People v. Sampson CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 18, 2024
DocketA169375
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Sampson CA1/1 (People v. Sampson CA1/1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Sampson CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 12/18/24 P. v. Sampson CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A169375 v. TODD COLE SAMPSON, JR., (Solano County Super. Ct. No. FCR343976) Defendant and Appellant.

A jury convicted defendant Todd Sampson of felony counts of sodomy of a child under 10 years old and oral copulation of a child under 10 years old after he sexually abused his half brother (brother). The trial court sentenced Sampson to 65 years to life in prison. On appeal, his sole claim is that the court erred by admitting expert testimony about Child Sexual Abuse Accommodation Syndrome (CSAAS). We affirm. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. Brother’s Testimony Brother was born in spring 2010. He and Sampson, who is 14 years older, have the same mother. During the relevant time period, brother lived with his father during the week but spent weekends at his mother’s Vacaville home, where Sampson lived. Brother and Sampson each had their own room at their mother’s house. Brother, who was 13 years old during the trial, testified that Sampson molested him “frequently” when he was in kindergarten and first grade. Sampson would come into his room, tell brother to take his clothes off, and then remove his own clothes. Sampson would bend brother over and insert his penis into brother’s “butt,” which he did successfully “[m]ore than one time.” Sometimes, Sampson would put “lube or Vaseline” on his own penis “and try to get his penis farther into [brother’s] butt.” Sampson would then “stop[] and go[] back into his room or . . . ejaculate[] on” brother’s back or buttocks. Afterward, brother took a shower or wiped himself off with a towel. It hurt when Sampson sodomized him, and he had blood in his “poop.” Brother also testified that Sampson sometimes put his penis in brother’s mouth, which “hurt bad.” Usually, this happened on the same occasions when Sampson sodomized him. Sampson sometimes ejaculated into brother’s throat, and it “was like slime-ish and it taste[d] not good.” At the time, brother did not know what semen was, and Sampson told him it was “pee.” Brother did not tell anyone about the sexual abuse while it was happening because he “was scared.” Sampson used to “[b]eat [him] until [he] cried,” and he thought Sampson would “hurt” him if he told. On cross- examination, brother agreed that he did not like Sampson, who was often mean to him. B. Brother’s Disclosure and Forensic Interview When brother was eight years old, he told his paternal grandmother (grandmother) that Sampson was sexually abusing him. Grandmother testified that brother had been having “really bad meltdowns” at home and

2 school. She denied that he was “acting out sexually,” but she did note that he asked her “what sex was about” and “what being gay meant.” She did not suspect that he was being sexually abused, “but something was obviously going on that . . . was hurting[,] and the behavior was very odd.” During one of brother’s meltdowns at home, grandmother told brother she could not help him unless he trusted her and told her what was wrong. Brother then said that Sampson “was going to play a game of hide-and-seek with him and that [Sampson] had peed in his mouth and that [Sampson] had gotten some lotion and tried to stick his wiener in [brother’s] butt.” Grandmother testified that brother also told her “there was blood” when he went to the bathroom. Brother had once seen a doctor when he was “making this really weird sound with his throat” and another time when “[h]e was peeing blood,” but sexual assault was never suspected. Grandmother decided to stop talking to brother about the sexual abuse because she thought he needed to speak to “a professional, because [she] wasn’t a professional,” and she scheduled a time for him to talk to a counselor. Grandmother did not immediately report brother’s disclosure because the situation was “uncomfortable,” but she eventually contacted both Child Protective Services and the police. Brother had no more contact with Sampson after telling grandmother about the abuse. A retired Vacaville police detective assigned to the case testified that she learned of brother’s allegations from Child Protective Services in November 2018, about a month after grandmother’s report to that agency. Soon afterward, another officer conducted a Multi-Disciplinary Interview of brother, a recording of which was played for the jury. During the interview, brother said he was there to talk about “[t]he Todd problem.” He said Sampson came into his bedroom at their mother’s

3 house and “tried to make [brother] suck his wiener. He tried to put his wiener up [brother’s] butt. He tried to make [brother] kiss his butt. He tried to make [brother] suck his wiener . . . and . . . pee in [brother’s] mouth.” Brother said this happened when he was six or seven years old but stopped by the time he was eight. Brother could not remember the first time the sexual abuse occurred, but when asked to describe the most recent time, he said Sampson “put gel on his wiener so it can go up [brother’s] butt,” but “it didn’t work and [brother’s] butt was bleeding also.” Brother thought this had happened about five times. He described it as feeling “weirdish kind of on your butt” and “like a little pinch.” Brother also said Sampson always “peed in [brother’s] mouth,” including on the most recent occasion. Later in the interview, however, brother indicated that Sampson “peed in [brother’s] mouth” only once but put his penis in brother’s mouth twice. Brother said the “pee” tasted “weird,” like “fuzz” or “poop and pee,” and “[w]hen [brother] spit it out, it was white.” Brother also thought Sampson “peed in [brother’s] butt.” Toward the end of the interview, brother asked whether the interviewer was “gonna tell somebody” about what he had said. Brother then expressed fear of Sampson, wondering whether Sampson was “gonna come and kill” brother because brother “told.” Brother indicated he waited to tell grandmother about the sexual abuse because he was scared that Sampson would kill him, although Sampson had never made such a threat. C. Expert Testimony Blake Carmichael, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist, testified for the prosecution as an expert on CSAAS. He described CSAAS as “an educational tool” developed to address “myths and misconceptions that people held about

4 kids who had been sexually abused.” He explained that CSAAS is “not like a mental health diagnosis” and cannot be used as a “test . . . to decide if a kid has been abused.” He did not know anything about the facts of Sampson’s case and would not offer an opinion about whether the child victim had been abused, which was up to the jury to decide. As described by Dr. Carmichael, CSAAS has five components: secrecy; helplessness; entrapment and accommodation; delayed, unconvincing, and conflicted disclosure; and recantation or retraction. These components explain behavior by sexually abused children that might otherwise seem inconsistent with their allegations, including not resisting abuse, not displaying strong emotions about it, failing to disclose it immediately, and being unable to describe it in detail. The components are not a “checklist of behaviors or relationships” that will be present every time a child is sexually abused. Sampson’s trial counsel cross-examined Dr. Carmichael about “the origin of CSAAS,” which was initially developed over 40 years ago based on observations of a group of children who had been sexually abused.

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People v. Sampson CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sampson-ca11-calctapp-2024.