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v. Hamilton

COLOCTAPPJuly 3, 2019No. 16CA1468, PeopleCited 260 times
Defendant Winv. Hamilton

Case Details

Status
Published
Procedural Posture
appeal from criminal conviction

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Outcome

Hamilton was convicted of sexual assault and distribution of a controlled substance. On appeal, the court addressed evidentiary issues regarding phone records but the conviction was upheld.

Excerpt

Hamilton bought a round of shots for J.F. and her friends at a bar. J.F. accused Hamilton of drugging her, separating her from her friends, taking her to an apartment without her consent while she was unconscious, and sexually assaulting her. Hamilton told the investigating detective, Slay, that J.F. had sent him multiple texts while they were drinking together at the bars and sent him texts the day after the alleged sexual assault. At trial, J.F. testified she thought her drink had drugs in it because she could not remember much after she had taken the shot. J.F. told the jury the next thing she remembered was waking up on her stomach in an apartment, with her hands being held above her head, and Hamilton was having sex with her. J.F. testified that she did not agree to have sex with Hamilton. Hamilton claimed the sex was consensual. Slay testified that police department personnel downloaded the contents of Hamilton's and J.F.'s phones and generated reports (the reports) reflecting the phones' contents. The prosecutor did not seek to introduce into evidence the reports or testimony of police department employees who had examined the phones or generated the reports. Instead, Slay testified that, based on his review of the reports, neither phone contained text messages from J.F. to Hamilton. Hamilton was convicted of one count of sexual assault and one count of distribution of a controlled substance. On appeal, Hamilton argued that the district court erred in allowing Slay to testify about the contents of J.F.'s and Hamilton's phones. Hamilton did not preserve his argument that the district court erred in admitting Slay's testimony regarding the contents of Hamilton's phone, but preserved his argument that the court erred in allowing Slay to testify regarding the contents of J.F.'s phone. A computer-generated report of a cell phone's contents is not hearsay as long as it was created without human input or interaction. To qualify as a computer-generated report that do

What This Ruling Means

**What Happened** This case involved serious criminal charges against Hamilton, who was accused of drugging a woman named J.F. at a bar and sexually assaulting her. J.F. claimed that Hamilton bought her and her friends shots, drugged her drink, separated her from her friends, and took her to an apartment while she was unconscious, where he assaulted her. Hamilton claimed J.F. had texted him during and after their time together, suggesting the encounter was consensual. **What the Court Decided** Hamilton was convicted of both sexual assault and distribution of a controlled substance (drugging someone). He appealed the conviction, challenging how certain evidence about phone records was handled during the trial. However, the appeals court upheld his conviction, meaning he remained guilty of both crimes. **Why This Matters for Workers** While this appears to be a criminal case rather than an employment dispute, it highlights important workplace safety issues. Workers should be aware that sexual assault and drugging someone are serious crimes that can result in criminal conviction. In workplace settings, employers have legal obligations to maintain safe environments and address sexual harassment or assault. Workers who experience such crimes should report them to both law enforcement and their employer's HR department, as both criminal and civil remedies may be available.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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