Gaston v. Brigano

208 F. App'x 376
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 7, 2006
Docket05-4367
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 208 F. App'x 376 (Gaston v. Brigano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gaston v. Brigano, 208 F. App'x 376 (6th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

ALARCÓN, Circuit Judge.

James R. Gaston was convicted in the Court of Common Pleas, Belmont County, Ohio of the attempted rape of a nine-year old girl and the rape of a seven-year old girl. In his direct appeal to the Ohio Court of Appeals for the Seventh Judicial District, he contended, inter alia, that the admission of an audio-tape of the seven-year old’s out-of-court statement over his objection -violated his right to confrontation under the Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution.

The Ohio Court of Appeals did not consider Mr. Gaston’s federal constitutional claims. Instead, it ruled that the audio-taped statement was admissible under Ohio Rule of Evidence 807(A). The Ohio Supreme Court dismissed the appeal.

Mr. Gaston filed a state prisoner petition for habeas corpus against Anthony Brigano, the Warden of the Lebanon Correctional Institute in Lebanon, Ohio (“the State”) pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio. The District Court granted the petition, holding that the admission of the audio-tape violated Mr. Gaston’s Sixth Amendment right to confrontation. The State has appealed from that judgment. We affirm because we conclude that Mr. Gaston’s right to confrontation was impermissibly denied under the Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Confrontation Clause in Ohio v. Roberts, 448 U.S. 56, 100 S.Ct. 2531, 65 L.Ed.2d 597 (1980).

I

A

The evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the State, reveals that Maxine Williams, Mr. Gaston’s live-in companion, was the sister of K.B., the mother of L.B., the seven-year old child who was named as the rape victim in Count Two of the indictment. Ms. Williams was also a friend of Ms. E.W., the mother of D.M., the nine-year old alleged victim in Count One of the indictment. Ms. K.B. and Ms. E.W. were also friends. Ms. KB.’s children and Ms. E.W.’s children met socially frequently before the alleged rapes.

Prior to June 15,1998, Ms. Williams had an affair with Ms. E.W.’s husband. As a result, Ms. E.W. had not spoken to Ms. Williams for two years. Ms. E.W. called Ms. Williams on June 12, 1998, to request that Mr. Gaston testify on her behalf at her trial in which she was accused of child endangerment resulting in the death of her twenty-month old son.

Mr. Gaston and Ms. Williams went to Ms. E.W.’s home on June 15, 1998, in response to her request. Ms. E.W. asked Ms. Williams to take her three children, including D.M., to the Gaston residence for the evening and deliver them to Barkcamp the following morning. Ms. Williams refused because she had to work that night.

Ms. Williams left E.W.’s residence later that evening in a separate vehicle to go work. Mr. Gaston called Ms. Williams at her workplace and told her Ms. E.W.’s children wanted to spend the night at their residence. Ms. Williams told him not to let them come over. She was concerned that Ms. E.W. was “up to something” because of Ms. Williams’s affair with Ms. E.W.’s husband. Nevertheless, Mr. Ga *379 ston took D.M. and her brothers, C. and J.J., to his and Ms. Williams’ residence to spend the night because they wanted to play Nintendo and eat pizza. After playing Nintendo, J.J. became tired and went to bed upstairs. D.M. fell asleep on the couch. Mr. Gaston told C. to go to bed upstairs. C. tried to get D.M. to go to bed upstairs, but Mr. Gaston told him that she could spend the night asleep on the couch. C. went upstairs but did not go to sleep.

Later, he came downstairs, because he heard his sister screaming. He observed that Mr. Gaston was lying naked on the couch with D.M. When C. yelled Mr. Gaston’s name, he jumped up, put his clothes on, and threw D.M.’s clothes at her. The children began crying and told Mr. Gaston they wanted to go home. At this time, Ms. Williams telephoned Mr. Gaston from her workplace. She heard D.M. complaining and “yelling she wanted to go home.”

Mr. Gaston took the children home at 12:30 a.m. on June 16, 1998. Ms. J.M., D. M.’s grandmother, testified that the children were crying and hysterical when they got out of Mr. Gaston’s car. When Ms. J.M. asked D.M. what was wrong, she replied: “Nothing, Grandma. I can’t tell you____[bjecause if I tell you, he’ll make sure my mommy goes to prison for the rest of her life.” C. then stated: “I’ll tell you what went on, Grandma.” C. told his grandmother: “I caught him on top of my sissy. I hollered his name once and he didn’t hear me. And I hollered his name again and he jumped off of her, ran across the room and put his clothes on, and threw hers at her.”

Ms. J.M. testified that when she continued to ask her granddaughter what happened, she replied: “He touched me ... [djown below where he’s not supposed to, Grandma.” Ms. J.M. then called the Wheeling Police Department. Mr. Gaston left the area while the call was made to the police. Mr. Gaston was arrested some time after midnight on June 16, 1998. C. testified at trial that after the police left, his mother called K.B., L.B.’s mother.

D.M. was taken to the Martin’s Ferry Police Department at the request of the Wheeling Island Police Department because that agency had jurisdiction over the incident. After making a report to the police, D.M. was taken to an emergency room for examination. Thereafter, D.M. was interrogated by Karen Holmes, a sexual assault specialist at Belmont County Children Services.

D.M. testified at the state trial that she went to Mr. Gaston’s house with her two brothers because they were supposed to go swimming the next day. After her brothers went to bed, Mr. Gaston took off her shorts and underwear, licked his fingers, and stuck them inside of her vagina. Mr. Gaston told her that if she told anyone about his conduct, he would have her mother put in prison.

L.B. was taken to the police station on June 16, 1998. She was examined at a hospital to determine whether she had been raped or sexually abused. The examination revealed that her vagina had been injured as the result of a penetrating injury. An expert witness testified that these injuries “could have been five days old or it could have been five months old.....[ojr five years even.”

On the same day that L.B. was examined, Ms. Holmes told her, “that’s a safety rule, you tell if somebody touches you [on your privates] ... and then the policemen ... make sure that it doesn’t happen again and that you’re all right.” Ms. Holmes then told L.B. that she was taken to the hospital to “make sure that you’re all right.” L.B. replied: “Yeah. Um [D.M.] went to the doctors and Jimmy [Gaston] went to jail.” During this interrogation, *380 L.B. stated for the first time that, on one occasion, sometime during the summer after school was out, Mr. Gaston hurt her when he put his private parts between her legs. L.B. also told Ms. Holmes that Mr. Gaston told her that he would kill her family if she told anyone what he had done.

L.B.’s taped statement was introduced into evidence over objection. It was the only evidence that identified Mr. Gaston as the person who raped her. At trial, Mr.

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208 F. App'x 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaston-v-brigano-ca6-2006.