State v. Jesse

385 P.3d 1063, 360 Or. 584, 2016 Ore. LEXIS 716
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 2016
DocketCC C110695CR; CA A153759; SC S063856
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 385 P.3d 1063 (State v. Jesse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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. Jesse, 385 P.3d 1063, 360 Or. 584, 2016 Ore. LEXIS 716 (Or. 2016).

Opinion

BREWER, J.

The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed. The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

*585 BREWER, J.

The issue on review following defendant’s conviction for first-degree sexual abuse is whether the trial court erred in excluding from evidence at trial, on the ground that it was not helpful to the jury, expert testimony that defendant proffered in support of his theory that certain statements that he had made were not, in fact, actual confessions of guilt. OEC 702. 1 Because we conclude that the trial court did not err in excluding the proffered testimony, we affirm defendant’s conviction.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Defendant was indicted in April 2011 on one count of first-degree sexual abuse, based on an allegation that he knowingly subjected his daughter M to sexual contact. Because defendant argues that the excluded expert testimony would have helped explain his own statements that the state characterized as confessions of guilt, we describe those statements in detail.

A. Statements that the State Claimed Were Confessions to the Charged Offense

1. Defendant’s initial disclosure to S

Defendant and his wife, S, were married for eight years and have two children, M and L. M was four years old in November 2009, when S returned home from work one morning and found defendant extremely upset. As S later described the discussion, defendant told her that she would never forgive him, handed over his wedding ring, and then told her that he had touched M over her diaper. S testified that defendant also said that he had been thinking about touching the children for some time and that he was worried about “turning into his [own] family.” According to S, defendant said that “he belonged in prison and to call the police right now.” S did not call the police, because defendant told *586 her that M had not awakened and did not know about the touching, and defendant agreed to leave the house.

2. Signed admission

S agreed to stay married to defendant for a short time so that he could seek counseling using her health insurance. S testified that she insisted, however, that she “needed some sort of proof that says that [defendant] did this so that * * * he couldn’t come back later and say that he wanted the kids.” S testified that she wrote the following statement for defendant to sign:

“I, [defendant], am admitting to touching my oldest daughter, [M], in an inappropriate way. I went in her room early in the morning and was tucking her into bed when I ran my hand over her diaper, over her pubic area. I then walked out and went to bed. My daughter did not wake up. I have never done this before. When my wife came home from work, I told her. She told me to leave and I agreed to that and to get counseling. I am writing this so my wife, [S,] has proof for the protection of our children.”

S also testified that she read the document out loud to defendant, and then defendant read and signed it. In his trial testimony, defendant denied that S showed him the document, and he asserted that his signature was forged.

3. M’s disclosures

S and defendant dissolved their marriage in March 2010. On September 11, 2010, M told S, “Well, one time I was in bed with daddy and — and he put his hand down my diaper.” M moved her hand over her pubic area to show S how defendant had touched her and said that defendant’s hand was on “her private.” M said that defendant did not take his hand out, so M pulled his hand out of her diaper. M told S that she did not tell about the incident sooner because she was afraid that defendant “would have to go away.” A few days later, before S called the police, she had M repeat the story. M’s story was the same except for an added detail about defendant saying, “I’m sorry.”

M described the incident similarly in a recorded conversation during a medical examination on September 20, 2010, and in testimony at trial. The physician did not find any *587 physical signs of abuse, but testified that that was consistent with an allegation of touching the outside of the vagina.

4. Defendant’s statements to sheriffs deputies

Defendant was arrested on April 3, 2011, and he was confined in the Washington County Jail. Nearly a year later, while still in jail and awaiting trial in this case, defendant approached two deputies. According to the deputies, defendant asked, “What happens if I confess right now?” The deputies testified that, a few minutes later, defendant approached them again and said, “I did it. I confess.” A deputy told defendant that the matter was between him and the courts. Defendant continued to pace the unit, approached the deputies again, and said (again, as the deputies described it), “Okay. I touched my daughter. I admit [it]. I’m a jerk.”

B. Dr. Callum’s Pretrial Testimony

Defendant attended 15 counseling sessions with Dr. Callum, a licensed psychologist, between December 2009 and July 2010, beginning shortly after the date of the charged offense. Defendant discussed with Callum issues of anxiety and marital difficulties. According to Callum, defendant told her that he was concerned about “thoughts” of touching his children, but assured Callum that he had “never” acted on the thoughts.

Before trial, the state filed a motion in limine, based in part on OEC 702, to exclude testimony by Callum concerning her clinical impressions of defendant. The state argued that “defendant will not be able [to] establish a sufficient nexus between [his] actions/behaviors and * * * Callum’s observations, opinions, discussions, recommendations, or beliefs surrounding her contacts with the defendant.” The state contended that “Callum has not even provided a formal diagnosis, and if such a diagnosis were to be provided, *** there is not a satisfactory link that can be demonstrated between the diagnosis and the material events that occurred in this case”; thus, her “testimony is not assistive to the trier of fact and should be excluded.”

The trial court held a pretrial hearing at which defendant elicited testimony from Callum through an *588 offer of proof. On direct examination, Callum testified that defendant

“had very low self-esteem. He was also plagued by fears and many of the cognitions of his childhood, which kept on just ruminating [in] his head, and those were the fears and negative thoughts that he was always having. And which continuously made him wonder if he was okay, what was wrong with him.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
385 P.3d 1063, 360 Or. 584, 2016 Ore. LEXIS 716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jesse-or-2016.