State v. Koenig

666 N.W.2d 366, 2003 Minn. LEXIS 466, 2003 WL 21756668
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 31, 2003
DocketC4-02-303
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 666 N.W.2d 366 (State v. Koenig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Koenig, 666 N.W.2d 366, 2003 Minn. LEXIS 466, 2003 WL 21756668 (Mich. 2003).

Opinions

[368]*368OPINION

ANDERSON, Paul H., Justice.

In the early morning hours of June 10, 2001, Travis Wade Koenig engaged in sexual activity with a 13-year-old girl whom he met through a telephone dating service. Koenig was subsequently charged with three counts of sexual misconduct, including child solicitation under Minn.Stat. § 609.352, subd. 2 (2002). The Hennepin County District Court dismissed the solicitation charge for lack of probable cause, finding that the child initiated contact with Koenig, willingly participated in multiple sexually-explicit conversations, and willingly decided to meet Koenig to engage in sexual activity. The court of appeals affirmed, concluding that the child’s receptive attitude and conduct left no opportunity for Koenig to solicit the child for sexual conduct. We reverse.

On the evening of June 9, 2001, respondent Travis Wade Koenig, then 31 years old, was on duty as a police officer in the City of Minneapolis. While on duty, Koe-nig placed several calls from his department-issued cellular telephone to the Minnesota Casual Sex Dateline. The calls were not recorded, but through an administrative subpoena, the police were able to obtain Koenig’s telephone records and verify that he had placed the calls to the dateline service. Koenig subsequently admitted that he made the calls and that he did so because he was in search of someone ready to have a sexual encounter. According to Koenig, users of this dateline service can post recorded messages to which other callers can then listen and respond if they choose.

Koenig was listening to messages posted by female callers when he heard a message posted by R.P. and J.L. According to Koe-nig, the message stated that the callers were two “hot chicks” from St. Louis Park who wanted to “party like rock stars,” were into “sex parties,” and could “go all night long.” Koenig testified that the message also stated something to the effect that the listener should call “if you think that you can keep up.” The message also stated that the callers were 18 and 19 years of age. At the time, R.P. was 13 and J.L. was 15.

Koenig responded to the message by leaving a voice-mail mentioning oral sex and stating that he would like to take the callers up on their offer. According to Koenig, R.P. replied by voice-mail, stating that she thought Koenig’s voice was sexy, inquiring if Koenig was muscular, and also inquiring about the “type of sex stuff’ he liked. This response started an exchange of approximately six or seven explicit voice-mail messages discussing various sexual acts. Koenig and R.P. then decided to talk live instead of via voice-mail. Koe-nig and R.P. talked by telephone for approximately 70-80 minutes. Koenig testified that R.P. told him about her sexual history and “what she likes and doesn’t like.” At some point, Koenig also briefly talked to J.L.

During one of the conversations, R.P. decided to take another call, which she termed a “booty call.”1 Koenig, thinking this was an excuse to end the conversation, told R.P. that he did not believe that she was going to call him back. Koenig testified that R.P. promised him that he could have any sexual favor he wanted if she did [369]*369not call him back within five minutes. Koenig testified that it was R.P.’s idea to give a sexual favor because he “kept telling her” that he did not think she would call him back. R.P. called back about 20 minutes later.'

Koenig stated that R-.P. indicated she wanted to meet him and suggested a location for the meeting. They arranged' to meet later that same night. Koenig called R.P. when he was leaving work sometime after 1:00 a.m. so she could be ready. He called again at approximately 2:00 a.m. when he arrived at the meeting place, a local gas station. After waiting 15 minutes' and thinking that R.P. and J.L. had decided not to meet, Koenig called a third time. R.P. and J.L. responded to this call by indicating to Koenig that they still planned to meet him. Koenig subsequently testified that he was in a hurry because he did not want his wife to question why he had not come home after work.

Shortly thereafter, R.P. and J.L. arrived at the gas station and got into Koenig’s car. Koenig then drove around, looking for a hotel that had a vacancy. At each hotel, he would leave R.P. and J.L. in the car while he inquired about a room. R.P. told the police that Koenig made them wait in the car. Koenig found a vacant room at the third hotel they visited and registered for a room under a pseudonym. R.P. told the police that Koenig made her and J.L. walk into the hotel separately because he did not want them to be seen together because they looked so young. Nevertheless, Koenig stated that, even upon seeing R.P. and J.L. in the light of the hotel room, he believed that they were 18 and 19 years of age.

After entering the hotel room, J.L. went into the bathroom and stayed there because she did not want to participate in any sexual activity. Koenig then asked R.P. if he could have the sexual favor she had promised and he testified that she responded by saying, “No, problem.” The sexual favor he'.requested was for R.P. to perform oral sex while she was restrained by his handcuffs. R.P. complied with the request. Koenig and R.P. also engaged in anal sex. R.P. then told J.L. she could come out of the. bathroom because they were finished. After J.L. came out of the bathroom, Koenig turned on a pornographic movie for the three of them to watch. During the movie, Koenig and R.P. had oral and vaginal sex while J.L. remained in the room.

As to these events, R.P. told the investigating officer that she felt forced into having sex with Koenig, felt scared, thought that Koenig was a creep and too old, and was afraid that if she did not do what he wanted, he would hurt her or J.L. J.L. initially told the police that she and R.P. went to the hotel willingly’with Koenig and were not forced. However, in a later interview with an investigating officer and an Assistant Hennepin County Attorney, J.L. said that R.P. pressured her into accompanying her to the meeting with Koe-nig, that J.L. was scared, and that R.P. told J.L. that she was scared. J.L. also said that while she and R.P. were waiting in the car at one of the hotels, they discussed leaving before Koenig returned from the hotel, but he returned before they could leave. J.L. added that after the events in the hotel room, she wanted to run away and return to her home because she was uncomfortable and afraid. Nevertheless, she did not run away and Koenig drove both R.P. and J.L. home.

The encounter between Koenig, R.P., and J.L. came to light because of a subsequent report of a sexual assault of R.P. by one or more other males which occurred a few hours after R.P.’s meeting with Koe-nig. Following this assault, R.P. was taken to a medical center for a sexual assault [370]*370examination. The nurse examining R.P. stated that R.P. told her that she had sexual intercourse with two other males before being raped by the men who had been arrested. Later that same day, an investigating officer interviewed R.P. about the sexual assault..

During the interview with R.P., the investigator inquired about the two other males with whom she had sexual intercourse earlier that morning. R.P. was only able to identify Koenig by his first name, but she gave the investigator Koe-nig’s cellular telephone number, through which the police tracked him down. When contacted, Koenig agreed to be interviewed.

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Bluebook (online)
666 N.W.2d 366, 2003 Minn. LEXIS 466, 2003 WL 21756668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-koenig-minn-2003.