Czech v. State

945 A.2d 1088, 2008 Del. LEXIS 132, 2008 WL 699074
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMarch 17, 2008
Docket269, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 945 A.2d 1088 (Czech v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Czech v. State, 945 A.2d 1088, 2008 Del. LEXIS 132, 2008 WL 699074 (Del. 2008).

Opinion

HOLLAND, Justice.

The New Castle County Grand Jury indicted the defendant-appellant, Stanley R. Czech (“Czech”) on fifteen counts of Rape in the First Degree 1 and one count of Continuous Sexual Abuse of a Child. 2 Following a five-day jury trial, the Superior Court convicted Czech of three counts of Rape in the First Degree and acquitted him on the remaining charges in the indictment. The Superior Court sentenced Czech to a total of fifty-one years of incarceration at Level V, suspended after serving forty-five years for decreasing levels of supervision.

In this direct appeal, Czech raises three contentions. Czech’s first argument is that the trial judge abused her discretion by allowing the child complainant’s mother to sit on the witness stand behind the child while the child testified before the jury. Second, Czech contends that the trial judge committed plain error by allowing evidence of a similar uncharged offense to be introduced into evidence. Finally, Czech submits that the prosecutor’s statements during closing arguments amounted to improper vouching.

We have concluded that none of Czech’s arguments have merit. Therefore, the judgments of the Superior Court must be affirmed.

Facts 3

Czech was charged with committing multiple offenses of rape against the five- *1092 year-old granddaughter of his girlfriend. Mary Jane Smith (“Ms.Smith”) testified that Czech is her mother’s boyfriend. Ms. Smith’s mother, Carol Young, and Czech had lived together for about ten years in Wilmington. Ms. Smith testified that her two children, 4 Mary (five-years old) and Martha (about three-years old) would stay with her mother and Czech about one weekend every two months from January 2004 through February 2006.

Ms. Smith testified that on March 12, 2006, she saw her five-year-old daughter, Mary, on the sofa at home with her hands down her pants moving up and down. She took Mary into the kitchen and asked Mary what she was doing. Mary replied it hurts down there. She asked Mary why it hurts and Mary was unresponsive. She asked Mary if anyone had ever touched her down there and Mary said no.

She warned Mary that she shouldn’t lie to her mother and asked again whether anyone had ever touched Mary down there. Ms. Smith testified Mary put her hands over her mouth and mumbled. Ms. Smith told Mary that she could not hear her and Mary mumbled again. Ms. Smith again told Mary that she couldn’t hear her and Mary said “Stoshi,” which is Czech’s nickname. On further questioning by her mother, Mary said that it happened every day.

Ms. Smith took Mary to her doctor who referred her to A.I. DuPont Hospital for Children. The following day, Mary was examined by a pediatrician specializing in child abuse. The physical examination provided no medical indications that Mary had been molested. The doctor testified, however, that this was consistent with child sexual abuse.

Four days later, on March 17, 2006, Mary was questioned by a child abuse investigator from the Child Advocacy Center at A.I. DuPont Hospital. Her interview was recorded and played for the jury at trial. Ms. Smith testified that, after the first interview at A.I. DuPont Hospital, Mary told her that Czech had also done the same things to her cousin Ruth, who was about eleven-years-old. 5

About two weeks later, on May 4, 2006, Mary was again interviewed at A.I. DuPont Hospital. That recorded interview concerning the reported abuse of Ruth was also played for the jury. Mary’s cousin, Ruth, subsequently testified at trial. Ruth stated that she and her five-year-old brother, Anthony, had stayed at her grandmother and Czech’s apartment several times, but that Czech had never touched her inappropriately, that she had never told anyone that Czech had touched her inappropriately, and that she had never seen Czech touch any of her cousins, including Mary, inappropriately.

Mary, then almost six-years-old, testified at trial. She did not respond, however, to any of the prosecutor’s questions concerning the offenses alleged against Czech or her prior interviews at A.I. DuPont Hospital. The recordings of the two statements to the investigator at A.I. DuPont Hospital were then played for the jury.

Czech, who was fifty-years-old, testified that he had lived with Carol Young for about twelve years in Wilmington. He said that Ms. Smith’s daughter, Mary and Martha, did not come over to their grandmother’s home very often, only when Ms. Smith wanted her mother to babysit. When the children or their cousins stayed *1093 for the weekend, the children would sleep in Carol and Czech’s bedroom in the one bedroom apartment. Carol and Czech would sleep on sofas in the living room. Czech said that when Mary and her cousin, Anthony, sometimes took baths at the apartment before bedtime, he would set the water and tell them to get in the tub. Czech denied ever touching Mary or any of her cousins inappropriately.

Child Witness Support Person

Czech’s first argument on appeal is that the trial judge abused her discretion by permitting a support person (the complainant’s mother) to sit behind the child complainant while she was testifying before the jury. Czech argues that special accommodation prejudiced him, heightened sympathy for the complainant, and enhanced her credibility because the jury may have perceived the mother’s presence as the trial judge’s endorsement of the child’s testimony. Specifically, Czech asserts that the trial judge erred by: first, suggesting the special accommodation sua sponte; second, not requiring a foundation to be laid for the presence of the support person; and third, denying Czech’s request for a special jury instruction explaining that the presence of the support person should not affect the jury’s assessment of the complainant’s credibility.

The question of whether it is permissible for an adult support person to sit in close proximity while a child complainant testifying before a jury is one of first impression in Delaware. Such accommodations have, however, been addressed and approved by several other jurisdictions providing that adequate procedural safeguards are imposed. 6 For example, in State v. T.E., the New Jersey Court of Appeals held that “upon a showing of substantial need, with appropriate safeguards imposed, and a cautionary instruction given, a trial judge’s discretion is not abused in permitting an adult support person to sit in close proximity to a young child while testifying before a jury.” 7 Other jurisdictions have required similar procedural safeguards including; requiring the state to prove there was a “compelling need” to have the support person sit next to the child; 8 issuing a cautionary instruction both to the jury and to the support person, 9

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Bluebook (online)
945 A.2d 1088, 2008 Del. LEXIS 132, 2008 WL 699074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/czech-v-state-del-2008.