1. The appellant and two other inmates of a correction facility were indicted for sexual assaults allegedly committed on the inmate victim Tierney. Motes’ trial resulted in acquittal on one count and conviction on two counts of aggravated sodomy. The victim’s testimony as to the two occurrences of which the defendant was convicted was circumstantial and was supported by that of another prisoner in the “bull pen.” The latter witness, who was also abused, reported the facts to a peace officer who had the named victim examined by a doctor. Scratches and other physical evidence supported the testimony that assaults had occurred. The evidence was ample to convince a rational trier of fact that the appellant, as well as his two co-indictees, was guilty of the offenses. The motion to direct a verdict of acquittal was properly overruled.
2. The trial court instructed the jury in substance in line with the holding in Sandstrom v. Montana,
3. The remaining enumeration of error complains that the court should have instructed the jury without request that if they found the victim Tierney had in fact consented to the acts perpetrated upon him by the defendant he could not be convicted without corroborating evidence, being then an accomplice to the act. Modern criminal law is generally in sex crimes such as rape or incest abandoning the requirement that the testimony of a consenting partner or victim must be corroborated.
Baker v. State,
Accordingly, as we understand
Baker,
all sex crimes will no longer be held to meet the requirement of Code § 38-121 that the testimony of an accomplice must be corroborated except where the statute defining the offense specifically mandates otherwise. Under this view the testimony of a consenting partner to a sexual offense needs no corroboration. We must therefore overrule
Babb v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
