State v. Jason Blow

2020 VT 106, 251 A.3d 517
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 25, 2020
Docket2020-276
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2020 VT 106 (State v. Jason Blow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Jason Blow, 2020 VT 106, 251 A.3d 517 (Vt. 2020).

Opinion

ENTRY ORDER

2020 VT 106

SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 2020-276

NOVEMBER TERM, 2020

State of Vermont } APPEALED FROM: } } v. } Superior Court, Addison Unit, } Criminal Division } Jason Blow } DOCKET NO. 172-6-20 Ancr

Trial Judge: Thomas Carlson

In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:

¶ 1. Defendant Jason Blow appeals the superior court’s denial of his motion to reconsider a hold-without-bail order issued under 13 V.S.A. § 7553. He argues that evidence obtained after the decision to hold him without bail disproves complainant’s allegations, warranting his release on bail pending trial. We disagree and accordingly affirm.

¶ 2. Defendant is charged with aggravated sexual assault in violation of 13 V.S.A. § 3253(a)(1) and second-degree unlawful restraint under 13 V.S.A. § 2406(a)(3). The information alleges that on June 4, 2020, defendant locked complainant in his car and sexually assaulted her while causing serious bodily injury. He faces the potential of life imprisonment under 13 V.S.A. § 3253(b) and as a habitual offender under 13 V.S.A. § 11.

¶ 3. The State moved to hold defendant without bail under 13 V.S.A. § 7553, which authorizes the superior court to hold a defendant without bail when the defendant is “charged with an offense punishable by life imprisonment” and “the evidence of guilt is great.” The evidence of guilt is great if “substantial, admissible evidence, taken in the light most favorable to the State and excluding modifying evidence, can fairly and reasonably show defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.” State v. Ford, 2015 VT 127, ¶ 10, 200 Vt. 650, 130 A.3d 862 (mem.) (quotation omitted). If the State shoulders this burden, which it may do with affidavits, depositions, sworn oral testimony, or other admissible evidence, State v. Duff, 151 Vt. 433, 439, 563 A.2d 258, 262- 63 (1989), a presumption against release arises, State v. Auclair, 2020 VT 26, ¶ 3, __ Vt. __, 229 A.3d 1019 (mem.). The court must then exercise its discretion in determining whether to nevertheless impose bail and conditions of release. Id. In this latter determination, the court may look to the factors listed in 13 V.S.A. § 7554(b), and the burden is on the defendant to overcome the presumption against release. Auclair, 2020 VT 26, ¶¶ 3, 6. The factors include:

the nature and circumstances of the offense charged; the weight of the evidence against the accused; and the accused’s family ties, employment, character and mental condition, length of residence in the community, record of convictions, and record of appearance at court proceedings or of flight to avoid prosecution or failure to appear at court proceedings. Recent history of actual violence or threats of violence may be considered by the judicial officer as bearing on the character and mental condition of the accused.

13 V.S.A. § 7554(b)(2).

¶ 4. The superior court held a weight-of-the-evidence hearing, at which the State adduced the following evidence in the form of affidavits from complainant and investigating officers. Based on a prior agreement, on June 4, 2020, defendant picked up complainant from her foster home in Georgia, Vermont to drive her to Indiana. Complainant was seventeen years old at the time of these events. The two drove for some time before defendant stopped at a park-and- ride in Vergennes. There, he asked complainant to engage in sexual intercourse with him, which complainant declined. When defendant put his hand between her legs, complainant tried to exit the vehicle, but the passenger door would not open. She climbed over the center console to the rear of the car, where the doors were likewise locked. Defendant followed her there and, despite complainant’s resistance, he held her down, wrapped his hands around her neck, removed her clothing, and inserted his penis into her vagina.

¶ 5. Thereafter, the two returned to the front seats and proceeded—ostensibly—to Indiana. After about twenty minutes, defendant allegedly received a text message informing him that a family member had been in a car accident and was being rushed to surgery. Defendant turned around and drove to Burlington, where he dropped complainant off near the University of Vermont Medical Center (UVMMC). Complainant then walked to a Colchester convenience store.

¶ 6. The next day, June 5, an officer who had been looking for complainant as a missing person found complainant and saw bruising around her neck and arms. The officer took photographs documenting the bruising. A subsequent inspection of defendant’s vehicle revealed that tape was used to block the passenger window from opening. It was also determined that if a mechanism in the center panel of the dashboard is activated, the vehicle’s doors do not open.

¶ 7. On June 19, multiple officers drove to defendant’s home to arrest him in connection with these charges and other allegations of criminal conduct. They spotted defendant in his vehicle in the vicinity and attempted to execute a traffic stop. Defendant fled and led the officers on a high-speed pursuit through congested traffic, imperiling several pedestrians along the way. Officers lost sight of defendant for a time but later found his abandoned vehicle in nearby woods. They deployed a police canine that eventually tracked defendant fleeing on foot.

¶ 8. Based on this evidence, the superior court found great evidence of guilt under § 7553. The court then considered the § 7554(b) and other factors and declined to release defendant on bail. As relevant to the latter analysis, the court observed that defendant introduced evidence that he had lived in Vermont with his grandmother virtually his entire life. Defendant also elicited testimony from his employer that, if released, defendant would continue to work for him. The court nevertheless declined to impose bail, citing the serious and violent offenses charged, the strong weight of the State’s evidence, and the consistency in and credibility of complainant’s allegations. The court also noted defendant’s status as a registered sex-offender with previous convictions, defendant’s willingness to endanger the public and flee from police,

2 and the prospect of life imprisonment stemming from the present charges. The court thus ordered defendant held without bail.

¶ 9. Defendant moved for reconsideration, arguing that two new pieces of evidence he received from the State through discovery after the weight-of-the-evidence hearing rendered complainant’s allegations impossible and that accordingly the weight of the evidence was no longer great under § 7553. First, text messages between complainant and defendant show that the last electronic communication between them on the morning of June 4 was at 1:04 a.m., from which an inference may be drawn that complainant was not picked up in Georgia until after that time. Second, an employee at the Colchester convenience store attested in a sworn statement that she saw complainant at that store at 4:25 a.m. that morning. Thus, defendant argued that complainant’s allegations of the following could not have occurred in the three hours and twenty- one minutes between 1:04 and 4:25 a.m.: the drive from Georgia to Vergennes, the sexual assault, the drive away from Burlington for about twenty minutes, the drive from there to Burlington, complainant’s drop off at UVMMC, and complainant’s walk to the Colchester convenience store.

¶ 10. Defendant further argued that additional new evidence so weakened the State’s case that the hold-without-bail order was no longer justified under the discretionary bail analysis.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2020 VT 106, 251 A.3d 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jason-blow-vt-2020.