State v. T. Stryker

2023 MT 63, 527 P.3d 606, 412 Mont. 1
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 2023
DocketDA 21-0028
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2023 MT 63 (State v. T. Stryker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. T. Stryker, 2023 MT 63, 527 P.3d 606, 412 Mont. 1 (Mo. 2023).

Opinion

04/11/2023

DA 21-0028 Case Number: DA 21-0028

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA 2023 MT 63

STATE OF MONTANA,

Plaintiff and Appellee,

v.

TIMOTHY JOHN STRYKER,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Sixteenth Judicial District, In and For the County of Rosebud, Cause No. DC 19-39 Honorable Nickolas C. Murnion, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellant:

Chad Wright, Appellate Defender, Kathryn Hutchison, Assistant Appellate Defender, Helena, Montana

For Appellee:

Austin Knudsen, Montana Attorney General, Michael P. Dougherty, Assistant Attorney General, Helena, Montana

C. Kristine White, Rosebud County Attorney, Forsyth, Montana

Submitted on Briefs: November 16, 2022

Decided: April 11, 2023

Filed:

__________________________________________ Clerk Justice Jim Rice delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Timothy John Stryker appeals from the judgment entered by the Sixteenth Judicial

District Court, after jury trial, adjudging him guilty of incest in violation of § 45-5-507(1),

(5)(a)(i) MCA. He challenges the District Court’s evidentiary ruling admitting evidence

of other acts. We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶2 Timothy Stryker and Rachel Showalter met through horse training activities, which

Stryker coached and in which Rachel’s daughter, F.S. participated competitively,

beginning when she was four years old. Stryker and Rachel were married in 2018, and

they, along with Rachel’s two children, F.S. and her twin brother, began living together on

Stryker’s ranch in Buffalo, Wyoming. The family was considered close, with each person

helping on the ranch and Stryker’s horse training business, and actively riding horses.

Wyoming Allegations

¶3 On an evening in June of 2019, Stryker, Rachel, and the twins, then 10 years old,

were on the couch, watching TV. They drifted in and out of sleep and, during the night,

Rachel opened her eyes and observed Stryker’s hand under F.S.’s shirt, rubbing her body,

including her breast area. In the morning, Rachel and F.S. were together in the barn, and

Rachel asked F.S. about what Stryker was doing. F.S. answered that she did not like

Stryker’s back rubs, and disclosed that Stryker had, on previous occasions, touched her

inappropriately on her breasts and buttocks. Rachel took the twins, drove into town, and

called an individual she knew at the Wyoming Department of Family Services (DFS).

Later that day, Kari Packard, a DFS social worker, conducted a forensic interview of F.S. 2 in which she disclosed that, over the prior few weeks, Stryker had touched her buttocks

and breasts on two other occasions, with the first time being when F.S. was in her bedroom.

¶4 Deputy Keeler and Sheriff Odenbach of the Johnson County Sheriff’s Office

interviewed Stryker that evening. Stryker initially denied touching F.S. inappropriately,

but later stated that, while giving F.S. back rubs, he may have accidentally touched her

buttocks, breasts, and nipples. The following day, Stryker called Deputy Keeler and asked

to meet again to talk further. On the way to that meeting, Keeler received a phone call

from Rachel, who informed him F.S. had also disclosed that Stryker had touched her vagina

while they were staying at the Lee Ranch in Montana in April, about six weeks earlier.

During Keeler’s second interview, Stryker again admitted to touching F.S. in Wyoming,

while she was in bed, but denied any touching had occurred in Montana. Stryker explained

that, on another occasion, he went into F.S.’s bedroom early in the morning to get her ready

for school, and while she was still asleep in bed, rubbed the outside of her vagina. When

Keeler asked why someone would touch F.S. the way he had, Stryker responded “pleasure”

and “[i]nstinct,” and that, “I guess it wouldn’t happen if there wasn’t some sort of physical

attraction.”

¶5 Deputy Keeler suggested that Stryker could write a letter of apology to help F.S.

heal from the ordeal, and provided pen and paper. Stryker wrote apology letters to F.S., as

well as to Rachel, his family and his friends. In the apology letter to Rachel, Stryker wrote:

“[h]ave no idea where this all came from. Can’t even wrap my own mind around it still.

No excuse, it is what it is . . . Still no excuse and like I said before I know you can[’]t

forgive me and I don’t really even want you to.” In his letter to family and friends, Stryker 3 wrote “[s]orry to disappoint you all. This is not me and I know without a doubt you all

know that. No excuses, will maybe someday figure it all out.” Stryker was charged in

Wyoming with the felony of Sexual Abuse of a Minor. However, prior to the Wyoming

case proceeding to trial, he was extradited to face a felony incest charge in Montana under

§ 45-5-507(1), (5)(a)(i), MCA.

Montana Allegation

¶6 As noted, during the Wyoming investigation, F.S. disclosed that Stryker had also

touched her inappropriately in Montana about six weeks earlier. Stryker and F.S. took a

trip to Colstrip, Montana, over two days, April 27-28, 2019, to help with spring branding

at the Lee Ranch. This was not the first time Stryker and F.S. had gone to the Lee Ranch.

When they arrived, Jeff Bilharz, ranch foreman, asked F.S. where she wanted to sleep. In

her trial testimony, F.S. stated Stryker had answered the question, saying F.S. could just

sleep with him in a bedroom. F.S. testified she spent the night in the room with Stryker,

and described the room in detail. Relating this incident to Rachel, F.S. provided an account

of specific contact Stryker initiated while they were in bed early in the morning, with

Stryker touching her buttock, vagina, and breasts under her clothes. To leave the room,

F.S. said she had to go to the bathroom and got up. She did not return to the bedroom, but

got some cereal and went into the living room.

¶7 Stryker provided a differing account at trial, stating F.S. had slept on the living room

couch, not in the bedroom. He called three witnesses, each of whom testified they saw F.S.

sleeping on the couch in the living room, rather than with Stryker. Bilharz testified he was

the first one to go bed and the first one to rise, at which point he saw F.S. sleeping on the 4 couch. On cross-examination, Bilharz was asked to read a text message exchange between

himself and Rachel wherein Rachel asked Bilharz where F.S. had slept that night, stating:

“So I have an odd question. Just trying to wrap my mind around this shit. That night of

your branding when you told Tim there were two rooms available what did he say? Give it

to me strai[gh]t.” Bilharz responded:

He asked [F.S.] w[h]ere she wanted to sleep and she shrugged her shoulders & said I don’t care & Tim asked if she just wanted to bunk with [him] & she said sure! & Tim said there u don’t have to mess up another bed & less work for Jeff & I said cool! That’s pretty much a quote [emoji] and the next morning everyone seemed fine [emoji][.]

After he read this text message, Bilharz explained that he could not finish the message at

the time because he was on horseback, but if he could have finished it, he would have also

stated that he saw F.S. lying on the couch.

¶8 Second, James Beier testified he heard F.S. say she was going to sleep on the couch,

and when he went to sleep, she was asleep on the couch and Stryker had retired to the

bedroom.

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Related

State v. C. Goodman
2023 MT 229N (Montana Supreme Court, 2023)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2023 MT 63, 527 P.3d 606, 412 Mont. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-t-stryker-mont-2023.