State of Maine v. Benjamin H. Hodgdon II
164 A.3d 959
Me.2017Background
- Hodgdon, a former middle-school teacher/coach, had a sexual relationship with the victim beginning when she was in junior high; she testified the first encounter occurred when she was 12 and they had repeated sexual contact before she finished junior high.
- The victim reported the abuse in 2013; Hodgdon was indicted in 2014 on multiple counts, including gross sexual assault (victim under 14), unlawful sexual contact (victim under 14), and sexual abuse of a minor (victim 14–15).
- At trial the State relied primarily on the victim’s testimony; Hodgdon denied sexual contact while she was a minor and presented witnesses and other evidence challenging timing and credibility.
- The trial court instructed the jury on each element (including age) but also gave an "on or about" timing instruction; the jury convicted on one gross sexual assault count, one unlawful sexual contact count, and one sexual-abuse-of-a-minor count.
- On appeal Hodgdon raised three main issues: (1) jury instructions improperly allowed conviction without proof the victim was under 14 for Counts 5 and 6; (2) indictment timing posed double jeopardy risk; and (3) insufficiency of the evidence to prove offenses occurred before the victim’s 14th birthday.
Issues
| Issue | Hodgdon's Argument | State's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whether the "on or about" jury instruction relieved State of proving victim was under 14 for Counts 5–6 | The instruction allowed jury to convict without finding victim’s age element beyond reasonable doubt | Jury was separately and repeatedly instructed on each element including age; burden remained with State | Court affirmed: instructions as a whole adequately required proof of age; no obvious error |
| Whether the indictment’s broad/elastic timing exposes Hodgdon to double jeopardy | The elastic time periods and verdict ambiguity could permit reprosecution for same acts | Indictment dates plus victim’s birthday give clear temporal parameters; Lyon reasoning protects against double jeopardy | Court affirmed: temporal parameters suffice to avoid double jeopardy concerns |
| Whether evidence was sufficient to prove sexual acts occurred before victim turned 14 | Testimony was unreliable; Hodgdon produced contrary witnesses and explanation for later admitted act at age 18 | Victim gave specific details placing first encounter in Jan/Feb 2000; jury may credit her testimony | Court affirmed: viewing evidence in State's favor, jury could rationally find elements beyond reasonable doubt |
Key Cases Cited
- State v. Westgate, 148 A.3d 716 (Me. 2016) (similar "on or about" instruction created risk jury could bypass age element; conviction vacated where elements not fully instructed)
- State v. Lyon, 131 A.3d 918 (Me. 2016) (upheld conviction despite "on or about" dates where evidence and indictment read together supply temporal parameters protecting double jeopardy)
- State v. Tucker, 117 A.3d 595 (Me. 2015) (court must review jury instructions as a whole to ensure correct statement of governing law)
- State v. Troy, 86 A.3d 591 (Me. 2014) (standard for sufficiency review: view evidence in light most favorable to State)
- State v. Cloutier, 695 A.2d 550 (Me. 1997) (permitting conviction despite victim testimony that some acts occurred after indictment date where overall temporal parameters were adequate)
