State v. James LaPierre ( 2012 )


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  •                                                    Supreme Court
    No. 2010-341-C.A.
    (P1/08-9A)
    State                      :
    v.                       :
    James LaPierre.                 :
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before
    publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to
    notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250
    Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone 222-
    3258 of any typographical or other formal errors in order that
    corrections may be made before the opinion is published.
    Supreme Court
    No. 2010-341-C.A.
    (P1/08-9A)
    State                       :
    v.                        :
    James LaPierre.                  :
    Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.
    OPINION
    Chief Justice Suttell, for the Court. The defendant, James LaPierre, 1 appeals from a
    judgment of conviction of three counts of first-degree child molestation and three counts of
    second-degree child molestation. On appeal, the defendant contends that the trial justice’s denial
    of his motion for a new trial was clearly erroneous because the jury’s verdict was against the
    weight of the evidence and failed to do substantial justice. Specifically, he argues that the
    testimony of the complaining witness was “so characterized by vagueness, illogic, inconsistency,
    and lack of recall that she was simply incredible.” For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we
    affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.
    I
    Facts and Procedural History
    The defendant met the complaining witness’s mother, Susan, 2 around March 1996, and
    the two began dating shortly thereafter. At some point during the summer of that same year,
    1
    The defendant legally changed his name to Miguel Monti in 1991. Because defendant’s name,
    however, is listed as James LaPierre in the case name and Superior Court documents, we shall
    refer to him as James LaPierre.
    2
    Because the complainant was a minor child at the time these incidents were reported, we shall
    use pseudonyms for her and her immediate family members and any person who was under the
    age of eighteen at the time to protect their privacy.
    -1-
    Susan introduced her three children to defendant. Jane, the complaining witness in this case, was
    the oldest of the three and the only girl. At that time, Jane was seven years old and the family
    lived at an apartment located on Atwells Avenue in the City of Providence.            Eventually,
    defendant began babysitting Susan’s children while she was working. In the fall of 1997, after
    becoming pregnant with defendant’s child, Susan and her children moved to Palfrey Place in
    Providence, at which time Jane was approximately eight years old. After the couple’s baby was
    born, Susan returned to work and defendant resumed babysitting on those nights.
    At trial, Susan testified that when Jane was either eight or nine years old, Jane informed
    her that defendant had “touched her butt.” 3 Susan further testified that she confronted defendant
    about her daughter’s comment, and he denied it. Later that day or the next day, Jane expressed
    to her mother that she had lied and that the alleged touching had not occurred. Jane testified at
    trial that between the initial disclosure to her mother and her subsequent recantation, she had
    spoken with defendant and he had “asked [her] not to tell her [mother]” or he would “[d]rag
    [them] through the mud.” Jane testified that defendant’s threat scared her, so she went back and
    told her mom that it never happened. Susan attested that, after her daughter’s revelation, she
    “watch[ed] for little thing[s],” but admitted that there were a number of times that she allowed
    her daughter to be alone with defendant notwithstanding the disclosure and her concerns that
    arose from it.
    In October 2000, defendant and Susan ended their dating relationship, but defendant
    continued to see their son on a daily basis. The next month, defendant began dating Kelly, a
    friend of Susan’s, with whom he later cohabitated. 4 In February 2005, however, defendant
    3
    During a grand jury proceeding held in 2005, Susan testified that Jane was either five or six
    years old at the time of this disclosure.
    4
    Kelly had a daughter who also lived with them.
    -2-
    moved out of Kelly’s residence to Aqueduct Road in the City of Cranston. The defendant
    continued to provide care for his son five days per week, so he discussed his need for a babysitter
    during those times with Susan, and she suggested that Jane babysit. The defendant testified that
    Jane babysat at his house “roughly” twenty-five to thirty times between February and April of
    2005, and that she would sleep over on the nights she was there.
    When Jane was in seventh grade, she became best friends with her classmate, Andrea. 5
    Jane testified that she told Andrea about what defendant did with her when she was younger after
    finding Andrea “in the science room on the floor crying.” 6 Jane stated:
    “I had asked [Andrea] what was wrong, and she kind of like lashed
    out on me and said that I wouldn’t understand. I asked her to tell
    me and maybe I could [understand,] and she told me, and when she
    told me I confided to her because I did understand, and I * * * did
    know how to give some type of advice to kind of help her calm
    down.”
    Jane further testified that Andrea was the only person she told about what defendant “had done to
    [her]” because she “didn’t want anybody to judge [her].”
    On April 28, 2005, Jane attended a Thursday night youth-group church event held in
    Cranston with Andrea. She was supposed to babysit at defendant’s house that night, so she
    asked the church’s bus driver to drop her off at Aqueduct Road rather than at her own address.
    According to Jane, when she arrived at defendant’s apartment, defendant asked her whether she
    needed pajamas and, after she responded affirmatively, requested that she change in front of
    5
    Andrea, however, testified that she met Jane in the eighth grade.
    6
    Although Jane alluded to her discussions about “what had happened with [defendant]” being
    sexual in nature, Andrea testified that the subject matter about these “private conversation[s]”
    with Jane was, in fact, sexual.
    -3-
    him. 7 Jane testified that she rejected his solicitation, and defendant asked her “[w]hy not?” Jane
    stated, however, that his questioning was interrupted by the home telephone ringing. 8
    According to Jane, she answered the telephone and heard the “bus monitor” yelling, “[i]s
    [defendant] touching [you], is he raping [you], is anything wrong?” 9 Jane testified that the “bus
    monitor” also stated that “they were on their way back,” so she told defendant that she forgot her
    bag on the bus and, subsequently, “ran out of the house.” 10 Jane further averred that by the time
    she got outside, the school bus already had returned and the police had arrived. The defendant
    testified that after he left his apartment, he saw “a very large amount of kids outside” who were
    making “a lot of noise and ruckus.” He stated that he heard them shouting, “That’s the one who
    raped her” and that they started running toward him. In response to this situation, defendant
    testified that he got into his truck and drove away. The defendant attested that he called his
    home telephone, that Jane answered it, and that she told him that she did not tell anyone that he
    had raped her, but stated that Andrea “had said something to the people on the bus.”
    A female officer questioned Jane, asking “[i]f what everyone was saying was the truth.”
    Jane testified that, at first, she told the officer that the allegations were a lie and that defendant
    had not done anything to her; but, after being told by the officer that she would get into trouble if
    7
    The defendant denied that this conversation occurred and testified that their discussion revolved
    around why she was so late getting to his apartment as well as babysitting instructions.
    8
    The defendant asserted that “the [tele]phone never rang in the house.”
    9
    Although Jane testified that it was the “bus monitor” who called her, both the bus driver and
    Andrea testified that the bus driver was the only adult on the bus that night.
    10
    According to the bus driver, Jane had asked that night if she could be the last kid to get
    dropped off; and, when he denied her request, “[s]he was a little upset.” Subsequently, after
    leaving defendant’s address, the bus driver testified that he “hear[d] the buzzer to the door go off
    and all of the kids started jumping out of the back door of the bus.” Based on information
    provided to him by Andrea, the bus driver returned to defendant’s address.
    -4-
    she was lying, Jane admitted “the truth.” 11 Jane then was brought to the Cranston police
    department and later was joined by her mother. After leaving the police station, Susan and Jane
    both spoke with defendant on the telephone. According to Jane, when defendant spoke with her,
    “[h]e was begging [her] to say that there was no penetration.” She testified that defendant was
    crying and that there were loud noises, similar to “water crashing,” that she could hear in the
    background. Susan testified that defendant said to her that “he was a monster, and he was sorry”
    during this telephone conversation. 12
    Kelly likewise testified that she spoke with defendant that night, asserting that “[h]e was
    hysterical” and crying during their conversation and that he said to her “that there was an
    incident where he * * * put baby powder on [Jane] * * * [but] that if he did something to her, he
    doesn’t remember.” Kelly further testified that defendant said that he was in a hotel “on the run”
    and that he wanted to kill himself. She stated that he continuously referred to himself as a
    “monster,” while exclaiming that “he couldn’t believe what he had done and that he felt bad and
    that he was sorry.”
    A grand jury indicted defendant on four counts of first-degree child molestation, and he
    was arrested on May 24, 2005. As the prosecutor was preparing Jane for her testimony on the
    eve of the trial, however, “other instances of alleged criminality were uncovered,” 13 and, as a
    11
    It is unclear from the record what Jane originally told the police about what had happened
    between her and defendant; however, defendant subsequently was charged with four separate
    counts of first-degree child molestation under G.L. 1956 § 11-37-8.1 (“A person is guilty of first
    degree child molestation sexual assault if he or she engages in sexual penetration with a person
    fourteen (14) years of age or under.”).
    12
    This information was not, however, provided by Susan to the police within her initial
    statement, her later statement to the Providence police, or her 2005 grand jury testimony.
    13
    During the motion for the new trial, defendant argued that it was at this time that Jane
    “change[d] the place, change[d] the dates and change[d] the substance of her testimony,” instead
    alleging “that not only were there activities occurring on the couch at Palfrey Place, but there
    was also penetration, vaginal intercourse and * * * anal intercourse.”
    -5-
    result, the charges against defendant were dismissed under Rule 48(a) of the Superior Court
    Rules of Criminal Procedure. Thereafter, on January 2, 2008, a second grand jury indicted
    defendant on a total of six counts of child molestation, three of which were first-degree charges
    and three of which were second-degree charges. 14 A trial was held in February 2010.
    At the trial, Jane testified that, after her family moved to Palfrey Place, defendant would
    babysit her and her two younger brothers approximately five or six nights out of the week while
    her mother worked. She recalled one particular night that defendant was babysitting, when, after
    sending her brothers to bed, defendant asked her to lie down on the couch with him, which she
    did. Jane stated that they were positioned with “[h]is back * * * against the couch and [her] back
    * * * against his chest,” and that this was the first time they had ever done this. 15 According to
    Jane, defendant then asked her “to play a game,” which eventually resulted in digital, vaginal
    penetration. She further testified that defendant told her to go to her mother’s bedroom where
    defendant performed cunnilingus on her. Jane stated that defendant would engage in “different
    14
    The six counts that defendant was indicted for included the engagement, with a person under
    the age of fourteen, in: (count 1) digital/vaginal penetration, (count 2) hand/inner thigh contact,
    (count 3) cunnilingus, (count 4) anal intercourse, (count 5) hand/buttocks contact, and (count 6)
    hand/penile contact.
    15
    As will be discussed infra, at the first grand jury hearing, Jane testified that she was six years
    old and was living at the Atwells Avenue apartment when defendant first sexually assaulted her.
    She further testified at the first grand jury hearing that “it also continued at Palfrey Place,” but
    that “[i]t happened more [at Atwells Avenue] than other places.” However, Jane’s testimony
    regarding how old she was changed between the first and second grand jury hearings based on
    her understanding of which apartment had a particular green rug. As Jane explained at the trial,
    she had “thought the green rug was in * * * Atwells [Avenue],” which is why she “mist[ook]
    [her] age.” Jane further testified that when she “realized that the green rug was on * * * Palfrey
    Place[,] [t]hat is how [she] came to the realization that [she] was much older than what [she] had
    said the first couple of times.” When Jane was questioned about how she came to this
    realization, she testified that she had “asked her [mother] where the green rug was, and [was
    told] that it was at * * * Palfrey [Place], * * * [and that] it happened the most where the green
    rug was.”
    -6-
    things [during] different time[s],” but that some type of sexual activity would happen “[e]very
    time [her] mom went to work and he babysat.”
    Jane additionally testified about another specific instance that took place when she was
    nine years old. She stated that she had been sleeping in her mother’s bed when defendant woke
    her up by “rubbing baby powder * * * on [her] butt” and proceeded to perform anal intercourse.
    Although Jane “told him to stop” “[b]ecause it hurt,” he did not. Jane attested that she did not
    tell her mother about this event. The last detailed event Jane testified about was when defendant
    asked her to “unzip his pants” and “told [her] to touch him,” which she did.
    According to Jane, when she was fourteen years old, she was walking to a local
    community pool when defendant stopped as he was driving by and “asked [her] if she wanted a
    ride.” Jane testified that she accepted the ride, but that defendant stopped by his apartment on
    the way to the pool to use the bathroom. Jane stated that, although she initially remained in the
    car, after a little while she also went into defendant’s apartment. She testified that when she
    arrived in the apartment, defendant told her that “[h]e wanted to teach [her] how to kiss.”16 She
    denied his request, and she testified that they went back to the car and he took her to the pool, but
    that she did not tell her mother about that occurrence.
    Andrea testified that on the night of April 28, 2005, after Jane was dropped off from their
    youth-group church event, she “told the bus driver that [they] had to go back and get [her]”
    because of “something that [she] had learned during the private discussion [with Jane] and based
    on the feeling [that Jane] told [her] she was experiencing before [they] dropped her off.”
    16
    Jane provided inconsistent testimony about this incident. At the grand jury proceeding and at
    trial, Jane testified that she was walking to the Zucollo pool when defendant offered her a ride;
    however, during cross-examination, she stated that she had made a mistake and that she really
    had been heading toward the Neutaconkanut pool. Further, Jane testified at the first grand jury
    proceeding that defendant performed cunnilingus on her after she went upstairs to his apartment;
    however, at the trial, she attested that he merely told her that he wanted to kiss her.
    -7-
    According to Andrea, after the bus arrived back at defendant’s residence, she saw Jane, who
    seemed “[a]ngry, upset, sad, [and] confused.” Jane testified that she was angry at Andrea
    “[b]ecause she told a secret,” and Andrea stated that, “[a]fter the incident [they] actually didn’t
    speak” and that they “haven’t talked * * * in years.”
    After the trial, the jury found defendant guilty on all six counts of child molestation. On
    May 3, 2010, defendant was sentenced to fifty years to serve at the Adult Correctional
    Institutions (ACI), with twenty-five years to serve, twenty-five years suspended, with probation,
    on the three first-degree charges. The defendant also was sentenced to thirty years to serve at the
    ACI, with fifteen years to serve, fifteen years suspended, with probation, on the three second-
    degree charges, with all sentences to run concurrently. The defendant appealed his conviction
    solely based upon the denial of his motion for a new trial.
    Further facts will be provided as may be necessary to discuss the issues defendant raised
    on appeal.
    II
    Standard of Review
    “When deciding a motion for a new trial, ‘the trial justice acts as a thirteenth juror and
    exercises independent judgment on the credibility of witnesses and on the weight of the
    evidence.’” State v. Bunnell, 
    47 A.3d 220
    , 232 (R.I. 2012) (quoting State v. Vargas, 
    21 A.3d 347
    , 354 (R.I. 2011)). “In this determination, the trial justice must ‘consider the evidence in
    light of the jury charge,’ then ‘independently assess the credibility of the witnesses and the
    weight of the evidence,’ and also ultimately ‘determine whether he or she would have reached a
    result different from that reached by the jury.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Vargas, 
    21 A.3d at 354
    ). “If, after
    conducting this independent review, the trial justice agrees with the jury’s verdict or if the
    -8-
    evidence is such that reasonable minds could differ as to the outcome, the motion for a new trial
    should be denied.” 
    Id.
     (quoting State v. Cipriano, 
    21 A.3d 408
    , 429 (R.I. 2011)). “Only when
    ‘the trial justice does not agree with the jury’s verdict, [must he or she] embark on a fourth
    analytical step.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Vargas, 
    21 A.3d at 354
    ).
    “Because a trial justice, when deciding a motion for a new trial, ‘is in an especially good
    position to evaluate the facts and to judge the credibility of the witnesses,’ on appeal, this Court’s
    review is deferential.” Bunnell, 
    47 A.3d at 232-33
     (quoting Vargas, 
    21 A.3d at 354
    ). “If the trial
    justice has articulated adequate grounds for denying the motion, his or her decision is entitled to
    great weight and will not be overturned by this Court unless he or she has overlooked or
    misconceived material evidence or was otherwise clearly wrong.” Id. at 233 (quoting Cipriano,
    
    21 A.3d at 429
    ).
    III
    Discussion
    On appeal, defendant argues that “the testimony of the complaining witness, [Jane], was
    so characterized by vagueness, illogic, inconsistency, and lack of recall that she was simply
    incredible,” and as such, “the trial justice overlooked and misconceived the material evidence
    (which was solely testimonial as no corroborative physical, medical, or forensic evidence was
    admitted at trial), and failed to draw the appropriate inferences from the evidence adduced.”
    The defendant points to four main inconsistencies, which he describes as the “circuitous
    statements of [Jane, which] shaped themselves into a patched-together story that was confusing,
    complicated, and replete with discrepancies.” First, he argues that Jane’s initial denial of any
    inappropriate touching, which defendant contends she manufactured “[o]nly after prodding[,]
    prompting[,] * * * and * * * inexorable pressure,” tends to show her lack of credibility. Second,
    -9-
    defendant proposes that, although originally he was indicted on four counts, when it came to
    light on the eve of the first trial that Jane “had provided glaringly incorrect time periods for the
    dates of the alleged assaults,” she suddenly “revealed ‘new’ or ‘different’ incidents that she had
    not previously disclosed.” Third, defendant criticizes Jane’s sudden recognition of a “crucial
    fact that * * * she had never mentioned during the thirty months the case had been pending”:
    “the existence of a green rug in the apartment where she was assaulted * * * that allowed her to
    pinpoint the dates of the assaults.” Finally, he maintains that Jane’s “retelling of the ‘pool
    incident’ * * * [makes] little logical sense,” both with respect to her confusion between the
    names of two separate and distinct pools and the “starkly different versions” of events that Jane
    provided, while under oath, about what happened after she accepted defendant’s offer to give her
    a ride.
    The state, quoting State v. Jimenez, 
    33 A.3d 724
     (R.I. 2011), argues that “defendant’s
    contentions [on appeal] lack merit” because “[t]he mere fact that defendant disagrees with the
    trial justice’s conclusions about credibility is not a sufficient basis to warrant the granting of a
    motion for new trial.” 
    Id. at 738
     (quoting State v. Rivera, 
    987 A.2d 887
    , 903 (R.I. 2010)).
    Further, the state contends that the record supports the trial justice’s decision to deny defendant’s
    motion for a new trial and that “defendant has not provided even a colorable basis for this Court
    to disturb the trial justice’s ruling.”
    After a thorough review of the record, it is clear to this Court that defendant’s arguments
    on appeal demonstrate little more than an apparent disagreement with the trial justice’s ultimate
    determination on credibility. The defendant asserts that the trial justice’s interpretation about the
    inconsistencies presented by the state’s witnesses was “simply illogical,” and that only his own
    testimony should “be interpreted as * * * credible and logical.” In our review of this case,
    - 10 -
    however, we do not focus on whether this Court simply agrees or disagrees with the trial
    justice’s credibility determinations. Rather, we give great deference to those determinations;
    and, if the trial justice has stated sufficient grounds for denying a motion for a new trial, we will
    not overturn that decision unless the trial justice “has overlooked or misconceived material
    evidence or was otherwise clearly wrong.” Bunnell, 
    47 A.3d at 233
     (quoting Cipriano, 
    21 A.3d at 429
    ).
    During the hearing on defendant’s motion for a new trial, the trial justice acknowledged
    that there were, in fact, “material inconsistencies” in Jane’s testimony and pointed out the same
    examples of which defendant now complains on appeal. The trial justice then explained that “the
    jury heard all of these inconsistencies” and “the explanations as to why these inconsistencies
    may have been given by the complaining witness in the first instance.” He also described
    possible rationales behind the apparent discrepancies that the jury may have relied upon to
    “accept[] the fact that most of the allegations that were complained of did, in fact, take place
    * * *.”
    The trial justice found all the state’s witnesses, including Jane, 17 Susan, and Kelly, to be
    credible, but he found “defendant’s credibility to be highly questionable, * * * if not
    17
    The trial justice expounded upon his credibility determination, in part, by stating the
    following:
    “I believe that the child witness, now a 20-year old, I
    believe she was credible. I believe she was credible in all of her
    testimony regarding the explicit acts that were complained of by
    her against the defendant.
    “* * *
    “The [c]ourt believes, under all of the facts and
    circumstances, that the witnesses presented by the prosecution in
    this case were credible and particularly the testimony of [Jane] at
    age 20 with regard to the salient, important facts of these acts
    occurring was extremely credible.”
    - 11 -
    incredible.” 18 Most importantly, in regard to the trial justice’s credibility determination of Jane,
    he asserted that:
    “The [c]ourt having had the benefit of having sat on a lot of
    cases, sat on a lot more cases than this jury, has a better
    understanding of what happens when child witnesses are called
    upon to disclose facts deeply personal in nature, particularly at the
    tenderest of ages, that it is not unusual that there are often
    inconsistencies both factual with regard to timelines, with regard to
    location and our laws allow for that.”
    The trial justice then aptly considered his charge to the jury, which he stated contained
    the “usual and ordinary instructions with regard to [child molestation] matters,” and stated that
    he “believe[d] that the jury understood and applied the instructions appropriately.”              He
    thoroughly explained that this “certainly was a case upon which reasonable minds could differ.
    [The jury] could have easily believed the testimony of the defendant in which he denied any
    inappropriate behavior on the part of himself and her.”            However, after conducting the
    appropriate analysis, the trial justice determined “that the jury verdict was wholly substantiated
    by the evidence,” and that he “d[id] not disagree with the jury verdict and would have come to
    the same conclusion if this wasn’t a jury trial.”
    On appeal, the defendant essentially asks us to second-guess the trial justice’s credibility
    determinations. We have searched the record, however, and we are of the opinion that the trial
    justice performed an exhaustive review of the testimony presented at trial and thoughtfully
    evaluated the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses in light of his charge to the jury. The
    trial justice found the complainant to be a credible witness, and conversely, he rejected the
    defendant’s testimony as incredible.      We cannot hold that the trial justice “overlooked or
    misconceived material evidence or was otherwise clearly wrong.” Bunnell, 
    47 A.3d at
    233
    18
    The trial justice further stated: “The [c]ourt just felt basically that the defendant’s testimony in
    and of itself was patently incredible[,] not forthright and was not truthful.”
    - 12 -
    (quoting Cipriano, 
    21 A.3d at 429
    ). Therefore, the trial justice’s findings and his conclusions in
    denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial were well within his discretion, and we have no
    cause to disturb his decision.
    IV
    Conclusion
    For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.
    The record of this case shall be remanded to the Superior Court.
    - 13 -
    RHODE ISLAND SUPREME COURT CLERK’S OFFICE
    Clerk’s Office Order/Opinion Cover Sheet
    TITLE OF CASE:        State v. James LaPierre.
    CASE NO:              No. 2010-341-C.A.
    (P1/08-9A)
    COURT:                Supreme Court
    DATE OPINION FILED: December 14, 2012
    JUSTICES:             Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia JJ.
    WRITTEN BY:           Chief Justice Paul A. Suttell
    SOURCE OF APPEAL:     Providence County Superior Court
    JUDGE FROM LOWER COURT:
    Associate Justice Francis J. Darigan, Jr.
    ATTORNEYS ON APPEAL:
    For State:   Lauren S. Zurier
    Department of Attorney General
    For Defendant: Lara E. Montecalvo
    Office of the Public Defender
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2010-341-C.A.

Judges: Suttell, Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, Indeglia

Filed Date: 12/14/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/26/2024