State v. Pretty Weasel

994 N.W.2d 435, 2023 S.D. 41
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 2, 2023
Docket30087
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 994 N.W.2d 435 (State v. Pretty Weasel) 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. Pretty Weasel, 994 N.W.2d 435, 2023 S.D. 41 (S.D. 2023).

Opinion

#30087-a-SPM 2023 S.D. 41

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

****

STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA, Plaintiff and Appellee,

v.

VANDON PRETTY WEASEL, Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FOURTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT LAWRENCE COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA ****

THE HONORABLE MICHELLE K. COMER Judge

ELLERY GREY of Grey & Eisenbraun Law Rapid City, South Dakota Attorneys for defendant and appellant.

MARTY J. JACKLEY Attorney General

ERIN E. HANDKE Assistant Attorney General Pierre, South Dakota Attorneys for plaintiff and appellee.

ARGUED APRIL 26, 2023 OPINION FILED 08/02/23 #30087

MYREN, Justice

[¶1.] Vandon Pretty Weasel was convicted of ten counts of sexual contact

with a child under age sixteen and one count of first-degree rape. At his trial, the

State introduced evidence from Debra Hughes, a mental health practitioner, who

had served as the victim’s counselor. The State did not notify Pretty Weasel that

Hughes would give expert testimony. On appeal, Pretty Weasel alleges this failure

of notice was prejudicial and asserts that Hughes’ testimony improperly bolstered

the victim’s testimony. We affirm.

Factual and Procedural History

[¶2.] Pretty Weasel and his wife, Jennean, were married in 2012. Five

children were living in their house at the time of the events that give rise to this

case. Jennean has two children with Pretty Weasel and two with Vincent Barrios.

A.D., the victim in this case, is the child of Jennean and Barrios and was twelve

years old at the time of trial. Also living with the family from the fall of 2015 until

the spring of 2020 was Pretty Weasel’s child from another relationship, K.P., who

was sixteen years old at the time of trial.

[¶3.] On the morning of March 10, 2020, Jennean noticed that A.D. was

acting “very, very upset” and was refusing to go to school. Jennean thought

something was not right, so she took her daughter on a drive to talk. While on this

drive, A.D. told her mother that Pretty Weasel had been touching her

inappropriately and doing so for a very long time.

[¶4.] Jennean went home and confronted her husband, who said he was

sorry. She told him he needed to leave, and he moved out of the house. The next

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day, Jennean filed a report with the police in Deadwood and met with Detective

Tom Derby, who set up a forensic interview for A.D.

[¶5.] Brandi Tonkel, a forensic interviewer at the Children’s Home Child

Advocacy Center (CAC), conducted the interview. During the interview, A.D.

disclosed extensive sexual contact. She stated that Pretty Weasel had touched her

“all around down there” and that it occurred almost “every night.”

[¶6.] After the forensic interview, Detective Derby, who had listened to the

interview, asked Jennean if she would agree to conduct a recorded phone call with

Pretty Weasel to see if they could obtain additional evidence to support A.D.’s

disclosures. Jennean agreed to do so. During this phone call, Pretty Weasel told

Jennean that he felt “so fricking guilty.” When Jennean asked him why he did

what he did to A.D., he said he thought she was Jennean. Jennean then asked, “[s]o

you touched her inappropriately?” to which Pretty Weasel responded, “I didn’t teach

her, I don’t want [A.D.] to be a liar and I didn’t teach her to be a liar. I mean if she

says then . . . I feel guilty.”

[¶7.] Later in the same recorded conversation, Jennean asked when this had

started, and Pretty Weasel said that A.D. was the one who started it and that it had

started with belly rubs. He then said,

And the first time went you know, didn’t notice but she kind of grabbed my hand higher, under her chest. And I was like whoa. I stopped. I thought--thought she was being curious. You know I just--I don’t know what--what to think. I didn’t know what to . . . And then she just pushed my hand lower a couple of times.

When pressed about how often this happened, Pretty Weasel said, “[l]ike once a

month. If that.” He said he did not remember how old A.D. was when it started

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and that it only happened when Jennean was gone. Pretty Weasel said he never

had sex with A.D. or put his fingers in her. He said he did not touch her but stated,

“[w]ell, she put my hand there.”

[¶8.] A grand jury indicted Pretty Weasel on twelve counts of sexual contact

with a minor under age sixteen (two counts for each year from 2015-2020) and one

count of first-degree rape occurring sometime in 2020.

[¶9.] Before trial, Pretty Weasel filed a motion to require the State to

provide a summary of any expert opinion it intended to use at trial pursuant to

SDCL 23A-13-4. Pretty Weasel also filed a motion for a subpoena duces tecum

seeking any counseling records involving A.D., followed by an in-camera review by

the court to determine relevancy. Without objection from the State, the circuit court

granted both motions. The court signed a subpoena duces tecum on February 11,

2022, directing Hughes to produce all counseling records for A.D. and provide them

to the court by February 14, 2022. Hughes was ill and unable to deliver the

documents by that date. Instead, both parties received the counseling records on

the first day of trial, after jury selection.

[¶10.] Jennean was the State’s first witness, and she explained how A.D.

disclosed the abuse to her and how she reported it to law enforcement. She also

discussed the recorded phone call she conducted with Pretty Weasel under the

guidance of Detective Derby. A recording of the phone call and a transcript were

received into evidence, and the recording was played for the jury.

[¶11.] On cross-examination, Jennean acknowledged that A.D. had

previously told her that K.P. had touched her inappropriately. Jennean explained

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that the family attended counseling with Hughes because of K.P.’s conduct, and

sometimes A.D. did not want to attend. The defense also asked Jennean if A.D. had

told Hughes that she did not like Pretty Weasel because he spanked her as a form of

discipline. Jennean acknowledged that A.D. may have said that to Hughes but later

testified that A.D. had not expressed to her personally that A.D. was upset about

being spanked.

[¶12.] On redirect, Jennean testified that Hughes had diagnosed A.D. with

PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder). The State then asked her whether Hughes

ever mentioned that A.D. was unable to tell the difference between what K.P. had

done to her and what Pretty Weasel had done. Pretty Weasel objected to the

question based on “improper 702, unnoticed 702,” and invading the province of the

jury, but the court overruled the objection. Jennean responded that she did not

recall what Hughes had told her.

[¶13.] The State also asked Jennean if Hughes had reported to her that A.D.

wanted to dress in a particular way that would make her less attractive as a female.

The defense objected as “speculation and foundation and confrontation[,]” but the

objection was overruled. Jennean responded, “[A.D.] does not feel comfortable in

tight-fitting clothing. She wants to wear bigger clothing to cover up herself.” The

State later asked if A.D. exhibited any behavior where she tried to make herself

look unappealing. Jennean answered that A.D.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
994 N.W.2d 435, 2023 S.D. 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pretty-weasel-sd-2023.