State v. Robert Burnham

58 A.3d 889, 2013 WL 204711, 2013 R.I. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 18, 2013
Docket2010-410-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 58 A.3d 889 (State v. Robert Burnham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Robert Burnham, 58 A.3d 889, 2013 WL 204711, 2013 R.I. LEXIS 14 (R.I. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

Justice FLAHERTY, for the Court.

This ease came before the Supreme Court on appeal from a judgment of conviction after a jury found the defendant, Robert Burnham, guilty of two counts of second-degree child molestation. The defendant filed a motion for new trial, but on November 26, 2008, the trial justice issued a written decision in which he denied the motion. He then sentenced the defendant to a term of thirty years, six to serve and the balance suspended, with probation. Before this Court, the defendant asserts that the trial justice erred: (1) when he denied his motion for new trial, which motion was founded on a claim that he was deprived of pretrial access to certain relevant hospital records and police reports; (2) when he failed to properly instruct the jury on the issue of the voluntariness of his police statement; and (3) when he improperly limited his cross-examination of the complaining witness. Because we are of the opinion that the defendant’s arguments are without merit, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.

I

Facts and Travel

In 2006, defendant was indicted by a grand jury on two counts of second-degree child molestation and one count of first-degree child molestation. All counts involved a single female, and all counts were alleged to have occurred between January 1, 2006, and June 8, 2006. 1

Before trial began, defendant’s pretrial counsel issued a number of subpoenas under Rule 17(c) of the Superior Court Rules of Criminal Procedure, 2 seeking medical records of the complaining witness, Jane, 3 including records from Jane’s hospitalization at Butler Hospital. Pursuant to the *893 subpoenas, records were returned to the motion justice from various social service and medical providers for in camera review by the motion justice. However, the motion justice did not review the records; rather, he followed his usual practice of allowing the attorneys to review the documents. It seems clear from the record that pretrial counsel invested considerable time going through the records.

On February 5 and 6, 2008, a jury trial was conducted in the Superior Court, in which both Jane and a detective testified for the state. Jane explained that the allegations in the indictment all had occurred in 2006, when she was twelve years old. She explained that defendant was a “friend of the family,” who once had had a relationship with her mother. She further testified that defendant owned a house and that defendant’s mother resided there with him. Jane said that she spent the night at defendant’s house on three separate occasions and that it was on those occasions that the three incidents occurred. According to Jane, each time she stayed at defendant’s house, she slept in defendant’s mother’s bedroom and she wore defendant’s mother’s pajamas.

At trial, Jane testified that the first time she slept at defendant’s house, she woke up to discover defendant on top of her while she was lying on her stomach. She explained that defendant had one hand near her neck and the other hand on his penis. According to her testimony, defendant then proceeded to pull her pajama bottoms down, and he placed his penis on her buttocks and vagina. She said that when he tried to insert his penis in her vagina, she moved her leg and he left the room.

During the second incident, Jane again was sleeping on her stomach, and she again awoke to find defendant on top of her. As he did in the first incident, defendant pulled her pajama bottoms down and placed his penis on her thigh, buttock, and vagina. She testified that when he tried to put his penis in her vagina, she moved and, as had occurred during the earlier occasion, he left the room.

Before the third incident, Jane was at defendant’s house, but she informed him she did not want to stay overnight. He replied that he was not going to bring her home because the weather had created poor driving conditions, and her mother was unable to pick her up because she did not have a car. Jane went to sleep, but she woke up, this time on her back, and realized that defendant was pulling her pajama bottoms down and inserting his penis in her vagina. She felt a sharp pain and made a sound, at which time defendant ran back to his room. 4

Jane revealed to her best friend the molestation that had occurred, but she did not tell her mother right away “[bjecause [Jane] used to watch America’s Most Wanted and * * * [she] thought they would come after [her].” She explained that after the third incident, her attitude toward defendant went “down hill” and that she would act “bad[ly]” around him and “[b]eat him up.” She said that at some point her mother asked her why she was behaving in this manner, and, at that time, she told her mother about the incidents. On June 8, 2006, her mother *894 brought her to the Warwick Police Department to give a statement.

During cross-examination, defense counsel asked Jane a series of questions about a conversation Jane had with her mother about other sexual activity in which she may have been engaged, suggesting that this had led to the accusations that she made against defendant. The state objected to the line of inquiry, citing Rule 412 of the Rhode Island Rules of Evidence, 5 and the trial justice sustained the objection because defendant had failed to provide prior notice of his intention to introduce any evidence of Jane’s purported sexual activity.

The state then called Det. Timothy Grant of the Warwick Police Department, who had investigated the incidents in question. He explained that, after interviewing Jane, he and another officer went to defendant’s home and informed him that he was the subject of an investigation. The detectives requested that defendant accompany them to the Warwick Police Department to assist in the investigation. Detective Grant then said that when the officers offered defendant the option of either driving himself to the station or riding with them, defendant chose to travel with the detectives. On the way to the station, defendant asked “if the case involved [Jane],” even though the officers had not yet referred to Jane by name. The officers brought defendant to a ten-foot-by-ten-foot room and read his Miranda 6 rights to him. The defendant acknowledged that he understood his rights, and he signed his name and provided his address on the rights form.

Detective Grant testified that during the interview at the police station, defendant acknowledged that he was a friend of Jane’s family and that she had stayed overnight at his home on three occasions. Detective Grant observed that during the conversation about the sleepovers, defendant became nervous and fidgety and that he would not maintain eye contact with the officers. He also testified that defendant said that Jane had worn tight jeans each time she slept at his home, but that he later stated that he remembered Jane wearing his mother’s pajamas on one occasion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 A.3d 889, 2013 WL 204711, 2013 R.I. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-robert-burnham-ri-2013.