State v. Jette

569 A.2d 438, 1990 R.I. LEXIS 25, 1990 WL 8000
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 6, 1990
Docket88-539-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 569 A.2d 438 (State v. Jette) 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. Jette, 569 A.2d 438, 1990 R.I. LEXIS 25, 1990 WL 8000 (R.I. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION

SHEA, Justice.

This case comes before us on appeal by the defendant from judgments of conviction entered after a jury trial in the Superi- or Court. We affirm.

The defendant, Regis Jette, was indicted on five charges of sexual assault. 1 The jury returned guilty verdicts on one count of first degree sexual assault and two counts of second degree sexual assault. The defendant was acquitted on two counts of first degree sexual assault by the same jury verdict. Judy T., 2 the complaining witness (hereafter victim or Judy), testified to the following facts at trial.

On the night of March 2, 1986, Judy and a friend went to a local bar, the Golden Elks Lounge. Shortly after Judy arrived, defendant entered the lounge. Judy testified that she had known defendant for approximately three years at that time and that they had met through a mutual friend. The defendant, Judy and her friend stayed at the Golden Elks Lounge for approximately one hour and then left to go to Lou’s Cafe, another local establishment, to shoot pool. The victim and defendant rode together in her car, and the victim’s friend met them there in her own vehicle.

At Lou’s Cafe Judy met a person who introduced himself as “Jim.” At approximately 11 p.m., she and “Jim” left the cafe and went to pick up the victim’s dog at a nearby farm. When the two later returned to Lou’s Cafe, Judy testified, defendant was not at the cafe. She stated that she and her friend left the cafe around 12:15 a.m., each in her own vehicle.

Judy testified that while driving down Mendon Road in Cumberland to her house in Pawtucket, she approached a police officer who was detouring cars off Mendon Road. After complying with the direction to detour, she noticed a car behind her flashing its lights. She testified that she stopped in the middle of the road, whereupon the vehicle pulled up alongside of her car and she recognized the driver as defendant. He rolled down his window and asked her if she wanted to go to his restaurant in Cumberland and “do a line of co *440 caine.” She said yes and followed him to his restaurant. She further testified that she had done cocaine with defendant before. After entering the restaurant through the back door, Judy testified that she did one line of cocaine and Jette did three.

Judy testified that after doing the cocaine, she told him she was going home. The victim claimed that defendant told her that he would not let her leave and locked the back door. The victim said she then moved to the front of the restaurant. She testified that defendant threw her to the floor and started taking her clothes off. The victim also claimed that defendant slapped her and kept banging her head on the floor.

After defendant took off her pants, Judy claims, he let go of her. While free she got up and threw a chair at a window in an unsuccessful attempt to break it. Judy testified that defendant then grabbed her by the back of her head, pushed her into the back room, and then removed her blouse. She claims that he then forced her to perform oral sex on him and threatened her with a knife.

The victim said that Jette also told her to get up on the counter in the middle of the room, whereupon he attempted sexual intercourse. She testified that he then got a stick of pepperoni out of the cooler and inserted it into her vagina. She said he also inserted his fingers into her rectum. She said that she told him that the pepperoni stick hurt and that it was cold and demanded that he stop.

Judy testified that defendant then stated that he was going to heat it up and proceeded to the stove. While he was engaged in warming the pepperoni stick, she ran out to the front of the restaurant. She stated that she started screaming and yelling and threw another chair that went through a window. The victim claims that when defendant tried to drag her into the back room again, she resisted. He then let go of her, and a few minutes later she saw him drive off in his vehicle. Judy then called a friend who came to the restaurant, and the police arrived shortly thereafter.

The defendant’s testimony about the events of the night in question is similar to the victim’s but with several significant differences. Jette testified that he had met the victim several years before the incident and that they had gone out socially many times. He also claimed that the victim had gone to his restaurant to drink and do cocaine on approximately eight to ten occasions. Sometimes it was just the two of them and other times other friends joined them, he said. He also testified that on several occasions he and the victim had sexual relations.

On the night in question, defendant agrees, he and the victim and her friend met at the Golden Elks Lounge and from there went to Lou’s Cafe. Jette and Judy played pool together before she left the cafe, and, defendant stated, he did not see her again until he was driving home and came upon her car on Mendon Road. He testified that her car was swaying 1 slightly and then stopped in the middle of the road. Jette claims that he did not flash his lights or do anything else to make her stop. The defendant said that after she stopped, he asked her if she was all right and then asked her if she wanted to go down to his restaurant to sober up. She followed him to the restaurant.

The defendant’s testimony corroborated much of the victim’s testimony of the events that occurred while they were in the restaurant; however, he contended that all the sexual acts between the two were consensual. He testified that after he and the victim were in the restaurant for approximately ten minutes, they started to get intimate. The defendant stated that at no time did the victim resist or tell him to stop.

After deliberations the jury returned guilty verdicts on three of the five counts. The defendant’s motion for a new trial was denied, and he was sentenced.

The first issue defendant raises on appeal concerns the jury verdict. The defendant argues that the jury verdicts were logically and legally inconsistent and unexplainable on a rational basis. Specifically, *441 defendant argues, it was inconsistent for the jury to convict him on only one of the three first degree sexual assault charges because if the jury believed the alleged victim, it had to convict defendant on the two other first degree sexual assault charges. The defendant points to case law that states that “[i]f the essential elements of the count of which the defendant is acquitted are identical and necessary to prove the count of which the defendant is convicted, then the verdicts are inconsistent.” See State v. Mercado, 263 S.C. 304, 307-08, 210 S.E.2d 459, 460 (1974). The inconsistency of the verdicts, he claims, warrants a reversal of his conviction and a new trial.

We find no inconsistencies in the verdicts. Here there were three separate counts of sexual assault, one alleging penetration by penis, another alleging penetration with a stick of pepperoni, and another alleging digital penetration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
569 A.2d 438, 1990 R.I. LEXIS 25, 1990 WL 8000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jette-ri-1990.