State v. Kozlov

2012 UT App 114
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedApril 12, 2012
Docket20090372-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2012 UT App 114 (State v. Kozlov) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Kozlov, 2012 UT App 114 (Utah Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

‐‐‐‐ooOoo‐‐‐‐

State of Utah, ) OPINION ) Plaintiff and Appellee, ) Case No. 20090372‐CA ) v. ) FILED ) (April 12, 2012) Konstantin Kozlov, ) ) 2012 UT App 114 Defendant and Appellant. )

‐‐‐‐‐

Fourth District, Provo Department, 081401858 The Honorable Fred D. Howard The Honorable Claudia Laycock

Attorneys: Elizabeth Hunt, Salt Lake City, for Appellant Mark L. Shurtleff and Christopher D. Ballard, Salt Lake City, for Appellee

Before Judges McHugh, Orme, and Christiansen.

CHRISTIANSEN, Judge:

¶1 Defendant Konstantin Kozlov appeals his convictions following a jury trial for attempted rape, see Utah Code Ann. § 76‐5‐402 (2008) (rape); id. § 76‐4‐101 (attempt); forcible sexual abuse, see id. § 76‐5‐404; and domestic violence in the presence of a child, see id. § 76‐5‐109.1(2)(c). We affirm. BACKGROUND1

I. Defendant and the Victim’s Relationship2

¶2 Defendant and his friend (the roommate) met the victim when they all worked together at McDonald’s. Subsequently, they moved into the same house, along with the victim’s children. Prior to this arrangement, the victim and her children did not have a permanent residence. Defendant paid the victim’s portion of the rent while she lived with Defendant. Defendant also bought the victim and her children gifts, paid for some of her other expenses, and bought a plane ticket for one of the victim’s children. Defendant developed a relationship with the victim’s children, and according to the victim, her children loved Defendant. Defendant seemed to want a romantic relationship with the victim. Although the victim accepted his gifts and financial assistance, she was not and did not intend to be romantically involved with him. In fact, about a month after she moved in with Defendant, the victim married a man in another state though the victim continued to live with Defendant, and for some time she did not tell him that she had married.

¶3 After living with Defendant for approximately seven months, the victim decided that, despite her financial instability, she needed to move out of Defendant’s residence because she had become increasingly concerned that Defendant would force her into a sexual relationship with him. According to the victim, Defendant became more aggressive toward her, and he began to follow her, call her bad names, listen to her phone calls, and appear at her workplace where he would remain for two or three hours.3 One night, Defendant entered the victim’s room while she was sleeping,

1. “Because this case comes to this court after a jury trial, we view the ‘facts in a light most favorable to the jury’s verdict’ and ‘present conflicting evidence only as necessary to understand [the] issue[ ] raised on appeal.’” State v. Samples, 2012 UT App 52, ¶ 2 n.2 (mem.) (alterations in original) (quoting State v. Holgate, 2000 UT 74, ¶ 2, 10 P.3d 346).

2. Background sections I and II rely mainly on the victim’s trial testimony that was, for the most part, uncontested.

3. Although Defendant and the victim met while working together at McDonald’s, these particular visits appear to have occurred after Defendant’s employment had ended at that restaurant. The McDonald’s supervisor testified that during these visits, (continued...)

20090372‐CA 2 struggled with her, and would not leave when she asked. Thereafter, the victim and her children moved to a new apartment for which Defendant paid the deposit.

II. Events Leading to the Charges Against Defendant

¶4 On the night of June 28, 2008, Defendant and the victim argued while talking on the phone. Despite the victim telling Defendant not to come to her apartment, he insisted that he was coming over and that if she did not open her door for him, he would kick the door down. Defendant arrived at the victim’s apartment around midnight, and when the victim said that she did not want to talk to him, he again told her that if she did not open the door he would kick it down or go through the window. The victim then let Defendant in but told him that she would talk with him for only five minutes.

¶5 While she and Defendant were sitting on the stairs talking, the victim heard her three‐year‐old child cry out. The victim went upstairs into her bedroom where her children were sleeping and lay in the bed next to her child to calm the child. Defendant followed the victim to the bedroom and refused to leave the room, despite the victim’s request that he do so.

¶6 Instead of leaving, Defendant lay next to the victim on the bed and began touching her breast over her shirt. When she told him to stop, he said, “No,” and she slapped him.4 Defendant then grabbed her hands with one of his hands and touched the victim’s genitals over her clothes with his other hand. The victim kept telling

3. (...continued) the victim’s “demeanor would change”; that when Defendant would bring the victim gifts, the victim always gave them to other crew members; and that Defendant and the victim “would have a conversation [that] almost always was an argument.” Additionally, the McDonald’s supervisor testified that although she told Defendant fifteen to twenty times that he was no longer welcome at the restaurant, Defendant told her that he could do what he wanted and continued to appear there. Finally, the supervisor told him that “if he continued to show up, [she] was going to call the police.”

4. Up until this point, the victim’s and Defendant’s versions of the events were mostly in agreement. Because the victim’s version was the only one given at trial, we refer to the victim’s description of the events. Later, we discuss what Defendant told the police and the facts that Defendant challenged when cross‐examining the victim.

20090372‐CA 3 Defendant to stop, to leave, and that she was going to call the police. Defendant responded by saying that he did not care and that he did not believe she would call the police. The victim also tried to get Defendant to stop touching her by kicking him, hitting him, pulling his hair, pinching him, moving her legs, and struggling throughout the encounter. While holding her hands and partially lying on top of her, Defendant touched the victim’s breasts under her clothing, pulled the victim’s pajama pants down, and touched her genitals with his hand. When the victim again told Defendant to leave, he refused and told her he could “do whatever [he] want[ed].” While on top of and between the victim’s legs, Defendant removed his pants and attempted to penetrate the victim’s vagina with his penis. However, Defendant was unable to maintain an erection, so his attempt to have intercourse with the victim was unsuccessful. Defendant also grabbed the victim’s jaw to try to kiss her and told her that he loved her, to which the victim responded that she did not care. Defendant then moved next to the victim, grabbed the victim’s right hand, and forced her to touch his penis.

¶7 The victim’s seven‐year‐old child, who was asleep in the same bed until that point, then woke up and said, “Mommy, are you okay?” When Defendant released the victim upon hearing the child, the victim grabbed her phone, which had previously been out of her reach, and called the police. Defendant put his pants back on, went downstairs, and waited for the police. The victim followed him and stood in the door frame of her house until the police arrived.

III. Defendant’s Interrogation5

¶8 Officers Stuart Fore and Shauna Lee Greening responded to the victim’s complaint to the dispatcher that Defendant would not leave her residence. After speaking with the victim, Officer Fore approached Defendant, who had been waiting with Officer Greening.

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Bluebook (online)
2012 UT App 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kozlov-utahctapp-2012.