State v. Maniatis

657 A.2d 149, 1995 R.I. LEXIS 104, 1995 WL 229157
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 18, 1995
Docket93-225-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 657 A.2d 149 (State v. Maniatis) 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. Maniatis, 657 A.2d 149, 1995 R.I. LEXIS 104, 1995 WL 229157 (R.I. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

SHEA, Justice.

This matter came before the Supreme Court on the appeal of the defendant, William Maniatis (Maniatis), from a conviction following a jury trial in Superior Court of first-degree sexual assault and five counts of second-degree sexual assault. For the reasons that follow we affirm.

The victims in this case were teenaged girls who worked at Kitchen 44, a restaurant defendant and his wife owned and had operated since 1987, located on Route 44 in Glo-cester, Rhode Island. In addition to operating his own glass installation business, prior to trial, defendant was a constant fixture at Kitchen 44, where his wife managed the restaurant and defendant himself pitched in as a maintenance worker, Friday-night cook, and general all-around helper. Many of defendant’s relatives worked at the family restaurant as well as defendant’s three children. It was here at Kitchen 44 that all the seeond-degree sexual assaults occurred. The first-degree sexual assault took place inside the premises of a second restaurant, the Rocking Horse Tavern, also located in Glocester on Route 44, that defendant and his wife purchased in 1990.

The defendant was charged with committing various forms of sexual assault upon six young girls employed at Kitchen 44 and was convicted of sexually assaulting four of the girls who worked at this restaurant between 1988 and 1990. The record reveals a similar pattern or scheme was employed by defendant in all the assaults. At the outset, defendant would tickle the girls. Then, when he was alone with them, he would forcibly touch them on the outside of them clothing on then-breasts or in their vaginal areas. The more isolated the victim, the more forceful and physical defendant became. Some of the girls were assaulted in a shed on the premises, others in the kitchen, another in the restaurant’s parking lot. All victims were employees of Kitchen 44 at the time as either waitresses or kitchen personnel. All assaults at Kitchen 44 occurred when other employees were present and sometimes able to witness some of the assaults.

Barbara was sixteen years old when she started working at Kitchen 44 in the summer of 1988. 1 This witness testified that she was never alone with defendant until one particular evening in December of that year when she was getting ready to leave work. Because her car had been giving her trouble, Barbara attempted to start it and let it warm up before she left the parking lot. She left her apron, her coat and her pocketbook in the restaurant when she went outside to start the car, which then would not start. She then got out of her car and lifted up the hood to attempt to solve the problem. At this point, defendant suddenly appeared behind her and began “tickling underneath [her] arms,” then “started to move his hands.” Barbara had not seen Maniatis before he came up behind her while she was peering under the hood of her car. Obviously not in a position to defend herself, the *152 victim tried to back away but “[h]e was holding [her] forcefully” and she “couldn’t move.”

Barbara testified that “at first when he started tickling me, I was laughing because I was nervous. I was, like, why is he doing this to me? I tried to back away, and he had me, then he grabbed my chest, and then I— you know, was trying to move away more, then he grabbed my vagina.” He gripped her with his left hand while his right hand “[g]roped, squeezed, touched” her breast. She was “getting really scared” and struggled with defendant in an effort to break free, but he gripped her tightly and “moved his hand down and started grabbing” at her genital area. She testified that she felt he was pulling her away from the restaurant toward the shed or perhaps the nearby woods. Fortunately, she was able finally to break fi’ee and run into the restaurant whereupon she retrieved her coat and pocketbook and immediately left. She never went back to work there.

Barbara told defendant’s wife that her reason for not returning to Kitchen 44 was only that “the hours were too much.” She came forward to testify at defendant’s trial on her own initiative because when she heard that defendant had been arrested for first-degree sexual assault, she “felt guilty * * * because [she] felt [she] should have said something to somebody earlier and maybe it wouldn’t have happened.”

The next incident involved a second-degree sexual assault upon a fifteen-year-old waitress who was employed at defendant’s restaurant and whom we shall call Penelope. This incident occurred sometime between August 1988 and August 1990. A male employee who worked in the kitchen at Kitchen 44 in 1988 testified that he was walking to his car behind the restaurant at dusk when he saw Penelope “up against a freezer in the food shed” “trying her best to get away” as defendant held her and “was attempting to put his hand underneath her apron front and down her pants.” When defendant saw this male employee “he stopped doing what he was doing” and Penelope “got away instantly.”

Once they were both back inside the restaurant, this employee asked Penelope if she was all right and Penelope responded that “[s]he felt she could control it. It wouldn’t happen again.” Neither Penelope nor this employee reported the incident.

This particular male employee testified that there were “a lot of occasions where [Maniatis] would make contact with [Penelope] and other waitresses. It was * * * common practice. After a while, you didn’t notice it anymore, it was so common.” He testified that “[h]e would put his arm around the girls, you know, acting like he would be their friend, and he would grab them.” It was so common, this witness testified, that “[t]here was one every night that he had touched in some way.” This witness culminated his testimony by declaring that he had once heard defendant’s son, who was also working at the restaurant, say, “[K]eep it up, Dad, I’m going to tell Mom.” The defendant’s son denied this statement at trial. However, Penelope testified that she was the one whom defendant “grabbed” when his son “told him if he didn’t knock it off he was going to tell mom.”

The next prosecution witness was a fifteen-year-old male employee at Kitchen 44 who started working there under the previous ownership and was the only help there when the Maniatises bought the place in May of 1987. He was kept on and worked at Kitchen 44 continuously as a short-order cook until November 1990 when defendant learned that the young man had testified before the grand jury. This young man was the only prosecution witness who knew all the victims and was able to confirm a number of incidents involving defendant.

He testified that on one evening after the restaurant had closed, he and Maniatis and another waitress, Hope, were the only persons there. As his testimony recounted, he was cleaning up in another part of the restaurant when he heard Hope call his name from the restroom. It was a “frantic call,” and as he went toward the restroom, he found Hope against the wall “with a weird look on her face like something had happened.”

Hope testified that she was cleaning the restroom that evening when Maniatis came *153 in and began to talk to her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
657 A.2d 149, 1995 R.I. LEXIS 104, 1995 WL 229157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-maniatis-ri-1995.