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Eureka man withdraws no contest plea

by Bob Henline Western News
| April 12, 2016 8:06 AM

 

Hadley Gene Resh, a Eureka man accused of sexually assaulting his 15-year-old stepdaughter, will go to trial in the September jury term in Montana’s 19th Judicial District Court. 

Citing statutory issues with the plea agreement, Resh’s attorney, Charles Sprinkle, moved to change his client’s plea from no contest to not guilty. Judge James Wheelis granted the motion and scheduled a pre-trial conference for July, with the trial to be held in September. 

Under the vacated plea agreement, Resh had entered a plea of nolo contendere, or no contest, to a single felony charge of sexual assault, with a second count of the same charge to be dismissed. As part of agreement between Resh and the prosecutor, Lincoln County Attorney Bernard Cassidy, the state recommended a six-year deferred imposition of sentence. The punishment prescribed by law for the crime is a fine of up to $50,000 and a prison sentence of not less than two years and not more than 100 years.

The no contest plea, while functionally equivalent to a guilty plea, is not an admission of guilt on the part of the defendant. By pleading no contest, Resh acknowledged not that he committed the crime, but only that the state had enough evidence to prove him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

Resh was initially charged Sep. 30, 2014, with one felony count of sexual intercourse without consent, or in the alternative, one count of felony sexual assault. Both felonies carry the same four to 100 year prison sentence.

The charges stem from an incident that occurred between March 28, 2014, and March 30, 2014, in which Resh, then 33, sexually assaulted his then 15-year-old stepdaughter.

The victim, who had moved to Kalispell after the assault, reported it to Kalispell police. The Kalispell detectives conducted a forensic interview with the victim following the crime report, and then contacted the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office. The case landed on the desk of Detective Duane Rhodes, the Sheriff’s Office primary investigator for sex crimes in Lincoln County.

Rhodes contacted Resh June 10, 2014. During that conversation, according to Rhodes’ narrative attached to the affidavit of probable cause, Resh denied any wrongdoing and attempted to deflect blame to the victim.

“Hadley denied the accusation and gave an explanation of her saying that it was because she got in trouble for sneaking out and the cops had to bring her home,” Rhodes wrote.

Rhodes reported returning to Eureka the next morning to interview Resh again. During that conversation, Resh reportedly admitted to having a drinking problem and not remembering the incident.

“I told him that I didn’t believe he was telling me the whole truth yesterday,” Rhodes wrote. “I knew he was depressed and had been drinking. Hadley lowered his head and nodded, as in agreeing with me. He then admitted he had a drinking problem and that’s why he was going to classes. He said he can’t remember and thatbothers him a lot. Hadley said he had been drinking every night until he got into AA, and confronting him with the accusation doesn’t surprise him and he is ashamed of himself.”

Resh was arrested Sept. 16, 2014, by deputies of the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office and released on $50,000 bond the same day. He remains free on bond. He will be tried on both counts, and if convicted could be sentenced to up to 20 years on each count. The sentences could be ordered to be served either consecutively or concurrently.