State v. Muzzy

79 P.3d 324, 190 Or. App. 306, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 1475
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 29, 2003
Docket99-12-39743; A113096
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 79 P.3d 324 (State v. Muzzy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Muzzy, 79 P.3d 324, 190 Or. App. 306, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 1475 (Or. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

*308 HASELTON, P. J.

Defendant appeals from his convictions for attempted first-degree sexual abuse and endangering the welfare of a minor. ORS 163.427; ORS 163.575. Defendant’s principal contention on appeal is that he was entitled to a judgment of acquittal on both charges because the state failed to adduce legally sufficient corroboration of his confession. ORS 136.425(1). We affirm.

Because defendant was found guilty, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the state. State v. Thompson, 328 Or 248, 250, 971 P2d 879, cert den, 527 US 1042 (1999). Both charges against defendant arose from his alleged conduct with S, an 11-year-old girl. At the time of the alleged conduct, S’s mother, Fettig, was involved with defendant and was living in his home. S, who lived with her father, would visit and stay overnight periodically. During the same period, from December 1998 through August 1999, another woman, Milburn, lived in the same home with defendant and Fettig.

On several occasions, S complained to Milburn and Fettig about seeing defendant’s penis. According to S, the first time that she saw defendant’s penis, she was doing homework at the dining room table and defendant was fixing his computer on the same table. When S bent down to pick up a pencil off the floor, she could see defendant’s penis through a hole or an open zipper in his pants. S was “sort of’ scared and mad — and she told Milburn.

On another occasion, S was in defendant’s living room watching television with another girl and defendant. The other girl saw that defendant had his penis out and started yelling at him. S then looked and saw that defendant’s penis was outside his clothing. She left the room and told Fettig.

According to Milburn, S told her that, when she and defendant were in defendant’s computer room, he would often wiggle his pants and expose himself. 1 On four or five occasions, S complained to Milburn that defendant has “got *309 his dick out again.” In particular, with respect to the incident in which she and the other girl were watching television, S told Milburn that defendant had been sitting opposite them and looking at them “with his legs spread open and his hands on his leg with his thing hanging out.” Milburn confronted defendant several times about exposing himself to S. When Milburn confronted defendant about the “living room” incident involving S and the other girl, defendant initially denied that anything had happened and then said, “If her mom [Fettig] don’t like it, she should get her out of my house.” On another occasion, defendant told Milburn that he probably engaged in such conduct to get attention.

Other witnesses confirmed that S had complained about defendant’s conduct. Penwarden, a family friend, was present on two such occasions. On the first occasion, S complained to Fettig that defendant “is playing with himself,” and Fettig then yelled at defendant. On the second occasion, several weeks later, S complained that defendant “was playing with his thing.” After the second instance, Penwarden threatened to harm defendant if it happened again.

Keeney, a protective services caseworker, interviewed S. Initially, S denied that anyone had exposed himself to her, and she denied any touching. Several days later, when Keeney again spoke with S several hours after S was taken into protective custody, S indicated that she understood that she was in protective custody because defendant had shown her his penis. Keeney then arranged for a CARES evaluation of S. During that evaluation, S stated that she had seen defendant’s penis on two occasions but denied that any touching had occurred. Throughout all interviews and in her trial testimony, S consistently denied that defendant had ever touched her or that she had touched him. S also denied that defendant had ever touched his penis in her presence.

Portland Police Detective Smith interviewed defendant at length after advising defendant of his Miranda rights and informing him that he was being investigated for “inappropriate activities” involving S and another girl. 2 Smith began the interview by stating that he knew that defendant *310 liked to show his penis to women. Defendant responded that he had shown his penis to two of his ex-girlfriends to see if they were “interested” and that he would show his penis through holes in his pants, or would unbutton his pants. Smith told defendant that S had said that she had seen defendant’s penis. In response, in positing explanations about how that could have occurred, defendant suggested that S could have seen him masturbating in his room when the door was ajar, showing his penis to ex-girlfriends whom he was trying to interest in sex, or having sex with S’s mother, Fettig. Defendant asserted that he had never intentionally shown S his penis. He acknowledged that he recalled a time when he was talking to an ex-girlfriend and had his pants unbuttoned and his penis out, and that he had looked under the table and saw S there looking at him.

Smith told defendant — falsely—that S had said that she had touched defendant and that defendant had touched her. 3 Smith admonished defendant that S “needed him to acknowledge what he had done so that she could get on with her life.” Defendant then spoke of an incident when S’s mother was fondling his penis and S was in the room, watching them, and suggested that S may have touched him then, but that he did not feel it.

Defendant then described the incident that became the subject of this prosecution: Six months earlier — in the spring of 1999 — defendant had been in the basement computer room, watching a video and masturbating. As he was masturbating, S had come into the room. Either just before or just after he ejaculated, defendant had noticed S watching him, and he had let her touch and rub his penis briefly. According to Smith:

“[Defendant] said that he thought to himself, quote, this is bad, unquote, and that he felt, quote, ashamed, unquote, that he let her touch him. He said he hurriedly sat, turned around and put his penis back into his pants. He said he was embarrassed and that he remembered thinking that he hoped [S] wouldn’t tell anyone what happened because he could get into trouble.”

*311 After defendant described that incident, Smith suggested that defendant write to S apologizing for what he had done. Defendant agreed. Smith left defendant alone to write the letter but suggested that defendant “might tell her what happened because a letter of apology not saying what you are apologizing for isn’t really an apology.” The letter, which was received into evidence at trial, stated:

“I’m writing this letter to apologize for something that happened a few months ago, in the computer room.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 P.3d 324, 190 Or. App. 306, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 1475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-muzzy-orctapp-2003.