State v. Hungerford

697 A.2d 916, 142 N.H. 110, 1997 N.H. LEXIS 64
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 1, 1997
DocketNo. 95-429
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 697 A.2d 916 (State v. Hungerford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hungerford, 697 A.2d 916, 142 N.H. 110, 1997 N.H. LEXIS 64 (N.H. 1997).

Opinion

BROCK, C.J.

The State appeals the Superior Court’s (Groff, J.) ruling that the testimony of two alleged sexual assault victims is not admissible in criminal prosecutions against the defendants, Joel Hungerford and John Morahan. See RSA 606:10, II (1986). We affirm and remand.

For our limited review of the underlying facts, we will rely on the findings that the trial court made for purposes of its ruling on the admissibility of the complainants’ testimony. The complainant in State v. Hungerford, Laura, is a woman in her late twenties who had suffered from symptoms of clinical depression and had experienced sexual problems in her marriage prior to entering psychotherapy. Although she had no memory of being abused by her father, defendant Hungerford, she sought therapy in September 1992 after her sister claimed to have recovered memories of being sexually abused by Hungerford. Laura began therapy with Susan Jones, a social worker. According to the trial court, Laura

explained to Ms. Jones that one of her motivations in entering therapy was to explore the possibility that she was sexually abused. Ms. Jones engaged in traditional psycho[114]*114therapy but did engage specifically in “memory retrieval.” In other words, a specific purpose of her psychotherapy with Laura was in part to retrieve or recover memories of possible or suspected sexual abuse.

Laura participated in psychotherapy for approximately nine months, including about one hundred sessions; during this period, she “remembered” several episodes of sexual abuse. She recovered several memories of her father penetrating her, digitally, vaginally, and anally. She recovered these during sessions with Ms. Jones, who instructed her “to close her eyes and focus on the image,” and to report “who she was afraid of.” In order to facilitate remembering, Laura was instructed to “close her eyes and pretend it was a movie,” or to “look around and see what happened.”

In March 1993, Laura experienced vaginal pain and a feeling of disgust with her body while taking a shower. A green bar of soap reminded her of a poster above her bed at the family home. She subsequently experienced an “image or flashback” which reminded her that two days before her wedding her father had entered her bedroom, ripped the covers off of her bed, and raped her. Part of this memory seems to have been recalled outside of a particular therapy session, although Ms. Jones did examine the “feeling” with Laura during therapy, and the trial court found that “Laura did recover part or all of the memory of that rape at a therapy session.”

■Laura reported each of these memories to the Amherst Police Department in March 1993. After the allegations had been made, Hungerford threatened to shoot himself, Laura, and Ms. Jones. Laura and Ms. Jones were aware of this threat. After the defendant made the threat, Laura had a nightmare about black hair, which, after she had drawn a picture of it, Laura recognized as her father’s beard. After being instructed to close her eyes, “[l]ook around,” and see what was “so terrifying,” Laura remembered being tied to a bed with her father beside her, and that something was inside of her vagina. She remembered later, at home, that the object in her vagina had been a gun.

The trial court described Ms. Jones’ memory retrieval techniques in some detail:

During these periods when Ms. Jones engaged in the process of memory retrieval, Laura would close her eyes for 15 or 20 minutes, during which the “memory” would be explored. According to Ms. Jones, during these periods, Laura would go into a “self-induced” trance. Ms. Jones indicated that she did not induce the trance with Laura, but [115]*115rather Laura was able to “enter the traumatic experience by her own access and design.” During these episodes, Ms. Jones would ask Laura if she could see or hear anything or anybody, or if anything was happening. These were the only times during therapy[] that Ms. Jones used this “visualization” technique.
Ms. Jones fashioned or relied on a so[-]ealled “Repressed Memory Syndrome[,”] which appears unrecognized in the field of psychology. Ms. Jones also believed that dreams are often the first signs of emerging memory, that flashbacks are a sudden reliving of a scene of sexual abuse, and that violent nightmares are a red flag for the existence of sexual abuse. Ms. Jones also described the concept of repression to Laura. Ms. Jones believed that Laura’s visualizations were memories of actual abuse. She believed that these incidents of abuse occurred, and by her conduct, communicated this belief to Laura. Laura believed that Ms. Jones indicated that body pains were connected to instances of past sexual abuse. Laura believed that Ms. Jones validated the reality of the remembered sexual abuse. Ms. Jones herself understood that by her actions she had validated the abuse and affirmed the memories for Laura.

The complainant in State v. Morahan, Sarah, presently is in her early twenties. She reported to the trial court that she had negative feelings about her parents, who had divorced, and reported “suffering from depression, narcissism] and bulimia at various stages of her life.” Sarah began psychological counseling in May 1988. After having been admitted to two private psychiatric hospitals with suicidal ideation, Sarah attended the DeSisto School, a gestalt, “‘therapeutic boarding school[,’] where students are required to attend psychotherapy.” While at the school, Sarah ceased taking the antidepressant medication that had been prescribed for her previously.

At the DeSisto School, Sarah reported a recurring dream of a man next to her in bed, and suspected she had been abused; at the same time, she expressed conflicting feelings about her grandfather. In 1991, after another hospitalization for suicidal ideation, she reported further suspicions of sexual abuse; the school provided Sarah with “inner child therapy” to “support her and offer her belief and comfort, and to determine what had happened.” Sarah reported that her stepfather might have “done something to her,” and much of her therapy during this period explored the possibility of sexual abuse.

[116]*116After several months of therapy, in July 1991, Sarah revealed in therapy that she “now remembered being raped by a teacher in the seventh grade.” According to the trial court:

In the next few months, Sarah continued to deal with the alleged rape and develop her memory. She indicated that she had become pregnant as a result of the rape and aborted the pregnancy by an overdose of steroids. In therapy, significant effort was directed to grieving over the abortion. One of Sarah’s therapists considered her the classic abused child. Sarah also attended dorm group sessions on a regular basis at which participants talked of their problems, including cases of sexual abuse. On June 8, 1993, Sarah[,] accompanied by DeSisto School personnel, reported the rape to the vice-principal at Hillside Junior High School. Thereafter, she recovered further memories of the rape while talking with her dorm supervisor and a therapist. In mid-August Sarah reported the rape to the Manchester Police.

Sarah was not questioned about the details of the assault at the hearing. The instant prosecutions followed.

Both defendants moved to dismiss the prosecutions, asserting that the complainants’ testimony would not be admissible at trial under State v. Cressey, 137 N.H.

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Bluebook (online)
697 A.2d 916, 142 N.H. 110, 1997 N.H. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hungerford-nh-1997.