State v. Joseph Anthony Thomas, Jr.

342 P.3d 628, 157 Idaho 916, 2015 Ida. LEXIS 12
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 2015
Docket42421-2014
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 342 P.3d 628 (State v. Joseph Anthony Thomas, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Joseph Anthony Thomas, Jr., 342 P.3d 628, 157 Idaho 916, 2015 Ida. LEXIS 12 (Idaho 2015).

Opinion

EISMANN, Justice.

This is an appeal out of Nez Perce County from a conviction for murder in the first degree. Because the district court erroneously excluded evidence that could have corroborated the defendant’s version of what had occurred and the State has not shown that such error was harmless, we vacate the jury verdict and the judgment and remand this case for further proceedings.

I.

Factual Background.

A jury found Joseph Anthony Thomas, Jr., (Defendant) guilty of the crime of murder in the first degree for the strangulation death of his ex-wife, Beth Irby Thomas (Decedent), on April 30, 2011. A friend of Defendant testified that at about 12:30 a.m. the following day, Defendant came to the friend’s home and stated that he had strangled Decedent. After Defendant left, the friend called 911. The first police officer to arrive at Decedent’s home found her with a leather belt cinched tightly around her neck. The belt was Defendant’s, and he was standing outside her house when the police arrived.

Prior to trial, the State became aware that Defendant may offer evidence that Decedent engaged in erotic asphyxiation. It filed a motion to exclude evidence regarding Decedent’s prior sexual acts or behavior, contending that it was not relevant. Defendant responded with partial transcripts of two interviews conducted by a detective.

One interview was of a close female friend of Decedent. The friend stated that Decedent “liked to be choked out,” and she then added: “I thought I’d throw that out there right off the bat. Yeah, she did. That, yeah.” The detective responded that they were anticipating that as a possible defense, and the friend responded: “I know it would be. Actually that’s the first thing that came to my mind.” The friend said that she did not think that Defendant and Decedent did it very often and “I know it was only hands.” When asked about it being only with hands, the friend explained: ‘Yeah. ’Cause I kind of asked her about that — like what do you guys do and she was just kind of like, ‘Oh, just hands.’ But then again, when she told me she liked to be choked out, I probably gave her the look. You know.” When asked if Decedent described it at all, the friend answered: “No. I think because I was kind of appalled she kind of nixed me on the conversation type thing. But she might have talked some more to [the other friend] about it. Because [the other friend] was there when we talked about that part and she’s a little more open than I am.”

The other interview was of Decedent’s boyfriend. He stated that early in their relationship, while having sex Decedent brought his hand up to her neck, squeezed her hand around his hand, and asked if he would squeeze her neck a little bit. He tried it for about fifteen to twenty seconds, but quit because it scared him and he did not like it. Later in their relationship, they were having sex and she asked him if he would choke her. He refused.

The district court granted the motion in limine on the ground that there was no evidence that Decedent was engaged in sexual activity or autoerotic asphyxia at the time of her death. The court ordered that Defendant “may not bring up autoerotic asphyxia during any portion of this case,” and it also denied Defendant’s request for funds to retain an expert regarding autoerotic asphyxia.

Defendant filed a motion asking the district court to reconsider its ruling. Defendant contended that the court’s ruling was broader than the State’s motion and that Defendant had the right to present his full defense. Defendant supported the motion with his affidavit in which he stated that Decedent had previously asked him to choke her during sex, that on one occasion he discovered her masturbating with one hand while using her other hand to pull a necktie that was around her neck, and that he and she had engaged in sexual activities shortly before her death and she had put the belt *918 around her neck. The court again ruled that evidence of Decedent’s prior sexual activities is irrelevant, but it would reconsider its ruling if “evidence is admitted at trial which would show that it is more probable than not that [Decedent] was engaged in some form of autoerotic asphyxia immediately prior to her death.” On the same date, it entered an order authorizing Defendant to retain, at county expense, an expert to advise Defendant about autoerotic asphyxia and to be prepared to testify at the trial on that subject.

Defendant filed another motion for reconsideration, describing the evidence he intended to present regarding Decedent’s prior sexual activities. It would include Defendant’s testimony summarized above; the testimony of the two persons interviewed by the detective; and the testimony of [the other friend], mentioned above, who would testify that while talking to Decedent about her sexual relationship with Defendant, Decedent mentioned being choked, and [the other friend] told her she did not think that was a smart idea. The district court reaffirmed its prior order with two exceptions mentioned in Defendant’s affidavit. The order would not exclude evidence about Defendant’s “sexual act with the victim which included choking with a belt immediately prior to the victim’s death,” and it would not exclude evidence regarding the tie “[i]f the evidence admitted at trial supports the theory that the defendant was choking herself immediately prior to her death while engaged in a sexual act.”

During the trial, Defendant testified that he went to Decedent’s house at about 8:30 p.m. on April 30, 2011, and played with their sons. After the sons were in bed, he and Decedent eventually drank some rum. They then started kissing and hugging and Decedent grabbed his belt. They ultimately engaged in sexual intercourse, and Decedent had put the belt around her neck. He stated that about twenty times previously she had put the belt around her neck and tightened it when they were having sex and had also used neckties. He stated that when he got up to dress, she continued to masturbate with the belt around her neck, which was something she had done before. He then left and sat in his vehicle for a while attempting to sleep. After a little while, he went back into Decedent’s house and found her dead.

Defendant also called a psychologist to testify about autoerotic asphyxiation. He stated that autoerotic asphyxia was a potentially lethal practice, and that deaths associated with it are often labeled as suicide or homicide rather than accidental. According to the psychologist, the goal is to deplete oxygen from the brain in order to heighten sexual arousal.

The State called as a witness the lead detective on the case. He testified that numerous interviews were done and that they “had to follow up on interviews about [Decedent] in reference to her activities and potential sexual practices that were known by friends through this investigation.” He did not testify about the interviews with Decedent’s female friend and boyfriend in which they stated that Decedent enjoyed being “choked out” during sex.

During the jury’s deliberations, it sent a note to the court asking, “Did anyone other than Joe [Thomas] lay foundation that Beth [Irby Thomas] was, in fact, into autoerotie asphyxiation?” The district court responded with a note stating, “You are advised that you must rely on your own memories as to what each witness had to say.” About one and one-half hours later, the jury returned with a verdict finding Defendant guilty of murder in the first degree.

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Bluebook (online)
342 P.3d 628, 157 Idaho 916, 2015 Ida. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-joseph-anthony-thomas-jr-idaho-2015.