In Re Heather B.

799 A.2d 397, 369 Md. 257, 2002 Md. LEXIS 331
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 7, 2002
Docket90, Sept. Term, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 799 A.2d 397 (In Re Heather B.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Heather B., 799 A.2d 397, 369 Md. 257, 2002 Md. LEXIS 331 (Md. 2002).

Opinion

HARRELL, J.

In February 2000, Petitioner, Heather B., and a number of other students at Roberto Clemente Middle School in Montgomery County, alleged, apparently to school faculty or administrators, that a male teacher at their school had abused female students sexually. After maintaining in two interviews with a detective from the Montgomery County Police Department that the teacher had engaged in such conduct, Petitioner admitted that the allegations were false in a subsequent interview with an investigator for the Montgomery County Public Schools.

On 23 October 2000, the District Court of Maryland, sitting in Montgomery County as a juvenile court 1 , found Petitioner *260 delinquent for making false statements to a police officer which, if she were an adult, would violate Maryland Code (1957,1996 Repl. Vol.), Article 27, § 150, 2 and for conspiring to cause a false statement to be made to a police officer in violation of that statute. The District Court placed Petitioner on probation with a number of special conditions and ordered her and her parents to pay restitution in the amount of $85, payable to the Department of Juvenile Justice, for ultimate disbursement to the teacher who was the object of the students’ scheme.

Petitioner appealed to the Court of Special Appeals. In an unreported opinion, filed on 27 July 2001, the intermediate appellate court affirmed the judgment of the District Court. We granted Petitioner’s petition for writ of certiorari, In re Heather B., 366 Md. 273, 783 A.2d 653 (2001), to consider the following questions:

1. Whether the Court of Special Appeals erred in concluding that Petitioner could violate or conspire to violate Md. Code (1957, 1996 RepLVol.), Art. 27, § 150 where there was *261 no evidence that Petitioner agreed to or did give a false statement that instigated a police investigation.
2. Whether the trial judge should have recused himself after he specifically found that Petitioner was a conspirator at the trial of another alleged conspirator.

I.

On 16 February 2000, Detective Erol Birch of the Montgomery County Police Department initiated an investigation of charges that a male physical education teacher at Roberto Clemente Middle School (“RCMS”) in Montgomery County had abused sexually a number of students. 3 As part of his investigation, Detective Birch interviewed the alleged victims and witnesses of the sexual abuse, including Heather B. (Petitioner), who was 12 years old at the time. In her first interview by Detective Birch, which took place on 16 February 2000, Petitioner described a number of instances in which the male teacher inappropriately had touched her and other girls, and stated that he twice had entered the girls’ locker room at the school while students were changing. In addition, Petitioner told Detective Birch that some of the girls reported the instances of the teacher entering the locker room to the physical education in-house resource teacher and another physical education teacher at RCMS. Both of the latter teachers, who are female, denied that the children reported any such incidents to them. On 23 February 2000, Detective Birch conducted a second interview with Petitioner, in which Petitioner reiterated and expanded upon her previous statements regarding the alleged misconduct.

*262 On 1 March 2000, Mr. Miles Alban, an investigator for the Montgomery County Public Schools, began investigating the allegations against the male teacher. According to Mr. Al-ban’s testimony, he noticed “minor inconsistencies” in the “point of view statements” prepared by the students involved, which had been obtained by the principal of ROMS. He also was “bothered” by some of the language attributed to the teacher in those statements, which Mr. Alban did not believe was the kind of language an adult “would use.” After reading those statements, Mr. Alban visited the girls’ locker room at ROMS and spoke to the female instructors to whom some of the students allegedly had reported the locker room intrusions. While at ROMS, he discovered that “it would have been impossible for [the male teacher] to stand” where the students alleged he stood in the locker room, “without being seen by one of the female instructors” in the “women’s office.” In addition, Mr. Alban also learned in the course of his investigation that, prior to making the allegations of sexual misconduct against the male teacher, some of the involved students had requested to meet with their school counselor regarding problems they were having with the teacher in a classroom setting. 4

At some point during his investigation, Mr. Alban was notified by his supervisor that one of the students “had changed his story.” 5 On 9 March 2000, Mr. Alban met with Petitioner’s father at ROMS and explained that “some of the *263 children were changing their stories.” He urged Petitioner’s father “to talk to his daughter,” who was located in a conference room at the school, “and see if he could not ... elicit the truth of what happened.” Petitioner’s father “spent about fifteen minutes” with his daughter, during which she continued to “maintain!] that the story was true.” At that point, Petitioner’s father left Petitioner and Mr. Alban alone. Under questioning by Mr. Alban, Petitioner admitted that the allegations of sexual misconduct were false. As Mr. Alban testified:

1 told [Petitioner], I said, [the teacher] had been teaching thirty years. He was going to lose his job, his wife was going to leave him, and he was going to go to jail. At that point, she said, started crying, said it didn’t happen, I couldn’t tell my father, he’ll ground me, please don’t tell my father.

On 12 May 2000, the State of Maryland (Respondent) filed a petition in the District Court of Maryland, sitting in Montgomery County as a juvenile court, alleging that “on or about” 16 and 23 February 2000, Petitioner, in violation of Md.Code (1957, 1996 Repl.Vol.), Art. 27, § 150,

did unlawfully and knowingly with intent to deceive, in Montgomery County, Maryland, make and cause to be made a false report, statement and complaint to a Montgomery County police officer, knowing the statement, complaint and report to be false, with the intent to cause an investigation and other action to be taken as a result thereof.

In addition, the petition also alleged that “on or about and between” 1 February and 25 February 2000, Petitioner “did unlawfully and wilfully” conspire with six other juveniles to commit acts in violation of § 150. Specifically, the petition maintained that Petitioner conspired with the other students “to make and cause to be made a false report, statement and complaint to a Montgomery County police officer, knowing the same to be false and with intent to deceive and with intent to cause an investigation and other action to be taken as a result thereof.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
799 A.2d 397, 369 Md. 257, 2002 Md. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-heather-b-md-2002.