Kenny Walden v. State of Arkansas

2023 Ark. App. 177
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 29, 2023
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2023 Ark. App. 177 (Kenny Walden v. State of Arkansas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenny Walden v. State of Arkansas, 2023 Ark. App. 177 (Ark. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Cite as 2023 Ark. App. 177 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION I No. CR-22-368

Opinion Delivered March 29, 2023

KENNY WALDEN APPEAL FROM THE GARLAND APPELLANT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 26CR-18-505] V. HONORABLE RALPH C. OHM, JUDGE STATE OF ARKANSAS APPELLEE AFFIRMED

WENDY SCHOLTENS WOOD, Judge

Kenny Walden appeals the sentencing order entered by the Garland County Circuit

Court convicting him of two counts of raping his minor child (MC) and sentencing him to

two consecutive terms of forty years’ imprisonment. On appeal, Walden argues that the

evidence was insufficient to support the convictions and that the circuit court abused its

discretion by allowing a forensic interviewer to testify as an expert witness. We affirm.

In 2018, Walden was charged with two counts of raping MC between April 15, 2017,

and April 1, 2018. At Walden’s trial, the evidence showed that when MC was thirteen years

old and in seventh grade, she confided in a friend that her father had raped her. Her friend

disclosed this information in a note delivered to a school counselor, and the allegations were

reported to police through the Arkansas Child Abuse Hotline on April 9, 2018. The following day, MC was referred to the Child Advocacy Center (CAC) in Hot Springs for a

forensic interview and a sexual-assault examination.

Morgan Stidham, a forensic interviewer at the CAC, conducted the interview. At

trial, after Stidham testified about her training and experience in the field of forensic

interviewing, the State moved to qualify her as an expert witness. The defense objected,

arguing that Stidham was merely a fact witness and that qualifying her as an expert would

improperly bolster her testimony. The State responded that Stidham was qualified by her

specialized training and experience and would testify about disclosures in cases of child

sexual abuse. The State explained that the defense had suggested that MC told people her

father was molesting her because she was upset that her parents might divorce. The State

argued that Stidham’s expected testimony—that MC’s disclosure was classified as accidental

and not intentional—was relevant to that issue. The circuit court overruled Walden’s

objection and qualified Stidham as an expert witness.

Stidham proceeded to testify that she utilizes a neutral, structured interview process

that is designed to elicit accurate and complete information about an event and that the

interview is videotaped for other professionals to use so that the child will not have to endure

repeated questioning. Stidham explained the structured phases of the interview process, the

dynamics of how children disclose abuse, and the types of memories and details they may

provide about it. With respect to MC’s demeanor during the interview, Stidham said she

was talkative and “used her hands a lot” during the rapport-building phase, which involves

talking about an activity the child likes. She said MC remained consistent and sincere

2 throughout the interview, but during the second phase of it—the substantive phase involving

disclosure of memories of the abuse—MC put her head down, was more quiet, and put her

hands in her lap. Without discussing the substance of MC’s disclosure, Stidham testified

that MC disclosed episodic memories of the abuse, including sensory and peripheral details.

She further testified that disclosure is a process, and it was her professional opinion that

MC’s disclosure of the abuse had been accidental, meaning MC told someone about it

without any intention that the person would do something about it.

MC testified that she was born on April 15, 2004, and that not long after she had

turned thirteen her father raped her. She testified about three specific incidents and said

these were not the only times her father had raped her. The first incident occurred within a

month after her thirteenth birthday while her mother was at work. She was preparing to take

a shower and had undressed and was checking the temperature of the water when Walden

walked in, grabbed her by the waist, and carried her to the bed. She said he “took his shorts

off, got on the bed, and put his penis inside [her] vagina.” He “moved back and forth” and

“[s]omething white” came out of his penis. He then put his shorts on “and went on with his

day.” MC said the last time Walden raped her was a couple of weeks before her interview at

the CAC, which occurred on April 10, 2018. Her mother was at work, and Walden again

walked into the bathroom when MC was undressed and preparing to shower. He told her

his penis hurt, and he wanted a hug; he then carried her to the bed and, again, put his penis

inside her vagina. MC described a third incident in which her father had intercourse with

her while she was on the couch after he had given her a massage. She said she was drifting

3 in and out of sleep, and he placed one of her legs on the floor. She said he then put his penis

in her vagina and “moved back and forth.”

Mary Jo Selig, a sexual-assault nurse, examined MC at the CAC on April 12. Selig

testified that MC had trichomonas vaginalis, a sexually transmitted disease. She also testified

that MC had no injury to her hymen but had a superficial abrasion at the opening to her

vagina that bled during the examination. Selig said that the skin in that area had become

“friable” because of exposure to the discharge caused by the sexually transmitted disease. She

said the abrasion could have been caused by a penetrating injury that never healed due to

the discharge, or it could have been from wiping because the skin had become so fragile from

the discharge.

Dr. Sarah Sullivan testified that Walden also tested positive for trichomonas vaginalis.

Dr. Karen Farst testified as an expert in child-abuse pediatrics. She said that Walden’s

positive test for trichomonas was “highly corroborative” of MC’s disclosure that she had been

sexually abused by her father. She said the only way to transmit trichomonas vaginalis is by

contact between the fresh secretions from the genital tract of an infected person with the

genitalia of a noninfected person. When asked if trichomonas can be transmitted by poor

hygiene and sharing towels, she said it is highly unlikely because trichomonas cannot survive

long outside the genital tract. She agreed that it is possible to transmit it by co-bathing, but

she said she saw no evidence of co-bathing in her review of the records and that if there was

a history that the family bathed together, she would still make a medical diagnosis of sexual

abuse if a child in the family had a trichomonas infection.

4 Walden testified in his own defense. He denied that he raped MC and said that she

was lying. The jury convicted him on both counts of rape, and this appeal followed.

On appeal, Walden first argues that the evidence is insufficient to support his

convictions. To determine whether evidence is sufficient to support a conviction, we view

the evidence in the light most favorable to the State and consider only the evidence that

supports the verdict. King v. State, 2018 Ark. App. 572, at 5, 564 S.W.3d 563, 566. We affirm

if the evidence is substantial. Id., 564 S.W.3d at 566. Substantial evidence is that which is of

sufficient force and character that it will, with reasonable certainty, compel a conclusion one

way or the other without resorting to speculation or conjecture. Id., 564 S.W.3d at 566–67.

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2023 Ark. App. 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenny-walden-v-state-of-arkansas-arkctapp-2023.