State v. Stephen Mulcahey

CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 21, 2019
Docket18-20
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Stephen Mulcahey (State v. Stephen Mulcahey) 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. Stephen Mulcahey, (R.I. 2019).

Opinion

November 21, 2019

Supreme Court

No. 2018-20-C.A. (K1/14-160A)

State :

v. :

Stephen Mulcahey. :

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, at (401) 222- 3258 of any typographical or other formal errors in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published. Supreme Court

Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.

OPINION

Justice Goldberg, for the Court. This case came before the Supreme Court for oral

argument on October 3, 2019, on appeal by the defendant, Stephen Mulcahey, from a judgment

of conviction, following a jury trial, for first-degree sexual assault in violation of G.L. 1956

§ 11-37-2. Before this Court, the defendant argues that the Superior Court erred in admitting

evidence of text messages allegedly sent by the defendant to the complainant because, he argues,

the text messages were not properly authenticated under Rule 901 of the Rhode Island Rules of

Evidence. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior

Court.

Facts and Travel

In October 2013, Victoria,1 the complainant, a seventeen-year-old high school senior,

was residing with her maternal aunt, Cristee McCormick (McCormick), in an apartment in

Coventry, Rhode Island. The defendant, who was McCormick’s boyfriend, also lived at the

apartment for an unspecified period after McCormick obtained custody of Victoria. At trial, the

complainant described defendant as kind of “like a father figure,” who would help her with her

1 We refer to the complainant in this case by a pseudonym. -1- schoolwork and provide transportation when needed. However, Victoria testified, defendant

sometimes made her feel uncomfortable: “Well, if he would give me a ride somewhere and when

I would be like waiting in the car or something and we would go to a restaurant or something, he

would like sit next to me and put his hand on my leg or something.”

On October 27, 2013, after spending the evening at a movie theater with her grandfather,

Victoria returned to McCormick’s apartment to eat Chinese food and watch a scary movie with

McCormick, defendant, and defendant’s brother. Victoria sat on the couch and covered herself

with a comforter blanket. The defendant sat between Victoria and McCormick, and defendant’s

brother was seated on a chair.

According to Victoria, just before the movie was about to begin, defendant pulled the

blanket over her head. Victoria tried to move the comforter out of the way, “but then things

happened.” The defendant started to rub Victoria’s back, which made her feel “uncomfortable

and a little bit nervous[.]” Victoria testified that she “thought that [defendant] thought that [she]

was [McCormick] so [she] tried to move around so that he would know that it was [her].” Then

defendant “started to rub [her] butt[,]” and, again, she tried to move around more to indicate to

defendant that she was not McCormick. The defendant, however, proceeded to rub Victoria’s

belly under her clothes, and he touched her vagina.

At that point, when McCormick walked to the bathroom and then to the kitchen to smoke

a cigarette, defendant whispered in Victoria’s ear that he wanted to “kiss [her] down there[,]”

and “taste [her] down there and lick [her].” The defendant then put his hand inside her vagina.

When she tried to pull defendant’s hand out by grabbing his arm, he “put it in harder[,]” which

“really hurt and it made [Victoria] very afraid.” Victoria estimated that the assault lasted for

about thirty minutes. When the movie ended, Victoria went next door to her grandmother’s

apartment to shower, and she noticed that she was bleeding from her vagina. -2- Within hours of the assault, at 12:30 a.m., Victoria received the following four text

messages from defendant:

“Hope I didn’t do anything to upset you good night sleep well” “Did I upset you” “Good night sleep well you are a beautiful person” “Can’t stop thinking about you”

At 7:37 a.m., Victoria received the following text message from defendant: “Good morning hope

you have a great day[.]” And, at 11:19 a.m., Victoria received the following text message from

defendant: “Are you still sleeping[?]” After the last text message, Victoria took a screenshot of

her phone depicting the six text messages from defendant, but she did not respond to any of

them.

The next day, while driving to a therapy appointment, Victoria told McCormick about the

assault. She also told her therapist, Eric McKnight, who immediately reported the assault to the

Coventry police. Later that day, Victoria and McCormick went to the Coventry police station to

report the assault. A Coventry police officer advised Victoria to go to the hospital. But, at the

hospital, she testified, she was afraid to undergo an examination and “felt very scared to do that”

and was “freaking out.” According to Victoria, the doctors “said that they weren’t going to do

anything because they didn’t want to make [her] more scared.”

On October 31, 2013, Victoria met with Detective Jason Burlingame (Det. Burlingame),

the Coventry police officer who had been assigned to the investigation. Victoria told Det.

Burlingame about the text messages she received from defendant and showed him the screenshot

of her phone. Detective Burlingame testified that he interviewed defendant and that, when he

showed defendant the screenshot of the text messages, defendant stated that he had sent them.

On March 4, 2014, defendant was charged by criminal indictment with one count of first-

degree sexual assault, in violation of § 11-37-2. The defendant filed a pretrial motion in limine

-3- to suppress evidence of the text messages, arguing that the state would not be able to meet its

burden to properly authenticate the evidence in accordance with Rule 901 through the testimony

of Victoria alone. The state, however, argued that Victoria’s testimony about her history of

texting defendant was sufficient to properly authenticate the text message evidence.

After hearing arguments from both parties, the trial justice, citing to federal caselaw, laid

out the following six factors for the court to consider when determining whether evidence of text

messages has been properly authenticated: (1) “Whether someone with personal knowledge

connects the person to the specific phone and phone number”; (2) “The witness must show

through direct or circumstantial evidence that the phone has the capacity to send and receive text

messages”; (3) “The witness needs to explain how the caller I.D. on the phone where the texts

[were] received links [the] text messages by a name or number to a particular person”; (4)

“[D]irect or circumstantial evidence that [the person has] received phone calls or text messages

from that number * * * in the past”; (5) “The witness must testify that they received and read the

text messages”; and (6) Circumstantial evidence establishing authorship.2 The trial justice then

reserved ruling on the motion, and the case proceeded to trial.

At trial, Victoria testified that, about a year before the assault, defendant provided her

with his cell phone number and she saved the number in her contacts under the name “Steph.”3

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