Bixler v. State

582 N.W.2d 252, 1998 WL 460145
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 6, 1988
DocketC5-97-181
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 582 N.W.2d 252 (Bixler v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bixler v. State, 582 N.W.2d 252, 1998 WL 460145 (Mich. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

STRINGER, Justice.

In this appeal brought by the State of Minnesota regarding respondent’s petition for posteonvietion relief we consider whether the court of appeals erred in concluding that because respondent is borderline mentally retarded, his constitutional right to present a meaningful defense was violated when the trial court refused to allow psychological expert testimony relating to the credibility of respondent’s confession. We hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in excluding the expert testimony and therefore reverse the court of appeals.

On March 9, 1994, Lynne Bixler called the police and reported that her husband Duane Bixler had sexually abused their 2-1/2-year-old daughter, S.B., a child with Downs Syndrome. When the police arrived at the Bixler residence, Lynne Bixler handed the officer a plastic bag containing what she believed to be a scab from her husband. She told the police that she found the scab between S.B.’s clitoris and labia when she changed S.B.’s diaper at approximately 8:00 a.m. that morning. She explained that her husband was mentally retarded due to a brain injury and .acted like a 15 or 16-year-old. Duane Bixler knew his wife had called the police and entered the room while the officer was talking with his wife. He said that he did not do anything wrong. The officer noticed that Duane Bixler had a fresh scar on his neck that was shiny, dry and concave. Lynne Bixler later told the police and a social worker that Duane Bixler had a habit of picking at his scabs and putting them in his mouth. Duane Bixler later acknowledged to the police that he had scabs on his body from skin graft surgery 2 months earlier related to severe burns that he received when he was 5-years-old but he thought they were gone by March 9, 1994. The officer did not arrest Duane Bixler but took the bag containing the scab with him.

Later that day a police detective phoned Lynne Bixler to set up a time for an interview. Duane Bixler testified that his wife asked him to drive her to the police station so she could talk with the detective. When he returned to pick her up, Lynne Bixler had just told the detective that she believed her husband had put one of his scabs in his mouth and then performed oral sex on their daughter S.B. Apparently based on this information the detective told Duane Bixler that he wanted to ask him a few questions. The detective interrogated Bixler in a room 14’ x 16’ in size, with a window looking out on the investigators’ cubicles. The room was brightly lit by fluorescent lights and contained a table and some bookshelves. The interrogation lasted for little more than an hour with an '8-minute bathroom break. At the beginning of the interrogation, the detective asked Duane Bixler if he knew why he was there. 1 He responded that he did, but that he did not abuse S.B. Shortly after the interrogation began, the detective advised Bixler of his Miranda rights, which he then waived. For the next hour Bixler denied he sexually abused S.B. The detective counseled him that in order to get help-for his problems related to his relationship with his wife, his abuse of drugs and his sexual abuse of S.B. he would have to first admit that he did it. At this point in the interrogation Bixler admitted that he had licked S.B.’s vagina. He *254 told the detective that he did it because S.B. liked it and because his wife would not have sex with him. The detective then gave him another Miranda warning and tape-recorded his confession. The recording was transcribed, Bixler was given a copy and signed it after making several changes. The detective then placed him under formal arrest.

At the Rasmussen hearing, the interrogating detective testified that he had little experience interviewing mentally retarded individuals and acknowledged that he had exerted pressure on Bixler to persuade him to confess. Bixler testified that he was 31-years-old, had a 9th grade education, and had sustained a brain injury from a car accident in 1981. He also testified that during the interrogation, despite his repeated denial of abusing S.B., the detective told him that he was in denial and that he could not go into any kind of treatment unless he admitted that he was a child molester.. He further testified that he admitted to abusing S.B. because he thought it was the only way he could get treatment, he was afraid of going to jail, he could not stand the pressure of being asked the same question over and over — “six times” and he thought the interview would never end unless he admitted that he abused S.B. Although Bixler acknowledged that he had been questioned by the police previously relative to a drug-charge,. he said that never before had he felt pressured by the police to admit anything. Regarding the present interrogation, in addition to questioning Bixler about S.B., the detective asked Bixler several questions in succession as to whether he sexually abused either his 5-year-old or 1-year-old daughter. When the prosecutor asked Bixler on cross-examination how he was able to resist admitting that he molested his youngest daughter, he responded that the detective did not pressure him as much about that daughter as he did about S.B.

Defense counsel then called Dr. Perkins, a psychologist, to the stand and in response to the state’s objection that expert testimony of Bixler’s personality characteristics is irrelevant, defense counsel made an offer of proof that Dr. Perkins would testify that he examined Bixler and that because of his low intelligence he is susceptible to coercion. Defense counsel argued that his statement was therefore a product of coercion and was involuntary, and that Dr. Perkins would further testify that Bixler is vulnerable to suggestion and intimidation and has a tendency to say what authority figures want to hear in order to bring an end to the pressure he feels from persons in authority. The Rasmussen court applied a totality of the circumstances test and refused to permit Dr. Perkins to testify at the hearing, concluding that Bixler responded appropriately throughout the proceedings, he added explanation when he thought it was necessary, he had experience with the criminal justice system including prior convictions, incarceration, and numerous interviews with the police, he was familiar with his Miranda rights, he had a very good memory for detail, the interrogation was not long and was conducted in an appropriate environment at an appropriate time, he agreed to be interviewed, and there was no evidence of any maltreatment. See Bixler. v. State, 568 N.W.2d 880, 883-84 (Minn.App.1997) (describing the Rasmussen court’s analysis). The Rasmussen court noted his mental impairments but found that they did not, in light of the other factors, make it impossible for him to give a voluntary confession. The Rasmussen court therefore rejected the offer of proof and concluded that Duane Bixler’s confession was admissible.

On three occasions during Bixler’s trial defense counsel again offered the testimony of Dr. Perkins regarding the reliability of Duane Bixler’s confession. On each occasion the state objected arguing that he was attempting to revisit the issue of voluntariness pertaining to admissibility. The trial court rejected the expert testimony as lacking foundation and irrelevant.

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Bluebook (online)
582 N.W.2d 252, 1998 WL 460145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bixler-v-state-minn-1988.