Garibay v. United States

72 A.3d 133, 2013 WL 3820988, 2013 D.C. App. LEXIS 418
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 25, 2013
DocketNo. 11-CM-482
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 72 A.3d 133 (Garibay 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
Garibay v. United States, 72 A.3d 133, 2013 WL 3820988, 2013 D.C. App. LEXIS 418 (D.C. 2013).

Opinion

GLICKMAN, Associate Judge:

Appellant Garibay was convicted in a bench trial of misdemeanor sexual abuse of a minor1 based on the testimony of the complainant and a detective who had interviewed her a week after the alleged abuse. Appellant now argues that, in finding him guilty, the trial court improperly relied on the substance of the complainant’s report to the detective, as shown by the fact that the court attached significance to the detective’s description at trial of the complainant’s demeanor during her interview. In addition, appellant contends the court infringed his Sixth Amendment right of confrontation by precluding him from questioning the complainant about a previous allegation of sexual assault that he had a good faith basis to believe might have been false. While we are not persuaded by appellant’s first argument, we remand with instructions to allow him the opportunity he seeks to conduct a limited voir dire examination of the complainant to probe the veracity of her prior allegation.

I.

A.

B.F., the complaining witness, testified at trial that appellant, who is her mother’s uncle, sexually assaulted her when he was visiting her apartment one evening in the last week of May 2010. B.F. was twelve years old at the time. Her mother had gone to bed and B.F. was in the living room with appellant when it happened. According to B.F., as she was putting a movie in the DVD player, appellant came up behind her, put his arms around her, and slipped his hand into her pajamas and touched her vagina. B.F. tried to push him away, but he did not move. Eventually, though, he removed his hand and abruptly left the apartment. Later that week, when appellant was again at the apartment, he came up behind B.F. as she was washing dishes in the kitchen and whispered in her ear that she looked “sexy.”

B.F. testified that she had been afraid to report appellant’s behavior. The following week, however, she told a friend that her uncle had molested her. At her friend’s urging, B.F. informed a school counselor, who called her mother, and the police were notified.

On June 3, B.F. was interviewed by Detective Darryn Robinson. At trial, Robinson briefly summarized what B.F. reported to him: that in the first incident, appellant “walked up behind her and he stuck his hands inside of her pants in the front of her pants feeling her vagina,” and in the second incident he “walk[ed] up to her whispering in her ear telling her that she looked sexy.” When B.F. told him these things, the detective testified, she was “upset” and “in shock,” not crying or “showing any emotion,” but “broken down” and “defeated.” B.F. told Robinson she had not reported the sexual assault incident earlier because she “didn’t know how to tell anybody.” Robinson understood B.F. to mean she was embarrassed and scared.

B.

During pretrial discovery in this case, appellant learned that B.F. previously had made a complaint of inappropriate sexual touching against her teenage cousin. Appellant requested the opportunity to conduct a pretrial voir dire examination of [136]*136B.F. or her mother to determine whether this complaint had been investigated and whether it was true or false. The court permitted appellant to voir dire B.F.’s mother, D.F.

D.F. testified that she had not talked with B.F. about the incident and had no first-hand knowledge of it, but she had been informed by a school counselor that her daughter, after participating in a “good touch-bad touch” class, had said her cousin had touched her “inappropriately” when she had visited him in Kansas on her summer vacation. D.F. and the counselor agreed that there was no need to inform the authorities in Kansas, because the incident had taken place between two children and B.F. was back in the District of Columbia and therefore out of “harm’s way.” A child protective services investigator notified the Wichita Police, though, and an officer called D.F. The officer told her that she and her daughter would have to return to Kansas for the investigation to proceed. D.F. could not afford that trip, so, she testified, the police “couldn’t do anything about” the alleged incident. Based on D.F.’s testimony, the court saw no need for a pretrial voir dire examination of B.F.

Appellant subsequently obtained a report on the matter prepared by the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services (“SRS”). The SRS report stated that the Department had “completed an investigation” and found B.F.’s allegation to be “unsubstantiated” because “the facts or circumstances do not provide clear and convincing evidence” of “sexual abuse” under Kansas law. In light of this report, appellant moved for leave to voir dire B.F. about her complaint against her cousin, but the court denied that request and ruled that appellant could explore the subject when he cross-examined B.F. at trial.

When that time came, B.F. acknowledged having told her school counselor that “someone” in Kansas “had touched” her when she was nine years old.2 However, B.F. said, the incident in Kansas “was not as serious as what happened now.” Appellant then attempted to ask B.F. whether she knew “what happened with the investigation in Kansas,” but the court sustained the government’s objection to the question. Appellant explained he wanted to inquire into whether B.F. had made “a false prior claim” of sexual abuse that “was unsubstantiated because she made it up and it just did not happen.” In opposition, the government argued that the only reason B.F.’s sexual abuse claim was unsubstantiated was that she and her mother did not return to Kansas to meet with the police. Appellant responded that, although this was D.F.’s testimony, there was nothing to that effect in the official report.3 The trial court sustained the government’s objection, ruling that appellant lacked a good faith basis to believe that the sexual abuse allegation B.F. had made against her cousin was false.

C.

At the trial’s conclusion, the court announced its findings and verdict. Despite what it called the “great effort” made by the defense to impeach B.F. and undermine her credibility, the court concluded that “[s]he did not contradict herself where it really counts.” And “considering her total demeanor,” the court found it “difficult not to believe her.” The court refer[137]*137enced B.F.’s demeanor both at trial, where she became emotional and “broke down” on the witness stand, and in her interview with Detective Robinson. “Once you look at that,” the court reiterated, “then it is easy to accept her testimony.”

II.

Under the so-called “report-of-rape” rule, B.F.’s report to Detective Robinson that she was the victim of a sexual assault by appellant was admissible at trial “not for the truth of the matter asserted, but merely for the fact that the statement was made.”4 Appellant argues that the trial court ignored this limitation when it relied on B.F.’s demeanor during her interview with the detective, because her demeanor on that occasion was relevant only to whether she was being truthful then.

We think appellant takes too narrow a view of the relevance of B.F.’s demeanor as evidence that appellant molested her. “It is the general rule that testimony of a witness as to the mental or emotional state of another, deduced from observation, is admissible” when relevant.5

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 A.3d 133, 2013 WL 3820988, 2013 D.C. App. LEXIS 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garibay-v-united-states-dc-2013.