State v. McClendon

228 So. 3d 252, 2017 WL 4277582
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 27, 2017
DocketNO. 2017-KA-0160
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 228 So. 3d 252 (State v. McClendon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. McClendon, 228 So. 3d 252, 2017 WL 4277582 (La. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Judge Marion F. Edwards,

Pro Tempore

| defendant, Bryant McClendon, appeals his conviction and sentence for molestation of a juvenile 'in violation of La. R.S. 14:81.2. We affirm the conviction and remand the matter to the district court for a ruling on defendant’s outstanding motion to reconsider sentence. We reserve defendant’s right to appeal the sentence resulting from the district court’s ruling on the motion to reconsider sentence.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On July 29, 2011, Bryant McClendon was charged with indecent behavior with a juvenile in violation of La. R.S. 14:81 involving alleged behavior with R.P., the minor daughter of a woman with whom McClendon had a relationship in the early 2000’s. He entered a plea of not guilty to the charge. The trial court found sufficient probable cause to substantiate the charge at a preliminary hearing on July 16, 2012. On March 26, 2013, the State filed a notice Of intent to offer evidence of similar crimes, wrongs, and/or acts involving previous sexually assaultive behavior pursuant to La. C.E. art. 412.2. The trial court ruled this evidence admissible. On |aJanuary 20, 2016, the bill of information was amended to charge McClendon with molestation of a juvenile, in violation of La. R.S, 14:81.2.

After a trial on the merits held on July 14, 2016, the jury returned a verdict of guilty of molestation of a juvenile. McClen-don was sentenced on July 27, 2016 to five years at hard labor to -run concurrently with any other sentences, with credit.for time served, and assessed $1,286.50 in costs.. On that same day, defense counsel filed a motion for. appeal and a motion to withdraw as counsel. Both motions were granted, and the trial court appointed the Louisiana Appellate Project to represent McClendon on appeal. On July 29, 2016, the defense filed a motion to reconsider sentence that remains outstanding.

FACTS

The victim, R.P., who is now twenty-seven, testified that when she was a child, she. and her mother lived • with Bryant McClendon. Her three younger half-siblings, B.M.l, B.M.2 and B.R.M, also lived in the home. All four children have the same mother, but McClendon is the father of R.P.’s three half-siblings. When R.P, was in middle school, the family lived in a two-bedroom home in New Orleans East. Her mother and McClendon shared one bedroom, and R.P. shared the second bedroom with her three half-siblings. The children’s bedroom had a set of bunk beds. R.P. and B.R.M. slept in the upper bunk and the other two children slept in the lower bunk.

R.P. testified that when she was very young she had a good relationship with McClendon. However, that relationship changed when she was in middle school. R.P. described how the normal play became a “little more touchy-feely,” McClen-don would make her sit on his lap while he touched her breasts. She could Rnot recall the exact time,the touching changed and became uncomfortable, but she remembered it was around the time the defendant drove her to a dance when she was in the eighth grade. ,

Things got worse for R.P. when McClen-don started coming into the bedroom at night after all the children were asleep. R.P. described how she woke up to find McClendon standing on the side of the bunk bed with his erect penis exposed. McClendon put R.P.’s hand on his penis and began to move her hand up and .down. R.P. stated that she didn’t know what to do, so she pretended to still be asleep and tried to turn over away from him to -make him stop, R.P. testified that on other occasions, McClendon would touch her breast or vagina. She pushed his hand away, but he “would just put his hand back.” The sexual contact continued, and escalated over time. R.P. estimated it, was about two years later when McClendon got into the bunk with her and put his mouth on her vagina.

R.P. testified that she wanted him to stop, but did not know what to do about it. She acknowledged that she did not wake any of the other children or call out to her mother. She simply tried to pretend she was still asleep. R.P. described one occasion when McClendon got into her bed and tried to penetrate her. She pushed and kicked him to try to stop him. She heard her mother call out to him and he left her room.

R.P. testified that the abuse occurred between 2002 and 2004. It .stopped, in 2004 when her mother and McClendon broke up and he moved out of the home. She stated that she didn’t tell anyone about the sexual abuse until several years later when she confided in a friend. She told her mother about the abuse in 2009 and. decided to disclose the abuse to police in 2010 after speaking with her half-sister, B.M.l, over the Thanksgiving holiday.

14R.P. explained that after Hurricane Katrina, her mother and three half-siblings relocated to Texas. R.P. returned to New Orleans to live with her maternal grandparents and finish school. When she visited with the family at Thanksgiving in 2010, R.P.,learned that her sister, B.M.l, who was .about fifteen at that time, was struggling in school and began making poor decisions, including transmitting a nude photo of herself to a boy. B.M.l confided.in R.P., stating that her father was touching her inappropriately. R.P. stated that she felt guilty, and in some way responsible for the abuse her sister was enduring, because of her failure to tell anyone about the abuse when it happened.

R.P., who was twenty-seven at the time of trial, testified that the sexual abuse affected her mental health. She has anger issues, as well as sexual and relationship issues, that require professional help. She explained the she has difficulty relating sex to love.

Lisa Holcomb, an investigator fi-om the Children’s Assessment Center in Houston, Texas testified at trial. She stated that the Children’s Assessment Center is a child advocacy center that investigates and treats child sex abuse cases that are subsequently referred to law enforcement and the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services.

Ms. Holcomb conducts forensic interviews with victims. She explained that a forensic interview is a neutral fact finding interview done by an objective party in the investigation of child sexual abuse allegations. Ms. Holcomb interviews children and intellectually disabled adults and communicates using different tools, as needed. In that capacity, Ms. Holcomb conducted a forensic interview with B.M.1 after the report of sex abuse was made to Texas authorities in 2010. At that |stime B.M.l was fifteen-years-old. A videotape of the interview was played for the jury over the objection of the defense.

In the video, B.M.1 stated that she was currently living with her mother and her mother’s boyfriend in Texas where they have lived since Hurricane Katrina. She admitted that she was currently attending an alternative school after being expelled from her former school for cutting classes. B.M.l told Ms. Holcomb she has an older sister who lives in Louisiana that she “talks to about things.” She said she was brought to the center by her mother because she was sexually molested by her father. She promised to tell the truth in the interview,

B.M.l said that her mother and father separated when she was much younger and she and her two siblings lived with their mother. However, they spent half the summer with their father and paternal grandmother in their home in Marrero, Louisiana.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 So. 3d 252, 2017 WL 4277582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcclendon-lactapp-2017.