State v. McMillen

2019 S.D. 40
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 10, 2019
Docket#28734-a-SRJ
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 2019 S.D. 40 (State v. McMillen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. McMillen, 2019 S.D. 40 (S.D. 2019).

Opinion

#28734-a-SRJ 2019 S.D. 40

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

****

STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA, Plaintiff and Appellee,

v.

TERRY MICHAEL MCMILLEN, Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MINNEHAHA COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA ****

THE HONORABLE BRADLEY G. ZELL Judge

THE HONORABLE LAWRENCE E. LONG Retired Judge

MARTY J. JACKLEY Attorney General

GRANT FLYNN Assistant Attorney General Pierre, South Dakota Attorneys for plaintiff and appellee.

BEAU BLOUIN of Minnehaha County Public Defender’s Office Sioux Falls, South Dakota Attorneys for defendant and appellant.

CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS ON MARCH 25, 2019 OPINION FILED 07/10/19 #28734

JENSEN, Justice

[¶1.] Terry Michael McMillen was convicted of four counts of rape in the

fourth degree, one count of sexual exploitation of a minor, one count of solicitation of

a minor, and a misdemeanor count of enticing a child away. McMillen claims, for

the first time on appeal, that his sentences for sexual exploitation of a minor and

solicitation of a minor violated the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment

because his convictions arose from the same conduct as the rape convictions.

McMillen also requests a new trial, arguing—again for the first time on appeal—

that the State engaged in prosecutorial misconduct by asking about similarities

between his step-daughter and the victim during his cross-examination. We review

both issues for plain error and affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

[¶2.] In the summer of 2012, McMillen met T.J.L. at a birthday party. At

the time, McMillen was thirty-seven years old and T.J.L. was fifteen years old.

After the birthday party, McMillen, T.J.L., and others went to another home where

McMillen and T.J.L. engaged in casual conversation. The next day, McMillen sent

T.J.L. a private message over Facebook, and the two began periodically messaging

each other. Later, they exchanged cell phone numbers and began occasionally text

messaging each other and conversing by phone from time to time.

[¶3.] In the early fall of 2012, McMillen twice sent text messages to T.J.L.

during the school day, asking if she wanted to skip school to “hang out.” The first

time, T.J.L. agreed and met McMillen at a pre-arranged location, a couple of blocks

from the school. McMillen then drove T.J.L. to his apartment where the two talked

-1- #28734

before McMillen drove her back to school. On the second occasion, McMillen picked

up T.J.L. during the school day and drove her to his apartment. T.J.L. claimed

McMillen took off her coat and started to kiss her after entering his apartment.

McMillen and T.J.L. then went to his bedroom and they began undressing one

another. While in the bedroom, T.J.L. testified McMillen initially penetrated her

vagina with his fingers before he penetrated her vagina with a rubber sex toy. She

also testified that McMillen then performed oral sex on her and she subsequently

performed oral sex on McMillen. The sexual activity ended when T.J.L. told

McMillen she no longer wanted to continue. T.J.L. testified that after the sexual

activity, McMillen showed her how to clean off the sex toy so his girlfriend would

not know it had been used.1

[¶4.] At trial, McMillen admitted he had messaged T.J.L. via Facebook and

text. McMillen also admitted that he and T.J.L. spoke occasionally by phone. He

claimed there was nothing sexual in their communications and denied any physical

relationship with T.J.L. McMillen also denied T.J.L. had been to his apartment and

claimed that she was only able to describe his apartment and his truck due to

publicly shared images on his Facebook page. These images were introduced as

evidence at trial.

1. McMillen married his girlfriend prior to the trial. McMillen’s spouse has a daughter approximately the same age as T.J.L.

-2- #28734

[¶5.] Images of Facebook messages between McMillen and T.J.L., sent

months after the alleged rape, were introduced as evidence at trial.2 None of these

messages contained any discussion or suggestion of a sexual relationship. T.J.L.

testified that she asked McMillen if the communications between the two of them

were “weird.” She also testified that she apologized to McMillen for “intruding”

after McMillen expressed that he did not want his girlfriend to discover their

communications.

[¶6.] In January 2014, T.J.L. confided to a friend about the sexual encounter

with McMillen. T.J.L. testified that her friend then messaged McMillen through

T.J.L.’s Facebook account accusing him of “messing around with a 15 year old[.]”

An image of this message was introduced into evidence. McMillen admitted to

receiving the message but did not reply to it. T.J.L. testified that she was convinced

by her friend to tell her parents about the sexual encounter with McMillen, and her

parents then reported the incident to law enforcement.

[¶7.] At trial, the two investigating officers testified that T.J.L. gave both

officers separate detailed statements about her encounter with McMillen and a

description of his apartment and the truck he drove. T.J.L.’s statements to both

officers were consistent. One of the officers indicated T.J.L. was hesitant to report

the alleged incident. McMillen’s counsel suggested during cross-examination that

the officer had compelled T.J.L. to report the crime against her will.

2. These Facebook messages were exchanged between June 2013 and January 2014. At trial, an investigating officer testified that T.J.L. told her she no longer had the messages exchanged prior to those dates, and that she may have deleted them after the encounter.

-3- #28734

[¶8.] McMillen testified in his defense and denied all the charges against

him. During the State’s cross-examination of McMillen, the following exchange took

place:

[Prosecutor]: Okay. You have a step-daughter; right? [McMillen]: I do. [Prosecutor]: How old? [McMillen]: 14, I believe. [Prosecutor]: What does she look like? [McMillen]: She’s about the same height of her mother, about the same size as her mother, and she wears glasses. [Prosecutor]: Dark hair? [McMillen]: Dark hair. [Prosecutor]: Darker complected[sic]? [McMillen]: Darker complected[sic]. [Prosecutor]: 13, 14 years old? [McMillen]: 13, 14 years old. [Prosecutor]: A lot like [T.J.L.]? [McMillen]: What do you mean a lot like [T.J.L.]? [Prosecutor]: [T.J.L.]’s got dark hair, dark complexion, 13 or 14 years old when you met her? Does your step-daughter look similar? [McMillen]: She’s taller than my step-daughter.

McMillen’s counsel did not object or take any other action with respect to these

questions.

[¶9.] During closing arguments, the State explained the elements of sexual

exploitation of a minor and the State’s burden “to prove [the elements] beyond a

reasonable doubt.” The State then asked the jury to consider McMillen’s conduct in

the bedroom as proof of sexual exploitation. In discussing the solicitation charge,

the State told the jury to consider “the same evidence we looked at [for rape in the

fourth degree] before” and “the communications they had.”

[¶10.] The jury found McMillen guilty on all counts. McMillen was sentenced

to fifteen years with five years suspended on the fourth-degree rape conviction in

-4- #28734

count one. The court imposed three fifteen-year, suspended sentences on the other

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Bluebook (online)
2019 S.D. 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcmillen-sd-2019.