People of Michigan v. Matthew John Holtman

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 7, 2024
Docket362520
StatusUnpublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Matthew John Holtman (People of Michigan v. Matthew John Holtman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People of Michigan v. Matthew John Holtman, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED March 7, 2024 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 362520 Allegan Circuit Court MATTHEW JOHN HOLTMAN, LC No. 2019-022614-FC

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: HOOD, P.J., and MURRAY and MALDONADO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendant, Matthew John Holtman, appeals by right his jury trial conviction of two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct (CSC-I), MCL 750.520b(1)(a) and (2)(b) (penetrative sex acts by a person 17 years of age or older against an individual less than 13 years old).1 The trial court sentenced Holtman as a second-offense habitual offender, MCL 769.10, to serve 39 to 60 years’ imprisonment for each CSC-I conviction to be served concurrently. On appeal, Holtman argues that the trial court erroneously admitted other-acts evidence, including evidence of sexual misconduct that occurred when he was six years old, and hearsay evidence. He argues that these errors entitle him to a new trial. We agree and vacate his convictions and remand for a new trial.

I. BACKGROUND

This case arises out of Holtman sexually assaulting a minor, M, between January 2016 and March 2019, when he was between 30 and 33 years old, and M was between five and eight years old. In February 2019, M and her mother J lived in the home of J’s mother in Otsego, Michigan with J’s other two children and her mother. At the time, Holtman and J were engaged and Holtman was the father of all of J’s children except for M. Holtman was in a relationship with J for several years and would stay occasionally with them at her mother’s house. Holtman would help her care

1 Holtman also pleaded guilty to one count of absconding or forfeiting bond, MCL 750.199a, in a separate case, Allegan Circuit Court Case No. 21-24944-FH. Holtman does not challenge this count of conviction on appeal.

-1- for the children and she would leave the children alone with him for hours at a time. M testified that Holtman began sexually abusing her when she was five or six years old. The abuse took place repeatedly for three years at different locations, including a bedroom in Holtman’s home in Kalamazoo, the living room of a trailer in Kalamazoo, and in the basement of J’s mother’s home.

Two incidents form the basis for the CSC-I charges: a penile-genital penetration at the Otsego residence (Count 1), and a penile-oral penetration at Holtman’s Kalamazoo house (Count 2). On one occasion at the Otsego home, Holtman told M to go to the basement to help him with laundry when her mother was sleeping. After they finished folding clothes, Holtman ordered her to take off her clothes and, once they were both undressed, penetrated her genitals with his penis while she knelt on a chair. On another occasion, in a bedroom at Holtman’s house in Kalamazoo, Holtman assaulted M in her bunk bed by having her perform oral sex on him.

M, who was 11 at the time to of trial, testified about these assaults and others. She described the sexual assaults as occurring on multiple occasions. Relevant to this appeal, although M provided detailed testimony about the context of the sexual assaults, her language regarding the penetration that formed the basis of Count 1 was imprecise. Initially, she described Holtman as trying to touch her “private part.” She later clarified that it was her “back private part,” and later clarified further that it was the part she used to “poop.” She used euphemistic language to describe anatomy and her description of the act of penetration (particularly the penetration forming the basis for Count 1) was imprecise. Even her clearest description was imprecise:

Q. Okay. And then he would try and put it – he would put it in between his cheeks [sic] on the back side.

A. He would try to.

Q. He would try to, okay. So there’s the cheeks and then there’s the hole. So, did it go—

A. He was trying to put it in the hole but it never worked except for one time when we were at his house.

Q. Okay. So it would be in between the cheeks and he would try and go in the hole but it didn’t go in the hole.

A. Yes.

Holtman does not directly challenge the sufficiency of this testimony. These facts are nonetheless relevant as it relates to his hearsay challenge.

M first reported the abuse in February 2019, when she was eight years old. Her second- grade teacher showed an age-appropriate “body safety” video to her class, and M began to cry. When her teacher came to comfort her, M told her about the abuse, and later told the school counselor and a health teacher. After returning home that day, she told J. M testified that she had not told her mother about the abuse beforehand because Holtman had told her not to, stating that he would “go to somewhere for a really really long time.” J testified that, when confronted,

-2- Holtman denied the sexual-abuse allegations. M later testified that the sexual assaults stopped after she reported them.

Two months after M first reported the sexual assault to her teachers, Dr. Debra Simms, a doctor at the Helen DeVos Center for Child Protection, examined her. Although the Safe Harbor Children’s Advocacy Center (Safe Harbor), the entity responsible for M’s forensic interview, referred M to Dr. Simms, M’s mother made the appointment and took her to the exam. The prosecution was not otherwise involved in the medical exam. Prior to the exam, M’s mother told her she would have to explain what happened.

At trial, the prosecution offered Dr. Simms’s testimony, and the trial court qualified her as an expert witness in sex abuse. Dr. Simms took M’s medical history, during which M described the sexual assaults. She then conducted a physical exam, which revealed no physical indications of sexual trauma. The exam, however, revealed a tooth abscess, for which Dr. Simms referred M to a dentist, and a skin tag, for which Dr. Simms referred M to a primary care doctor.2 She testified about the names that M used to refer to her anatomical parts “because we [the medical center] needed to know what she calls those parts because we refer to them by the same name.” She testified that when she asked M why she was there “for a check-up,” M stated, “My dad pulled my pants down and put his gina in my gina.” Dr. Simms explained that M defined her dad as Holtman and translated M’s euphemisms for anatomy, including referring to female genitalia as “gina” or “agina.” She also testified to M’s statements detailing Holtman’s sexual abuse, how it made M feel, and how often the abuse occurred “because our testing can be related to how far back the exposure was.” She acknowledged that she found no physical evidence of sexual trauma.

Defense counsel objected to the admission of this testimony during trial, arguing that it was inadmissible hearsay. The trial court overruled the objection, stating that MRE 803(4)3 allows for statements made for purposes of medical treatment and diagnosis, and that “a sufficient foundation has been laid by the doctor’s testimony that these statements were made for the purpose of a medical treatment.”

In addition to M and Dr. Simms, Holtman’s cousin, AD, testified. Prior to trial, AD wrote a statement that Holtman sexually assaulted her when they were children. At trial, AD testified about four separate incidents of Holtman sexually assaulting her, from when AD was “about 2 years old” and Holtman was 6 or 7 years old, to when AD was “either 9 or 10, I’ll say 10” and

2 During her direct examination, Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
People of Michigan v. Matthew John Holtman, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-matthew-john-holtman-michctapp-2024.