State v. Panek

145 A.3d 924, 166 Conn. App. 613, 2016 Conn. App. LEXIS 281
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedJuly 5, 2016
DocketAC36820
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 145 A.3d 924 (State v. Panek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Panek, 145 A.3d 924, 166 Conn. App. 613, 2016 Conn. App. LEXIS 281 (Colo. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

SHELDON, J.

*614 This case concerns the ultimate facts that the state must plead and prove to convict a defendant of voyeurism under General Statutes § 53a-189a, *615 Connecticut's video voyeurism statute. 1 Section 53a-189a was enacted by the legislature in 1999, and it now provides in relevant part: "(a) A person is guilty of voyeurism when, (1) with malice, such person knowingly photographs, films, videotapes or otherwise records the image of another person (A) without the knowledge and consent of such other person, (B) while such other person is not in plain view, and (C) under circumstances where such other person has a reasonable expectation of privacy, or (2) with intent to arouse or satisfy the sexual desire of such person or any other person, such person knowingly photographs, films, videotapes or otherwise records the image of another person (A) without the knowledge and consent of such other person, (B) while such other person is not in plain view, and (C) under circumstances where such other person has a reasonable expectation of privacy...."

So framed, the statute has two parallel subdivisions, each of which establishes a separate basis for proving a defendant guilty of voyeurism thereunder. Each subdivision sets forth the five common conduct, circumstances and mental state elements of that offense plus one additional, aggravating mental state element that distinguishes the two subdivisions from one another. The first common element, which describes the conduct a defendant must engage in to commit voyeurism under either subdivision, is (1) that he photograph, film, videotape or otherwise record the image of another person. The second, third and fourth common elements, which describe the circumstances under which the defendant must engage in the proscribed conduct in order to commit either form of that offense, are that he do so (2) without the other person's knowledge and consent, (3) while the other person is not in plain view, and (4) under circumstances where the other person has a reasonable *616 expectation of privacy. The fifth common element, which describes the mental state with which the defendant must engage in the proscribed conduct under the statutorily prescribed circumstances in order to commit voyeurism, is that he do so *927 (5) knowingly. Finally, the sixth essential element of voyeurism, an aggravating mental state that is different under each subsection of the statute, is (6) that the defendant commit the five common elements of voyeurism either with malice, in violation of subdivision (1) of subsection (a) of the statute, or with intent to arouse or satisfy the sexual desire of himself or of another person, in violation of subdivision (2) of subsection (a) of the statute.

The question presented on this appeal is whether a defendant can be prosecuted for and convicted of voyeurism based upon allegations and proof that he surreptitiously recorded the image of another person while he and she were engaged in consensual sexual activity with one another in a private place. This question comes before us on the state's appeal from the dismissal of three consolidated informations charging the defendant, John Panek, with violating § 53a-189a (a)(1) in that manner against three different women. The informations were dismissed on the ground that the defendant's recording his own sexual activity with another person cannot establish the third essential element of voyeurism with respect to that person, to wit: that he recorded the other person's image when she was "not in plain view...." Interpreting the phrase "not in plain view," as used in the statute, to mean "not in plain view of the defendant, " the trial court concluded that the facts alleged by the state did not tend to establish the third essential element as to any of the complainants because each was allegedly in the defendant's immediate physical presence, and thus in his plain view, when he recorded her image. (Emphasis added.)

*617 The state claims that the trial court erred in so interpreting the statute, and thus in dismissing the three informations, because the meaning of its "not in plain view" element is not plain and unambiguous on the face of the statute, as the trial court ruled. It contends, to the contrary, that if the statute is properly construed in light of its legislative history, the disputed element must be understood to require only proof, as here alleged, that the complainants were "not in plain view of the public " when the defendant recorded their images. The defendant disagrees, and so do we. We conclude that the judgment of the trial court must be affirmed.

This case arises against the following factual and procedural background. On or about July 30, 2011, a woman with whom the defendant had recently been involved in an intimate relationship reported to officers from the Wilton Police Department that approximately three weeks earlier she had caught the defendant making a recording with his cell phone of a private sexual encounter between them in the bedroom of her New York City apartment. When she objected to his conduct in so doing, which she had not previously known of or consented to, he complied at once with her demand that he delete the recording after telling her that it was the first time he had made such a recording of them. Twelve days later, however, having decided to end her relationship with the defendant and remembering that he had a computer with a camera in it facing the bed in his home in Wilton, where he and she had previously engaged in sexual activity, she traveled to Wilton to break up with him and confront him as to whether he had other recordings of their private sexual encounters on his computer. When he admitted that he did, insisting that he had used them only for his own personal sexual gratification, she demanded that he pull them all up so he and she could delete them together. In response to *618 her demand, the defendant pulled up a file marked with her initials, but quickly deleted it before she could see what was in it or where in his computer files it had been *928 stored. Over her protest that he had not complied with her demand, he stated that he had not wanted to show her where the recordings were stored because he also had recordings of other women in that location, all assertedly consented to, which he did not want her to see. Armed with this information, the Wilton police secured a warrant to search the defendant's Wilton home, including all of his computer equipment and file storage devices, for similar recordings. Thereafter, although the defendant initially had told the officers who searched his residence that he had no other unconsented-to recordings of the complainant or others in his possession, he recontacted them to tell them the names of two other women whose images he had secretly photographed, without their knowledge and consent, when they were undressed in his presence.

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Related

State v. Panek
177 A.3d 1113 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 A.3d 924, 166 Conn. App. 613, 2016 Conn. App. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-panek-connappct-2016.