State v. Marcus Huffman

68 A.3d 558, 2013 WL 3209538, 2013 R.I. LEXIS 119
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 26, 2013
Docket2011-193-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 68 A.3d 558 (State v. Marcus Huffman) 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. Marcus Huffman, 68 A.3d 558, 2013 WL 3209538, 2013 R.I. LEXIS 119 (R.I. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

Justice ROBINSON,

for the Court.

The defendant, Marcus Huffman, appeals from a judgment of conviction following a lengthy trial, at the conclusion of which the jury found him guilty of first degree sexual assault stemming from an incident that occurred in March of 2007. The justice of the Superior Court who had presided over the trial sentenced the defendant to sixty years, with forty years to serve at the Adult Correctional Institutions and with twenty years suspended with probation. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of conviction.

I

Facts and Travel

A

The Incident of March 17-18, 2007 1

Based upon the testimony and other evidence presented at trial, the jury reasonably could have found the following facts. On the afternoon of March. 17, 2007, the nineteen-year-old complaining witness, whom we shall refer to pseudonymously as Cindy, was at her apartment in Fall River, Massachusetts, with her girlfriend and Cindy’s sister; they spent, some time smoking marijuana. At some point, Cindy’s friend, Ryan Borges, arrived at the apartment; she left with him to pick up another friend, and they then went to Ryan’s house. At approximately 8:30 p.m., Cindy’s brother, Tyrone, arrived at Ryan’s house, where Cindy, Ryan, and three other persons were already present. While at Ryan’s house, Cindy drank alcohol (Red Bull mixed with liquor, and three shots each of vodka, rum, and cognac), and she shared four “blunts.” 2 Cindy changed into a white “muscle shirt,” a white long-sleeved T-shirt, a red shirt, jeans, a fitted hat, and sneakers. They then decided to go to a club in Providence called Platforms. Cindy testified that, before leaving Ryan’s house, she felt “woozey.” Tyrone *561 considered Cindy to have been “drunk” while still at Ryan’s apartment; he noticed that she was stumbling and that her eyes were “red,” “watery,” and “glazy.” Tyrone testified that, once they arrived at the club, Cindy was “stumbling” and “slurring her words.”

At some point near midnight, the group arrived at the entrance to Platforms. However, Cindy was not permitted to enter the club because (according to the owner of the nightclub and the owner of the security company that staffed the nightclub) she was too intoxicated. The rest of the group went into the club for approximately forty-five minutes. Cindy’s companions had instructed her to wait for them in Ryan’s car in the parking lot. However, Cindy chose not to' wait in Ryan’s car; she instead remained outside the club, near the entrance. While there, she noticed a police cruiser, the driver of which was speaking to the club’s owner, Joseph Manfredi. Mr. Manfredi, who at trial identified defendant as that driver, saw Cindy walk over to defendant’s cruiser.

The police officer, whom Cindy identified in court as defendant, had called her over to the window of the cruiser and told her that she had to leave the club’s property due to her intoxication. When she told him that she did not have anywhere to go, the police officer told her to enter the front seat of the cruiser. Cindy proceeded to get into the cruiser because she “trusted him.”

Cindy told defendant that she needed to use a restroom; defendant then drove her to what she described as a “brick” building, which building was later identified as being a police substation. Key card logs were used to monitor entries to the police substation, and monitoring was also conducted by surveillance cameras. Both the key card log and the surveillance footage indicated that defendant and Cindy entered the building at approximately 12:40 a.m. on March 18.

Cindy testified that, after entering the bathroom stall, her next memory was of waking up on the floor of the building— without her sports bra or boxer shorts on. She added that her pants were unbuckled and the zipper was pulled down. Cindy testified that she had felt pain in her vagina, both inside and outside, and also in her back, her arms, and her thighs. Cindy said that her vagina felt swollen and that she “just knew something was wrong”; she added that she felt as though she were “leaking.” She managed to leave the building on foot and to find her way to her aunt’s house, which was not far away.

Cindy remembered nothing that happened between the time of her arrival at her aunt’s house and the moment when she woke up in the hospital. According to her aunt, Josephine Saygbe, Cindy told her that she had been “raped by a cop.” Her aunt called the police. The defendant was one of three patrolmen who responded to the aunt’s home. The other two patrolmen noticed that, at the aunt’s house, Cindy was very upset and appeared intoxicated. An EMT from the Providence Fire Department also responded to the aunt’s house; the EMT examined Cindy and then transported her to Women and Infants Hospital. The defendant also went to that hospital, as did the other two patrolmen who had responded to the aunt’s home.

Upon Cindy’s arrival at Women and Infants Hospital, the physicians there determined that she was too intoxicated for them to perform a sexual assault kit at that time. Cindy stated that, when she used a bathroom in the hospital, she noticed bright red blood; she added that the blood was not the same color as that associated with her menstrual period, which had begun earlier that day. Cindy was *562 transferred to Rhode Island Hospital, where blood tests were conducted. She tested positive for marijuana and she had a blood alcohol level of 0.174 at 4:28 a.m. on March 18. In due course, a sexual assault kit was performed at Rhode Island Hospital. There was divergent testimony - at trial regarding the examination of Cindy: as we. shall explain, the testimony of the resident who performed the sexual assault kit, of the certified nursing assistant (CNA) who assisted him, and of a sexual assault expert differed in several respects.

Doctor Keith Corl, a first-year resident, performed the Sexual Assault Evidence Collection kit and completed a report. He noted that Cindy complained of vaginal pain. He testified that he did not observe any trauma to the vagina. He further testified that he observed blood coming from Cindy’s “cervical os,” which he said was consistent with menstruation. He did not observe symptoms consistent with penetration; therefore, based upon the sexual assault kit results, he could not testify that vaginal penetration had occurred shortly prior to his examination of Cindy. It should be noted that it is undisputed that, years prior, Cindy had had sexual intercourse with a boyfriend.

Patricia Cragg, a certified nursing assistant, also testified at trial. She testified that she acted as the “chaperone” for Dr. Corl while he completed the sexual assault kit; she did not conduct any tests or otherwise examine Cindy. She handed the doctor the proper materials (such as swabs and tests) and sealed the various items that he handed to her. CNA Cragg testified that she observed that Cindy’s vagina was swollen and inflamed and that there was bleeding.

Doctor Christine Barron, who was qualified as an expert in the field of sexual abuse, testified at trial; she gave her testimony over defendant’s objection (which had also been the subject of a motion in limine).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 A.3d 558, 2013 WL 3209538, 2013 R.I. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-marcus-huffman-ri-2013.