State v. Crocker

676 S.E.2d 658, 197 N.C. App. 358, 2009 N.C. App. LEXIS 712
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJune 2, 2009
DocketCOA08-1363
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 676 S.E.2d 658 (State v. Crocker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Crocker, 676 S.E.2d 658, 197 N.C. App. 358, 2009 N.C. App. LEXIS 712 (N.C. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

BRYANT, Judge.

Defendant appeals from judgments and commitments entered 9 June 2008 after a jury returned verdicts of guilty on three counts of first degree sexual offense with a child under the age of 13 and three counts of taking indecent liberties with a child. For the reasons stated herein, we find no error with the judgment of the trial court.

The evidence presented at trial tended to show that defendant befriended Robert 1 while working at the Grandover Resort in Greensboro, North Carolina. Robert lived with his parents and had two children — a daughter, Helen, and a son, Peter. At the time of trial, Helen was eleven and Peter fourteen.

Sometime during the summer of 2006, Robert and defendant began spending time together, and occasionally, Robert, along with Helen and Peter, would spend the night in defendant’s apartment. The guests would sleep on an air mattress and a sofa in the living room. *360 Helen testified that one night in September 2006 she was laying on the sofa watching T.V. when defendant sat down and began rubbing her feet. Defendant moved his hand up her leg and under her shorts.

State: Tell the ladies and gentlemen of the jury where would his hands be underneath your pants and underneath your panties?
Helen: Where I use the bathroom.
State: The area that you pee out of?
Helen: Yes
State: Would his hand touch that area?
Helen: Yes
State: What would his hand do to that area? Can you describe that for the ladies and gentlemen of the jury?
Helen: It would go between the skin type area.
State: Okay. The area that you use the bathroom out of?
Helen: Yes.
State: How did it feel when he would touch you in those areas?
Helen: It felt like there was a pressure point that he would rub against and I felt like I was about to pass out.
State: All right. Now, when you say that he would push or rub on that pressure point, . . . did that cause you any discomfort or pain?
Helen: Yes, it hurt.

Helen also testified that defendant reached inside her t-shirt and touched her chest. This same conduct occurred on three occasions: (1) one night in September 2006, (2) once before her 19 October 2006 birthday, and (3) sometime between November and 19 December 2006.

Sometime during December 2006, Helen’s mother discovered blood in Helen’s underwear. Not knowing whether Helen had begun her menstrual cycle or if she had been hurt — and “[Helen] was not very forthcoming with what had happened” — Helen was taken to see *361 Dr. Melissa Lowe, a pediatrician with Wendover Pediatricians in Greensboro, North Carolina. At trial, Dr. Lowe was admitted as an expert witness. She testified that during her initial conversation she asked what Helen thought may have caused her bleeding. When Helen failed to respond, Dr. Lowe asked “if anyone had touched her in her private.” Helen became “very upset. She, when she nodded because she had tears coming down her face, she was not able — I think she was choked up at the moment, not really saying anything verbally. And then she managed to say . . . that Terry touched her down there.” Dr. Lowe informed Helen’s mother and filed a report with law enforcement authorities.

On 19 December 2006, Helen met with Kimberly Madden, a forensic interviewer with Family Services of the Piedmont in Greensboro, North Carolina. Helen explained how defendant had put his hand down her shirt and in her pants touching the part of her body where she urinates. Helen described how defendant touched a pressure point that made her feel “kind of faint” that was near the part of her body where she urinates. She told Ms. Madden these events occurred at defendant’s apartment, on defendant’s couch.

On 17 January 2007, Helen saw Dr. Angela Stanley, a pediatrician with the Moses Cone Health System. At trial, Dr. Stanley, testifying as an expert and using diagrams for illustration, described the anatomy of the female genital area. Dr. Stanley related that the labia majora or outer layer is tougher “so it is not susceptible to painfulness, not highly innervated”; that “its normal role is to pad the genital area.” She noted that the labia majora would have to be separated in order to expose the inside structures. When asked to describe the inside structures, Dr. Stanley stated, “Those are different types of structures. This area is . .. more susceptible to injury, hence the covering.”

State: In hearing the description that [Helen] had given in reading material that you had been given as far as sensory detail that she gave also describing the pain and discomfort that she was feeling, would you find it more consistent with touching the structures on the inside of the labia majora or outside the labia majora?
Stanley: It would be more consistent with touching on the inside rather than . . . [the] padded structures on the outside.
State: The detail she gave about a pressure point and shaking and these kinds of details, would that be consistent with *362 touching on the outside of the labia majora or inside the labia majora?
Stanley: The description the child was giving would be stimulation of these structures [sic] would be possible with extreme pressure and friction on the outside over these structures or also on the inside coupled with the complaint of pain, it would be more suggestive of touching these structures on the inside.
State: The descriptions that you gave would be more consistent with touching the inside the labia majora or these internal structures here; is that correct?
Stanley: That’s correct.

At the close of the State’s evidence and again after the close of all evidence, defendant made a motion to dismiss based on insufficiency of the evidence. Both motions were denied.

The jury returned verdicts of guilty on three counts of first degree sexual offense with a child under the age of thirteen and three counts of taking indecent liberties with a child. The trial court entered judgments consistent with the jury verdicts and committed defendant to a term of 192 months to 240 months for two counts of first degree sex offense and two counts of indecent liberties to be followed by a term of 192 months to 240 months for one count of first degree sex offense and one count of indecent liberties in the custody of the North Carolina Department of Correction. Defendant appeals.

Defendant raises two issues on appeal: whether the trial court erred by (I) failing to dismiss the three counts of first degree sexual offense and (II) allowing opinion testimony on the credibility of the victim.

I

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
676 S.E.2d 658, 197 N.C. App. 358, 2009 N.C. App. LEXIS 712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-crocker-ncctapp-2009.