State v. Fulp

Decision Date08 September 1992
Docket NumberNo. 1871,1871
Citation423 S.E.2d 149,310 S.C. 278
CourtSouth Carolina Court of Appeals
PartiesThe STATE, Respondent, v. Richard E. FULP, Appellant. . Heard

Assistant Appellate Defender Lesley M. Coggiola, of S.C. Office of Appellate Defense, Columbia, for appellant.

Attorney General T. Travis Medlock, Chief Deputy Atty. Gen. Donald J. Zelenka, Asst. Atty. Gen. Harold M. Coombs, Jr., and Staff Atty. Rakale B. Smith, Columbia; and Sol. Ralph J. Wilson, Conway, for respondent.

GOOLSBY, Judge:

The jury convicted Richard E. Fulp of assault with intent to commit criminal sexual conduct in the second degree in violation of S.C.Code Ann. § 16-3-656 (1985). 1 Fulp appeals, questioning the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. He argues the evidence failed to establish "aggravated coercion" as required by S.C.Code Ann. § 16-3-653(1) (1985), the statute creating the offense of criminal sexual conduct in the second degree. 2 We affirm.

The victim here was visiting the Myrtle Beach area with her college roommate and several other girlfriends. Around midnight on the night of April 7, 1990, the victim's girlfriends decided to go outside for a walk. When they had not returned by 4:00 a.m., the victim, worried that something had happened to them, left her motel room to look for them. A little while later, she walked up to a man on the street and asked him whether he had seen her friends. While she was talking with the man, Fulp approached and asked the man for a cigarette.

The victim then started walking back to her motel room. She began to run when she realized Fulp, a person she did not know, was following her. The victim ran to the door at the back of her motel room after she remembered she did not have a key to the front door. When she reached the back of the motel, which was lighted only by the moon and a light from the inside of her room, the victim attempted to jump over a railing that guarded the balcony to her room. Before she could clear the railing, however, Fulp grabbed the victim and pulled her down to the ground. He then spun the victim around and grabbed both her breasts with his hands. The victim lost her footing and fell. As she sat on the ground kicking and screaming, Fulp leaned toward her and began fumbling with the clothing that covered her stomach. Fulp ran away when the victim screamed the name of a friend still inside the motel room.

"Aggravated coercion" occurs if a person "threatens to use force or violence of a high and aggravated nature to overcome the victim or another person, if the victim reasonably believes that the actor has the present ability to carry out the threat." S.C.Code Ann. § 16-3-651(b) (1985).

Although Fulp did not verbally threaten the victim, his actions, beginning with his following the victim and ending with his fumbling with her clothing, support an inference that he threatened to use high and aggravated force upon the victim to accomplish a sexual battery. "Threats...

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2 cases
  • State v. Elliott
    • United States
    • South Carolina Supreme Court
    • 4 Septiembre 2001
    ...grabbed the victim, forced her into the woods, and ripped her clothes in an effort to commit a sexual battery); State v. Fulp, 310 S.C. 278, 423 S.E.2d 149 (Ct.App.1992) (the evidence supported a verdict of second degree assault with intent to commit criminal sexual conduct, even though the......
  • State v. Lindsey, 25669.
    • United States
    • South Carolina Supreme Court
    • 30 Junio 2003
    ...grabbed victim, forced her into the woods and ripped her clothes off in an effort to commit a sexual battery); State v. Fulp, 310 S.C. 278, 423 S.E.2d 149 (Ct.App. 1992) (evidence supported a verdict of second degree assault with intent to commit criminal sexual conduct, even though the def......

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