State v. Dickerson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedNovember 9, 2018
Docket116628
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Dickerson (State v. Dickerson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Dickerson, (kanctapp 2018).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 116,628

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

ROBERT DICKERSON, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Wyandotte District Court; MICHAEL A. RUSSELL, judge. Opinion filed November 9, 2018. Affirmed.

Peter Maharry, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.

Daniel G. Obermeier and Jennifer S. Tatum, assistant district attorneys, Mark A. Dupree Sr., district attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.

Before ATCHESON, P.J., HILL, J., and STUTZMAN, S.J.

PER CURIAM: Robert Dickerson appeals his conviction for aggravated indecent liberties with a child. He raises several claims of error. First, he complains about a late amendment of the charging document by the State. Next, he raises two evidence issues. He argues that the district court improperly admitted a forensic interview of a child and, later, a Facebook Messenger conversation. Finally, he also thinks the prosecutor erred by appealing to the sympathy of the jury. In our review, we have considered all of his claims and are unmoved.

1 Our review of the record reveals that Dickerson was not prejudiced by the State's amendment of the Information, even though it came after the close of the evidence. Looking at his two evidence issues, first, we do not adopt his position that a forensic interview of a child is expert testimony that needs to be qualified as such. Second, we find no abuse of discretion by the court when it admitted the Facebook message, even though there was conflicting evidence about the message, because the State satisfied its burden of showing the message was authentic. Finally, after considering the prosecutor's comments in context, we are not persuaded they were an improper appeal to the sympathies of the jury. We affirm.

We outline the evidence.

In early 2014, C.B., a 15-year-old girl, and S.S., a 13-year-old boy, were dating and sexually active. C.B. moved in with her grandmother, where she was home schooled, and S.S. lived with his grandmother, Jackie, and his step-grandfather, Dickerson. C.B. would often visit S.S.'s home and, on at least one occasion, was alone with Dickerson. This is when the trouble started.

When S.S. got home from school one afternoon, C.B. was at his home and told him that Dickerson had touched her. C.B. had been alone with Dickerson all day. She said he touched her while she was in the bathroom and then later in the bedroom. C.B. did not want to tell anyone else because she did not want to break up with S.S.

But, according to C.B., things "started getting weird" and C.B. did tell. On Memorial Day weekend in 2014, she told her great-grandmother, Geraldine Croom, that Dickerson "used his fingers" on her and "ate her out." She later disclosed to her grandmother, Carla Simpson, that Dickerson "fingered" her in the bathroom and "ate her out" in the bedroom. C.B. also told Z.S., S.S.'s older brother, that Dickerson "went down on her inappropriately." 2 Later, C.B. repeated her allegations to Jacob Newell, a social worker with the Kansas Department for Children and Families. Then she disclosed what happened to Jennifer Washam, a forensic interview specialist at Sunflower House. In those interviews, C.B. detailed what happened when she spent the day alone with Dickerson:

 Her grandmother dropped her at Dickerson's house in the morning so she could do laundry. Jackie was at work and the kids were at school.  She and Dickerson went to an auction where he purchased a drain snake. They went to a grocery store and looked at flowers.  Back at the house, Dickerson asked to kiss her.  He kissed her and undid her belt. In the bathroom, he put his hand down her pants and started "fingering" her. She asked him to stop and tried to walk away.  He said he was not done with her and guided her to his bedroom.  He put her on his bed, removed her pants, and started "eating her out." She covered her eyes, cried, and asked him to stop. She told him that it hurt. Dickerson told her he liked it when she made noise.  He went into the bathroom and washed his mouth out with mouthwash.  He told her not to tell anyone.

A few days later, Dr. Terra Frazier, a child abuse pediatrician, examined C.B. The results were normal. But Frazier expected no injuries from mouth-to-genital or hand-to- genital contact.

The State charged Dickerson with aggravated indecent liberties with a child, a severity level 3 person felony; and criminal sodomy, a severity level 3 person felony, occurring on or about May 1, 2014, to May 31, 2014. In March 2015, the State amended

3 the Information, changing the date range of the offense to April 1, 2014 to May 31, 2014. This was later extended by one month at the close of evidence at trial.

Dickerson filed a Daubert motion to exclude the forensic interview. The court held an evidentiary hearing and found testimony about the forensic interview admissible under the factors listed in Daubert v. Merrill Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 592-95, 113 S. Ct. 2786, 125 L. Ed. 2d 469 (1993).

At the jury trial, Croom, Simpson, Newell, S.S., Z.S., Frazier, Washam, and C.B., among others, testified. Over Dickerson's objection, a video recording of Washam's forensic interview of C.B. was shown to the jury. We offer a brief summary of some of the trial testimony.

C.B. testified to the facts as she had done in the forensic interview. C.B.'s grandmother, Simpson, did not remember the date, but she remembered Jackie calling one night and asking her to bring C.B. over the next day to help around the house. Simpson stated that C.B. had just moved in with her at the end of February or the first of March 2014 and was being home schooled until she could get the paperwork to enroll her in school. Jackie said that Dickerson would be home and C.B. could go to an auction with him and Dickerson would help with her home schooling. Simpson dropped C.B. off at the house in the morning on her way to work and Dickerson was the only person home. After that day, she noticed Dickerson acting differently towards C.B.

The State offered and the court admitted, over Dickerson's objection, screenshots purportedly of a Facebook Messenger conversation in June 2014 between C.B. and Z.S. in which Z.S. told C.B. that S.S. was at camp and Dickerson had S.S.'s phone. Then C.B. sent Z.S. a screenshot of messages she had received the previous day from S.S.'s Messenger account that read "This is Bob" and "Y u tell on me." C.B. knew Dickerson as "Bob" and did not know anyone else named Bob. 4 For the defense, Jackie testified that she had never asked C.B. to come over and do laundry at her house. Jackie testified she had S.S.'s phone while S.S. was at camp, not Dickerson.

S.S. testified that in October 2013, Dickerson found out he and C.B. were having a sexual relationship and Dickerson threatened to break them up if they continued having sex. S.S. testified that C.B. was mad at Dickerson about this and she wanted Dickerson "away somehow." S.S. testified he did not give Dickerson the password to his cellphone.

Dickerson testified on his own behalf and denied the allegations. He also denied having the password to or sending messages from S.S.'s phone.

After the close of evidence, the State moved to amend the Information to allege that the crimes occurred between March 1, 2014, and Memorial Day 2014 (previously it had been between April 1, 2014, and May 31, 2014).

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State v. Dickerson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dickerson-kanctapp-2018.