State v. Leopoldo Belen

CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 3, 2019
Docket18-129
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Leopoldo Belen (State v. Leopoldo Belen) 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. Leopoldo Belen, (R.I. 2019).

Opinion

December 3, 2019

Supreme Court

No. 2018-129-C.A. (P1/14-2479A)

State :

v. :

Leopoldo Belen. :

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone 222- 3258 of any typographical or other formal errors in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published. Supreme Court

Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.

OPINION

Justice Flaherty, for the Court. The defendant, Leopoldo Belen, appeals from a

judgment of conviction after a jury found him guilty of four counts of first-degree sexual assault.

The defendant argues that the trial justice erred when he did not declare a mistrial after the

prosecutor made two improper comments during closing arguments. After thoroughly reviewing

the record and after considering the arguments of the parties, we affirm the judgment of conviction.

I

Facts and Travel

Belen and Emily1 met in Providence approximately one year before the alleged assault. On

the day the couple met, Emily was walking to her job at a fast-food restaurant when Belen

approached her in his car. From this chance encounter, Belen and Emily became friends, a

friendship that quickly developed into a romantic relationship. After they dated for a few months,

Belen and Emily moved together to an apartment in Woonsocket.

1 To protect the anonymity of the complaining witness, we have used a pseudonym in place of the victim’s name in this opinion. 1 Belen was not working at that time, and soon thereafter Emily lost her job. Emily testified

at trial that, at Belen’s insistence, she became an “escort.” Emily testified that Belen “was pretty

persistent so eventually [she] just gave in.” While Emily was working as an escort, Belen would

drive her to and from her appointments with her customers.

In the early morning of April 1, 2014, Emily claimed that she was sexually assaulted by

Belen in their shared apartment. Just days before the assault, Belen and Emily had cavorted with

an unnamed woman at a motel in Warwick, and, she testified, the three had engaged in a variety

of consensual sex acts during their overnight stay. After their weekend frolic, Emily and Belen

returned to their apartment. Emily described Belen’s demeanor at that time as “[e]xtremely

hostile.” Emily testified that, as a result, she “tried to keep [her] distance” that night. However,

some time during the night Emily noticed that the battery to her cell phone had been removed.

The next morning, Belen woke Emily and asked whether she had smoked their last

cigarette. She told him that she had in fact smoked it. At that response, Emily said that, an

apparently enraged Belen began to physically assault her. According to Emily, Belen then began

to assault her sexually and physically over the course of the next two hours, at times raping her

with a hair mousse bottle. She said that she was naked and bleeding from her nose because of the

physical and sexual abuse. According to Emily, Belen, while cleaning up blood, became more

agitated at the fact that she was bleeding in the bathroom where he was assaulting her. She testified

that Belen closed all the windows and played music to cover up the clamor caused by the assault.

At some point, Belen strangled Emily and she passed out. Emily testified that after she

regained consciousness she told Belen that she was feeling lightheaded and that she needed to eat

something. Belen then permitted her to go to the kitchen to heat up some food. When Belen turned

his back on her to go back to the bathroom, Emily covered her naked body with a sheet and fled

2 the apartment. She said that she ran downstairs and banged on a neighbor’s door. The neighbor

allowed her to come into the apartment and provided a phone so that Emily could call the police.

When the police arrived, Belen was no longer in the apartment. Emily was transported to

the hospital by ambulance. At the hospital, a nurse performed an examination using a “sexual

assault kit.” At trial, an expert witness called by the state testified that Belen’s DNA had been

found on the can of hair mousse that Emily claimed had been used in the sexual assault. Belen’s

DNA was also present on swabs obtained from Emily’s body. Under cross examination, the expert

conceded that the DNA on the swabs could have been the result of consensual sex that may have

occurred from thirty-six to forty-eight hours before the test was administered to Emily.

Emily’s neighbor testified at trial and said that she had not heard any screaming, banging,

or loud music emanating from the apartment shared by Emily and Belen. However, she also

testified that a frantic and hysterical Emily appeared at her door that morning clothed only in a

sheet.

On August 18, 2014, a grand jury indicted Belen on four counts of first-degree sexual

assault in violation of G.L. 1956 § 11-37-2. Prior to the indictment, Belen, who was being held

without bail, made several phone calls to Emily. Those calls were recorded by the Adult

Correctional Institutions, and one of them was played for the jury at trial. Significantly, the trial

justice had granted defendant’s motion in limine and ordered that the fact that the call was

originally from the ACI be redacted. In the recorded phone call played for the jury, Belen

apologized to Emily, telling her that he made a mistake, he was not in his right state of mind, and

he was only human.2 Emily in response called Belen a monster, to which Belen replied: “Listen,

even monsters make mistakes.”

2 We rely on the state’s transcript of the call, because Belen did not challenge its accuracy at trial. 3 At the close of evidence, and during her final argument, the prosecutor made two

statements that lie at the heart of this appeal. First, the prosecutor inadvertently referred to the

“ACI” when she discussed the recorded phone conversation that had been played for the jury.3 In

her statement, the prosecutor said: “One thing you will have upstairs with you in the jury

deliberation room is the ACI—excuse me, is the phone call [Emily] told you about.”

Second, also during her closing argument, the prosecutor said the following about the

victim’s testimony:

“In addition to telling these stories, as long as [defense counsel] is going to make gender based arguments, I don’t know about all the women on the jury, but I hate getting pap smears and a yearly exam and that is one more thing she had to do that morning. When you heard from the nurse, in order to have a sexual assault kit done, and she was told and she gave consent that she would have a speculum inserted into her vagina to take the vaginal swabs and then also taking of the anal swabs. Again, one more thing to ask yourself, why would she lie? Why would she make all this up? Doesn’t make sense?”

Belen’s attorney objected to the reference to the ACI after the prosecutor’s closing

argument had concluded. In addition, the trial justice, sua sponte, raised the issue of the prosecutor

having related her personal experience as part of her final argument. The trial justice ruled that

both of those comments were improper, and he suggested that he provide the jury with a cautionary

instruction. Belen declined the trial justice’s offer of a cautionary instruction, but he did make a

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