State v. K. Worthan ( 2023 )


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  •                                                                                             08/08/2023
    DA 22-0389
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    
    2023 MT 151
    KELLY DEAN WORTHAN,
    Petitioner and Appellant,
    v.
    STATE OF MONTANA,
    Respondent and Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM:           District Court of the Twenty-First Judicial District,
    In and For the County of Ravalli, Cause No. DV 20-133
    Honorable Jennifer B. Lint, Presiding Judge
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Appellant:
    Caitlin Carpenter, Montana Innocence Project, Missoula, Montana
    Sarah Lockwood, Tipp, Coburn & Associates, P.C., Missoula, Montana
    For Appellee:
    Austin Knudsen, Montana Attorney General, Roy Brown, Assistant
    Attorney General, Helena, Montana
    William Fulbright, Ravalli County Attorney, Hamilton, Montana
    Submitted on Briefs: June 14, 2023
    Decided: August 8, 2023
    Filed:
    q.,-6.--,f
    __________________________________________
    Clerk
    Justice Laurie McKinnon delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    ¶1     Kelly Dean Wortham (Worthan) appeals the denial of his second postconviction
    relief (PCR) petition relating to his convictions for two counts of sexual intercourse without
    consent, § 45-5-502, MCA; two counts of incest, § 45-5-507, MCA; and one count of
    tampering with a witness, § 45-7-206, MCA. We conclude Worthan’s second petition is
    time barred and must fail.
    ¶2     We affirm and restate the dispositive issue on appeal as whether Worthan’s petition
    is time barred.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    ¶3     Worthan was charged in 2004 by amended information with two counts of sexual
    intercourse without consent and two counts of incest. The victims were his daughters,
    nine-year-old O.W. and eight-year-old K.W., and the offenses were committed between
    November 1, 2002, and April 28, 2003. 1 Worthan was also charged with tampering with
    witnesses, specifically O.W.
    ¶4     A jury convicted Worthan of all counts. The District Court sentenced Worthan to
    130 years in prison with 60 years suspended. Worthan’s convictions were affirmed on
    appeal. State v. Worthan, 
    2006 MT 147
    , 
    332 Mont. 401
    , 
    138 P.3d 805
    . Worthan filed his
    first PCR petition in 2007 asserting a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel (IAC).
    Following an evidentiary hearing, the court denied Worthan’s petition. In 2010, this Court
    1
    O.W. and K.W. were adopted after Worthan’s trial. As a result, their legal initials are now O.B.
    and K.B. Nonetheless, we will refer to them as O.W. and K.W. to conform with the appellate
    briefing.
    2
    affirmed. Worthan v. State, 
    2010 MT 98
    , 
    356 Mont. 206
    , 
    232 P.3d 380
    . Worthan also
    filed IAC claims in federal court, which were all denied. See Worthan v. Law, CV
    11-48-M-DWM (D. Mont. July 27, 2011); affirmed by Worthan v. AG of Mont., 
    514 Fed. Appx. 671
     (9th Cir. 2013); cert denied by Worthan v. Frink, 
    571 U.S. 894
    , 
    134 S. Ct. 224 (2013)
    . Worthan also requested the appointment of counsel, which was denied by the
    district court and affirmed by this Court. State v. Worthan, No. DA 16-0457, 
    2017 MT 74N
    , 
    2017 Mont. LEXIS 132
    . Lastly, in 2015 and 2018, Worthan’s suspended portion of
    his sentence was twice revoked for contacting the victims.
    ¶5     In April 2020, Worthan filed the instant PCR petition, his second, and moved for a
    new trial in the original proceeding and requested discovery. Worthan asserts a Brady
    violation, contending that the State withheld information and records of a different
    proceeding which should have been disclosed to Worthan. The District Court denied
    Worthan’s petition and all outstanding motions without ordering the State to respond.
    ¶6     Some discussion of the underlying facts is necessary. Worthan and his wife,
    Melissa, had three children together: a daughter, O.W.; a daughter, K.W.; and a son, W.W.
    In April 2003, O.W. went to see her friend, C.S., for a sleepover at C.S.’s house. At the
    sleepover, O.W. told C.S., “my dad does bad things to me.” C.S. told her mother, Tammy,
    which prompted Tammy to ask O.W. what Worthan had done to her and when it had
    happened. O.W. explained it was when she was alone with Worthan and while her mother
    would go to the store. O.W. elaborated that Worthan would make her “lick his private
    place.” Tammy reported the abuse to the school counselor. O.W. also disclosed the abuse
    to her teacher.
    3
    ¶7     On April 25, 2003, Shelly Verwolf (Verwolf), Child Protection Supervisor with
    Child and Family Services (CFS), began an investigation into O.W.’s disclosures. O.W.
    was interviewed and disclosed that Worthan would put his “private” in her “private” and
    in her mouth. O.W. explained she was not supposed to talk about the incidents of sexual
    abuse because Worthan warned her he would go to jail if anyone found out. O.W. also
    expressed concern about her sister, K.W., because O.W. had seen Worthan take K.W. into
    his bedroom and lock the bedroom door. Verwolf contacted law enforcement based on the
    information O.W. provided. Verwolf was already aware of a report from March 2003 that
    Worthan was involved in “a separate or unrelated matter of sexual abuse.”2
    ¶8     On April 28, 2003, Verwolf placed an emergency protective hold on O.W. and K.W.
    and transported them to the police station for a law enforcement interview. During the
    interview, O.W. gave disclosures consistent with her prior disclosures, explaining to
    Verwolf and Police Chief Lewis Barnett, that her father put his private spot in her mouth
    and private spot inside her private spot. Verwolf inquired whether anything came out of
    Worthan’s private spot, and O.W. shared it was “white stuff, like slime.” O.W. elaborated
    Worthan made her touch his private spot with her hand. K.W. denied sexual abuse during
    the interview.
    ¶9     Worthan went to the police station when he learned his children were there. Chief
    Barnett interviewed Worthan upon his arrival.        Worthan admitted speaking to O.W.
    2
    At Worthan’s sentencing, his nieces came forward alleging he had sexually abused them as
    children. When one of the nieces discovered Worthan had young daughters, she was so concerned
    that she reported Worthan’s past abuse to the hotline at the Department of Public Health and
    Human Services (DPHHS) in March 2003.
    4
    immediately before his interview and mentioned his prior statement to O.W. about him
    going to jail if O.W. did not recant her statements to Chief Barnett. Worthan denied all
    allegations.
    ¶10    Chief Barnett also interviewed Melissa. Verwolf had left the room to attend to the
    Worthan children where she observed Worthan escorting W.W. out of another room.
    Verwolf told Worthan he could not take the children. Verwolf observed O.W. curled up in
    a ball, crying. Verwolf asked O.W. why she was upset. O.W. explained her mother was
    mad at her for disclosing, and her father told her to tell the authorities what she said was
    not true. O.W. eventually referenced this incident in therapy and told her clinical therapist,
    Dr. Debra Ruggiero, that her mother told her that she should have just lied and said it did
    not happen and that if she got adopted, her mother would not love O.W. anymore.3 DPHHS
    removed all three children from Melissa and Worthan’s care the same day.
    ¶11    Beginning April 28, 2003, O.W. and K.W. lived with Mya Fadely (Mya) and Kevin
    Fadely (Kevin) in foster care for 14 months. Shortly after the placement, O.W.’s foster
    brother Brandon Fadely (Fadely) began sexually abusing O.W. An investigation into
    Fadely’s abuse began in 2011, when Fadely’s adoptive sister disclosed he was also sexually
    abusing her. The State removed O.W. and K.W. from the Fadely foster home. However,
    the State returned the Worthan children to the Fadely foster home when their new
    placement required respite care. When O.W. returned, Fadely continued to sexually assault
    3
    Due to this exchange, Melissa became subject to a no contact order concerning her daughters.
    The court ruled that Melissa would be “excluded from any contact with either [O.W.] or [K.W.]
    during all phases of the trial at which they attend court.”
    5
    O.W. In 2014, O.W. disclosed Fadely’s abuse at a forensic interview. Fadely subsequently
    pled guilty to sexual intercourse without consent of O.W. from April 2003 to September
    2011.
    ¶12     In August 2003, Dr. Ruggiero was retained to conduct separate weekly therapy
    sessions with O.W. and K.W. K.W. eventually disclosed Worthan’s abuse to Dr. Ruggiero
    despite not initially disclosing to the police, Verwolf, or the forensic interviewer.
    Dr. Ruggiero testified she was not surprised that K.W. made a delayed disclosure because
    K.W. “hadn’t had permission all along, to tell.” K.W. explained that the sexual abuse
    committed by Worthan would “tend to be one day [O.W.] and then another [K.W.], kind of
    taking turns.” K.W. said she would dread going home from school because she wondered
    if it was “going to be a day when it was going to happen” to her.
    ¶13     Worthan’s trial began on June 14, 2004. O.W. and K.W. recalled the instances of
    sexual abuse committed by Worthan occurring in his bedroom in their Stevensville
    apartment. The girls ably described the layout of the apartment along with Worthan’s
    bedroom, the bed, and closet. They described in detail to the jury the many instances of
    Worthan’s sexual abuse. The State presented law enforcement and expert witnesses and
    O.W. and K.W. gave corroborating and consistent accounts of Worthan’s abuse.
    ¶14     The jury found Worthan guilty of two counts of sexual intercourse without consent,
    § 45-5-502, MCA; two counts of incest, § 45-5-507, MCA; and one count of tampering
    with a witness, § 45-7-206, MCA. The court imposed sentence and ordered Worthan to
    have no contact for the duration of his sentence with O.W. and K.W., “by any means.”
    Worthan and Melissa’s parental rights were terminated in a separate proceeding.
    6
    ¶15    On June 22, 2004, O.W. and K.W. were removed from the Fadely foster home and
    went to their new foster placement in Hamilton. J.B., the girls’ new foster mother and her
    husband, adopted O.W. and K.W. While the girls were living with J.B., Melissa went to
    Hamilton “on numerous occasions” and would show up at J.B.’s house. As a result, J.B.
    and her husband moved the girls to Missouri in 2008 to give them a “fresh start.” Melissa
    nonetheless continued to contact the girls and send gifts to Missouri.
    ¶16    In June 2013, Worthan called O.W. and K.W. from prison while they were in North
    Carolina celebrating a family member’s birthday. Worthan’s mother-in-law, Pam Cassady
    (Cassady), answered the call. Worthan asked to speak to K.W., and Cassady gave K.W. the
    phone. While speaking with K.W., Worthan repeatedly asked K.W. how she felt about him
    and continued to try to influence K.W. to recant her trial testimony. J.B. said the girls
    believed the trip was a “ruse” so Worthan could speak with them. O.W. and K.W. were
    distraught upon arriving home to Missouri. K.W. remained upset about the call for months.
    ¶17    In November 2014, O.W. testified at Fadely’s sentencing hearing.4           At the
    sentencing hearing, O.W. explained she was placed at the Fadely foster home because CFS
    took her “away from a bad situation” occurring at her other home where she was being
    sexually abused. O.W. testified Fadely, when he was 12 years old, abused her “every night”
    after “a couple weeks” of living there. O.W. explained she would be sleeping in a shared
    bedroom with her foster sisters on the top bunkbed when Fadely would come up onto her
    4
    Melissa continued to pursue O.W. For instance, Melissa met O.W. at the airport when O.W.
    arrived for Fadely’s sentencing. The prosecutor said O.W. was “upset” while in Melissa’s
    presence.
    7
    bunk, place his hand over her mouth, undress her pants halfway, and put his penis into her
    vagina.
    ¶18     In 2015, Worthan’s first revocation occurred based on his phone call to K.W. in
    2013. At the revocation hearing, State Investigator Hulme reported that J.B. relayed O.W.
    had recently moved back to Montana and started living with Melissa and that Melissa had
    begun “trying to convince [O.W.] that [her and K.W.] were brainwashed and that nothing
    had happened.” O.W. testified she reconnected with Melissa when she turned 17 years old
    and recently moved back to Montana to live with Melissa “on and off.” Worthan also
    testified at his revocation hearing, suggesting the court amend his conditions to have
    “unlimited” contact with K.W. and O.W. The court found Worthan violated his no-contact
    condition by directly calling K.W. and by writing to his daughters. The court revoked
    Worthan’s sentence and reimposed the no contact condition.
    ¶19     On June 21, 2015, four days after Worthan’s first revocation judgment, he began
    contacting O.W. through prison phone calls. This continued through 2016. Worthan also
    called O.W.’s fiancé, Batson, forty times—with O.W. on speakerphone for twenty of those
    calls. Worthan urged Batson to convince O.W. to send him an affidavit saying, “she knows
    I didn’t hurt her or whatever.” Worthan also called his former cellmate, Ron Nelson
    (Nelson), six times to arrange for Nelson to instigate contact with O.W. Worthan called
    Nelson seven more times to follow-up whether Nelson had established contact with O.W.
    Worthan urged Nelson to arrange O.W.’s contact with the Montana Innocence Project,
    praised Nelson for his efforts in contacting O.W., and advised Nelson to “make it all about
    her.”
    8
    ¶20   On June 6, 2016, Worthan filed a pro se motion for appointment of “private counsel”
    and a supporting brief in District Court. Worthan alleged O.W. had recanted and referenced
    the Fadely case and corresponding documents.        Worthan asserted newly discovered
    evidence:
    Specifically, this “recantation” made by the victim in this case on numerous
    occasions. The victim (witness) stated that the crime did not occur by the
    defendant. In fact, the victim was being sexually abused before and during
    Defendant’s trial by Brandon Thomas Fadely who is currently serving time
    in Shelby, MT, for sexually abusing the victim in Defendant’s case.
    The District Court denied the motion for appointment of counsel. We affirmed on appeal.
    State v. Worthan, No. DA 16-0457, 
    2017 MT 74N
    , 
    2017 Mont. LEXIS 132
    .
    ¶21   In January 2018 and in preparation for Worthan’s second revocation, State
    Investigator Jesse Jessop (Jessop) contacted O.W. regarding the 2015-2016 phone contact
    from Worthan. Jessop testified that O.W. “unequivocally wanted no contact with Kelly
    Worthan” and declined to testify at the second revocation, wanting “nothing further to do
    with” him. Jessop reported O.W. “was being manipulated by Kelly and Melissa Worthan,
    and their circle of friends, and that the counselor with whom Melissa Worthan had set
    [O.W.] up to ‘investigate false memories’ was a hoax. [O.W.] adamantly re-affirmed her
    actual memories of Defendant sexually abusing her during her childhood.” O.W. also
    explained to Jessop she had received unwanted gifts from Worthan—sent through
    Cassady—including artwork with O.W.’s daughter’s name on it, even though O.W. never
    shared her daughter’s name with Worthan. O.W. discarded the artwork but gave Jessop
    photos of the artwork.
    9
    ¶22    At Worthan’s second revocation hearing, the District Court revoked his sentence—
    based on the multiple phone calls directed at O.W.—and imposed a 130-year sentence with
    no time suspended. The court imposed a no contact condition.
    ¶23    In November 2019, Worthan applied to the Montana Innocence Project, which
    agreed to represent him. The same year, O.W. submitted an affidavit claiming her memory
    of the Fadely abuse was “much clearer” in her mind and she was “unsure” whether Worthan
    sexually abused her.
    ¶24    On April 7, 2020, Worthan filed a second, successive petition for PCR, while
    simultaneously filing a Motion for New Trial and requests for discovery. Based on O.W.’s
    affidavit, Worthan claimed he had “newly discovered evidence” that the State had coached
    O.W. and conspired to cover up the Fadely abuse to implicate Worthan instead. Worthan
    alleged that the State “knew O.W. was being raped by [Fadely] in the foster home,”
    pointing to an alleged “breakdown in the placement” with the Fadely foster family.
    Worthan also claimed the State’s purported concealment of the Fadely abuse constituted a
    Brady violation. Invoking § 46-21-102(2), MCA, Worthan claimed he did not commit the
    crimes “for which he was convicted.” The District Court dismissed his claims in 2022
    without ordering the State to respond. The District Court subsequently denied Worthan’s
    Motion for a New Trial in the criminal docket after the State filed a response and submitted
    witness affidavits. Worthan appeals.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶25    This Court reviews a district court’s denial of a PCR petition to determine whether
    the court’s findings of fact are clearly erroneous and whether its conclusions of law are
    10
    correct. Garding v. State, 
    2020 MT 163
    , ¶ 12, 
    400 Mont. 296
    , 
    466 P.3d 501
    . Discretionary
    rulings in PCR proceedings, including rulings related to whether to hold an evidentiary
    hearing, are reviewed for abuse of discretion. Wilkes v. State, 
    2015 MT 243
    , ¶ 9, 
    380 Mont. 388
    , 
    355 P.3d 755
     (internal citations omitted).
    DISCUSSION
    ¶26    The State argues Worthan’s second PCR petition is time barred since Worthan did
    not raise his newly discovered evidence claim within one year after he proffered the bases
    of his claims in 2016 but did not file his petition until 2020. In turn, Worthan argues all
    new evidence in his second post-conviction petition was timely because he had “an
    intangible suspicion” that O.W. would recant without any “potential concrete knowledge”
    of evidence of her recantation.
    ¶27    Newly discovered evidence is reviewable only if filed within one year after the
    evidence was discovered or reasonably should have been discovered. State v. Root, 
    2003 MT 28
    , ¶ 18, 
    314 Mont. 186
    , 
    64 P.3d 1035
     (citing § 46-21-102(2), MCA). Section
    46-21-102(2), MCA, provides:
    A claim that alleges the existence of newly discovered evidence that, if
    proved and viewed in light of the evidence as a whole would establish that
    the petitioner did not engage in the criminal conduct for which the petitioner
    is convicted, may be raised in a petition filed within 1 year of the date on
    which the conviction becomes final or the date on which the petitioner
    discovers, or reasonably should have discovered, the existence of the
    evidence, whichever is later.
    Subsection 2 provides a narrow exception to the requirement that a PCR petition be filed
    within one year of the conviction becoming final. The triggering point for the one-year
    11
    period to commence running is when the “petitioner discovers, or reasonably should have
    discovered” the existence of the new evidence.
    ¶28    Here, Worthan claims the newly discovered evidence is O.W.’s affidavit and the
    Fadely prosecution. However, Worthan’s own admissions and efforts to secure O.W.’s
    recantation establishes that, as early as 2016 when he filed a pro se motion for appointment
    of counsel and supporting brief, he personally represented to the court that the victim
    offered a recantation and he also referenced the Fadely case. More particularly, on June 6,
    2016, Worthan asserted a claim of newly discovered evidence and the need for court
    appointed counsel when he filed a pleading indicating:
    Specifically, this “recantation” made by the victim in this case on numerous
    occasions. The victim (witness) state that the crime did not occur by the
    defendant. In fact, the victim was being sexually abused before and during
    Defendant’s trial by Brandon Thomas Fadely who is currently serving time
    in Shelby, MT, for sexually abusing the victim in Defendant’s case.
    ¶29    Thus, to accept Worthan’s argument that he did not know of the “recantation” until
    2020 when O.W.’s affidavit was filed and that he did not know of the Fadely prosecution
    in 2016 would render meaningless the statutory language of § 46-21-102(2), MCA,
    requiring that the petition be filed within one year from when the petitioner discovered or
    reasonably should have discovered the existence of evidence. Through Worthan’s own
    words and representations to the court, he knew of the “recantation” and Fadely conviction
    in 2016 yet waited until 2020 to file his petition. Worthan represented to the Court that
    there was a recantation and described Fadely’s conviction for sexually abusing O.W. We
    cannot ignore Worthan’s own admissions, affirmations, conduct, and pleadings. Further,
    by March 28, 2017, Worthan was on notice by this Court that his previous filings were
    12
    insufficient because he had not filed a PCR petition and counsel could not be appointed in
    the absence of a petition. Worthan, 
    2017 MT 74N
    , ¶¶ 6-7.
    ¶30    We conclude that Worthan’s PCR petition is time barred. Our conclusion that
    Worthan’s petition is time barred is dispositive of Worthan’s alleged Brady violation,
    request for new trial, and request for discovery. 5
    CONCLUSION
    ¶31    Affirmed.
    /S/ LAURIE McKINNON
    We Concur:
    /S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
    /S/ BETH BAKER
    /S/ DIRK M. SANDEFUR
    /S/ JIM RICE
    5
    A new trial motion must be filed within 30 days following a verdict or finding of guilt and be
    served upon the prosecution. Section 46-16-702(1)–(2), MCA. Worthan’s deadline to file his
    motion passed on July 21, 2004. Worthan cannot simply rename his PCR petition a motion for
    new trial. Here, Worthan alleged the same newly discovered evidence in his motion for new trial
    as in his PCR petition. Worthan’s conviction is 16 years old, he is presumed guilty, and he no
    longer has available to him the option of requesting a new trial—based on the statutory language
    itself. Worthan is limited to pursuing relief under the PCR statutes.
    13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: DA 22-0390

Filed Date: 8/8/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/8/2023