State v. Babayan

787 P.2d 805, 106 Nev. 155, 1990 Nev. LEXIS 28
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1990
Docket18713, 18732
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 787 P.2d 805 (State v. Babayan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Babayan, 787 P.2d 805, 106 Nev. 155, 1990 Nev. LEXIS 28 (Neb. 1990).

Opinion

*158 OPINION

Per Curiam:

This opinion considers two consolidated matters which arose from a series of five grand jury indictments. The indictments, returned between May 9th and December 13th, 1984, charged respondent Ruben Babayan (Babayan) and his co-defendants, petitioner Greg Sarkissian (Sarkissian) and Manouchehr Rashidi (Rashidi), with multiple counts of child abuse causing substantial mental harm, sexual assault, and lewdness with a child under the age of fourteen. See NRS 200.508; NRS 200.366; NRS 201.230. Prior to trial, Babayan and Sarkissian moved to dismiss the indictments. They contended, inter alia, that the indictments were invalid because (1) the district attorney had failed to present exculpatory evidence to the grand jury; and (2) those involved in the investigation and presentation of evidence to the grand jury had such conflicts of interest that concepts of due process and fundamental fairness were violated. The district court granted the motion with respect to respondent Babayan and dismissed with prejudice all indictments against him; however, the district court perceived a difference in the level of misconduct involving petitioner Sarkissian and denied his motion.

The State now appeals from that portion of the district court’s order that dismissed all indictments against respondent Babayan *159 with prejudice. Petitioner Sarkissian seeks mandamus directing respondents, the Second Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada and the Honorable Robert L. Schouweiler, District Judge, to dismiss the indictments against him. For the reasons set forth below, we (1) affirm that portion of the district court’s order dismissing the indictments against Babayan, (2) reverse the district court’s decision to dismiss the indictments with prejudice, and (3) grant the relief petitioner Sarkissian seeks.

FACTS

The allegations that formed the basis of the grand jury indictments against Babayan and Sarkissian began to surface in early March, 1984, following the psychological evaluation of a child who attended the Montessori preschool on Hash Lane in Reno. 1 Following a brief interview of the child at the Children’s Behavioral Clinic in Reno, the evaluator, a contract psychologist at the clinic and a clinical psychology student at the University of Nevada, Reno, concluded that the child had been sexually abused.

Washoe County Sheriff’s Detectives soon began to investigate the alleged child abuse by interviewing children who attended Babayan’s preschools, the children’s parents, and preschool teachers and staff. As word of the alleged abuse and the investigation spread, more parents began to have their children who attended the preschools evaluated. Most of the evaluations were conducted by employees of the Children’s Behavioral Clinic or by clinicians with whom the Children’s Behavioral Clinic employees were associated in private practice. In time, more alleged victims began to surface. The allegations of child abuse, originally made against only Sarkissian — a shuttle bus driver and handy man at the Hash Lane preschool — soon included respondent Babayan and petitioner Sarkissian’s successor in employment, Manouchehr Rashidi. Ultimately, a task force was formed to carry on the burgeoning investigation and to collate the information being gathered.

By at least mid-April, 1984, private civil attorneys contemplating civil suits against the preschools began contacting the District Attorney’s Office. John Maher, the Assistant District Attorney that Washoe County District Attorney Mills Lane originally assigned to the case, later described the interaction between the District Attorney’s Office and civil attorneys, and, in particular, attorney Peter Chase Neumann, as a bi-directional flow of statements made by the civil attorneys’ clients. At least one civil *160 attorney contacted the District Attorney’s Office and expressed concern regarding the speed at which the investigation of the case was progressing.

In early May, 1984, the District Attorney’s Office also became aware of other complaints about the slowness of the investigation. District Attorney Mills Lane in a subsequent hearing attributed these complaints to parents and other people that were involved with the school. A meeting was held on May 3, 1984, at the Washoe County District Attorney’s Office in order to address the concerns. In attendance at the meeting were therapists who had evaluated some of the alleged victims, parents — at least one of whom, Dr. William Terry, was also a therapist actively engaged in evaluating alleged victims and providing information for the investigation — and supporters of respondent Babayan. Also in attendance were Mills Lane, John Maher, John Oakes — who later, for a time, would prosecute the case — and sheriff’s deputies. On that night, while the investigation of the alleged abuse and the psychological evaluations of children were still ongoing, the decision to go forward with the prosecution was made.

The District Attorney’s Office filed a complaint on May 4, 1984, and made its first presentation to the grand jury on May 9, 1984. It made subsequent presentations to the grand jury on June 6, September 13, October 25, and December 12, 1984. Those testifying at the grand jury presentations included: Washoe County Sheriff’s Detective Brent Royle, civil attorney Peter Chase Neumann, 2 some alleged victims, the alleged victims’ parents, and various therapists who had evaluated and/or were treating the children. In all, the grand jury returned five indictments against Babayan, Sarkissian, and Rashidi that alleged sixty-nine counts of child sexual abuse involving twenty-six alleged victims.

In mid-1985, the various counsel for the defendants joined in a motion to have the alleged victims examined by independent experts. The Honorable Robert Schouweiler held a hearing on the motion on July 9, 1985. There, Rashidi’s counsel stressed the need for evaluation of the children by outside experts, rather than, as he phrased it, “marriage and family counselors and therapists whose children had attended the Montessori School.” The purpose of the psychiatric evaluation that the defendants proposed was not to determine the specifics of the State’s allegations, but to evaluate the alleged victims’ credibility and competency. As a factual basis for the motion, counsel pointed to statements by children that were either inconsistent with estab *161 lished facts, i.e., one child alleged total penile penetration other vagina when a medical examination revealed that her hymenal ring was intact, or that were simply incredible, i. e., another child alleged that large bullets had been fired into his rectum and that he had been forced to kill hundreds of people.

Defendants’ counsel offered as an expert witness Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
787 P.2d 805, 106 Nev. 155, 1990 Nev. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-babayan-nev-1990.