Stephen James Kilpatrick v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMay 4, 2021
Docket2043193
StatusPublished

This text of Stephen James Kilpatrick v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Stephen James Kilpatrick v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephen James Kilpatrick v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Huff, Russell and Malveaux PUBLISHED

Argued by videoconference

STEPHEN JAMES KILPATRICK OPINION BY v. Record No. 2043-19-3 JUDGE GLEN A. HUFF MAY 4, 2021 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF BEDFORD COUNTY James W. Updike, Jr., Judge

Gregory M. Lipper (Timothy R. Clinton; Clinton & Peed, on briefs), for appellant.

Craig W. Stallard, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Among the tools available to parties in a criminal trial is the use of expert testimony to

assist the jury’s understanding of the evidence and its resolution of facts at issue. To be sure,

that right comes with certain limitations, many of which serve to guarantee that an expert’s

testimony does not express opinions on issues entrusted exclusively to the jury for its own

consideration, such as the defendant’s mental state at the time of the alleged offense and,

ultimately, whether the defendant is guilty. But so long as a party’s experts do not violate these

limiting principles, they have substantial latitude in terms of the relevant information they may

present.

In this appeal, Stephen J. Kilpatrick (“appellant”) contends the Bedford County Circuit

Court (the “trial court”) unduly restricted his ability to offer expert testimony which he believes

was crucial to his defense. Prior to being convicted by a jury on multiple counts of computer

solicitation of a minor, appellant attempted to offer expert testimony from a forensic psychologist who would have testified that, after conducting a psychological evaluation of

appellant, he concluded appellant was not a pedophile. Appellant sought this testimony to

support his argument that he did not believe that the person with whom he engaged in electronic

communications was a minor and to show that he lacked a motive to solicit a minor. The trial

court barred this testimony, ruling that it would amount to an expression of an opinion on an

ultimate issue of the case and thereby invade the exclusive province of the jury. Because the trial

court’s ruling was erroneous and prejudicial, this Court reverses appellant’s convictions and

remands the case for a new trial.

I. BACKGROUND

Appellant was caught in a sting operation, beginning when Investigator Jake Wade of the

Bedford County Sheriff’s Office set up a fake profile under the name “Jenny Block” on

Craigslist.org. On November 15, 2017, “Jenny” posted in a “hook-up area” on Craigslist

designated for “casual encounters” and used the abbreviation “W4M,” which was understood to

mean “woman for man.” In that post, Jenny described herself as a student in Lynchburg who

was looking for “any suggestions” as to “what there was to do” around the city.

Roughly a week later, appellant responded to Jenny’s post and, among other things,

requested that she “pull up [her] shirt” and watch him masturbate.1 Although Jenny did not

oblige his request, she asked that appellant tell her more about himself. After a short period of

small talk between the two, appellant asked Jenny what she was studying, to which she

responded, “I guess you could say I’m studying general studies.” Jenny then asked appellant

whether he would “be okay with [her] being a little younger than [him],” and appellant

responded in the affirmative.

1 Appellant acted under the pseudonym “David Dundall” when communicating with Jenny. -2- At this point, Jenny had not relayed her specific age to appellant. She had, however, told

appellant she occasionally drove a vehicle by appellant’s place of employment, Liberty

University, an activity legally reserved for persons at least fifteen years and six months of age.

In addition, appellant had asked Jenny what high school she attended. Jenny did not provide a

specific response to that question, but instead told him she went to a school in Bedford County.

On December 15, 2017, Jenny gave her first indication of her age, telling appellant she

was thirteen years old. At some point prior to this disclosure, appellant had made the comment

that “older guys know how to please a girl.” When Jenny asked appellant what he meant by that,

appellant responded the next day with the following message:

So here’s what I think about high school buys [sic] versus older men. I think when boys in high school when they get horny they don’t really understand their own body and don’t know anything about girls . . . . They don’t know really what girls like or don’t like . . . . They can only think about their penis, LOL, and can’t control themselves and just cum . . . . That’s what I remember when I was in high school, LOL. I can tell you stories about what I did with girls in high school if you want, haha . . . [b]y now I’ve been with enough girls that I know a lot. Although, every girl is different. So you always have to ask a girl what they like to be sure. I know the girls - - that girls get aroused more slowly and they like lots of attention to get them ready to cum . . . .

Beginning on January 4, 2018, Jenny and appellant moved their communications from

the Craigslist email format to personal email and text messaging at Jenny’s request (Investigator

Wade hoped to “further the investigation” and trace the email address and phone number

appellant provided to a specific suspect). The two continued to engage in sexually explicit

conversation for the next couple of months, and in those conversations, appellant made

occasional reference to Jenny’s stated age. Specifically, appellant told Jenny she had “a pretty

thirteen Y.O. body with growing curves.” He further remarked that Jenny was “[n]o ordinary 8th

grader, baby!” and said, “if I get this excited when you’re thirteen how excited will you get me

when you’re sixteen?” -3- Following appellant’s sexually explicit comments and repeated references to Jenny’s

stated age, Investigator Wade began constructing a plan for a takedown operation. He first used

the email address and phone number provided by appellant to obtain a return on an

administrative subpoena, which in turn led him to a residence in Forest, Virginia. He then

perused a number of messages appellant had sent that indicated appellant drove a blue Honda

Civic as well as other messages which described appellant’s physical appearance. Upon

conducting surveillance of the residence, Investigator Wade observed that a person matching

appellant’s stated physical appearance lived in the residence and drove a blue Honda Civic.

Once appellant became the primary suspect of the investigation, Jenny asked him to meet

her in person at Cloverhill Boulevard in Bedford County, which was designated by law

enforcement as the takedown site. The two agreed to meet at that location on June 27, 2018 at

4:00 pm. Jenny also requested that appellant go to Walmart beforehand and buy her some

cookies. Appellant agreed to do so and further indicated he would bring lubricant to the site.

Around 3:30 pm on June 27, Investigator Wade was stationed at the Walmart closest to

the takedown site and observed a blue Honda Civic pull into the parking lot. He then saw

appellant emerge from the vehicle, enter the store, and then return to the vehicle with a white

plastic bag in hand. From there, appellant drove to the takedown site and was confronted by

Investigator Wade and other members of law enforcement. Upon Investigator Wade’s request,

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