State v. Jeffrey Martin

68 A.3d 467, 2013 WL 3025779, 2013 R.I. LEXIS 103
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 18, 2013
Docket2009-381-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 68 A.3d 467 (State v. Jeffrey Martin) 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. Jeffrey Martin, 68 A.3d 467, 2013 WL 3025779, 2013 R.I. LEXIS 103 (R.I. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

Chief Justice SUTTELL,

for the Court.

The defendant, Jeffrey Martin, appeals from a judgment of conviction for first-degree sexual assault following a jury trial in the Superior Court. On appeal, the defendant argues that the trial justice erred in denying his request to instruct the jury on the defense of consent, in admitting certain testimony under the excited-utterance exception to the hearsay rule, and in denying his motion to dismiss the indictment because of irregularities in the grand jury proceedings. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.

I

Facts and Travel

The July 8, 2006 sequence of events underlying this appeal began at a Hooters restaurant in the City of Warwick where defendant went to watch a pay-per-view Ultimate Fighting Championship match. While there, defendant met Samantha, 1 who was also watching the fight. The two engaged in conversation throughout the evening, and exchanged contact information. The next day, defendant contacted Samantha, and they made plans to meet later that day at Iggy’s restaurant in Warwick. They drove separately to Iggy’s and ate lunch together. After lunch, they had drinks at the nearby Sandbar, and then decided to go to Kartabar in Providence. The two drove to Providence together in Samantha’s car. Samantha testified that on their way to Kartabar, they stopped at an ATM as well as at defendant’s apartment, where defendant spent a short time showing her around. The defendant testified differently: he said that although they stopped at an ATM on their way to Karta-bar, it was not until after they left Karta-bar that they visited his apartment. Both defendant and Samantha testified that they spent time together at Kartabar that afternoon.

*470 From there, the testimony of Samantha and defendant diverges substantially. Samantha testified that, as she was driving defendant back to where his vehicle was parked in Warwick, he repeatedly asked if he could see her apartment but that she declined each of those requests. According to Samantha, defendant persisted, asserting that he needed to use the bathroom. Samantha testified that, because she did not know of a public restroom in the immediate vicinity, she relented and let him use the bathroom in her apartment, which was nearby. After defendant used her bathroom, Samantha showed him her apartment, including her pet ferrets, which she kept in a cage in her bedroom. Samantha testified that, after she put the ferrets away, she and defendant started to kiss, and defendant pushed her onto the bed, where they continued kissing. She also testified that, at some point, “defendant tried to move his hand underneath [her] shirt up towards [her] bra” and then “tried to move underneath the bra” on her right side; she added that she “said no, and [she] was able to free [her] right hand and grab his and pull it down.” Samantha asserted that defendant then tried to remove her shorts, to which she responded, “No, Jeff, stop.” She testified that by this point she had stopped kissing defendant, but that he was still trying to kiss her, and that he began to remove his own pants. Although she continued to tell defendant “no” and tried to push him away, defendant took her hand and placed it on his erect penis. Samantha testified that, after she forcefully removed her hand from defendant’s penis, he “inserted his fingers into [her] vagina,” where they remained “for a few seconds.” She recounted that she “yelled no and was able to move [her] hand down and grab his hand to remove [his fingers]” and that, when she tried to push him away, “[h]e grabbed [her] around the neck” and choked her. Samantha testified that this struggle continued and that defendant eventually “tr[ied] to insert his penis into [her].” According to Samantha, defendant continued in these attempts for a few minutes despite her continued protests, but was unsuccessful because she was still wearing shorts and the bottom half of a two-piece swimsuit.

Samantha testified that, after various attempts, she was finally able to push defendant away and get up from the bed, at which point she yelled at defendant to get dressed. The defendant eventually got dressed and Samantha drove him back to where his car was parked. She explained that she behaved calmly because “[she] didn’t want to set the defendant off. [She] wanted to keep the cool demeanor that he seemed to have at the time and just get him back to his car and get away from him at that point.” She testified that, when defendant asked if they could see each other again, she responded “maybe” (again, because she did not want to anger him) and that defendant kissed her before exiting her car, but that she did not reciprocate. Samantha recalled that she took a circuitous route back to her apartment and attempted to call four friends while en route, including Dawn Benson, who called her back approximately thirty minutes later.

The defendant recalled the events of July 9, 2006, very differently. The defendant testified that when they drove past Samantha’s apartment, he asked if they could “check it out” and Samantha agreed to show him. She gave him a tour and showed him her pet ferrets in her bedroom. The defendant testified that, while they were in her bedroom, he noticed a laundry basket full of lingerie and that, when he asked her if she would ever wear it for him, she responded, “maybe I will.” He testified that they sat down on the bed together, where they started kissing and *471 “caressing each other.” The defendant recounted that he rubbed Samantha’s breasts both on top of and beneath her shirt, and that she was making “sounds of pleasure.” He also testified that he “lifted up her shirt and * * * was kissing her breasts,” and that they started “massaging” each other in the “crotch area.” However, defendant recounted that, when he started to unbutton his pants, Samantha told him, “No sex on the first date,” to which he responded, “I know,” and “went back to kissing her breasts.” The defendant testified that he did not at any time pin or throw Samantha to the bed, and that he neither penetrated her with his finger nor attempted to have sex with her. Additionally, the defendant testified that he was not aroused at any point during the interaction, that he never had his pants or underwear off, and that the only time Samantha said “no” was with reference to not having sex on a first date. The defendant asserted that, eventually, the two were interrupted by sounds coming from the ferret cage and that, after Samantha got up to tend to the ferrets, defendant used the bathroom and then they left the apartment. The defendant recounted that he flirted with and touched Samantha as she was driving him back to his car and that he “was planning on kissing her, but she * * * beat [him] to the punch,” by initiating a goodbye kiss.

Samantha also testified that two days later, she received two text messages from defendant, which read “Morning” and “How is your day going?” Additionally, she testified that she received two voice-mail messages from defendant, but that they had been erased approximately one year after the incident. Samantha indicated that she told law-enforcement officials about the text and voicemail messages, but was not asked to save or copy them.

On July 13, 2006, Samantha contacted the police to make a complaint.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 A.3d 467, 2013 WL 3025779, 2013 R.I. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jeffrey-martin-ri-2013.