Feaster v. United States

631 A.2d 400, 1993 WL 368381
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 16, 1993
Docket90-CF-1572
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 631 A.2d 400 (Feaster v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feaster v. United States, 631 A.2d 400, 1993 WL 368381 (D.C. 1993).

Opinions

ROGERS, Chief Judge:

Appellant Michael A. Feaster appeals from his convictions by a jury of sexual offenses on the grounds that his Sixth Amendment right to present a defense was violated when the trial judge excluded from the defense case a transcript of the grand jury testimony of Oscar Mitchell. We hold that the judge will have abused his discretion in excluding the grand jury transcript unless accompanied by a finding that the witness was not shown to be unavailable to testify at trial. Accordingly, we remand the record to the trial court to make a finding regarding unavailability. Appellant’s other contention, that the trial judge erred by denying his motion to sever the counts relating to two of the complainants, is controlled by Johnson v. United States, 610 A.2d 729 (D.C.1992), petition for reh’g en banc denied, which upheld the admission of prior sexual conduct under the “unusual sexual preference” Drew1 exception.

I.

The complainants were seven young boys from troubled homes whom appellant took into his home and held out as his “godsons.” 2 Four of the complainants were under the age of fourteen at the time of the incidents, which occurred between the summer of 1987 and early 1989. The complainants maintained that when they began staying at appellant’s home, he had treated them “nice,” made sure that they went to school and did their homework, and bought clothes for them. However, this living situation ended on Saturday, February 25, 1989, when one of the boys, John, ran away from appellant’s apartment to his grandmother’s home. Crying and upset, he told his grandmother that appellant had sexually assaulted him. The following Monday, John was examined by a doctor. As a result of a police investigation, appellant was charged with forty-one counts of sexually assaulting the boys who lived at, or regularly visited, his home.3

At trial, the boys related a similar account of the events which allegedly took place in appellant’s home. The testimony of John, who was twelve at the time of the incidents, is both illustrative and possibly critical in some respects. John testified that he had lived in appellant’s two-bedroom home for six months. According to [403]*403John, appellant stayed in the front bedroom, while he (John) and his brother Har-ald (age eleven), Derrick (age ten), and Oscar Mitchell (age nineteen), stayed in the rear bedroom.4 On November 23, 1988, a date which John claimed to remember because it fell between his birthday and Thanksgiving, John was watching television in the living room. Around 10:30 p.m. appellant, dressed in his underwear, told him to come into his room. John testified that he went into appellant’s room, and appellant closed the door, laid on the bed, and began rubbing John’s buttocks. John claimed that appellant told him to lie on his side on the bed, kept touching his buttocks, and sodomized him. John and William (age sixteen) described several occasions on which appellant, in a similar manner, sodomized them.5

In addition, the boys described in strikingly similar detail incidents in which appellant asked them to “hit the nipple,” directing them to suck his chest nipples while he masturbated and ejaculated. John, Harald, and Derrick explained that they had not told anyone about what appellant was doing because they were afraid of appellant and ashamed. Alex (age nine) admitted that at first he had denied to the police and the prosecutor that the acts occurred because he was frightened. William testified that appellant had given him money in exchange for being his lover, and that appellant had told William that if he was ever caught, he (appellant) would take all of the boys down with him.

However, three of the boys — John, Har-ald, and William — also testified that Oscar Mitchell (age nineteen) had been aware of, and in some instances even observed, the sexual misconduct that occurred. John testified that when appellant sodomized him in December 1988, Oscar Mitchell was in the bed with them.6 Harald testified that at one time, although he could not remember when, Oscar Mitchell walked into the room as appellant was sexually assaulting him. A third boy, William, testified that Oscar Mitchell “knew what was going on,” having walked into the room and observed things; William recalled an incident in the summer of 1987 when Oscar Mitchell had been in the bedroom when appellant called William and asked him if he wanted to “make love.” According to William, Oscar Mitchell left the bedroom after hearing this statement.

At the close of government’s case, defense counsel sought permission to introduce the transcript of Oscar Mitchell’s testimony before the grand jury in lieu of his live testimony.7 Counsel proffered that Oscar Mitchell was unavailable to testify at trial:

At this time, Your Honor, the defense would proffer to the Court that over the last three months the defense has taken extensive steps to determine the location of Mr. Oscar Mitchell. I’ve personally been out looking for him, I have had relatives of the defendant out trying to find him. I’ve had several investigators trying to find Mr. Mitchell. We have been unable to do so. We have used every bit of our effort and good faith to [404]*404find Mr. Mitchell, to present him as witness at this time.

Defense counsel requested that the trial judge direct the prosecutor to disclose the transcript and, waiving appellant’s Confrontation Clause rights, counsel sought to have the transcript introduced under the prior recorded testimony exception to the hearsay rule as the first defense witness. Defense counsel stated, “it is clear that this witness is unavailable,” and again offered to present testimony of an investigator regarding the witness’ unavailability. In response to the trial judge’s question, the prosecutor stated that the government did not know where Oscar Mitchell was. When defense counsel asserted that the defense “ha[s] done everything we can to find him,” the trial judge responded, “All right,” and asked the prosecutor for his “response to the defense request that the grand jury testimony be submitted as evidence in light of the witness’ unavailability.” The prosecutor responded, “I’ve never heard of such a thing in a criminal trial, and I would strongly oppose it.” Following a recess, the prosecutor repeated his opposition to introduction of the grand jury transcript on the basis that the case had been on hold for six weeks and that defense counsel had never voiced any concerns about locating Oscar Mitchell. The prosecutor also argued that the defense had not made a sufficient showing of unavailability, observing that defense counsel had not sought the assistance of the gov-eminent or the court in finding Oscar Mitchell.

Upon reviewing the grand jury transcript, and hearing from defense counsel on the relevance of the grand jury testimony, the trial judge denied the defense request to have Oscar Mitchell’s grand jury testimony admitted in the defense case.8 The judge stated:

The thrust of what Mr. Mitchell says in this transcript is he doesn’t know any— he was hardly home. He didn’t see anything, and he doesn’t know anything.

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Feaster v. United States
631 A.2d 400 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1993)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
631 A.2d 400, 1993 WL 368381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feaster-v-united-states-dc-1993.