People v. Rosario

958 N.E.2d 93, 17 N.Y.3d 501
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 18, 2011
StatusPublished
Cited by197 cases

This text of 958 N.E.2d 93 (People v. Rosario) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York 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 v. Rosario, 958 N.E.2d 93, 17 N.Y.3d 501 (N.Y. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Read, J.

The issue for us to decide in these two cases is whether prior consistent statements alleging sexual abuse were properly admitted under the prompt outcry rule or, alternatively in the Rosario case, to rebut a claim of recent fabrication. In both appeals, we affirm the Appellate Division, which concluded that the prior consistent statement was inadmissible in Rosario, and admissible in Parada.

I

Rosario

Complainant, who was 16 at the time of trial, testified that her father, defendant Angel Rosario, began to abuse her sexually when she was about nine years old. Over the next four or five years, he would frequently rub his body against hers when he encountered her alone in the family’s apartment, pressing his penis against her. He would make complainant perform oral sex on him, and once put his mouth on her vagina when she was in her bedroom, watching the Disney Channel on television. When complainant was 13 years old, defendant penetrated her vagina with his penis. Then in early 2004, when complainant was 14 years old and in ninth grade, she struggled with and resisted defendant when he forced sexual intercourse on her. Complainant says that she told defendant “This is never going to happen again,” and that he did not touch her sexually after this encounter. At no time did defendant ejaculate, and, in every instance, the penetration was slight. Complainant did not tell [507]*507anyone in her extended family1 about defendant’s sexual advances because she was scared that she would not be believed and would get into trouble, and she was fearful about how her mother would react.

By January 2004, about the time the abuse stopped, complainant had started dating. In May 2004, her boyfriend noticed that she was upset and asked her what was wrong. They were in the school courtyard at the time. Because she “had difficulty saying” what was bothering her, complainant’s boyfriend suggested that she write it down. Complainant then took a piece of paper from her book bag and wrote the following note, which she handed to her boyfriend for him to read:

“Well, um I kind of get sexually harassed by my Dad since I was I think 10. And im not very proud of it + I havent told nebody cause he’s my dad n i didn’t want him 2 go away + pwease don’t tell nel [and] lately ive bin pushing him off n stuff so like yeah, please don’t say anything.”

When complainant’s boyfriend responded by “look[ing] at [her] like, are you serious? Can this really happen and why didn’t you tell anybody” she felt “embarrassed and ashamed.” Complainant’s boyfriend testified that he slipped the note into his pocket, unbeknownst to complainant; she testified that he crumpled up the note and threw it away as they left the courtyard. Complainant was not sure when she wrote the note, but thought it “must have been May” or perhaps “earlier”; her boyfriend asserted that this episode took place in May 2004. He located the thought-to-be-lost note (which was admitted into evidence) in February 2006, and produced it for the District Attorney two days before he testified on June 8, 2006.

On June 24, 2005, about a year after she wrote the note, complainant argued with defendant when he refused to let her go to the movies with her boyfriend. Having gotten friendly with Police Officers Anthony Flores and Slade Bradley, who ran the Explorers Program sponsored by the New York Police Department,2 complainant stopped by the stationhouse to talk to Officer Flores. When he was not there, she went to the movies with her boyfriend, in defiance of defendant. But once at the [508]*508movies, she got nervous about getting into “severe trouble” and being “hit” by defendant, a stern disciplinarian who inflicted corporal punishment when displeased with her behavior.

Before returning home, complainant called Officer Flores (whom defendant had also contacted, fearing that his daughter had run away from home after their argument). Officer Flores picked complainant up at the movies and returned with her to the stationhouse. Once there, complainant spoke with both Officers Flores and Bradley (a woman), telling them that defendant had sexually abused her. According to complainant, she decided to report “what was going on” at that point in time because she was tired of “all of the stuff that went on in [her] house” and did not want to be molested anymore. The officers took complainant to meet with a detective in the Manhattan Special Victims Squad, to whom she repeated her claim of sexual abuse. Defendant was arrested and subsequently indicted for first-degree course of sexual conduct against a child (Penal Law § 130.75 [1] [b] [being at least 18 years old and engaging in two or more acts of sexual conduct over a period of time not less than three months in duration with a child less than 13 years old]), first-degree rape (Penal Law § 130.35 [1] [engaging in sexual intercourse by forcible compulsion]) and other lesser charges.

At trial, defendant denied his daughter’s accusations; his wife testified that she had never noticed any change in her daughter’s personality or behavior toward defendant. In summation, the defense argued that complainant — portrayed as a willful only child, angry at defendant for restricting her freedom and anxious about the punishment he would mete out for her disobedience on June 24, 2005 — embroidered a tale of mistreatment by her father with a claim of sexual abuse (perhaps in response to a suggestive question posed by Officer Bradley) and then found herself “backed into a corner.” The jury convicted defendant of all the charges submitted to it, including first-degree course of sexual conduct against a child, and first- and second-degree rape. The trial judge sentenced defendant to an aggregate term of 15 years in prison, to be followed by five years of postrelease supervision.

The Appellate Division reversed the judgment, holding that the note did not qualify as a prompt outcry “in view of the months-long delay between the charged conduct and the writing of the note, especially in the absence of a sufficient explanation for the complainant’s not confiding in someone else earlier” (68 [509]*509AD3d 600, 601 [1st Dept 2009]). The court further concluded that the note was not admissible as a proper rehabilitative response to a defense claim of recent fabrication for two reasons: “It was offered on the People’s direct case ... in the course of the complainant’s direct testimony, in anticipation of a defense of recent fabrication”; and at the time

“the note was admitted into evidence, the defense had done nothing to specify to the jury . . . when and how the complainant had decided to make a false accusation against defendant [and] could as easily have claimed that the complainant’s motivation . . . arose years earlier, in response to defendant’s controlling and overbearing conduct over the years, rather than on June 24, 2005” (id. at 602 [emphasis added]).

A Judge of this Court granted the People permission to appeal (15 NY3d 809 [2010]).

Parada

Complainant testified that defendant Luis Parada sexually abused her when he babysat her after school and during school breaks from mid-2002 until early 2004 at the apartment where she resided with her mother and four brothers and the man with whom her mother then had a relationship, a childhood friend of defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
958 N.E.2d 93, 17 N.Y.3d 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-rosario-ny-2011.