Gary Pugh v. Commonwealth of Kentucky ( 2023 )


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  •              IMPORTANT NOTICE
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED OPINION
    THIS OPINION IS DESIGNATED “NOT TO BE PUBLISHED.”
    PURSUANT TO THE RULES OF CIVIL PROCEDURE
    PROMULGATED BY THE SUPREME COURT, RAP 40(D), THIS
    OPINION IS NOT TO BE PUBLISHED AND SHALL NOT BE
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    CASE IN ANY COURT OF THIS STATE; HOWEVER,
    UNPUBLISHED KENTUCKY APPELLATE DECISIONS,
    RENDERED AFTER JANUARY 1, 2003, MAY BE CITED FOR
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    CONSIDERATION BY THE COURT SHALL BE SET OUT AS AN
    UNPUBLISHED DECISION IN THE FILED DOCUMENT AND A
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    THE ACTION.
    RENDERED: FEBRUARY 16, 2023
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    Supreme Court of Kentucky
    2021-SC-0448-MR
    GARY PUGH                                                            APPELLANT
    ON APPEAL FROM MCCRACKEN CIRCUIT COURT
    V.                HONORABLE TIMOTHY KALTENBACH, JUDGE
    NO. 20-CR-0399
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY                                              APPELLEE
    MEMORANDUM OPINION OF THE COURT
    AFFIRMING
    A McCracken Circuit Court jury convicted Gary Pugh of first-degree
    assault, first-degree rape, and first-degree sexual abuse. Pugh was also found
    to be a persistent felony offender in the first-degree. The jury recommended a
    sentence of life imprisonment which the trial court then imposed. Pugh now
    appeals as a matter of right.1 He argues the trial court committed reversable
    error when it denied his motion for directed verdict on the charge of first-degree
    assault. He also argues he was prejudiced by statements made by the
    Commonwealth during voir dire concerning the concept of proof beyond a
    1   Ky. Const. § 110(2)(b).
    reasonable doubt. Upon review, we find no error and hereby affirm the
    judgment of the McCracken Circuit Court.
    I.     FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Seventy-nine-year-old Wanda Burton lived on Ward Street in Paducah for
    the last fifteen years with her pet dog. Prior to this incident, she was diagnosed
    with cancer of the eye and had undergone chemotherapy and radiation
    treatment. Wanda had been recently hospitalized three times for a period of
    one week each time. She sustained a cracked hip from falling and at least one
    of the hospitalizations was because of her cracked hip.
    Wanda lived next door to Shawn and Jenny Beach. Shawn helped
    Wanda with various household repairs and his wife and daughter visited
    occasionally. Wanda would be invited over to eat supper with the Beaches and
    would sometimes watch their daughter.
    Wanda had been a member of the Victory Assembly of God church for
    approximately twenty years. She attended church faithfully until her ill-health
    kept her from attending services. Church is where she met Appellant Gary
    Pugh. Wanda and Pugh had been communicating over Facebook messenger for
    some time prior to Pugh’s arrival to Wanda’s home in July of 2020. They
    discussed mostly God and her cancer. Pugh had offered to come over and pray
    with Wanda about her cancer, but Wanda never felt well enough to have any
    company.
    On July 20, 2020, Gary again asked Wanda if he could come over to give
    her anointment oil and pray for her eye. This time, Wanda agreed. Pugh’s
    2
    friend Cole Hoppman gave him a ride over to Wanda’s house and waited in the
    car for him to return.
    On warm days Wanda would typically open her front door but leave the
    screen door shut and locked. When Gary came over that evening, around 7:30
    p.m., he went inside and shut the front door and locked it. Pugh gave Wanda a
    hug and sat down in her rocking chair. Pugh asked Wanda where she kept her
    anointing oil. Wanda replied that she kept the oil in the kitchen and went to
    retrieve it. Pugh followed her. When Wanda told him she did not need his help,
    he grabbed her hands and pulled her into her bathroom locking the door
    behind him.
    Pugh got Wanda down on the bathroom floor and hit her head on the
    bathtub. Pugh beat her with his fists on her face and around her eye that was
    afflicted with cancer. He broke her nose and caused her to sustain a facial
    fracture around her eye socket. He grabbed her head by the hair and slammed
    it into the tile floor. Wanda tried to fight back by kicking Pugh. He told her, “If
    you don’t quit, I could kill you.” He pulled up her blouse and pushed her bra
    up and began sucking her right breast. He tore at her shorts, ripping them
    open at the crotch. He attempted to put his penis into her vagina, but he was
    unable to achieve an erection, so he inserted his finger instead causing
    abrasions to her inner labia and inside her vagina. There was also a tear in the
    skin between her vagina and rectum.
    While the assault was occurring, Wanda’s neighbor, Jenny Beach had
    noticed a strange car parked on the wrong side of the street behind a bush.
    3
    Jenny sent her husband Shawn to investigate. Shawn saw Cole Hopman
    sitting in the driver’s seat. Hopman told Shawn he gave a friend a ride to pray
    with Wanda. Shawn was suspicious because the car was not parked in the
    driveway. When Shawn went to knock on Wanda’s door, he noticed the door
    was shut, which Wanda rarely did when the weather was warm. He knocked
    even louder when he heard no reply. When Wanda heard Shawn knocking, she
    screamed. Pugh stopped his assault, put on his pants, and ran for the front
    door. When Shawn heard Wanda scream, he was about to kick the door in
    when Pugh ran out through the door saying “She fell. She fell. She fell.”
    Shawn told Pugh to stay where he was while he checked on Wanda.
    When he saw Wanda, her face was severely bruised, mostly around her eye,
    and her lip was lacerated. She told him Pugh beat her and tried to rape her.
    Shawn told his wife to call the police and Pugh handed him his phone and told
    Shawn to call the cops. Shawn went over to Cole Hopman’s car and retrieved
    the keys from the vehicle.
    When McCracken County Sheriff’s Deputy Aiden Pedgrim arrived at the
    scene, there were several people around who were very upset with Pugh. He
    placed Pugh in his cruiser to separate him from the others. Pugh initially told
    Deputy Pedgrim that he went over to Wanda’s house to pray and that she fell.
    Pugh later told him that Cole Hopman was the person who assaulted Wanda.
    Detective Martin was the lead investigator. She took pictures at the
    hospital and of Wanda’s residence. She also took pictures of Pugh’s superman
    ring that appeared to match the injuries on Wanda’s face. Detective Martin
    4
    discovered Pugh’s watch in Wanda’s bathroom. When she asked Pugh about it,
    he said it was because he was trying to rescue Wanda from Hopman.
    At the hospital, Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner (SANE) Emily Honey
    performed an examination and collected a Sexual Assault Forensic Evidence
    (SAFE) kit from Wanda. Nurse Honey collected swabs from Wanda’s cheek,
    breast, and pelvic area and performed a pelvic exam. She testified the trauma
    and abrasion to Wanda’s vagina and labia were consistent with a sexual
    assault. A buccal swab was taken from Pugh which Hunter Stanley from the
    Kentucky State Police Western Crime Lab testified matched the DNA profile
    from the saliva sample taken from Wanda’s right breast.
    Dr. Jeremy Klope treated Wanda that day at the Mercy Lourdes
    Emergency room. He testified that Wanda sustained a laceration on her lip
    which required stitches and had swelling around her eye. He performed a CT
    scan which indicated she had a nasal and facial fracture as well as bleeding
    within her nasal cavity. Dr. Klope testified most of the trauma Wanda
    sustained was around her eyes. Wanda at the time of the trial was still unable
    to breathe properly through the left side of her nose unless she pressed the
    other side closed. Her nose continuously runs, and she would have to have
    surgery to repair her nose in order for it to function properly.
    Pugh testified at trial and his version of events differed both from
    Wanda’s version and his previous statements. He told the jury that he went to
    Wanda’s house that day to give her an estimate on cutting her grass, after
    which he went to wash his hands in her bathroom and accidently left his watch
    5
    there. Later that day, he told the jury, he went back to Wanda’s house to pray
    with her. When he entered her house, he shut and locked her door out of force
    of habit. When he gave Wanda a hug, he sneezed on her chest because of his
    allergies. Wanda went to get the anointment oil, and according to Pugh, fell.
    Pugh went to help her, and she told him not to touch her. When Wanda went
    to the bathroom she fell and hit her face. Pugh testified that as he tried to help
    her again, she pushed him away. Pugh said she fell a total of four times and
    the last time he tried to help, she tore her shorts. Pugh said he told a different
    version of events previously because he was scared.
    Pugh was initially indicted on September 21, 2020, for first-degree
    unlawful imprisonment, second degree assault, first-degree rape, and first-
    degree sexual abuse. The Commonwealth sought, and the grand jury returned,
    a superseding indictment on March 18, 2021, amending the second-degree
    assault to first-degree and adding a persistent felony offender in the first-
    degree charge. The Commonwealth agreed to dismissal of the unlawful
    imprisonment charge after the close of evidence. At trial, after the close of the
    Commonwealths’ case and at the close of evidence, Pugh made a motion for a
    directed verdict on the charge of assault in the first degree and the other
    charges. Pugh argued that there was insufficient evidence presented by the
    Commonwealth for a reasonable jury member to conclude that Wanda had
    sustained a serious physical injury as required for a conviction of assault in
    the first-degree. The trial court denied the motions and the case went to the
    jury. The jury found Pugh guilty of assault, rape, and sexual abuse in the first-
    6
    degree. The jury also found Pugh to be a persistent felony offender in the first-
    degree and recommended a sentence of life imprisonment. The trial court
    followed the recommendation of the jury and sentenced Pugh accordingly. This
    appeal followed. We now discuss the merits of the appeal.
    II.   ANALYSIS
    Pugh argues the trial court erred by not granting his directed verdict
    motion on the charge of assault in the first-degree. He also argues his rights
    were substantially prejudiced by the Commonwealth’s comments during voir
    dire regarding proof beyond a reasonable doubt. While Pugh’s first issue is
    preserved, he concedes that his second issue is unpreserved.
    A. The Trial Court did not err when it denied Pugh’s motion for a
    directed verdict on assault in the first-degree.
    Pugh argues that the Commonwealth did not present enough evidence
    during trial to show that Wanda had sustained a serious physical injury during
    the assault and, as such, the trial court should have granted a directed verdict
    on that charge. This Court has previously stated that:
    On motion for directed verdict, the trial court must draw all fair and
    reasonable inferences from the evidence in favor of the
    Commonwealth. If the evidence is sufficient to induce a reasonable
    juror to believe beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is
    guilty, a directed verdict should not be given. For the purpose of
    ruling on the motion, the trial court must assume that the evidence
    for the Commonwealth is true, but reserving to the jury questions
    as to the credibility and weight to be given to such testimony.
    Commonwealth v. Benham, 
    816 S.W.2d 186
    , 187 (Ky. 1991). On appellate
    review, the test of a directed verdict is, if under the evidence as a whole, it
    7
    would be clearly unreasonable for a jury to find guilt, only then is the
    defendant entitled to a directed verdict of acquittal. 
    Id.
    Pugh was convicted of assault in the first-degree, a class B felony. The
    relevant portion of Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS) 508.010(1)(a) states that a
    person is guilty of assault in the first degree when he “intentionally causes
    serious physical injury to another person by means of a deadly weapon or a
    dangerous instrument[.]” Pugh argues that the Commonwealth failed to prove
    beyond a reasonable doubt that Wanda sustained a serious physical injury as
    required under the statute. Serious physical injury is an essential element of
    assault in the first-degree. KRS 500.080 (17) defines “serious physical injury”
    as “physical injury which creates a substantial risk of death, or which causes
    serious and prolonged disfigurement, prolonged impairment of health, or
    prolonged loss or impairment of the function of any bodily organ.”
    This Court has consistently held that medical testimony is not required
    to prove serious physical injury and that the victim is certainly competent to
    testify about their own injuries. Commonwealth v. Hocker, 
    865 S.W.2d 323
    ,
    325 (Ky. 1993). However, in order to prove a serious physical injury, we require
    a “fairly strict level of proof.” Prince v. Commonwealth, 
    576 S.W.2d 244
    , 246
    (Ky. App. 1978). It is undisputed that Wanda suffered from a broken nose and
    facial fracture. At the time of the trial, almost one year after the assault she
    was still suffering from a deviated septum caused by her nasal fracture. Her
    nose continuously ran, and she could not breathe normally through her nose
    as she once had prior to the assault.
    8
    Our Court of Appeals, when weighing whether an eleven-month-old child
    had suffered a serious physical injury when the defendant in that case broke
    her humerus,2 surveyed other jurisdictions and found:
    [W]hether a single type of injury involving broken bones
    constituted sufficient bodily injury to support aggravated assault
    have generally found them sufficient under the facts or evidence
    presented at trial where the victim suffered a broken ankle, arm,
    back, cheek bone, collarbone, finger, hand, jaw, leg, nose, rib,
    shoulder, and skull.
    Clift v. Commonwealth, 
    105 S.W.3d 467
    , 470-71 (Ky. App. 2003) (citing Tracy A.
    Bateman, J.D., Annotation, Sufficiency of Bodily Injury to Support Charge of
    Aggravated Assault, 
    5 A.L.R.5th 243
     (1992)). (Emphasis added.)
    This Court has also held that the seriousness of the physical injury is
    dependent on the characteristics of the victim. Schrimsher v. Commonwealth,
    
    190 S.W.3d 318
    , 329 (Ky 2006). In Clift, as in Schrimsher, the victims in both
    cases were especially vulnerable since both were infants under the age of one.
    Infants are especially vulnerable in ways that adults are not. And while Wanda
    still enjoys mobility and is able to fend for herself, she too, is at an equally
    vulnerable stage of life. In some ways, perhaps more so. Having suffered
    through cancer and several hospitalizations in the near past, and having
    cracked her hip from falling, her ability to recover from trauma is arguably less
    than that of a child. At the time of the trial, approximately eleven months after
    the attack, her nose still did not function normally. This certainly is a
    prolonged loss or impairment of the function of a bodily organ. Pugh argues
    2   Humerus is the upper arm bone, colloquially known as the funny bone.
    9
    that she could have had surgery to repair her deviated septum and have a fully
    functioning nose if only she chose to do so. Pugh, impliedly so, urges this
    Court to consider her failure to surgically remedy her affliction, akin to a type
    of contributory negligence, or waiver of some sort. Pugh has cited no case law
    to support this position. And while Pugh’s concern for Wanda’s health,
    howsoever belatedly acquired, is certainly grounds for this Court to be
    optimistic regarding his prospects for rehabilitation, this Court will not
    sanction a rule saddling the victim with such a burden. There may be a
    plethora of reasons why a surgery is delayed or not undertaken by a victim. For
    no surgery is without risk, especially for a lady of advanced years recovering
    from cancer and rape and a horrific assault. Therefore, the trial court
    committed no error when it denied the motion for a directed verdict on the
    assault in the first-degree charge.
    B. The Commonwealth’s statements concerning reasonable doubt did
    not cause a manifest injustice requiring reversal.
    Pugh also argues that the Commonwealth made impermissible statements
    defining the concept of reasonable doubt. During voir dire, the Commonwealth
    made the following statement about reasonable doubt:
    None of us can tell you what reasonable doubt is. We can’t
    give a specific definition. I can tell you a little bit about what it’s
    not. It’s not proving guilt beyond any doubt, beyond a shadow of a
    doubt, but beyond a reasonable doubt. There’s a distinction there,
    it’s not beyond any doubt, it’s not beyond a shadow of a doubt, it’s
    beyond a reasonable doubt. Reasonable and doubt are commonly
    used words that you in your good common sense and experience
    can take care of and define at the time you render a verdict.
    10
    As Pugh concedes in his brief, this issue is unpreserved. Consequently, this
    Court will review this issue using the palpable error standard under RCr3
    10.26. Early v. Commonwealth, 
    470 S.W.3d 729
    , 737 (Ky. 2015). For an error
    to be palpable it must be “easily perceptible, plain, obvious and readily
    noticeable.” Brewer v.Commonwealth, 
    206 S.W.3d 343
    , 349 (Ky. 2006). An
    unpreserved error may be corrected on appeal if failure to do so would cause a
    manifest injustice. Commonwealth v. Goss, 
    428 S.W.3d 619
    , 626-627 (Ky.
    2014). This is an error that if it remained uncorrected, there would be a
    likelihood of a different result, or call into question the defendant’s right to due
    process. Id. at 627.
    We have held that trial courts should prohibit counsel from offering any
    definition of reasonable doubt during any phase of the trial. Commonwealth v.
    Callahan, 
    675 S.W.2d 391
    , 393 (Ky. 1984). And we held that reversal is
    required should there be an actual violation of this rule. Simpson v.
    Commnwealth, 
    759 S.W.2d 224
    , 226 (Ky. 1988). However, we have held there
    was no error when the prosecutor commented during voir dire the
    Commonwealth had the burden to prove their case beyond a reasonable doubt
    and not beyond a shadow of doubt. Johnson v. Commonwealth, 
    184 S.W.3d 544
    , 549 (Ky. 2005). When discussing the rule Callahan expounded, this
    Court, in Johnson, pointed out the factual similarities between that case and
    Callahan. Id. at 549. We noted in both cases a prosecutor’s attempt to define
    what reasonable doubt is not should not be considered error. And later on, this
    3   Kentucky Rules of Criminal Procedure.
    11
    Court held that a similar statement did not constitute palpable error when the
    issue went unpreserved. Cuzick v. Commonwealth, 
    276 S.W.3d 260
    , 268 (Ky.
    2009).
    The comments made by the prosecutor in this case are essentially the
    same as those made in Johnson and Cuszick. In Johnson, even though the
    issue was preserved by contemporaneous objection, we found no error.
    Johnson, 184 S.W.3d at 549. And since Pugh, as in Cuzick, failed to preserve
    the issue, we find no error, palpable or otherwise. Aside from the testimony of
    Pugh, which the jury apparently found unconvincing, the evidence was
    overwhelming on the issue of Pugh’s guilt. There is no manifest injustice here
    which would require reversal of the conviction.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    Based on the foregoing, we find that the McCracken Circuit Court
    committed no error when it denied Pugh’s motion for a directed verdict on the
    charge of assault in the first-degree. Likewise, upon review of the comments
    made by the prosecutor during voir dire, we find no manifest injustice and
    therefore no grounds for reversal of the conviction. We hereby affirm the
    judgement of the trial court.
    All sitting. All concur.
    12
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT
    Roy Alyette Durham II
    Assistant Public Advocate
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE
    Daniel J. Cameron
    Attorney General of Kentucky
    Jenny L. Sanders
    Ken W. Riggs
    Assistant Attorneys General
    13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2021 SC 0448

Filed Date: 6/26/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/29/2023