State v. P. Green

2025 MT 52N, 564 P.3d 1286
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 2025
DocketDA 22-0556
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2025 MT 52N (State v. P. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. P. Green, 2025 MT 52N, 564 P.3d 1286 (Mo. 2025).

Opinion

03/18/2025

DA 22-0556 Case Number: DA 22-0556

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

2025 MT 52N

STATE OF MONTANA,

Plaintiff and Appellee,

v.

PITASKUMMAPI DAVID GREEN,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Fourth Judicial District, In and For the County of Missoula, Cause No. DC-2020-708 Honorable Jason Marks, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellant:

Penelope S. Strong, Attorney at Law, Billings, Montana

For Appellee:

Austin Knudsen, Montana Attorney General, Thad Tudor, Assistant Attorney General, Helena, Montana

Matthew Jennings, Missoula County Attorney, Ryan Mickelson, Deputy County Attorney, Missoula, Montana

Submitted on Briefs: December 11, 2024

Decided: March 18, 2025

Filed: ir,-6‘A•-if __________________________________________ Clerk Justice Jim Rice delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c), Montana Supreme Court Internal Operating

Rules, this case is decided by memorandum opinion and shall not be cited and does not

serve as precedent. Its case title, cause number, and disposition shall be included in this

Court’s quarterly list of noncitable cases published in the Pacific Reporter and Montana

Reports.

¶2 Pitaskummapi David Green (Green) appeals his judgment of conviction, entered

upon jury trial in the Fourth Judicial District Court, of sexual intercourse without consent

(SIWOC), a felony, in violation of § 45-5-503(1), MCA. He contends that his trial counsel

provided ineffective assistance, and that we should exercise plain error review of

instructional error. We affirm.

¶3 On December 16, 2020, the State charged Green with one count of SIWOC, alleging

that Green raped longtime family friend, S.D. S.D., a 75-year-old woman, described

Green, a 30-year-old man, as a “surrogate son” who she had known since he was 16 years

old. S.D.’s relationship with Green included providing school clothes for him, feeding

him, helping Green with homework, and giving him a place to stay when needed. When

Green was 19 years old, S.D. took him in and he lived at S.D.’s apartment for several

months. Green has an 11-year-old son with S.D.’s niece, Menahke Fish (Fish), and S.D.

has made attempts over the years to foster the relationship between Green and the child,

which have been largely unsuccessful. Prior to the incident in question, S.D. had not seen

Green for a little over a year.

2 ¶4 The jury trial was conducted in April 2022. The State called S.D., two of her

daughters, a Missoula police officer, a Missoula Police Department detective, a Sexual

Assault Nurse Examiner (SANE), Green’s employer, and a Montana Crime Lab DNA

supervisor and analyst. The defense called Green to testify on his own behalf. The facts

of the incident as presented at trial are summarized below.

¶5 In the early morning of December 9, 2020, Green knocked at S.D.’s apartment door.

S.D. was asleep, but upon waking promptly came to the door. She asked who was there,

and Green replied, “Aunt [S.D.], it’s me, let me in.” S.D. testified it was unusual for Green

to come at that hour, and she thought “he was in trouble or something.” She said that Green

appeared “all shaggy, dirty, [and] agitated,” smelling of alcohol. Later, when initially

questioned by police, Green admitted to drinking heavily and using methamphetamine that

night, a combination that had led him to “black out” on other occasions. However, at trial,

Green provided contradictory testimony, first, on cross-examination denying any

methamphetamine use and stating that he initially lied to police, and then, on redirect,

returning to the account he had initially told police—that he had used methamphetamine

and alcohol that night prior to going to S.D.’s apartment.

¶6 S.D. unlocked the door and then went directly to her room to get a blanket to cover

herself, as she was still in her nightgown. Green told S.D. that he had been at a party at his

cousin’s house earlier, that they were drinking all night, and that Green left because he

could not be late for work. S.D. suggested Green take a shower to clean up while she put

on a pot of coffee. Green entered the bathroom and turned on the water, while S.D. made

herself a cup of coffee and placed a cup next to the coffee pot for Green to use after his

3 shower. S.D. heard the shower running and heard Green suggest that she join him in the

shower, which struck her as very unusual, as he had never said anything like that before.

She sat down in her recliner. A few minutes later Green exited the bathroom naked, still

disheveled, and appearing as if he had not yet showered. Green positioned himself behind

S.D. and began trying to fondle S.D.’s breasts, saying that he had “been planning this for

a long time.” S.D. related that she was in shock, Green’s demeanor was that “this is going

to happen and you have no way of stopping it,” and Green was “jerking on himself and

masturbating and that,” followed by this testimony:

He’s grabbing my legs and that and his hand was under my nightgown and that, and he eventually—he couldn’t get an erection and then he grabbed me by my shoulders and pushed me, then over to the couch and I was still hugging my blanket and that and we fought and we fought and I kicked and told him to go home and that, and he stuck his finger in my vagina and made the comment nice and tight. And then he was on top of me and he was trying to put his penis in me and he was too high [directionally] and he was really hurting me. And then he said, I have to feel wet, I have to feel wet. And then he finally with his finger he found wet and it was over in two seconds and that, and I was shaking and that, he got up and he looked at the clock or his watch or something and said, [o]h, I’m late. And he bent down, kissed me on top of the head and said, “[s]ee you later, Aunt [S.D.],” and walked out of the door.

S.D. said Green’s attempt to penetrate her caused “excruciating pain,” but that she

continued to resist, explaining, “I was able to fight that and keep that and that, but then he

just got more forceful and more forceful.” She said that she told Green, “[g]o home to your

wife. Leave me alone. Why are you doing this? I helped you just like your mother did,

things of that nature.”

¶7 Describing how she felt after the assault, S.D. testified:

4 I felt defeated. I felt betrayed. I felt humiliated. I felt like dirt. I was in disbelief. I laid in that position on the couch gripping my blanket for I don’t know how long, how long I laid there. But I know I did not get up and take a shower until sometime in the late afternoon.

Asked why she felt disbelief, S.D. added:

Because I trusted him. I totally trusted him. And that’s not—I did not live my life in a bad way to be so humiliated. . . . I’m just not the same person and I can’t make myself become that person I was before. I can’t stand anybody behind me. I have PTSD. I barely leave my apartment. I don’t have trust in anybody. It’s just—its just I’m not me anymore. It changed my life.

¶8 Green testified, and provided a brief account of the encounter:

I came out [of the bathroom]. I sat down in the recliner and then we started talking about having sex, and she agreed. She took off her underwear and then we moved over to the couch and I started using my fingers as foreplay and then the sex occurred and then it was over real quickly and then after that she was like angry at me.

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2025 MT 52N, 564 P.3d 1286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-p-green-mont-2025.