and double jeopardy is not implicated. Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County Case No. C-02-CR-21-002187 REPORTED

IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF MARYLAND

No. 1410

September Term, 2022 ______________________________________

STATE OF MARYLAND

v.

GARRETT LEE HOLSEN ______________________________________

Graeff, Nazarian, Zarnoch, Robert A. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

JJ. ______________________________________

Opinion by Nazarian, J. ______________________________________

Filed: December 20, 2023

Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic. 2023-12-20 15:17-05:00

Gregory Hilton, Clerk In 2021, Garrett Lee Holsen was charged with committing multiple sex crimes

against a Naval Academy classmate. At trial in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County,

the State presented evidence that Mr. Holsen had sex with and kissed the victim without

her consent. The defense contended that the overlapping elements across the three

charges—second-degree rape, third-degree sex offense, and second-degree assault—

presented a risk that the jury would produce inconsistent verdicts and asked the court to

direct the jury first to consider the charge of second-degree rape and, if it found him not

guilty, not to consider the other two charges. Over the State’s objections, the trial court

agreed with the defense’s proposal, prepared a verdict sheet to that effect, and instructed

the jury to proceed in that fashion.

The jury acquitted Mr. Holsen of second-degree rape and, as instructed, stopped

before entering verdicts on the remaining counts. The defense then moved to dismiss the

remaining charges and the court granted that motion. The State argues on appeal that the

trial court erred in instructing the jury not to consider the sex offense and assault charges

and in dismissing them. We agree, reverse the judgments as to those two charges, and

remand for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

Mr. Holsen was one of the victim’s “best guy friends” from the Naval Academy. To

celebrate the end of their “plebe” (freshman) year, the two attended a party held at an

AirBnB on May 22, 2021. The victim arrived at the party around 8:00 p.m. Throughout the

night she had been drinking, to the point where she felt “dizzy,” was unable to “see clearly,”

and eventually “blacked out.” When Mr. Holsen arrived later that night, he saw her but says he didn’t believe she was intoxicated. By contrast, two of her classmates believed that

the victim was intoxicated based on her slurred speech, imbalance, and generally looking

“out of it.”

One friend took the victim to a bathroom in hopes of making her feel better. The

victim fell and vomited multiple times. The friend told everyone that the victim was cut off

from drinking. Mr. Holsen testified that he didn’t hear this announcement. At around

2:00 a.m., the other friend took the victim, who could not walk on her own, to another

bathroom. She vomited again and told the second friend that she was feeling better. That

friend then left for about five to ten minutes to get the victim some food.

While waiting for the friend to return, the victim received a text message from Mr.

Holsen asking where she was. Soon after, Mr. Holsen went up to the bathroom to talk to

her. She testified that because she was inebriated, she couldn’t remember much of what

happened next, but she did remember having sex with Mr. Holsen despite not wanting to.

By contrast, Mr. Holsen explained that the victim did not seem inebriated and consented

to sex with him. When the second friend returned to the bathroom, she opened the door

and saw the victim bent over the bathtub, Mr. Holsen behind her, both of their pants off,

and Mr. Holsen “thrusting in” her. The friend told Mr. Holsen to leave once she realized

“what was going on.” Mr. Holsen stopped, buckled his pants, and told the friend “[i]t’s not

what you think.” At that point, the first friend joined the second with the victim in the

bathroom. The victim was “immensely distraught,” sobbing, said that she didn’t know how

Mr. Holsen “got in,” and that she “didn’t want him to.”

2 According to a friend of Mr. Holsen’s, he returned to the party after being gone to

the bathroom for a long time and said that “[w]e need to go.” His demeanor was “urgent”

and “freaked out,” and he admitted to his friend that he had “fucked” the victim. He and

his friend went back upstairs to the bathroom and saw the victim, but her friends told them

to go away and they left. On the way back to the Academy, Mr. Holson admitted that he

had “messed up” and cheated on his girlfriend but said that he had sought the victim’s

consent multiple times and that she had said yes. At the same time, the victim passed out

and her friends carried her back to her dorm.

Mr. Holsen was charged with second-degree rape (count 1), third-degree sex offense

(count 2), fourth-degree sex offense (count 3), and second-degree assault (count 4). 1 In

response to a demand by Mr. Holsen, the State filed a Bill of Particulars that included an

identical paragraph to describe the facts supporting each count. The paragraph varied only

with the title of the charge, which appeared in the exact same spot each time:

The victim in the case was severely intoxicated. She was in the upstairs bathroom and had been vomiting. Her friend left her briefly to get her food and water. The victim’s head was in a toilet. The Defendant entered the bathroom, although the victim thought it was her friend returning. The Defendant began kissing the victim. The victim ended up on the floor when the Defendant removed her pants and underwear. The Defendant vaginally penetrated the victim with his penis. The victim did not consent to the vaginal intercourse. The rape ended when the victim’s friend returned and pulled the Defendant off the victim because the friend felt the victim was too intoxicated to consent to sexual intercourse. The friend

1 Count 3, fourth-degree sex offense, was dismissed by the State voluntarily before consideration of jury instructions or the verdict sheet.

3 reported that she saw the Defendant having sex with the victim from behind.

(Emphasis added.)

During the discussion of jury instructions, defense counsel argued that because the

State’s case had focused on consent, it would be illogical to allow the jury to acquit Mr.

Holsen of rape but convict him of a lesser offense—if the jury found him not guilty of rape,

the defense contended, there was no way the absence-of-consent element of the sex offense

charge or the assault charge could be satisfied. The State countered that the charges

represented separate crimes with separate elements and that the jury could find that the

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Holsen, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-holsen-mdctspecapp-2023.