Court Opinion

ID: 7797031
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-08-02 13:15:24.749136+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:28:33.612763
License: Public Domain

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

              Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Humphreys and Friedman
UNPUBLISHED

              Argued at Lexington, Virginia

              ROGER DWAYNE KIMBLE, JR.
                                                                          MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
              v.     Record No. 0831-21-3                             CHIEF JUDGE MARLA GRAFF DECKER
                                                                                AUGUST 2, 2022
              COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

                                   FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF AUGUSTA COUNTY
                                                Anne F. Reed, Judge

                               Jennifer T. Stanton, Senior Assistant Public Defender (Kieran
                               Bartley, Assistant Public Defender, on brief), for appellant.

                               Rebecca M. Garcia, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares,
                               Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

                     Roger Dwayne Kimble, Jr., appeals his convictions for sodomy, in violation of Code

              § 18.2-67.1(A)(2), and object sexual penetration by force, in violation of Code § 18.2-67.2(A)(2).1

              He argues that the evidence was insufficient to sustain his convictions because the victim’s

              testimony was inherently incredible. For the following reasons, we affirm.

                                                     I. BACKGROUND2

                     On November 15, 2019, the appellant texted Sophia Miller shortly after 5:00 p.m. He

              asked if she was home and told her that he had cigarettes. He then arrived at Miller’s Craigsville

                     *
                         Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
                     1
                      The trial court also convicted the appellant of attempted felony escape. He does not
              challenge that conviction on appeal.
                     2
                       “In accordance with familiar principles of appellate review,” the Court views the facts
              and the reasonable inferences flowing from them “in the light most favorable to the
              Commonwealth, the prevailing party at trial.” Poole v. Commonwealth, 73 Va. App. 357, 360
              (2021) (quoting Gerald v. Commonwealth, 295 Va. 469, 472 (2018)); see Gerald, 295 Va. at 473.
home a short time later with food and cigarettes, in order to have dinner with her while her

boyfriend was at work. The appellant and Miller had been coworkers. He also had babysat for

her children. He and Miller had previously had “sexual relations,” and he occasionally slept at

her home. She also described him as her best friend. When the appellant arrived that day, he

was angry and told Miller that she did not “treat him fairly” because she gave other men “a

chance” at a romantic relationship with her but would not become romantically involved with

him. Miller told the appellant that she was not interested in a relationship with him. He started

to “storm out” but then began cooking dinner “like nothing happened.” He gave Miller a plate of

food and a steak knife with which to cut it.

       After the meal, the appellant went to the bathroom and then returned to the living room

with his pants unbuttoned and unzipped. The appellant ignored Miller’s request to fasten his

pants and instead exposed his penis. He demanded that Miller “suck it,” but she refused. The

appellant then tried to remove her pants. She fought him and cried for him to stop, but he pulled

her pants down to “about midway between [her] knees and waist.” He then wrestled Miller from

the couch to the floor and told her that he “would stick his penis in whatever hole that he could.”

After Miller fought her way back onto the couch, the appellant slapped her in the face and

choked her. He also penetrated her vagina with his finger and demanded oral sex. When she

resisted, he threatened to kill her and looked at the steak knife she had used during dinner.

Miller was afraid that the appellant would hurt or kill her. The appellant put his penis in Miller’s

mouth “a couple times” before backing away and pulling up his pants.

       Miller was in shock after the altercation but sent a text message to her boyfriend to hurry

home and ran to her bedroom. The appellant told Miller that he was “just kidding” and that he

“heard [she] liked it rough so [he] figured [she would] like it.” Miller phoned her friend Brandon

Davis and told him that she was not “okay.” She was on the phone with Davis when the

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appellant entered her bedroom. She demanded that he leave. He ignored her, put on rubber

gloves, and told Miller that he was “dispos[ing] of the evidence.” He then repeated that he was

“just kidding.” Miller screamed several times for the appellant to leave. As he went to the door

he asked, “[D]oes this mean I can’t come back later and stay?” Miller told him that he could not

come back and yelled at him to “get the fuck out.” She thought she screamed loudly enough to

be heard by her neighbors.

       Miller remained on the phone with Davis until after the appellant left. She ended that call

when her boyfriend, Billy Ryder, phoned her in response to her text. Ryder described Miller as

“hysterical” as she told him what the appellant had done. Ryder called 911.

       At some point while Ryder and Miller were on the phone, before Ryder arrived at

Miller’s home, the appellant tried to phone her. At Ryder’s suggestion, Miller returned the

appellant’s call while Ryder was also on the phone. During that call, Miller asked the appellant

why he tried to rape her. He replied, “I thought you like it like that, don’t you?” When he later

tried to contact her, she messaged him that “what he did wasn’t right.” She also blocked his

phone number.

       Miller spoke with a police investigator on the phone the night of the incident, as soon as

Ryder reached her residence. She also went to the Sheriff’s office that same night and spoke

with an investigator.

       Three days after the attack, Miller confronted the appellant in a text message. Her

message recounted that he choked her, put his penis in her mouth, and “tried to rape” her. Miller

texted that his actions were “sick,” “twisted,” and “[not] okay.” The appellant replied, “I never

did anything with you that we hadn’t been doing all day since [your boyfriend] left for work.”

       As a result of Miller’s police report, Sergeant David Browning of the Augusta County

Sheriff’s Office ultimately conducted a Sexual Assault Response Team (SART) interview with

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her. He also attempted to contact the appellant. The SART interview with Miller was originally

scheduled for November 25, 2019, but did not occur because Miller forgot about it. Miller

testified at trial that she did not recall missing the interview but that she had “vehicle problems”

and was moving at the time. Sergeant Browning rescheduled the interview for December 18,

2019. During the interview on that date, Miller told Browning that she did not get a protective

order because she did not have enough gas to get to the courthouse. At trial, she testified that she

did not get a protective order because the appellant did not know where she was living and she

was not afraid of him.

       The appellant refused to speak to officers prior to his arrest. After his arrest, he told

Sergeant Browning that he and Miller had a “strange relationship.” The appellant said that he

and Miller wrestled and tickled each other on November 15, 2019. He also said that Miller

“like[d] . . . rough [sex]” but he “told her no because [he was] not into that.” The appellant

stated that he “had to leave out the back door” of Miller’s residence that evening because her

boyfriend “came home early.” Sergeant Browning obtained a search warrant for the appellant’s

phone and discovered that all text messages and call data prior to November 30, 2019, had been

deleted, although the phone still contained photographs taken prior to that date. Browning then

obtained the appellant’s cell phone data from Verizon. That data, as well as the data from

Miller’s cell phone, indicated that the appellant both made and received calls and text messages

on the night of November 15, 2019. Those records showed that the appellant and Miller

exchanged text messages or phone calls between about 5:00 and 5:30 p.m., shortly after

7:30 p.m., and again shortly after 9:00 p.m. that night. The records also showed that all cell

phone activity occurred through cell towers in Craigsville.

       Miller’s neighbor, Patricia Berry, testified for the defense. She lived approximately thirty

feet away from Miller’s residence and did not hear any screaming on November 15, 2019.

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Berry, however, could not specifically recall whether she had been at home that evening and

could say only that she was usually home on Friday nights.

       The appellant presented an alibi that he had been at a friend’s hunting camp outside

Craigsville on November 15, 2019. Miles Haislett testified that he was with the appellant on

November 15, 2019, which was a Friday, noting that it was the last day of a particular type of

hunting season. He also testified, however, that the events he described had occurred on a

Saturday. According to Haislett, the appellant arrived at his residence in the middle of the

afternoon, but he also testified that the appellant could have arrived there in the morning.

Haislett said that at around 6:00 or 7:00 p.m., he and the appellant left for Michael Morris’s

hunting camp, which was twenty-five or thirty miles outside Craigsville. They planned to stay

overnight but left around midnight because it was cold and rainy and Morris’s trailer leaked.

Haislett did not see the appellant make any telephone calls while they were together.

       Morris also testified, stating that he was with the appellant on November 14 or 15, 2019,

which was a Friday and the day before “rifle season” started. He said that they drove to his camp

outside Craigsville shortly after noon to set up for that evening’s dinner. He then dropped the

appellant off at a supermarket back in Craigsville at about 5:00 p.m. Morris testified that the

appellant returned to the camp later that night, around 9:00 p.m., with Haislett but that the two

men left when it began raining. Morris said that Verizon cell phone service was not available at

his camp or on most of the drive to and from the camp. He admitted on cross-examination that

when he originally spoke to Sergeant Browning about taking the appellant to his hunting camp

that day, he did not mention that he brought the appellant back to Craigsville around 5:00 p.m. or

that the appellant returned to the hunting camp later that evening with Haislett.

       The appellant testified in his defense. He said that he was at Miller’s residence in the

morning on November 15, 2019, and left around noon. He claimed that he was confused when

                                                -5-
talking to Sergeant Browning because “the days all run together.” He further asserted that the

incident in which he had reported leaving through the back door of Miller’s home had occurred

about a week before November 15, 2019. The appellant denied ever hurting Miller or trying to

have sex with her on November 15, 2019, but he said that they had had consensual sex in the

past and engaged in a “little fling” while she was dating Ryder. The appellant also admitted

communicating with Miller by phone around 6:00 p.m. on November 15, 2019, before he left for

the hunting camp.

       In closing argument, the appellant contended that Miller’s testimony was inconsistent and

incredible. The trial court noted that the case turned on the credibility of the witnesses. It found

the phone records and testimony of Haislett and Morris “compelling.” The court recognized that

Haislett testified that the appellant did not use his phone while they were together and Morris

testified that there was no cell phone service in the area of the hunting camp. The court

observed, however, that the phone records showed calls between the appellant and Miller during

the time period he claimed to have been at the hunting camp. The court concluded that Miller’s

testimony was credible and was corroborated by the phone records. Accordingly, it found the

appellant guilty of sodomy and object sexual penetration by force.

                                          II. ANALYSIS

       The appellant argues that the evidence was insufficient to sustain his convictions because

Miller’s testimony was inherently incredible and unworthy of belief. He asserts that no physical

evidence proved the crime, Miller’s testimony was contradictory, and her actions were contrary

to “usual human behavior.”

       “Determining the credibility of witnesses . . . is within the exclusive province of the [fact

finder], which has the unique opportunity to observe the demeanor of the witnesses as they

testify.” Dalton v. Commonwealth, 64 Va. App. 512, 525 (2015) (first alteration in original)

                                                -6-
(quoting Lea v. Commonwealth, 16 Va. App. 300, 304 (1993)). “[T]he conclusions of the fact

finder on issues of witness credibility may be disturbed on appeal only when [the appellate court

concludes] that the witness’ testimony was ‘inherently incredible, or so contrary to human

experience as to render it unworthy of belief.’” Ragsdale v. Commonwealth, 38 Va. App. 421,

429 (2002) (quoting Ashby v. Commonwealth, 33 Va. App. 540, 548 (2000)). “Evidence is not

‘incredible’ unless it is ‘so manifestly false that reasonable men ought not to believe it’ or

‘shown to be false by objects or things as to the existence and meaning of which reasonable men

should not differ.’” Gerald v. Commonwealth, 295 Va. 469, 487 (2018) (quoting Juniper v.

Commonwealth, 271 Va. 362, 415 (2006)).

       Accordingly, “[a] legal determination that a witness is inherently incredible is very

different from the mere identification of inconsistencies in a witness’ testimony or statements.

Testimony may be contradictory or contain inconsistencies without rising to the level of being

inherently incredible as a matter of law.” Kelley v. Commonwealth, 69 Va. App. 617, 626

(2019). Instead, such inconsistencies are appropriately weighed and “‘resolved by the fact

finder,’ not the appellate court.” Id. (quoting Towler v. Commonwealth, 59 Va. App. 284, 292

(2011)). In making a credibility determination, the fact finder “[i]s free to believe or disbelieve,

in part or in whole, the testimony of any witness.” Bazemore v. Commonwealth, 42 Va. App.

203, 213 (2004) (en banc); see Rollston v. Commonwealth, 11 Va. App. 535, 547 (1991).

       With regard to the crimes at issue here, both of a sexual nature, it is well established that

“a conviction for rape and other sexual offenses may be sustained solely upon the uncorroborated

testimony of the victim.” Poole v. Commonwealth, 73 Va. App. 357, 368 (2021) (quoting

Wilson v. Commonwealth, 46 Va. App. 73, 87 (2005)). “[B]ecause sexual offenses are typically

clandestine in nature, seldom involving witnesses to the offense except the perpetrator and the

                                                -7-
victim, a requirement of corroboration would result in most sex offenses going unpunished.” Id.

at 368-69 (quoting Wilson, 46 Va. App. at 88).

       Here, as the trial court stated, the resolution of the case hinged on witness credibility.

And the law is clear that “[t]he credibility of the witnesses and the weight accorded the evidence

are matters solely for the factfinder.” Commonwealth v. Perkins, 295 Va. 323, 328 (2018)

(quoting Elliott v. Commonwealth, 277 Va. 457, 462 (2009) (emphasis added)). Only if the

witness’s testimony is inherently incredible as a matter of law will the appellate court disturb the

trial court’s credibility determination. Nobrega v. Commonwealth, 271 Va. 508, 518 (2006)

(quoting Walker v. Commonwealth, 258 Va. 54, 70-71 (1999)); see also Sullivan v.

Commonwealth, 280 Va. 672, 676 (2010) (noting that the same deference that applies to the

findings of fact made by a jury also applies to findings made by a trial judge). As already noted,

the “inherent incredibility” test is a tremendously high standard on appeal.

       Contrary to the appellant’s suggestion, the record here does not establish that Miller’s

testimony was inherently incredible as a matter of law. Relying on Willis v. Commonwealth, 218

Va. 560 (1977), the appellant argues that Miller’s testimony was inherently incredible because it

was inconsistent and she delayed meeting with Sergeant Browning for the SART interview. The

appellant’s case, however, is readily distinguished from Willis.

       In Willis, a sixty-five-year-old woman alleged that her twenty-two-year-old cousin and

another young man raped her, but she did not report the incident until about a month later and

then tried to withdraw the warrants. See id. at 561-63. Further, the woman gave contradictory

testimony regarding details of the alleged offense—which man had raped her first, whether she

was wearing any clothing, and whether she had seen and talked to the men after the incident

occurred. Id. at 562-63. Her reputation in the community for truthfulness was “low.” Id. at 563.

Noting that the woman’s “wholly uncorroborated” testimony was “replete with contradictions

                                                 -8-
and inconsistencies,” the Supreme Court held that her testimony was “incredible as a matter of

law.” Id. at 563-64 (emphasis added).3

          The appellant claims Miller delayed reporting the incident because she did not attend the

SART interview on November 25, 2019, and the interview on December 18, 2019, was

thirty-three days after the offenses occurred. The record, however, demonstrates that Miller

reported the incident right after it happened. She told Ryder and Davis by phone immediately

afterward. Ryder reacted by calling 911 to report the appellant’s sexual assault of Miller as soon

as she told him about it. Also on the night of the offense, Miller spoke to a police investigator

about the assault by phone and went to the Sheriff’s office, where she reported what the

appellant had done to her. Given Miller’s immediate interaction with the police following the

incident, the delay in her formal SART interview is not at all comparable to the delay in Willis,

in which the incident itself went unreported for a month. Further, although Miller missed her

first SART interview, she explained that she did not recall scheduling the interview in November

and was moving at the time. Her delay in attending the SART interview simply did “not render

[her] testimony inherently incredible as a matter of law.” Corvin v. Commonwealth, 13 Va. App.

296, 299 (1991) (holding that the explanation given by the juvenile victim for his fourteen-month

delay in reporting a sexual assault was “acceptable” under the circumstances of the case).

Whether Miller’s explanation was credible was for the trial court as the fact finder to determine.

See id.

          3
         The Court in Willis did not suggest that the credible testimony of a victim must be
corroborated. See Wilson, 46 Va. App. at 88 (quoting Willis, 218 Va. at 812, for the principle
that “convictions for crimes of a sexual nature may depend upon the ‘uncorroborated testimony
of a prosecutrix if her evidence is credible[] and the guilt of the accused is believed by the [fact
finder] beyond a reasonable doubt’”). The Supreme Court has repeatedly made clear that a
conviction for a sexual offense may be sustained by the victim’s testimony alone. See also, e.g.,
Fisher v. Commonwealth, 228 Va. 296, 299 (1984); Snyder v. Commonwealth, 220 Va. 792, 796
(1980). Here, the trier of fact found the victim credible.
                                                 -9-
        The appellant also contends that Miller’s testimony was inconsistent because she

provided more details about the offenses at trial than she initially reported to Sergeant Browning

and gave different explanations regarding why she had missed the November SART interview

and had not obtained a protective order. However, unlike in Willis, the descriptions of the

offenses that Miller gave at different times were consistent. Also, no evidence suggested that

Miller had a poor reputation for truthfulness. That she later provided additional details or other

reasons for her actions did not make her an incredible witness. In fact, even assuming that she

made inconsistent statements, “[t]he mere fact that a witness may have . . . given inconsistent

statements during the investigation of a crime does not necessarily render the testimony

unworthy of belief.” Juniper, 271 Va. at 415. Instead, such inconsistencies are “appropriately

weighed as part of the entire issue of witness credibility, which is left to the [fact finder] to

decide.” Id.

        Additionally, unlike in Willis, Miller’s testimony was corroborated by the phone records,

which the trial court found “compelling.” See Lambert v. Commonwealth, 70 Va. App. 740, 760

(2019) (holding that a witness’s testimony was not inherently incredible when it was

corroborated by other evidence). The phone records established that Miller called both Ryder

and Davis on November 15, 2019, and they testified that she told them about the incident. The

phone records further showed that the appellant called Miller after he left her residence and that

he, Miller, and Ryder had a three-way phone call.4 The phone records demonstrated that the

appellant made and received phone calls and text messages on the night of November 15, 2019,

through a cell site in Craigsville. This evidence legitimately called into question for the trier of

fact the testimony of his purported alibi witnesses that he was at a hunting camp a distance away.

        4
          During that conversation, Miller asked the appellant why he would rape her, and he
replied, “I thought you like it like that, don’t you?”
                                                  - 10 -
The evidence had this effect because the camp itself had no cell phone service and such service

was limited on the route to and from the camp.

        Thus, the record in the appellant’s case does not show that Miller’s testimony was

unworthy of belief. See Snyder v. Commonwealth, 220 Va. 792, 796 (1980) (stating that the rape

victim’s story was not “improbable” and the “conflicts in her testimony . . . were not so material

or so unusual that her version of the events on the night in question was rendered unbelievable as

a matter of law”); see also Fisher v. Commonwealth, 228 Va. 296, 299-300 (1984) (holding that

“[t]he evidence was neither incredible nor so contrary to human experience as to render it

unworthy of belief” where, even though the child victim’s “credibility was subjected to

substantial attack,” the trial court believed her).

        After balancing all the evidence, the trial court found that Miller’s testimony was credible

and supported by the phone records. Having reviewed the record, we conclude that Miller’s

testimony was not inherently incredible and the evidence was sufficient to support the

convictions. See Poole, 73 Va. App. at 363, 368-69; Smith v. Commonwealth, 56 Va. App. 711,

718-19 (2010) (citing Swanson v. Commonwealth, 8 Va. App. 376, 379 (1989)). The

Commonwealth’s evidence proved beyond a reasonable doubt that the appellant was guilty of

sodomy and object sexual penetration by force.

                                         III. CONCLUSION

        Miller’s testimony was not inherently incredible as a matter of law. Therefore, this Court

defers to the trial court’s finding that Miller’s testimony was credible and sufficient, along with

other evidence in the record, to sustain the appellant’s convictions. The trial court’s judgment is

affirmed.

                                                                                           Affirmed.

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