Fritzinger v. State

10 A.3d 603, 2010 Del. LEXIS 638, 2010 WL 5080937
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedDecember 13, 2010
Docket593, 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 10 A.3d 603 (Fritzinger 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
Fritzinger v. State, 10 A.3d 603, 2010 Del. LEXIS 638, 2010 WL 5080937 (Del. 2010).

Opinion

STEELE, Chief Justice:

On June 16, 2009, a jury convicted Brian Fritzinger of rape, unlawful sexual contact, and continuous sexual abuse of his ex-girlfriend’s two minor daughters. Frit-zinger appeals his conviction, asserting that the Superior Court committed numerous reversible legal errors. Because the trial judge failed to give Fritzinger a hearing mandated by 11 Del. C. § 3508, and also improperly referred to two complaining witnesses as “victims” while instructing the jury, we reverse and remand for a new trial. In addition, because the record before us could cause an objective observer to perceive unfairness or bias, we order reassignment to a different judge for the new trial.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In 2004, sisters Mary and Tina Smith, 1 aged nine and six, shared a bedroom in a three-bedroom house where they lived with their older brother and their mother. In August 2004, their mother, Helen Leon, met Brian Fritzinger. Within about six months, Fritzinger had moved into the house. Leon and Fritzinger had a volatile relationship and broke up more than once. They reunited after the birth of their baby girl, Beth, 2 on July 22, 2005, but broke up for the last time in November 2006. Frit-zinger moved out and Mary, Tina, and Beth continued to live with Leon. In March 2007, Fritzinger moved into a different house with his new girlfriend, Serena Miller. At some point, Leon’s son moved in with Fritzinger and Miller.

A. Mary and Tina Move In with Frit-zinger.

On June 14, 2007, Fritzinger filed a petition in Family Court for custody of Beth. That same day, he assumed physical custody of Beth from Leon. Then, in July 2007, Fritzinger reported to the Division of Family Services that Leon was neglecting *606 Mary and Tina and abusing drugs. DFS relieved Leon of custody of both daughters and received her permission for the girls to live with Fritzinger and Miller, rather than enter foster care. Mary and Tina began living with Fritzinger and Miller on July 22, 2007.

While they lived there, and continuing through March 2008, each sister attended a once weekly counseling session as part of a program called the Child Well Being Initiative. During this counseling, both girls consistently said that they had never been sexually abused. Both told their social worker that they felt happy and safe living with Fritzinger and Miller.

B. Mary and Tina Enter Foster Care.

On December 13, 2007, Fritzinger and Miller returned custody of the sisters to DFS, who placed them in a foster home. Mary and Tina did not like their first foster parents, the Wests, and on at least one occasion, Tina asked if she could go back to live with Fritzinger. The sisters lived with the Wests until August 13, 2008, when DFS moved them to another foster home. They shared this home with new foster parents, the Atallians, two foster sisters, and the Atallians’ adopted son.

On October 2, 2008, Mary and Tina attended a Family Court hearing regarding them foster placement. Both sisters told the Family Court judge that they wanted them half sister, Beth, to come live with them. The Family Court judge told them that he had no power to take Beth from Fritzinger and Miller and place her in them foster home.

C. Mary and Tina Alleye Sexual Abuse.

That same afternoon, after the judge explained he could not place Beth in their home, Tina told her guidance counselor at school that Fritzinger had sexually abused her and her sister. The record shows that until then, neither sister had previously disclosed any sexual misconduct by Frit-zinger to anyone. Tina later asserted, however, that she had previously disclosed that information to her two foster sisters at the Atallians’ house, and that they had encouraged her to tell someone.

The school promptly contacted Mary and Tina’s social worker and reported what Tina had told her guidance counselor. The social worker visited Tina at school on October 6. During that meeting, Tina told the social worker about Fritzinger’s sexual abuse. The social worker spoke with Mary at school that same afternoon, and Mary corroborated Tina’s allegations. Mary explained to the social worker that the abuse had occurred over a substantial period of time and that she had never reported it because she wanted her half sister Beth to have a father who could continue to be a part of her life.

D.The State Arrests and Charges Frit-zinger.

After hearing these reports, the 'Social worker informed her supervisor, and DFS investigators took over the case. On October 10, 2008, DFS contacted the Delaware State Police regarding Mary’s and Tina’s allegations. On October 14, 2008, a representative from the Children’s Advocacy Center interviewed both sisters. Both girls repeated their claims of Fritzinger’s sexual abuse during these interviews. On October 15, 2008, the police arrested Frit-zinger. In November 2008, both sisters returned to counseling with the Child Well Being Initiative, where they repeated them allegations.

The sisters claim that Fritzinger’s sexual abuse included vaginal, oral, and anal sex, and sexual touching. They claim that the abuse happened regularly, beginning when they all lived in Leon’s house, and *607 lasting until after the sisters had moved into the Wests’ foster home. Mary claims that one time Fritzinger abused Tina while Mary watched from her bed. She also asserts that the sisters discussed the ongoing abuse only one time.

Ultimately, the State charged Fritzinger with twenty-six counts of sexual misconduct, including various degrees of continuous sexual abuse of a child, unlawful sexual contact, and rape. Since his arrest, Frit-zinger has asserted his innocence of all charges and has denied that any of the alleged conduct ever happened. As part of his defense, he claims that Mary and Tina concocted the allegations as an attempt to remove their half sister Beth from his custody, thereby assuring that Beth could live with them.

E. A Jury Convicts Fritzinger and Fritzinger Appeals.

Fritzinger’s trial lasted six days. The jury convicted him on ten of the charges, and he received a sentence of life plus 65 years in prison. On appeal, Fritzinger claims that the Superior Court erred in six specific respects. First, he alleges that the judge improperly denied him the opportunity to obtain and then present evidence to the jury of Mary’s previous sexual contact with other persons. Pursuant to 11 Del. C. § 3508, Fritzinger moved to gather and present evidence to the jury regarding Mary’s sexual contact with others. That was important to Fritzinger’s defense, to show that Mary could have developed her sexual knowledge from a source other than him. The trial judge did not permit Fritzinger to obtain or present that evidence. She also denied his request for an instruction that the jury could not infer from Mary’s knowledge of sexual acts that her knowledge derived from Fritzinger’s conduct.

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Bluebook (online)
10 A.3d 603, 2010 Del. LEXIS 638, 2010 WL 5080937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fritzinger-v-state-del-2010.