Trout v. State

377 P.3d 296, 2016 Alas. App. LEXIS 120, 2016 WL 3545482
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJune 24, 2016
Docket2504 A-11365
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 377 P.3d 296 (Trout v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trout v. State, 377 P.3d 296, 2016 Alas. App. LEXIS 120, 2016 WL 3545482 (Ala. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

Judge ALLARD.

A jury convicted Lisa Miranda Trout of two counts of first-degree sexual abuse of a minor and one count of second-degree sexual abuse of a minor based on allegations that she sexually abused her oldest son, J.T.

Trout challenges her convictions on appeal, raising four claims of error. She first argues that the superior court committed plain error when it failed to ensure that her decision to testify at trial was made knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily. Second, she argues that the court should have instructed the jury to presume that.a police detective's missing notes, had they been available, would have been favorable to her. Third, Trout argues that the court should have allowed the jury to hear more details about her ex-husband's prior domestic violence because it was relevant to prove that her ex-husband had manipulated their: oldest son into making false allegations against her, Lastly, Trout argues that the trial court erred when it sentenced her to a term of active imprison ment beyond the presumptive range for her most serious offense without any finding of good cause.

For the reasons explained here, we reject Trout's claims and affirm her convictions and sentence.

Backgrmmd Facts

Lisa Trout and her ex-husband Dunovan Trout have three boys. The, couple married in 1998, separated in 2000, and divorced acrimoniously in 2002, There was domestic violence in the relationship. Trout had sole custody of the children from 2000 until 2009, and during that period, Dunovan saw the children only occasionally.

Trout was a heavy drinker., And, according to all three of her sons, she was violent and abusive when she was intoxicated. J.T., Trout's oldest son, testified that he tried to protect his brothers from Trout when she became intoxicated. -

Trout was arrested in 2009 for felony driving under the influence. During her incarceration, Trout's children went to live with their grandfather (Trout's father) and his wife, J.T., who was fifteen years old at the time, located his father Dunovan on the internet. The boys began communicating and visiting with their father, After an argument with their grandfather, the boys moved in with Dunovan, his new wife Michelle, and then-«daughter.

At some point while J.T. and his brothers were living with Dunovan, J,T. became angry and upset, Dunovan asked J.T. about his relationship with his mother and whether she burt him. J.T. said "yes," and his father continued asking questions, including whether she hit him and whether she raped him. J.T. began to ery and said "yes." Dunovan and J.T. told the pastor at their church that J.T.'s mother sexually abused him.

Around the same time, Dunovan's wife Michelle reported to the police that Dunovan had driven while intoxicated and physically assaulted her. In response to these allegations, Dunovan told the police that Michelle had physically abused the children and, for the first time, he reported to the police that JT. had alleged that his mother sexually abused him,

Follovwng this report, Michelle brought J.T. to a children's advocacy center, and J.T. told a social worker and Anchorage Police Detective Brett Sarber that his mother had been sexually abusing him since he was in kindergarten or first grade

Detective Sarbez' began an investigation and obtained a Glass warrant to record a conversation between J.T. and his mother. 1 To prepare J.T., Sarber wrote a list of questions on a notepad for J.T. to ask his mother. During the phone call, J.T. told Trout it had been bothering him for some time that she had sex with him,. Trout denied having any memory of abusing J.T. and blamed any *298 possible wrongful behavior on her excessive use of alcohol. When J.T. asked Trout if she ever sexually abused his brothers or if it was just him, Trout responded that it was "just [him].”

Sarber also separately interviewed Trout. During this interview, Trout denied the allegations. At one point in the interview, however, she stated that she wondered if something might have happened between her and J.T. when she woke up after a night of drinking.

Trout was charged with one count of first-degree sexual abuse of a minor for engaging in fellatio with J.T. and one count of first-degree sexual abuse of a minor for having sexual intercourse with him; 2 both incidents were alleged to have taken place in February or March of 2009 (4.e., shortly before Trout's 2009 arrest for felony DUI). Trout was also charged with a third count, second-degree sexual abuse of a minor for touching .s genitals in October 2008. 3

Trout's Trial

The State's theory at trial was that J.T; protected his brothers from physical abuse and neglect in their home while Trout sexually abused J.T. for many years, The State submitted evidence of both parents' alcohol abuse problems, prior Office of Children's Services (OCS) involvement with the family, and Trout's physically abusive conduct toward her children when she was intoxicated. All three boys testified that their mother physically abused them when she was intoxicated. Dunovan also testified about his sons' reports of physical abuse, stating that, according to his sons, Trout beat them with wine bottles and curtain rods, and that they had sometimes slept in the car in winter to escape Trout's abuse.

J.T. testified that his mother began abusing him sexually when he was in kindergarten or first grade. J.T. testified that sometime during this period, he woke up on the couch and his mother was drunk, naked, and on top of him, trying to have sex with him.

J.T. described several instances of sexual abuse between ages 5 and 15, including the three incidents for which Trout was charged and ultimately convicted. One of these incidents involved penile-vaginal sex that J.T. testified took place about two weeks before Trout's 2009 felony DUI arrest, J.T. testified that in the second incident, which occurred around the same time, Trout hit him several times and then performed oral sex on him. In the third incident, which occurred around Halloween 2008, J.T. testified that, Trout tried to have sex with him by unzipping his pants and pulling out his penis, but he pushed her away.

J.T. also testified that his mother initiated sexual acts or attempted 'sexual intercourse with him about onee a month, but he never told his brothers because he did not want them'to think she was a bad person. J.T. stated that he never reported the sexual abuge because he did not think anyone would believe" lfum

In addition to J. T’s testlmony, the jury also heard the entire Glass warrant conversation between J.T. and Trout in which J.T. confronted Trout with his allegations of sexual abuse, The jury also heard the recorded interview between Trout and Detective Sar-ber.

The defense theory at trial was that J.T.\s father manipulated J.T. to falsely accuse Trout of sexually abusing him. The defense emphasized that Dunovan hated Trout, had previously physically abused Trout, and had a pattern of deflecting attention from his own bad behavior by accusing others of bad behavior. The defense also emphasized that Dunovan had a financial motive to manipulate J.T.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
377 P.3d 296, 2016 Alas. App. LEXIS 120, 2016 WL 3545482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trout-v-state-alaskactapp-2016.