State v. Reed

2000 UT 68, 8 P.3d 1025, 402 Utah Adv. Rep. 17, 2000 Utah LEXIS 82, 2000 WL 1170089
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 18, 2000
Docket990289
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 2000 UT 68 (State v. Reed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah 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. Reed, 2000 UT 68, 8 P.3d 1025, 402 Utah Adv. Rep. 17, 2000 Utah LEXIS 82, 2000 WL 1170089 (Utah 2000).

Opinion

DURHAM, Justice:

{1 Gary Owen Reed appeals from a final order denying a motion for a new trial and from convictions of two counts of sodomy on a child, a first degree felony, and one count of aggravated sexual abuse of a child, also a first degree felony. Reed raises four claims of error: (1) inadequate jury voir dire; (2) prosecutorial misconduct; (8) failure to bifurcate the trial proceedings; and (4) an improper elements instruction to the jury. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

1 2 Beginning in the fall of 1992, Reed, who was in his late twenties, befriended the victim, a ten-year-old child in the fifth grade. Reed quickly developed an unusually close attachment to the victim and began visiting him frequently at his home and taking him on outings. The victim's mother objected to Reed's relationship with her son, and confronted Reed on numerous occasions-some one hundred times-which often resulted in shouting matches, shoving bouts, and mutual threats. These confrontations on one occasion led the mother to drive her car into Reed's motorcycle, and on another led the victim's stepfather to punch Reed in the face, breaking his nose. After each confrontation, however, Reed insisted that he would continue seeing the victim because the victim was his "best friend" and they had "a great time together."

13 As the mother's opposition grew, Reed began visiting the victim when she was not at home. Reed also took the victim away from the home, to such places as Lagoon, the 49th Street Galleria, the Sports Park, parking lots, Reed's house, and the private apartment of a friend. Reed also took the victim to such places during school hours. This was all done without the mother's knowledge or permission. During this period, Reed gave the victim gifts, money, and even marijuana, and also let the victim drive his van on many occasions. When the victim's family moved from Salt Lake City to Magna, Reed contin *1027 ued to pursue the victim and visited him often.

{4 Throughout this period, the victim's mother continuously tried to end Reed's relationship with her son. She spoke to all of her son's teachers and to the police detective assigned to the school, who would call her if they saw Reed's van at the school. She also talked to Reed's roommates and his employer, and even tried to talk to his mother.

1 5 Reed displayed an obsessive disposition toward the victim, often saying that he loved him and would always be with him, and that he always wanted to be able to see him and never wanted to be unable to talk to him. Reed even devised a system of communication in which he would use a walkie-talkie to contact the victim.

T6 From very early in the relationship, Reed began having sexual contact with the victim, the first incident occurring in the fall of 1992. These acts consisted of Reed's fondling the victim's genitalia and anal area, performing fellatio on the victim, and engaging in sodomy. The sex acts, some twenty to thirty incidents, began when the victim was ten years old and in the fifth grade and continued over three and one-half years, ending when the victim was thirteen years old and in the seventh grade. The victim testified that these sex acts made him feel "weird," "uncomfortable," and "gross."

T7 During the first year after this relationship began, the victim started to get into trouble with the authorities. He was referred to juvenile court and placed on probation for such things as stealing, running away, and other unruly behavior. As a condition of his probation, the victim was barred from seeing Reed. Despite this, Reed continued to pursue a relationship with the victim. Finally, in May of 1995, the victim was placed in detention after being caught with Reed during school hours. It was during this detention that the victim first disclosed the sexual nature of Reed's three-and-a-half-year relationship with him.

ANALYSIS

I. ADEQUACY OF VOIR DIRE PROCEEDINGS

T8 Reed's first point on appeal is that the trial court abused its discretion by failing to conduct adequate voir dire examination of the jury. Specifically, Reed argues that the trial court failed to ask a requested follow-up question to particular jurors who had personally known a victim of sexual abuse. The exact question defense counsel requested was:

[Whether they [the jurors] would tend to believe the victim over the person accused of the crime, simply because of their association with people that they know that have been accused [sic] in the past.

T9 According to Reed, this question was necessary because jurors who knew abuse victims might be predisposed to believe the alleged victim rather than the accused. Reed argues that not asking the requested follow-up question was an abuse of discretion because no other question during voir dire adequately addressed this issue.

110 Our analysis is governed by State v. Piansiaksone, 954 P.2d 861 (Utah 1998), in which we held: "''Whether the trial court abused its discretion [in determining the scope of voir dire] turns on whether, considering the totality of the questioning, counsel was afforded an adequate opportunity to gain the information necessary to evaluate jurors?" Id. at 868 (quoting State v. Bishop, 753 P.2d 439, 448 (Utah 1988)); see also State v. Worthen, 765 P.2d 889, 844-45 (Utah 1988).

T11 We further stated in Piansiaksone that trial courts should Hiberally conduct voir dire proceedings " 'in a way which not only meets constitutional requirements, but also enables litigants and their counsel to intelligently exercise peremptory challenges and which attempts, as much as possible, to eliminate bias and prejudice from the trial proceedings." Piansiaksone, 954 P.2d at 867 (quoting State v. James, 819 P.2d 781, 798 (Utah 1991)); see also State v. Taylor, 664 P.2d 439, 447 (Utah 1988) ("[Vjoir dire examination has as its proper purposes both the detection of actual bias and the collection of data to permit informed exercise of the peremptory challenge." (citations omitted)). We also indicated that " 'failure to question ju *1028 rors concerning issues in any certain way desired by counsel or to ask any specific question desired by counsel does not rise to the level of a constitutional violation so long as the relevant areas of bias have been covered." " - Piansiaksone, 954 P.2d at 867 (quoting James, 819 P.2d at 798).

{ 12 Viewing the totality of the questioning in this case, we conclude that the trial court adequately covered, either directly or indirectly, the area of potential bias identified by Reed. The trial court's first pre-trial instruction to the prospective jurors informed them that this case involved two counts of sodomy upon a child and one count of aggravated sexual abuse of a child. Thus, the prospective jurors knew at the outset that the victim in this case was a child. The trial court subsequently asked the prospective jurors whether they would automatically believe a child witness over an adult, or vice versa.

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Bluebook (online)
2000 UT 68, 8 P.3d 1025, 402 Utah Adv. Rep. 17, 2000 Utah LEXIS 82, 2000 WL 1170089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-reed-utah-2000.