Is photographing a woman’s breasts in public illegal?
This is a very long and interesting case. I have tried to simplify the
legal terms so that my readers will understand the importance of the legal
decision given in this particular case. The issue is; did the defendant get a
fair trial? I am going to give you my opinion about this man’s conduct and also
give you my thoughts on the law as it applied in this particular case.
David Eric Lambert appealed
his Sullivan County Criminal Court jury convictions for unlawful photography
and attempted sexual battery. (assault)
The Sullivan County Grand Jury charged the
Defendant via presentment with one count of unlawful photography and one count
of sexual battery based upon his conduct at a Dollar Tree in Kingsport on March
18th, 2016.
Prior to his trial, the Defendant’s lawyer asked
the trial court judge to dismiss the unlawful photography charge against
his client arguing that then Code section 39- 13-605 was unconstitutionally
vague.
Specifically, he contended that the language of
the statute “was so broad that it did not provide individuals with adequate
notice of proscribed activity and did not provide law enforcement with
sufficient guidance to protect against arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.”
Alternatively, the Defendant, assuming that the
statute was constitutional, submitted that his conduct could not support a
conviction for unlawful photography because the defendant merely photographed what these women already
chose to expose to the public” and because “there was no reasonable expectation
of privacy in public place.
That is an interesting point. For example, if a
woman was walking in a park with her breasts totally bare (which in Canada is
legal) why would it be illegal to
photograph her if in doing so it isn’t
done up so close as to cause the woman to feel that she is in some form of danger
or is experiencing a serious invasion of
her privacy ?
The Defendant’s lawyer argued that his client’s
actions were not illegal under Tennessee law.
A hearing was held on the Defendant’s motion to
dismiss the unlawful photography charges. At the hearing on the Defendant’s
motion to dismiss, the trial court first heard arguments from the parties about
the statute’s vagueness. Ultimately, the trial court concluded that the statute
was constitutional because it was not “so vague that the defendant wouldn’t
know what conduct” was proscribed given that the statute had other elements
that impacted whether the taking of a photograph qualified as a criminal
offense. The trial court further determined that the statute did not authorize
or encourage arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.
I can hardly.believe
that the
defendant looked up the law to see if he could photograph the private areas of
women.
The
trial court then addressed the Defendant’s alternative argument about whether
his conduct constituted a crime. The trial court heard evidence from various
victims and from Kingsport Police Department’s Detective Martin Taylor.
Detective Taylor testified that after receiving
reports of the Defendant’s behavior and speaking with several victims, he
interviewed the Defendant on March 24th , 2016. A tthe conclusion of the interview, the
Defendant provided a statement that Detective Taylor read into the record of
the trial.
“This all started about four or five years ago
when my father died of cancer. I began videoing women in public. I like
blonde-haired females but have no preference. Recently, I have been going to
shopping centers in Kingsport and have filmed women in Hobby Lobby, Walmart,
Ross, and the shopping center on East Stone Drive. I did not mean to scare
anyone and only filmed the females for my own purposes. I just liked using the
video function on my phone. It is kinda like an obsession with the
technological aspect of the phone. I have never posted any of the images I have
taken on the Internet or shared with other people. I actually did not think I
was doing anything wrong because everything was done in a public place.
However, I realize this was not a good decision on my part. If it was not
illegal, it was definitely crossing moral boundaries. As far as grabbing the
woman’ s rear at [the Dollar Store, I don’t recall being there or doing it.
This past Saturday, I was at Bed Bath and Beyond in Johnson City. I had been at
Ross just before going into Bed Bath and Beyond. When I came out of the store,
I was stopped by the police. I did not video anyone in Ross. However, there may
have been a couple of videos I took at Bed Bath and Beyond. I told the officer
what I did and they confiscated my cell phone. It is a LG G2 phone with a
silver case and blue sleeve underneath. I gave the officers permission to look
through the phone.”
“Today, I am giving Detective Taylor permission
to examine my phone for the videos I have stored on the phone. There should be
around [twenty] videos on the phone of different females I have collected
recently. I understand the seriousness of the charges against me and need help
with the problems I have. I am willing to undergo treatment and with the
willingness of the court will do what is necessary to get help for my problem.
Again, I am very sorry for all of this and want the women I videoed to know I
never meant any harm and apologize for my actions. This is a truthful
statement.”
Detective Taylor said that he examined the
photographs and videos on the Defendant’s cellular telephone but found no
photographs or videos of any of the victims in the three Sullivan County cases.
Detective Taylor further stated that the Defendant’s phone had been modified so
that duct tape covered the camera lights. The victim in this case, Shelly
Grizzel, testified about her encounter with the Defendant at the Dollar Tree in
Kingsport on March 18th , 2016. She claimed that she observed the
Defendant with a cellular telephone camera positioned within one foot of her
bottom and that he had the camera recording her in order to see her bottom on the phone’s screen. The
victim further described that as she attempted to get away from the Defendant,
he “grabbed the right side of” her rear end and said, “Nice bum.”
In my opinion, his grabbing her buttocks
constituted the crime of sexual
molestation.
In ruling on the Defendant’s alternative
argument that his conduct did not constitute a crime, the trial court first,
referencing the Defendant’s statement to Detective Taylor, found that the
Defendant had “readily admitted to videoing or filming or taking pictures with
his phone of women in public.”
With regards to this specific case, the trial
court noted that the victim testified that the Defendant “held the phone less
than a foot from her behind and when she
turned around, she could see the camera
was filming her behind and as she turned to get away ,the Defendant reached out
and grabbed her rear end, making comments about it. Thereafter, the court found
that this victim, along with several others, had a reasonable expectation of
privacy given the “very, very close proximity to the victim’s private area. from
which the Defendant was using his phone to capture the images.
The trial court further determined that society
was willing to recognize this privacy interest as legitimate. In consequence,
the trial court ruled that the issue of the Defendant’s guilt was a jury
question rather than a question of law and subsequently, the court denied his lawyer’s
motion to dismiss.
The day before the trial began, the Defendant
filed a motion, asking that the trial court for a hearing out of the presence
of the jury to determine the admissibility of certain evidence, including the
statement the defendant provided to
Detective Taylor and any evidence of other bad acts committed by the Defendant.
The trial court held a hearing on the admissibility of the Defendant’s
statement prior to the beginning of trial.
During the hearing, the Defendant’s lawer argued
that the statement violated Rule 404(b)’s prohibition on propensity evidence,
arguing that his general admission to “filming women” was not a specific
admission of the charged offense. According to the Defendant’s lawyer, the only
specific reference to this particular victim was his statement that he was not
present in the Dollar Tree, which was beneficial to him. The lawyer commented that the State (prosecutor) was
unable to produce any video in relation to this victim and was, therefore,
attempting to use the Defendant’s general statement to establish the elements
of the offense.
The prosecutor conceded that the Defendant’s
statement contained admissions that “could be considered referencing prior bad
acts” but argued that “they were highly
relevant and probative of elements” they would be required to prove, including
identity, intent, motive, and not a mistake. The prosecutor contended that
because it had no video or photograph of the victim purportedly taken by the
Defendant, the Defendant’s admissions “that he videoed women in public, that he
had a preference for blond-haired and that he went into shopping centers in
Kingsport which had established his identity as the perpetrator. The prosecutor
noted that the specific offense at issue involved filming a blonde-haired
female at a shopping center in Kingsport. In addition, the prosecutor commented
that identity was at issue because the Defendant, in his statement to Detective
Taylor, denied that he was present in the Dollar Tree.
The prosecutor further argued that the
Defendant’s admissions that he took the videos because he was obsessed with the
technology available on his phone, that he took the videos “for own own purposes” and did not share them publicly,
and that his actions “crossed moral
boundaries” established his intent.
In addition, the prosecutor maintained that the
Defendant’s acknowledgment his actions had crossed moral boundaries”
established that he acted for the purpose of sexual gratification as required
by the unlawful photography statute.
Finally, the prosecutor remarked that the Defendant’s recognition that
he had a “problem” which required treatment was indicative of motive, intent,
and sexual gratification.
The trial court concluded that the evidence was
admissible on the issues of intent and motive. In so concluding, the trial
court specifically referenced the following portions of the statement: the
Defendant said that he began videoing women in public, that he liked
blonde-haired women but had no preference, that he was going to Kingsport
shopping centers and filming women, that he did not post the images, that he
did not think he was doing anything wrong because he was in a public place,
that he realized it was not a good decision, that he crossed moral boundaries,
that he gave Detective Taylor permission to examine his phone, that he had
approximately twenty videos on the phone of different females collected
recently, that he understood the seriousness of the charges, and that he needed
help with his problem and was willing to undergo treatment. The court also
ruled that the probative value of these admissions was not outweighed by the
danger of unfair prejudice. The court ordered that the statement be redacted to
exclude the remaining admissions
The victim testified that on March 18th
, 2016, she was shopping with her mother at the Dollar Tree on West Stone Drive
in Kingsport. She had blonde hair at that time and was fully-clothed, wearing
jeans. The victim described her encounter with the Defendant that day inside
the store. The victim said that she was standing near the air fresheners in the
back of the store when she “felt like someone was standing really close” to
her. She stepped forward, but the individual did as well. She then turned
around to look and saw the Defendant, whom she did not know. According to the
victim, he had a “really creepy grin” on his face and had his cellular
telephone’s camera positioned at the right side of her rear end. She estimated
that the Defendant had his phone “less than a foot away from” her bottom at
that time; he was “extremely close” and “invading her personal space.”
The victim stated she was able to see the screen
of the Defendant’s phone. The victim, observing that the phone’s camera was
enabled and seeing her pants on the screen, realized that the Defendant was
filming her. She tried to quickly walk down the aisle away from the Defendant,
but he “sped up” and “reached out and grabbed” the right side of her rear end.
In so doing, the Defendant said, “Nice ass.” After the Defendant grabbed her
bottom, the victim hit the Defendant in the face with a can of air freshener,
and the Defendant hurried out of the store. The victim indicated that no one else
was around her when this incident with the Defendant occurred; however, her
mother came “running when [the victim] hollered out” for help. The victim
explained that she did not consent to the Defendant’s actions, that his taking
a video of her in this manner was embarrassing, and that she expected not to be
filmed in that way while shopping at the Dollar Tree. She affirmed her belief
that she had “a reasonable expectation” that this would “not happen to her in a
public place.” She was able to identify the Defendant as the perpetrator
immediately following the incident, and she made an in-court identification.
The victim acknowledged that she had never seen a video of the incident.
Donna Stiltner, the victim’s mother, testified
that she was with her daughter at the Dollar Tree on March 18th ,
2016. However, she did not see the incident and only heard her daughter “holler
in a loud voice.” When she went to her daughter, her daughter said, “He just
grabbed me.” The victim’s mother then saw a man in a brown shirt and jeans walk
past her “very abruptly” “with his head ducked,” holding a phone in his hand.
She recalled that she chased the man out the door “hollering things at him and
trying to get him to stop,” but he only proceeded to speed up. She chased him
into the parking lot, but he disappeared. She left before the police arrived
because she had to pick up her husband and grandchildren.
When asked what she remembered from that day
about the way the man looked, the victim’s mother described him as a white man
with a “pretty good suntan,” who was of “average build,” and had a “pretty
square” jawline. She said that he did have a hat on that was pulled down;
accordingly, she did not “get a good look at his face.”
In court,
she identified the Defendant as the man she saw that day in the Dollar Tree.
She asserted that she did not know the Defendant prior to this time and had no
reason “to want to get him in trouble” aside from this incident.
Detective Taylor testified that several days
after the incident at the Dollar Tree, he was assigned to investigate this
case. He subsequently met with and obtained a statement from the victim on
March 22nd , 2016. He also determined that the Dollar Tree did not
have any security camera footage from “inside the store showing the aisles and
stuff.” He identified the Defendant as a suspect and obtained a written
statement from him at the police department on March 24th , 2016.
The Defendant’s statement, as redacted
previously by the trial court, was admitted into evidence and read to the jury:
I began videoing women in public. I like blonde-haired females but have no
preference. Recently, I have been going to shopping centers in Kingsport and
have filmed women. I did not mean to scare anyone and only filmed the females
for my own purposes. I just liked using the video function on my phone. It is
kinda like an obsession with the technological aspect of the phone. I have
never posted any of the images I have taken on the Internet or shared with
other people. I actually did not think I was doing anything wrong because
everything was done in a public place. However, I realize this was not a good
decision on my part. If it was not illegal, it was definitely crossing moral
boundaries. As far as grabbing the woman’s rear at thr [the Dollar Store, I
don’t recall being there or doing it. It is a LG G2 phone with a silver case
and blue sleeve underneath. I am giving Detective Taylor permission to examine
my phone for the videos I have stored on the phone. There should be videos on
the phone of different females I have collected recently. I understand the
seriousness of the charges against me and need help with the problems I have. I
am willing to undergo treatment and will do what is necessary to get help for
my problem. Again, I am very sorry for all of this and want the women I videoed
to know I never meant any harm and apologize for my actions. This is a truthful
statement.
The exhibit entered into evidence was a copy of
the Defendant’s statement with the inadmissible portions blotted out.
Detective Taylor stated that he subsequently
obtained the phone described in the Defendant’s statement. He recalled that the
phone “had pieces of duct tape torn in small pieces on the outside where the
camera area” was located, and he opined that the tape “would block off any
lights that might show, like a flash or any external lights on the back side
where the camera was for that function.” Detective Taylor confirmed that he
attempted to retrieve data from the Defendant’s phone. According to Detective
Taylor, he extracted data from the cell phone using Cellebrite extraction
software, but he was unable to get any evidence off of the phone that seemed to
depict the victim. Detective Taylor explained that the software was not always
able to retrieve all of the data off of a phone. He indicated that sometimes he
was “one-hundred percent” successful in recovering all of the deleted items
from a phone but that other times he was not.
On cross-examination, Detective Taylor
acknowledged that he did not attempt to talk to anyone else who was at the
Dollar Tree on the date of the alleged incident. Although the victim had
informed Detective Taylor that her mother was with her at the Dollar Tree, he
did not interview the victim’s mother. He stated that he did speak with the
store manager but only about retrieving any possible surveillance video.
Additionally, Cellebrite was “the standard software” used by “most law
enforcement” at the time, according to Detective Taylor.
The prosecutor rested his case and the Defendant elected not to testify and
chose to present no proof. Based upon the evidence presented by the prosecutor ,
the jury convicted the Defendant of one count of unlawful photography as
charged and one count of attempted sexual battery as a lesser-included offense.
Following a sentencing hearing, the trial court
imposed a sentence of eleven months and twenty-nine days for each of the
Defendant’s convictions. It was ordered that the Defendant serve these
sentences consecutively to each other, as well as consecutively to an
eleven-month-and-twenty-nine-day sentence imposed in one of the other two
unlawful photography cases. The court further ordered that the Defendant serve
his sentences in confinement. After denial of the Defendant’s motion for new
trial, he filed a timely notice of appeal. The case was now before the court of
appeal for its review.
On appeal, the Defendant (his lawer) raised the
following issues: (1) whether the trial court properly denied his motion to
dismiss on grounds that the unlawful photography statute was unconstitutionally
vague and that his conduct did not constitute a crime; (2) whether the
admission of his statement at trial violated Rule 404(b) of the Tennessee Rules
of Evidence; (3) whether the evidence was insufficient to support his
convictions; and (4) whether the trial court erred by ordering that he serve
the eleven-month-and-twenty-nine-day sentences imposed in this case
consecutively to each other and to the Defendant’s sentence in the other unlawful
photography case.
The Defendant claims that the trial court erred
by denying his motion to dismiss because the proscribing statute was
unconstitutional and because his conduct could not support a conviction of
unlawful photography.
First, the court of appeal had to consider
whether these issues were ripe for review via a pretrial.
The court of appeal ruled that the trial judge
had considered the Defendant’s
challenge to the constitutionality of Code section 39-13-605 and properly
declined to consider the Defendant’s assertion that his conduct did not satisfy
the elements of Code section 39-13-605, including the element of a reasonable
expectation of privacy. to dismiss.
The latter question was essentially a pretrial
challenge to the sufficiency of the State’s evidence, which would “be akin to
summary judgment for adjudicating questions of fact involving the general issue
of guilt or innocence,” a procedure that does not exist in criminal cases
The Defendant challenges the constitutionality
of Code section 39-13-605 on grounds that the phrase “when the individual has a
reasonable expectation of privacy” is vague. Essentially, he is asserting a
claim that Code section 39-13-605, due to its vagueness, failed to place him on
notice that his conduct would violate the statute. The trial court concluded
that the statute was not unconstitutional.
At the time of the offense in this case, Code
section 39-13-605 provided, in pertinent part, as follows: (a) It is an offense
for a person to knowingly photograph, or cause to be photographed an
individual, when the individual has a reasonable expectation of privacy,
without the prior effective consent of the individual, or in the case of a
minor, without the prior effective consent of the minor’s parent or guardian,
if the photograph
(1) Would offend or embarrass an ordinary person
if such person appeared in the photograph and (2) Was taken for the purpose of
sexual arousal or gratification of the defendant. (b) As used in this section, unless the context
otherwise requires, “photograph” means any photograph or photographic
reproduction, still or moving, or any videotape or live television transmission
of any individual. (c) All photographs taken in violation of this section shall
be confiscated and, after their use as evidence, destroyed.
Didn’t this defendant’s lawyer do his homework before
he filed his client’s appeal?
Despite the importance of these constitutional
protections,” the Supreme court has recognized the ‘inherent vagueness’ of
statutory language and has held that criminal statutes do not have to meet the
unattainable standard of ‘absolute precision.
The vagueness doctrine does not invalidate every
statute that a reviewing court believes could have been drafted with greater
precision, especially in light of the inherent vagueness of many English words.
The Defendant correctly pointed out that the
phrase “when the person has a reasonable expectation of privacy” is not defined
in the statute under which the Defendant was convicted. It is, however, a
phrase commonly used in the law. The discussion of the existence of a
reasonable expectation of privacy most often occurs in cases discussing the Fourth Amendment to the United States
Constitution, but its use is not limited to that arena, and the court
couldn’t fathom any reason to ascribe to the phrase as used in
Code section 39-13-605 a meaning different from that it enjoys in every other
legal context.
It is well established that a person has a
reasonable expectation of privacy when the person has “an actual, subjective
expectation of privacy and society is willing to view the individual’s
subjective expectation of privacy as reasonable and justifiable under the
circumstances
Utilizing the common understanding of the terms
contained in Code section 39- 13-605, one has to conclude that the statute does
not “prohibit conduct ‘in terms so vague that persons of common intelligence
must necessarily guess at its meaning and differ as to its application. This
would apply to any statute or code.
The Defendant contended that the trial court
erred by admitting his statement into evidence, arguing that its admission
violated Tennessee Rule of Evidence
404(b)’s prohibition on propensity evidence. The State contended that the
statement was admissible to prove intent and that the Defendant knowingly
filmed the victim and his motive was that filmed the women for his own purposes
in which both of which are permissible purposes.
the Defendant’s statement does not contain any
admission to wrongdoing specific to this case. It is only a general admission
that he had been using his cellular telephone to video women in the Kingsport
area. The admission of this evidence of other bad acts by the Defendant is
governed by the Tennessee Rule of Evidence
404(b). Generally speaking of evidence of a person’s character or trait of
character is not admissible for the purpose of proving action in conformity
therewith on a particular occasion.” To admit such evidence, the rule specifies
four prerequisites:
(1) The court upon request must hold a hearing
outside the jury’s presence; (2) The court must determine that a material issue
exists other than conduct conforming with a character trait and must upon
request state on the record the material issue, the ruling, and the reasons for
admitting the evidence; (3) The court must find proof of the other crime,
wrong, or act to be clear and convincing; and (4) The court must exclude the
evidence if its probative value is outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.
When, as in this particular case, the trial court substantially complied with
the procedural requirements of Rule 404(b), The court of appeal court would overturn the trial court’s ruling only when
there has been an abuse of discretion.
The rationale underlying the general rule is
that admission of such evidence carries with it the inherent risk of the jury’s
convicting the defendant of a crime based upon his bad character or propensity
to commit a crime, rather than upon the strength of the evidence. Nothing in
the rule prohibits its application to statements made by the defendant, and
although evidence of other bad acts “usually does not come in the form of
statements or confessions made by the defendant, there exists no valid reason
to make an exception to the requirements for prior bad act evidence disclosed
in a defendant’s confession.
Tennessee recognizes three instances in which
evidence of uncharged crimes may be admissible They are, (1) to prove identity
including motive and common scheme or plan)
(2) to prove intent; and (3) to rebut a claim of mistake or accident if it is
asserted as a defense.
Detective Taylor asked the Defendant about the
incident that precipitated the charge in this case, and the Defendant made a
specific disavowal of guilt. Specifically when the Defendant said, “As far as grabbing the
woman’s rear at the Dollar Store, I
don’t recall being there or doing it.”
Furthermore, in arguments before the jury,
defense counsel focused on the fact that no video recording was ever discovered
by the prosecution and submitted that no video existed because these events did
not happen as the victim said, what the Defense counsel surmised.
The victim testified about a video that the
prosecutor has said doesn’t exist. If she’s mistaken about that, then maybe
she’s been mistaken about the encounter she had with a guy who she admits is
creepy. If she could be mistaken about the video, then she could be mistaken
about what actually happened in the
Dollar Store.
The Defense counsel also attempted to discredit
the victim’s mother’s testimony by claiming that she was merely protecting her
daughter. He suggested that the victim’s mother went after somebody. That
doesn’t mean that the Defendant did any of what he was accused of doing. That just means her
daughter told her something happened and she re-acted as any good mother would.
In this case, the Court of appeal must agree
with the prosecutor that the Defendant’s
identity was placed at issue. There was no surveillance video obtainable from
the Dollar Tree; the identification of the Defendant rested solely on the
victim’s and her mother’s testimony; the reliability of which was challenged by
the defense. In his statement to Detective Taylor, the Defendant admitted that
he had been frequently videoing blonde-haired women in Kingsport shopping
centers but claimed he had no recollection of being at the Dollar Tree or of
the victim in this case. Because identity of the perpetrator was a material
issue in this case, evidence of motive and a common scheme or plan were
relevant
This raises an interesting question. Did the
Detective suggest to the Defendant that the molestation took place in the
Dollar Tree and did the Defendant t tell
the Detective that he wasn’t in the Dollar Tree?
Did the victim’s statement provide evidence that
the Defendant filmed the victim for the purpose of sexual arousal or
gratification while in the Doller Tree? This is one of those cases in which it
is a she said, he said.
The Defendant’s
specific sentence in the police
statement is not bad act evidence but
is in fact, it is the opposite. However, it was the prosecutor seeking
admission of this evidence, not the Defendant. The Prosecutor would be unable
to bootstrap the entire statement by seeking admission of this single sentence.
However, other reasons supported its admission.
.
an extreme close-up of the victim’s bottom
including the nature of the area itself
added credence to the element of sexual arousal or gratification. The Defendant
admitted that he took the other videos “for his own purposes” and his actions of
crossing moral boundaries.”
Moreover, the Defendant recognized that he had a
problem for which he was willing to get help. The Defendant’s general-denial
defense placed intent and state of mind at issue
A person may feel that what he has
done is immoral and illegal but that
doesn’t necessarily mean that his
actions were illegal.
The Court of Appeal had concluded that such proof supplied
circumstantial and evidence that the the Defendant took these videos for the
purpose of sexual arousal or gratification, despite his claimed motivation that
he was only compelled to do so by an obsession with the technical function of
this phone. Additionally, as the trier of fact, the jury was free to disregard
the Defendant’s claimed motivation in the statement that he was only compelled
to do so by an obsession with the technical function of this phone and find
that portion of the statement not credible I agree that that explanation was
far from being credible.
The jury, as the sole arbiter of the facts and
the credibility of the witnesses, was free to accredit or discredit any portion
of any witness’s testimony as it saw fit. Credibility in testimony was left to the jury and the weight and value to
be given to evidence in this particular case were resolved by the the jury be it justified or in error.
A guilty verdict removes the presumption of
innocence and replaces it with a presumption of guilt The defendant has the
burden of proving why the evidence is
insufficient to support the jury’s verdict. The standard of proof is the same
whether the evidence is direct or circumstantial.
The unlawful photography statute in effect at
the time the Defendant committed this alleged act was set forth in detail
above. As charged in this case, the elements of the offense required the State
to show: (1) that the Defendant knowingly photographed the victim; (2) that the
victim had a reasonable expectation of privacy at the time of being photographed
and did not provide prior effective consent to being photographed; (3) that the
photograph would offend or embarrass an ordinary person if such person appeared
in the photograph; and (4) that the photograph was taken for the purpose of
sexual arousal or gratification of the Defendant.
The term, “Photograph” as used in this section
“means any photograph or photographic reproduction, still or moving, or any
videotape or live television transmission of any individual person.
It was an
element of the conviction offense that the photograph in question would offend or embarrass an ordinary person if such
person appeared in the photograph.”
The victim said that the Defendant was a
stranger to her, that she saw her pants on the Defendant’s phone placed less
than a foot away from her bottom, and that she observed a “really creepy grin”
on the Defendant’s face while he was filming her. She also described the
Defendant’s position as “extremely close” and “invading her personal space.”
The victim’s testimony indicated that the recording was an extremely close-up
view of her rear end.
Although no recording was ever found, a rational trier of
fact could have concluded under the circumstances presented in this case that
the recording of the victim would offend or embarrass an ordinary person if
such person appeared in the photograph.
While
such a close-up image could be obtained from surveillance footage or other
similar recordings, the result would still likewise embarrass and offend an
ordinary person.
Finally, the State (Prosecutor) had to establish that the photograph was in
fact taken for the purpose of sexual
arousal or gratification of the Defendant.” In the light most favorable to the
State, the circumstances support this element—the Defendant’s facial
expression; his extremely close-up filming of the victim’s private areas; his
placing duct tape on his phone to avoid detection; and his acknowledgement of a
problem that “crossed moral boundaries”
for which he was amenable to professional help. Importantly, when the Defendant
was challenged by the victim, the Defendant grabbed her bottom and said, “Nice
ass,” before quickly exiting the store.
Brace yourself for the decision of the Court of Appeal
“Nonetheless, because the victim did not have a
reasonable expectation of privacy, we hold that the evidence is insufficient to
support the Defendant’s conviction for unlawful photography. The conviction is
reversed, and the charge is dismissed.
Now there was the matter of his conviction for
Sexual Arousal or Gratification.
In the light most favorable to the State, the
circumstances support this element—the Defendant’s facial expression; his
extremely close-up filming of the victim’s private areas; his placing duct tape
on his phone to avoid detection; and his acknowledgement of a problem that “crossed
moral boundaries” for which he was amenable to professional help.
Importantly, when the Defendant was challenged
by the victim, the Defendant grabbed her bottom and said, “Nice ass,” before
quickly exiting the store. Nonetheless, because the victim did not have a
reasonable expectation of privacy, we hold that the evidence is insufficient to
support the Defendant’s conviction for unlawful photography. The conviction is
reversed, and the charge is dismissed.
S]exual battery is unlawful sexual contact with
a victim by the defendant [when the sexual contact is accomplished without the
consent of the victim and the defendant knows or has reason to know . . . that
the victim did not consent.
The jury was instructed on the statutory
definitions for sexual contact and intimate parts. “‘Sexual contact’ includes
the intentional touching of the victim’s, the defendant’s, or any other
person’s intimate parts, or the intentional touching of the clothing covering
the immediate area of the victim’s, the defendant’s, or any other person’s
intimate parts, if that intentional touching can be reasonably construed as
being for the purpose of sexual arousal or gratification as per Tenn.
Code Ann. § 39-13-501(6). “Intimate parts’ includes semen, vaginal fluid,
the primary genital area, groin, inner thigh, buttock or breast of a human
being.
Now comes the interesting aspect of that charge.
The Defendant didn’t touch her bare buttocks since she was wearing jeans.
In this case, the Defendant was convicted of the
lesser-included offense of attempt. The attempt statute defines criminal
attempt as follows:
The attempt statute defines criminal attempt as
follows: A person commits criminal attempt who, acting with the kind of
culpability otherwise required for the offense: (1) Intentionally engages in
action or causes a result that would constitute an offense, if the
circumstances surrounding the conduct were as the person believes them to be;
(2) Acts with intent to cause a result that is an element of the offense, and
believes the conduct will cause the result without further conduct on the
person’s part; or (3) Acts with intent to complete a course of action or cause
a result that would constitute the offense, under the circumstances surrounding
the conduct as the person believes them to be, and the conduct constitutes a
substantial step toward the commission of the offense. Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-12-101(a). Furthermore, conduct does not
constitute a substantial step under subdivision (a)(3), “unless the person’s
entire course of action is corroborative of the intent to commit the offense.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-12-101(b).
In this particular case, the victim testified that after her prior
interaction with the Defendant, she tried to get away from him, but he followed
her. The Defendant then grabbed her bottom and said, “Nice ass.” The victim hit
him with an air freshner can, and the Defendant abruptly left the store.
A victim’s testimony alone is sufficient to
support a defendant’s conviction and requires no corroboration. In this
particular case, the victim’s mother
testified that when she went to her daughter after her daughter “hollered” out,
her daughter informed her that the Defendant had “just grabbed” her, thereby providing
some level of corroboration. Furthermore, completion of the attempted offense
is not a defense to prosecution for criminal attempt. Proof, even
uncontroverted proof, that a defendant completed a crime, in and of itself,
does not shield a defendant from a conviction for criminal attempt of the crime
allegedly committed.” Accordingly, the evidence was sufficient to support the
Defendant’s conviction for attempted sexual battery..
The Defendant argues that the trial court erred
by imposing consecutive sentencing. Although the Defendant’s convictions for
unlawful photography in all three cases have been reversed and dismissed on
appeal, the court will addressed his challenges to the sentence imposed to
facilitate further appellate review.
Specifically, the Defendant contends that the
trial court failed to make any findings to support the imposition of
consecutive sentences and that service of three consecutive
eleven-month-and-twenty-nine-day sentences in confinement “is not reasonably
related to the severity of the offenses involved.”
Misdemeanor sentencing, in contrast to felony
sentencing, is covered by Code section
40-35-302, the terms of which afford the trial court considerable
flexibility in setting the length and manner of service of the misdemeanor
sentence. For example, a separate sentencing hearing is not mandatory in
misdemeanor cases, and the enhancement and mitigating factors need only be
considered when calculating the percentage of the sentence to be served “in actual
confinement” prior to “consideration for work release, furlough, trusty status
and related rehabilitative programs
Although the Amwican Supreme Court has not yet applied the standard
of review with respevct to abuse of discretion coupled with a presumption of
reasonableness—to misdemeanor sentencing decisions, it has stated, “The abuse
of discretion standard, accompanied by a presumption of reasonableness, is the
appropriate standard of appellate review for all sentencing decisions holding
that, because “it establishes that the
abuse of discretion standard of appellate review accompanied by a presumption
of reasonableness applies to all sentencing decisions,” the standard is the
appropriate standard of appellate review for a trial court’s sentencing
decision to either grant or deny judicial diversion”). Consequently, we join
the growing number of panels of this court that have held that the standard
similarly applies to appellate review of misdemeanor sentencing.
However, a court may not impose consecutive
sentences for misdemeanors under Code
section 40-35-302 without considering whether the requirements of Code section 40-35-115 are met.
when a defendant is convicted of more than one
criminal offense.” Because the criteria for determining consecutive sentencing
“are stated in the alternativeonly one need exist to support the
appropriateness of consecutive sentencing.”
When reviewing a trial court’s imposition of
consecutive sentences, “the presumption of reasonableness applies,” which gives
“deference to the trial court’s exercise of its discretionary authority to
impose consecutive sentences if it has provided reasons on the record
establishing at least one of the seven grounds listed in Tennessee Code .
The Defendant argues that the trial court failed
to make the appropriate findings in support of consecutive sentencing. In
rendering its sentencing decision, the trial court considered the presentence
report and the statutory mitigating and enhancement factors. As for applicable
enhancement factors, the trial court correctly determined that the Defendant
had a previous history of criminal convictions and that the Defendant had
failed to comply with prior conditions of a sentence involving release into the
community.
In mitigation, the trial court found that the
Defendant’s conduct neither caused nor threatened serious bodily injury. The
trial court noted that it was placing “great weight on the enhancing factors”
and “not much weight at all on the mitigating factor.” The trial court ordered
the Defendant to serve eleven months and twenty-nine days on both counts with
release eligibility after service of seventy-five percent of his imprisonment.
The trial court then addressed “alternative
sentencing,” while focusing a lot” on
the Defendant’s prior record. The trial court initially commented on the
copious number of times that the Defendant had received sentences involving
release into the community. The trial court observed that the Defendant had
received probation “time after time after time.” The trial court further noted
that the Defendant had numerous prior misdemeanor convictions, including
“obscene display and masturbation in
public,” which were “similar in nature” to the present convictions, as well as
additional prior convictions for “possession
of drugs, breaking and entering multiple assaults.” Next, the trial court
remarked that the victim had stated this incident had “affected her
emotionally” and also that the Defendant reported good physical and mental
health, with no “prolonged drug or alcohol” issues. The trial court stated that
it had considered the psychosexual report but declined to give it much weight.
Ultimately, the trial court ruled, “when I weigh
the positive factors and the negative factors as I’m required to do, the
negative factors far and away outweigh any positive factors in this report. I’m
going to deny alternative sentencing for that reason. He’s going to serve the
sentence and the three misdemeanor sentences are going to be consecutive to one
another.”
The trial court’s ruling indeed reflects that it
failed to specify which of the criteria from Code section 40-35-115 it was relying upon to impose consecutive
sentencing.
However, the trial court’s findings substantiate
the application of criterion (2)—that the Defendant is an offender whose record
of criminal activity is extensive. The trial court emphasized the Defendant’s
prior misdemeanor convictions, particularly those “dealing with obscene
display, masturbation in public, those kinds of things, possession of drugs,
breaking and entering and multiple assaults.” “Trial courts can consider prior
misdemeanors in determining whether a defendant has an extensive record of
criminal activity” for consecutive sentencing purposes.
The trial court also noted that the Defendant
had often violated the terms of previously-imposed probationary sentences stating
that although many of the defendant’s “convictions did not involve acts of
violence and most constituted driving offenses, they indicate a consistent
pattern of operating outside the confines of lawful behavior”). The evidence
supports the trial court’s conclusions, and consecutive sentencing was
appropriately ordered in this case under either an abuse of discretion or de
novo standard of review.
he Court of Appeal had discerned no error in the trial court’s
sentencing decision with respect to the consecutive sentences given to the
Defendant.
Because the evidence was insufficient to support
the Defendant’s conviction for unlawful photography, that conviction was reversed and the charge was dismissed.
However, the evidence was sufficient to support the Defendant’s conviction for
attempted sexual battery, and that conviction is affirmed. The judgments of the
trial court were, therefore, affirmed in part and reversed in part.At the time
of this article being written, the Defendant was serving his
consecutive sentences.
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