David v. State

28 P.3d 309, 2001 Alas. App. LEXIS 139, 2001 WL 789442
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJuly 13, 2001
DocketA-7227
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 28 P.3d 309 (David v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David v. State, 28 P.3d 309, 2001 Alas. App. LEXIS 139, 2001 WL 789442 (Ala. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Randall E. David was indicted for sexually abusing his stepdaughter. At his trial, David presented the testimony of Dr. David Raskin, a psychologist specializing in the study of human memory and, in particular, the effect that interviewing techniques have on a child's memory.

Dr. Raskin testified that all people, and especially young children, are susceptible to the phenomenon of "suggestion". That is, a person's memories can be distorted if they are asked questions that suggest the truth of particular facts or events. Based on his review of the state trooper interviews of David's stepdaughter, Dr. Raskin concluded that the state troopers had not used good interviewing procedures. Raskin suggested that the state troopers, by their interviewing techniques, had unwittingly encouraged David's stepdaughter to invent accusations of sexual abuse against David, and thus the stepdaughter's testimony might not be trustworthy.

The jury rejected this theory and found David guilty. David now appeals his conviction.

This appeal centers on an incident that occurred during the prosecutor's cross-examination of Dr. Raskin. The prosecutor asked Dr. Raskin if anything had ever happened to him that might cause him to be biased concerning sexual abuse cases. Dr. Raskin answered "absolutely not". The prosecutor then asked, "Have you ever been accused of sexual abuse yourself?" When Dr. Raskin answered "no'", the prosecutor pursued the subject by asking Dr. Raskin, "Your daughter has never accused you of ... sexual abuse?" At this point, the defense attorney objected and called for a bench conference.

After the jury left the courtroom, the prosecutor told the trial judge (Superior Court Judge Richard D. Savell) that he wanted to ask Dr. Raskin whether he, himself, had been accused of sexual abuse by one of his children. The prosecutor argued that if Dr. Raskin had ever faced such an accusation, then, regardless of whether the accusation was true or false, this experience might have biased Dr. Raskin in favor of sexual abuse defendants and made Dr. Raskin inherently distrustful of children's reports of sexual abuse. The prosecutor told the court that he had "materials" indicating that Raskin's daughter had accused him of sexual abuse.

Judge Savell allowed the prosecutor to conduct a voir dire examination of Dr. Ras-kin to investigate this matter. But when the prosecutor asked Dr. Raskin whether his daughter had ever accused him of sexual abuse, Raskin flatly denied this, and he accused the prosecutor of outright fabrication. Judge Savell then asked the prosecutor if he had any extrinsic evidence to support his *311 allegation, but the prosecutor ducked the question by asking permission to continue his voir dire examination of Dr. Raskin. (Unfortunately, Judge Savell never again asked the prosecutor whether he had any evidence to support his allegations.)

The prosecutor next asked Dr. Raskin if he had been sued by a woman in Utah, and if, in that civil suit, the court had sealed certain psychiatric records pertaining to the treatment of Raskin's son. Raskin acknowledged that this was correct. The prosecutor then asked Dr. Raskin if those sealed records contained an allegation that Raskin had sexually abused his son. Raskin responded that the records were sealed, and that they were also protected by the psychotherapist-patient privilege, so he would not reveal their contents.

Judge Savell rejected Raskin's claim of psychotherapist-patient privilege on the basis that Dr. Raskin was not the psychotherapist who treated his son. And Judge Savell concluded that it was irrelevant whether the Utah court had sealed the documents because he did not intend to order "the contents of court-sealed records [to be} opened". Judge Savell then ordered Dr. Raskin to answer whether "there are papers from [his son's psychiatric} treatment, or otherwise" containing an allegation that Raskin had sexually abused one of his children.

Dr. Raskin responded by again asserting that he was not authorized to reveal the contents of the sealed treatment documents:

Dr. Raskin: Your Honor, I think I've [already] answered [your] question. I've told [the prosecutor] that the ... alleged statement by ... my daughter ... accusing me of sexual abuse is absolutely false- and she was furious when she was informed [that someone had attributed such an accusation to her}. I've also told you that I'm not going to disclose information from my son's psychiatric records during treatment. I don't know what else I can say.
[[Image here]]
The Court: Did your son, in any setting, allege that you abused him or your daughter?
[[Image here]]
Dr. Raskin: Your Honor, I cannot disclose to you my son's psychiatric treatment records. ... I cannot do that because he is the only person who can release [those records]. I cannot do that; and you know that, Your Honor.

Confronted with Dr. Raskin's refusal to reveal the contents of the sealed psychiatric treatment records, Judge Savell directed his in-court clerk to bring the jury back to the courtroom. The judge's intention was to have the prosecutor again pose these questions to Dr. Raskin, so that the jury would know that Raskin refused to answer this inquiry.

But when the jury returned to the courtroom and the prosecutor asked Dr. Raskin, "[Alre there records in which a child of yours has accused you of sexually abusing one or more children?", Raskin replied, "I know of no such records. It's a fabrication."

Taken aback by this answer, the prosecutor asked Dr. Raskin, "You were asked these same questions just a minute ago, and you refused to answer. Is that correct?" Raskin replied, "That is not correct. I was not asked that question." The prosecutor then asked Judge Savell for permission to play Raskin's voir dire to the jury. Over the defense attorney's objection, Judge Savell declared that Raskin's answers during voir dire would be played to the jury because they constituted "a prior inconsistent statement".

The two attorneys then began to dispute whether Dr. Raskin had indeed been asked the same question during the voir dire. Judge Savell cut them off and posed his own question to Dr. Raskin: >

The Courk Dr. Raskin, are there records-regardless of origin, regardless of truth-arising from statements made by your son that accuse you, directly or indirectly, of sexual abuse of a child of yours, whether son or daughter?
Dr. Raskin: I know of no such records in which my son accused me of child abuse. The Court: And my next question to you is: Why did you just a few minutes ago refuse to answer that?
*312 [[Image here]]
Dr. Raskin: I was asked [a few minutes ago} to disclose information in sealed doeu-ments about my son's psychiatric records
[[Image here]]
The Court: That [was] not ...
Dr., Raskin: ..., which I refused [to dol.
The Court: That [was] not the question.
Dr.

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Related

State v. Savo
108 P.3d 903 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2005)
Riggins v. State
101 P.3d 1060 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 P.3d 309, 2001 Alas. App. LEXIS 139, 2001 WL 789442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-v-state-alaskactapp-2001.