State v. Tenbusch

886 P.2d 1077, 131 Or. App. 634, 1994 Ore. App. LEXIS 1823
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 14, 1994
Docket9112-2677; CA A76206
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 886 P.2d 1077 (State v. Tenbusch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Tenbusch, 886 P.2d 1077, 131 Or. App. 634, 1994 Ore. App. LEXIS 1823 (Or. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

*636 DEITS, P. J.

Defendant was charged with two counts of sexual abuse in the first degree and two counts of sexual abuse in the second degree. ORS 163.425; ORS 163.415. The state appeals the trial court’s order suppressing defendant’s self-incriminating statements. The state argues that the trial court erred in concluding that defendant’s statements were involuntary. We reverse and remand.

In an earlier case, defendant pleaded guilty to sexually abusing his stepson and was placed on probation. Two conditions of his probation were:

“9. The defendant shall engage in sexual offender treatment with a mental health professional trained and experienced in such treatment, and who is acceptable to his Probation Officer. The goals of such treatment shall be to reduce defendant’s deviant sexual arousal, reduce defendant’s level of denial, increase defendant’s empathy for his victims, and increase the defendant’s level of understanding of defendant’s own functioning.
“11. The defendant shall submit to polygraph examinations about his sexual history, and about his compliance with probation, whenever directed by his Probation Officer or his sexual therapist.”

Defendant did not appeal from the above conditions of probation.

The pertinent facts of this case, as found by the trial court, are not in dispute:

“1) As part of the conditions of his probation, Defendant was ordered to attend and complete a course of treatment for sexual abuse. Through the probation department, Defendant was assigned to receive that treatment from Loring Cannon, as therapist.
“2) Defendant from his discussions with Cannon, understood he must complete the treatment program as prescribed by Cannon, or Ms probation could be revoked and he could be sent to prison. As outlined by Cannon it was a goal of the treatment program, that Defendant be honest in revealing his sexual conduct and history, and in acknowledging who were Ms victims.
*637 “3) Defendant met with Cannon on September 4,1991 (before Defendant entered his guilty plea) and two successive weekly meetings. Cannon urged Defendant to be honest, and told Defendant if he was not more honest he would be required to take a polygraph examination. At the third meeting Cannon told Defendant to take the polygraph examination.[ 1 ] Defendant believed he was required to take the polygraph examination as directed by Cannon.
“4) After the examination, Cannon received a report on October 26,1991. The report indicated the Defendant was not truthful with regard to several questions. During a discussion of the report and in response to Cannon’s questioning of Defendant, Defendant admitted he had abused the two female victims. More specifically, as testified by Cannon, during the discussion of the report Defendant stated he ‘did it’... ‘if the polygraph says I did, I did.’
“5) During the several discussions, Cannon had advised Defendant that based upon Cannon’s experience, Defendant would not go to prison if he acknowledged sexual abuse other than that for which he was convicted, although he might be prosecuted resulting in more or harsher conditions of probation. Cannon further explained to Defendant, or at least implied, that if the newly acknowledged abuse occurred after the conviction, jail or prison punishment were likely, but not if the abuse occurred before the conviction.
“6) After the discussion about the polygraph examination, and with Defendant’s consent, Cannon contacted Patty Cooper. Cooper, the social worker employed by Children’s Services Division as a specialist in abuse and family conflicts, was working with the victims and Defendant’s family. Cannon and Cooper arranged a meeting in mid-November 1991, for Defendant to meet with the victims and other family members.
“7) Cannon, after discussion with Cooper, told Defendant that it would be helpful to the female victims for Defendant to admit his abuse to them. Cannon also told Defendant that Cannon would be required to inform the *638 police authorities of Defendant’s admission of the abuse of the two victims.
“8) On November 13, 1991, Cannon, Cooper, Defendant and several persons including the female victims met at Cooper’s offices. The purpose of the meeting was to coordinate treatment of the family, including Defendant. In the course of the meeting, while the two victims were present, Defendant stated “I sexually abused my [step]daughters.” During the meeting there was no discussion of new criminal charges against Defendant. However, Cooper did advise Defendant that CSD was required to report his statements to the police but Defendant had the option of makingthe report to the police himself. Defendant said he would report to the police and did so on the same day.
“9) Defendant went to the local police and contacted Officer Lundquist on November 13, 1991. Defendant announced to Lundquist he was there to turn himself in for molesting his two [step]daughters. He also said he was prepared to take the consequences, but during the brief discussion Defendant stated he did not recall any of the abuse. Lundquist interviewed the two female victims that day and met again with Defendant the next day.
“10) Before the second interview began, Lundquist advised Defendant of his Miranda rights and that the conversation would be tape recorded, to which the Defendant consented and proceeded. During the second interview Defendant was comfortable and cooperative, but continued to deny recollection of details, or was evasive, but did acknowledge he had abused the two [step]daughters.
“11) Defendant is a forty-one-year old who was on probation for the first time. He testified he believed that he must comply with the treatment directed by Cannon, that it was ‘mandatory’ he take the polygraph examination, that he had been directed to tell the truth, that he had told Cannon he had abused the two females, that he knew was [sic] to admit to the girls he had abused them and that he had to go tell the police. From his manner, and the consistency of his statements with other evidence presented, this Court finds that Defendant is credible in asserting that he believed he was required to admit and to report he had abused the two victims to comply with conditions of his probation and to avoid going to prison.
“12) Defendant was under duress at the time as most sex offenders experience[,] since they are required to admit *639 or confront facts that they wold [sic] rather avoid. This Court finds however, that this duress was not so significant that it rendered the Defendant incapable of making informed choices.

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Bluebook (online)
886 P.2d 1077, 131 Or. App. 634, 1994 Ore. App. LEXIS 1823, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tenbusch-orctapp-1994.