BATTERY BY STRANGULATION DROPPED/
DEFENDANT PLED TO SIMPLE BATTERY WITH PROBATION R.K.D. was arrested on September 28, 2008, on charges of "simple" domestic violence ("DV")
and DV battery by strangulation. The first charge was a misdemeanor.
The second charge was a second degree felony punishable by up to 15
years in prison.
Following
his arrest, R.K.D. retained Jeffrey H. Garland. Garland was also
retained to represent the Defendant in a related DV injunction case.
This
case, like so many others, featured a couple in a long-term
relationship with two young children. Whatever really happened on the
night in question, and whatever the status of their personal
relationship, this couple would still be bound by their two children.
With
the welfare of the children in mind, Garland recommended that R.K.D.
consent to the injunction without evidentiary findings. In return, he
was able to retrieve most of his personal property and, more
importantly, he received supervised visitation with his children.
In
this case, the supervised visitation had to be scheduled through the
Valued Visits Program conducted by The Castle. Garland emphasized to
the client the need to faithfully attend the visitations. The client
did exercise his visitation on every available opportunity. Ultimately,
the Defendant's genuine attention and care for his children was the
primary motivational fact for resolving the criminal case without jail
or a trial.
As
with so many cases, there were no independent witnesses to what
transpired between the couple. The girlfriend called the police and
made a report that she had been hit and strangled. Three Port St. Lucie
Police Officers responded and carefully investigated the case. The
Police Officers observed no evidence of injury or strangulation.
Photographs of the girlfriend were taken inside the house with a flash
and outside the house in sunlight in order to fully document the areas
of claimed injury. These digital photographs were carefully examined by
the defense and revealed no evidence of injury.
When
the Police Officers arrived at the residence, the Defendant had already
left. A Police Officer called the Defendant on his cell phone and
requested that he return to the scene. The Defendant returned to the
scene within ten minutes. The Defendant claimed that the couple had an
argument, and he had "taken a walk" as DV counselors recommend. He denied battering or choking his girlfriend.
Later
on, during depositions, each of the Police Officers was asked whether
they were familiar with the procedure recommended by DV counselors for
individuals to "take a walk"
when confronted with a stressful situation. Each of the Officers was
familiar with such recommendations. They had no opinion whether the
Defendant had left the home as part of this recommended procedure to "take a walk",
or whether he left the home in order to avoid the police. Each of the
Officers agreed that the Defendant readily and immediately returned to
the scene. The Officers observed that he was not upset or intoxicated.
The Officers agreed that the Defendant was cooperative.
Attorney
Garland secured from 911 a digital copy of the original call. The
girlfriend was carefully questioned by the 911 operator about physical
injury and the possible need for an ambulance. The girlfriend
repeatedly denied physical injury. Although her voice was
emotion-tinged, there was no indication that the girlfriend was
disoriented during the 911 call for any reason, including physical
injury.
Later
on, during a deposition, the girlfriend maintained that she had been
seriously injured during the incident. She asserted that she had
received a concussion to the back of her head. She said she had been
choked to the point of nearly blacking out. Although she had advised
the Police Officers that she had been choked, she never mentioned a
concussion or injury to the head.
The
defense investigation obtained medical records concerning an on-the-job
injury received by the Defendant to his right hand. While working with
a concrete saw, the Defendant received a serious cut to his right
wrist. As the result of prompt medical treatment, the injury was
sutured and the hand immobilized in a cast.
The
Defendant was wearing this cast at the time of the alleged incident. He
advised the Police Officers that the presence of the cast would have
made it nearly impossible to have held the girlfriend in the way that
was being alleged. He pointed out that there was no blood or tearing to
the injury. The Police Officers confirmed that the injury appeared to
be intact, and that the Defendant was wearing the cast at the time he
returned to the scene of the incident.
No
one can be sure what happens behind closed doors. Accusations are made,
sometimes in anger and sometimes not completely true. In this case,
Defendant and his girlfriend had many months to work through these
problems via counseling and child visitation. The girlfriend later
agreed to the dropping of the felony charge in return for a plea to
probation on the separate misdemeanor battery charge. The case was
resolved in this way before Circuit Judge Marc Cianca on June 8, 2009. |