State v. Ibrahim

862 A.2d 787, 2004 R.I. LEXIS 203, 2004 WL 2965287
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 23, 2004
Docket2002-101-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 862 A.2d 787 (State v. Ibrahim) 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. Ibrahim, 862 A.2d 787, 2004 R.I. LEXIS 203, 2004 WL 2965287 (R.I. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

This matter came before the Supreme Court on the appeal of the defendant, Mos-tafa R. Ibrahim, from a Superior Court judgment of conviction entered on February 7, 2002, after a guilty verdict by a jury on one count of second-degree child molestation sexual assault in violation of G.L. 1956 § 11-37-8.3 and § 11-37-8.4. 1 The defendant had been charged with sexually assaulting the nine-year-old sister of his son’s playmate while all three children were spending the day at the defendant’s house. After the verdict, the defendant made a motion for new trial, which the trial justice denied, and he subsequently was sentenced to fifteen years, with three years to serve, and the balance suspended, with probation.

Mr. Ibrahim raises four issues on appeal. First, he asserts that the trial justice incorrectly applied the sentencing benchmarks. Second, he challenges the trial justice’s jury instructions, contending that the “trial justice did not explain with precision and clarity that each element of the case had to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt,” thereby denying him due process and a fair trial. Third, defendant argues that he was denied his statutory and constitutional rights, including the Sixth Amendment right to confrontation, the right to equal protection, and the right to effective assistance of counsel, all because of his “severe deficiency in understanding the English language.” Lastly, defendant avers that the state violated his constitutional rights by failing to provide relevant discovery and potentially exculpatory evidence to him.

We directed the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not summarily be decided. After hearing the arguments of counsel and examining the memoranda filed by the parties, we are of the opinion that cause has not been shown, and proceed to decide the appeal at this time. For the reasons indicated in this ruling, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.

Facts and Travel

On March 11, 2000, the victim, Sarah, 2 then nine years old, and her three-year-old sister spent the day at defendant’s house. Mr. Ibrahim has a son who attended the same preschool as Sarah’s sister. The de *791 fendant’s wife had offered to watch the two girls for the day in return for their grandmother’s baby-sitting her son two days earlier. This was the first occasion that Sarah and defendant had met.

After they arrived at defendant’s house, the children watched a movie in the basement and ate their lunch. Sarah testified at trial that after the children had finished watching the movie, defendant came downstairs and asked her whether she wanted to play on the computer, also in the basement, but in an area that could not be seen from the place where the younger children were playing. Sarah said that she then sat down at the computer and proceeded to use an art program, while defendant stood next to her. She testified that at some point defendant came in contact with her by rubbing the lower part of his body against her hip area. He then put his hand under her shirt and started to rub her back, including her lower back, for several minutes. The defendant then stopped, showed Sarah another game on the computer and finally went upstairs, while Sarah resumed playing with the younger children.

Afterward, the children went upstairs to the living room, on the first floor, to play a board game. After playing several rounds of the game and watching some more television, Sarah testified, she became bored and eventually went into one of the upstairs bedrooms, where she had seen another computer, and sat down. After several minutes, defendant entered the room. Sarah testified that he again started to rub the lower part of his body against her. He then tried to kiss her on the mouth, but she turned away, and he kissed her, instead, on the cheek. According to Sarah, she then got up and escaped into defendant’s son’s bedroom across the hall. While this was happening, the two younger children were playing in the living room downstairs. The defendant’s wife had left the house about ten minutes earlier to buy a board game.

Sarah further testified that she initially hid behind the bed in the second bedroom. When defendant entered the room, she told him she was looking for defendant’s cat. Telling defendant that she was tired, she then sat down on the bed. According to Sarah’s testimony, defendant came around the bed and got on top of her. He kneeled over her and pushed her onto the bed. The defendant then put his hands under her shirt, attempted to remove her bra with one hand and touched her breasts with the other, although she could not recall whether he touched her breasts over or under her bra. While she was still on the bed, defendant “French kissed” her by putting his tongue into her mouth. Sarah further testified that she told defendant “no, Mostafa, I don’t want to do this,” to which he replied “[Sarah], just a little.” Being able to wiggle out from under him, Sarah ran into the basement, where she hid behind the boiler or furnace. After about five minutes, when she heard that defendant had come down into the basement, she managed to run upstairs and lock herself in the bathroom at the top of the basement stairs. She remained in the bathroom until defendant’s wife returned home after what seemed to her to be about two hours or less. When she heard his wife enter the house she came out of the bathroom and told her that defendant had “tried to have sex with me.” Then she called her grandmother, who came to defendant’s house to pick her up. Sarah told her grandmother what had happened. The grandmother testified that when she arrived at defendant’s house about fifteen to twenty minutes later, she found Sarah lying on the couch. She initially hoped that everything had been a mistake, as defendant’s wife told her, but then Sarah told her that defendant had put his hands *792 under her shirt and in her pants and had kissed her using his tongue. The grandmother testified that before leaving defendant’s house she spoke with defendant and his wife, and that defendant told her that he was just treating Sarah as he would his own daughter. She further testified that defendant then said, “I just wanted to hold her. I just wanted to kiss her. She is so pretty.” According to Sarah’s grandmother, defendant started to plead with her and urged her to think about his family. From defendant’s house the grandmother and the two girls went to the house of their maternal great-grandmother. After arriving at the great-grandmother’s house, she informed the girls’ mother and then called the police.

That same night, Sarah and her mother went to the Warwick Police Department, where Sarah signed a statement. The statement was taken by Det. Mark Perkins and was written out by Sarah’s mother because Sarah, was very upset and nervous. Detective Perkins testified at trial on behalf of defendant that the statement did not mention the fact that defendant was rubbing up against Sarah, but that she said that defendant rubbed her back under her shirt, kissed her on the cheek, pushed her down on the bed, attempted to remove her bra, touched her breasts, and kissed her with his tongue. Sarah’s statement also indicated that she hid in a bathroom for some period until defendant’s wife came home. .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
862 A.2d 787, 2004 R.I. LEXIS 203, 2004 WL 2965287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ibrahim-ri-2004.