Jones, Jr. v. United States

CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 4, 2023
Docket18-CM-0953
StatusPublished

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Jones, Jr. v. United States, (D.C. 2023).

Opinion

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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

No. 18-CM-0953

KEVIN E. JONES, JR., APPELLANT,

V.

UNITED STATES, APPELLEE.

Appeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (2017-CMD-015669)

(Hon. Patricia A. Broderick, Trial Judge)

(Submitted December 11, 2019 Decided May 4, 2023)

Jesse I. Winograd for appellant.

Jessie K. Liu, United States Attorney at the time of submission, and Elizabeth Trosman, Suzanne Grealy Curt, Amy Joy Thomas, and Allessandra Stewart, Assistant United States Attorneys at the time, were on the brief for appellee.

Before BLACKBURNE-RIGSBY, Chief Judge, MCLEESE, Associate Judge, and THOMPSON, * Senior Judge

* Judge Thompson was an Associate Judge of the court at the time of submission. She began her service as a Senior Judge on February 18, 2022. THOMPSON, Senior Judge: Following a bench trial, appellant Kevin E. Jones,

Jr., was convicted of one count of simple assault, based on an allegation that he

kissed an eight-month-old infant, L.T.C., on the lips while the child was in day

care. He argues in this appeal that (1) the evidence was insufficient to support the

conviction, (2) the trial court failed to ascertain the competence of the child

witness who was the government’s key witness, and (3) the court abused its

discretion in denying the defense’s request to compel production of the witness’s

school records before trial. For the following reasons, we vacate appellant’s

conviction and remand for additional findings by the trial court.

I.

Appellant was charged by information on September 13, 2017, with one

count of simple assault, in violation of D.C. Code § 22-404(a). His bench trial

took place on July 10, 2018. The government called two witnesses, the first of

whom was L.T.C.’s mother, who testified that appellant is the son of Doris

(Haney), the operator of the day care home in which her infant child L.T.C. had

been enrolled since February 2017. L.T.C.’s mother testified that she expected 3

appellant to hold L.T.C. and to provide care to him if he was crying, but that she

did not give appellant permission to do “anything else” by way of touching L.T.C.

The government’s other witness was K.P., who was eleven years old at the

time of appellant’s trial and ten years old at the time of the (August 2017) charged

incident. K.P. testified that she was assisting in the basement of the day care at

Doris Haney’s house when she witnessed appellant come to the basement, where

L.T.C. and K.P. were, pick up L.T.C. and kiss the child on the lips, and then put

the child back down. 1 K.P. testified that she responded by wiping the baby’s

mouth with a wipe because she felt that what had occurred was “nasty.” L.T.C. did

not cry when appellant kissed him. K.P testified that she did not tell Ms. Haney

about the kiss when Ms. Haney came back to the basement, did not tell her own

mother or Ms. Haney that day or the next day, and did not tell anyone else that

appellant had put his tongue in L.T.C.’s mouth. She thought that the incident

“wasn’t that big of a deal.” K.P. further testified that she did not remember telling

interviewers (the “ladies in the room” from the Child Advocacy Center) that

appellant used his tongue and moved his head up and down while kissing L.T.C.,

or that appellant’s mouth was open, or that his tongue was moving at the time, but

1 Before appellant picked up L.T.C. and kissed him, K.P. had been on the floor with L.T.C., playing with him and tickling him. 4

she agreed that she told the interviewers that appellant “used his lips and maybe his

tongue.” Her trial testimony was that appellant “just used his lips.”

The trial court denied appellant’s motion for judgment of acquittal,

remarking that L.T.C. “was not asking to be kissed.” The defense then called Ms.

Haney, who testified that appellant’s job at the day care was “mostly to watch [the]

children” from the basement steps “when [K.P.] was around.” Ms. Haney told the

court that the allegation that appellant kissed L.T.C. surfaced only after she

(Haney) confronted K.P. (on the day of the alleged kiss) about ordering pay-per-

view shows on Haney’s basement television without Haney’s permission, and after

appellant reported to Haney the same day, in K.P.’s presence, that K.P. had hit one

of the children — a report that prompted Haney to scold K.P. After these

incidents, Haney would no longer allow K.P. to come to the day care center to

assist with the children — work for which Haney had been paying K.P. $25 per

week. The defense argued that K.P. was biased.

In announcing its verdict, the trial court credited K.P.’s testimony. The

court found appellant guilty of “simple assault, not any kind of sexual things,”

reasoning that “[a] child doesn’t have the ability to consent.” The court stated,

“it’s simple assault, which is an offense of touching, not necessarily sexual.” The 5

court remarked that while appellant’s conduct was not “the crime of the century,”

it was nonetheless “concerning.” 2

This appeal followed. After initial briefing, and at the government’s request,

we stayed this matter pending a decision by this court in Perez Hernandez v.

United States, No. 15-CM-130. This court’s en banc opinion in that case was

issued on December 29, 2022, see Perez Hernandez v. United States, 286 A.3d 990

(D.C. 2022) (en banc). We have the parties’ supplemental briefs, and the instant

matter is now ripe for resolution.

II.

A. Sufficiency of the Evidence

2 Before sentencing appellant, the court heard a victim impact statement from L.T.C.’s mother, in which the mother stated that L.T.C. was “violated.” The prosecutor argued in closing that appellant’s conduct was “bizarre and quite disturbing.” 6

Appellant argues that there was insufficient evidence to support his

conviction for simple assault. He asserts that the government failed to prove that

he injured or intended to injure anyone. He acknowledges that non-consensual

sexual touching can constitute assault, but argues that the trial court’s “express

finding” that his actions “were not sexual in nature” — that his kissing L.T.C. was

“not any kind of sexual thing[]” — precluded a conviction on that basis. Appellant

emphasizes that there was no evidence that L.T.C. cried or reacted in some other

negative way to the kiss or wanted appellant to “cease contact.” Appellant argues

that L.T.C.’s inability to consent to a sexual touching is irrelevant on this record

and highlights that L.T.C.’s mother knew that appellant would interact with L.T.C.

as a caregiver. Appellant asserts that even if the relevant question is whether the

kiss would have offended a reasonable person, the evidence that K.P. did not

immediately report to anyone what occurred shows that she was not offended by

appellant’s conduct.

Our review of the sufficiency of the evidence is de novo, see Nero v. United

States, 73 A.3d 153, 157 (D.C. 2013), but in criminal cases generally, “we must

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