State v. Washington

693 N.W.2d 195, 2005 WL 612708
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 17, 2005
DocketA03-980
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 693 N.W.2d 195 (State v. Washington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Washington, 693 N.W.2d 195, 2005 WL 612708 (Mich. 2005).

Opinion

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 197

SYLLABUS

1. The admission of Spreigl evidence of incidents that occurred 16 years prior to the charged offense was not an abuse of discretion in a criminal sexual conduct case where the defendant was incarcerated during more than half of the intervening time, there was significant similarity between the prior and charged acts and the defendant claimed that the victim was fabricating her complaints.

2. Once having determined that some testimony about prior bad acts was admissible as Spreigl evidence, the district court should exclude testimony of extraneous prejudicial facts that are not relevant to the purposes for the Spreigl evidence, but the district court is not required to do so sua sponte.

Affirmed.

OPINION

Appellant Lionel Lee Washington was convicted of ten counts of criminal sexual conduct for sexually abusing his girlfriend's 15-year-old daughter, M.D. In affirming the conviction, the court of appeals held that evidence of a sexual assault that Washington had committed against a 15-year-old girl more than 16 years earlier was properly admitted as Spreigl evidence to prove a common modus operandi. State v. Washington, 2004 WL 1725753 at *4 (Minn.App. Aug.3, 2004). The court did not specifically address Washington's argument that the scope of the Spreigl evidence was overbroad and included "extraneous" details that were more prejudicial than probative. We affirm.

In January 2002, M.D., then 17 years old, reported that 41-year-old Washington had sexually abused her between the winter of 2000 and October 2001. M.D. told a police investigator and a social worker that the first incident had occurred when Washington took her to a Saint Paul duplex and forced her to perform oral sex on him, as discipline and under the guise of teaching her how to do it properly. M.D. reported that the subsequent abuse, usually oral sex, occurred at the duplex and at her family's Cottage Grove apartment, where Washington lived for much of the relevant time. M.D. told investigators that Washington threatened that if she told anyone of the abuse, he would harm her, her mother and her two sisters. Sometimes he displayed a gun while making these threats.

Washington was charged in Washington County District Court with ten counts of criminal sexual conduct with a person younger than 18 years old. Minn.Stat. §§ 609.342, subd. 1(b), (g), (h)(iii); 609.343, subd. 1 (b), (g), (h)(iii); and 609.344, subd. 1(b), (e), (f), (g)(iii) (2004). The state served notice that it intended to offer Spreigl evidence that Washington had sexually abused two other females, ages 14 and 15, in 1982 and 1984. In connection with the 1984 incident involving the 15-year-old, Washington had pleaded guilty to third-degree criminal sexual conduct and first-degree tampering with a witness. No charges were pursued on the 1982 incident.

At a pretrial hearing, both victims of the 1982 and 1984 abuses testified that Washington had forced them to perform oral sex on him to teach them how to do it properly, required them to wash after each sexual assault, photographed them nude, threatened them with harm if they told anyone, and displayed a gun. M.K., the victim of the 1984 abuse, testified that Washington once had cut her neck with a knife. M.K. also said that while she was hospitalized and Washington was awaiting trial, he had assaulted her in the hospital and threatened further harm if she testified at his trial. M.K. did not volunteer information during the pretrial hearing about why she was in the hospital, and neither the attorneys nor the district court asked.

Before trial, the district court issued an order concluding that both Spreigl incidents were relevant and proven by clear and convincing evidence, and that the time gap did not bar admission because Washington had spent "substantial time" in jail or prison during the interval. The district court reserved ruling on the admissibility of evidence of these incidents until the *Page 199 state had offered all of its non-Spreigl evidence at trial.

At trial, M.D. testified that the first incident of abuse occurred after she had sneaked out of her home to meet a boyfriend. M.D. was walking home when Washington directed her into his car, warned M.D. that her mother was "too upset" about M.D.'s behavior for her to go home, and then took her to a Saint Paul duplex where Washington forced her to perform oral sex on him, saying he would teach her how to do it properly. M.D. said that Washington confined her at the duplex for 3 or 4 days, forcing her to have sex approximately three more times. M.D. testified that trips to the duplex for sex continued through the spring of 2000. She said that Washington took nude photographs of her, told her she "could be a stripper, and dancer," and at one point forced her to drink alcohol and then penetrated her with a sex toy. M.D. testified that further incidents of abuse occurred at her home during evenings when her mother was at work and her two sisters were asleep. She said that she often was forced to bathe after sex, and that Washington sometimes displayed a gun as he threatened M.D. not to report the abuse.

M.D. testified that she revealed the abuse to her mother in March 2001, but that Washington accused M.D. of fabrication, and that the abuse resumed a month later. M.D. said she attempted suicide twice and that Washington counseled M.D.'s mother against taking M.D. for medical treatment, once commenting that M.D. likely would "make up some lie" when queried by health-care workers.

On the last day of the state's case in chief, the district court announced that it would admit M.K.'s testimony about the 1984 incidents "involving criminal sexual conduct as well as tampering with a witness incident" but it would exclude evidence of the 1982 abuse as cumulative. After the state had offered all of its non-Spreigl evidence, the court instructed the jury that it was about to hear evidence of a prior "occurrence," that the evidence was to be used only for "determining the state of mind, intent, motive, common scheme or plan, or lack of mistake which the defendant possessed on the dates charged in the complaint," and that using it to convict the defendant "might result in unjust double punishment."

M.K. then testified. M.K. told how she met Washington at an arcade on Hennepin Avenue in Minneapolis in 1984 and that Washington had another female show M.K. "the ropes" of prostitution. M.K. testified that she gave Washington the prostitution proceeds and lived at what she thought to be Washington's home. She testified that the first incident of abuse occurred when Washington taught her how to perform oral sex. M.K. testified that Washington "made" her take a shower so "there would be no trace" of the sex acts.

M.K. testified that over the next couple of months, she had sexual contact with Washington periodically. She said that she was forced to bathe after each occurrence, that Washington "had a gun and he threatened to kill" her if she disclosed the incidents, that he once put a gun in her mouth, and that he cut her throat with a knife. She also said that Washington photographed her in a "nightie," and that he continued to force her into prostitution. The abuse ended after M.K. escaped Washington's home and called a police officer who had once apprehended her as a runaway.

M.K. also testified about the contact she had with Washington while she was hospitalized.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
693 N.W.2d 195, 2005 WL 612708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-washington-minn-2005.