St. Luke Gregory, Jr. v. State of North Carolina Attorney General of North Carolina

900 F.2d 705, 29 Fed. R. Serv. 1306, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 4874, 1990 WL 37194
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 4, 1990
Docket89-7514
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 900 F.2d 705 (St. Luke Gregory, Jr. v. State of North Carolina Attorney General of North Carolina) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Luke Gregory, Jr. v. State of North Carolina Attorney General of North Carolina, 900 F.2d 705, 29 Fed. R. Serv. 1306, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 4874, 1990 WL 37194 (4th Cir. 1990).

Opinions

ERVIN, Chief Judge:

St. Luke Gregory, imprisoned by North Carolina for taking sexual advantage of his young daughter, brought this Section 2254 case challenging the admission of two hearsay statements identifying him as the assailant. Gregory argues that the statements were so untrustworthy as to have violated his Sixth Amendment right to confront his accuser. The district court agreed that statements the child made several months before the crimes occurred were too unreliable to support the conviction, and ordered relief in the form of a new trial. We affirm.

I.

A jury concluded that Gregory had sexually assaulted his daughter LaTonya, then three-and-a-half years old, in September, 1984. Some of the most damning evidence against Gregory came in testimony from LaTonya’s maternal grandmother, Doris Griffin, who often babysat the child while Gregory and his wife, LaTonya’s mother, worked.1

In June, 1984, and again on September 7, 1984, Gregory dropped LaTonya off at Griffin’s home and proceeded to work. During both visits, LaTonya exclaimed something like “Daddy put it in my butt”, a remark the parties agree connotes a sexual [706]*706contact between father and daughter.2

The September remark finds corroboration in Griffin’s discovery of a substance, apparently pus, on LaTonya’s panties and testimony that LaTonya would not allow her to touch her crotch because it hurt. Dr. Phillip Greene, who examined LaTonya later that day, testified that “[LaTonya] said that her daddy unzipped his pants and “told me do my legs apart,” and she showed me by the spreading of her legs, and he — those are my words. These are her words: “Wanted to get close to me,” and the fourth part of this continuous sentence was that “that he hurt me here,” and she pointed to between her legs.”3

No contemporaneous evidence corroborates LaTonya’s June statement. Griffin noticed nothing in LaTonya’s appearance or conduct that triggered suspicion, and seems to have dismissed the remark as a naive impertinence.

A Dr. Beals testified that on September 13, 1982, he had diagnosed gonorrhea in the seventeen-month-old LaTonya. Beals observed that sexual congress is the means of transmitting gonorrhea “almost in every case known”, and that the probability of infection by other means is very slight. Other evidence indicated that Gregory had been treated for gonorrhea at about the same time.4

[707]*707The district court accepted the magistrate’s recommendation that it rule the June hearsay inadmissible, finding “absolutely no objective corroborative evidence of the abuse reported at that time.” The court viewed LaTonya’s September statements to Griffin and Greene in a different light, rejecting the magistrate’s counsel that it hold these two inadmissible also. Identifying a dozen factors corroborating the September statements, the district court concluded that while it “is on the cutting edge of the issue of relaxation of confrontation clause requirements”, the in-dicia of reliability associated with the statements warranted admission.5

II.

The issue for our review is one arising with depressing frequency in our nation’s courts, one that, as a sister Circuit has observed, “place[s] a strain on traditional notions of procedural justice.” Nelson v. Farrey, 874 F.2d 1222, 1224 (7th Cir.1989), cert. denied, — U.S. -, 110 S.Ct. 835, 107 L.Ed.2d 831 (1990) (citations omitted). The victim and principal witness to the crime charged is, by virtue of the youth that made her so vulnerable, unable to give reliable testimony. Her absence deprives the accused of the opportunity to cross-examine his accuser, an opportunity that, though some aver it a poor way to elicit truth from a very young child, our system holds dear. Id. at 1230; The Supreme Court, 1987 Term: Leading Cases, 102 Harv.L.Rev. 143, 157 (1988).

In Ohio v. Roberts, 448 U.S. 56, 100 S.Ct. 2531, 65 L.Ed.2d 597 (1980), the Court promulgated a rule mediating between the accused’s interest in confrontation, [and broadly in the best exposition of the truth,] and the victim’s and society’s interest in the effective prosecution of child abuse. The rule allows the admission of hearsay evidence from an unavailable declarant if, though not within any well-recognized exception to hearsay exclusion, the evidence bears “particularized guarantees of trustworthiness.” 6 Id. at 66, 100 S.Ct. at 2539. It is the district court’s Roberts analysis that we review today.

In this case, the issue is whether we may look a considerable distance backward and forward from June of 1984 — principally to the 1982 diagnosis of gonorrhea and the events of September of 1984 — for corroborating factors. This issue is novel to us. The district court, referring to a portion of the magistrate’s decision citing cases from two other courts of appeals, stated that it would address the statements’ reliability in light of contemporaneous circumstances. See United States v. Renville, 779 F.2d 430, 440 (8th Cir.1985) (“[T]he reliability of the declaration is assessed in light of the circumstances at the time of the declara[708]*708tion and the credibility of the declarant.”) (citing Huff v. White Motor Corp., 609 F.2d 286, 292 (7th Cir.1979)); see also United States v. Dorian, 803 F.2d 1439, 1444 (8th Cir.1986) (quoting the Renville contemporaneity requirement); United States v. Love, 592 F.2d 1022, 1027 (8th Cir.1979). As we shall explain, even if we disagreed with the well-reasoned requirement of contemporaneous corroboration, a requirement implicit in the Roberts insistence on “particularized” guarantees of reliability, we nonetheless would hold the chronologically distant evidence presented in this case to be a logically insufficient index of the reliability of the June hearsay.

No doubt because of the relative novelty of the Roberts exception and the fact-specific examination each Roberts inquiry demands, the cases, rather than publishing a comprehensive list of possible corroborating factors, tend to consider what, in the declarant’s condition or otherwise, suggests truthfulness or a lack thereof. For example, in Ellison, the district court referred to the many discrepancies among the five-year-old sexual assault victim’s descriptions of her assailant and the place of her assault in concluding that admission of the descriptions as hearsay violated the accused’s Sixth Amendment rights. Ellison v. Sachs, 583 F.Supp. 1241, 1249 (D.Md.1984), aff'd, 769 F.2d 955

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Bluebook (online)
900 F.2d 705, 29 Fed. R. Serv. 1306, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 4874, 1990 WL 37194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-luke-gregory-jr-v-state-of-north-carolina-attorney-general-of-north-ca4-1990.