State v. McGill

539 S.E.2d 351, 141 N.C. App. 98, 2000 N.C. App. LEXIS 1284
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 19, 2000
DocketCOA99-1454
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 539 S.E.2d 351 (State v. McGill) 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. McGill, 539 S.E.2d 351, 141 N.C. App. 98, 2000 N.C. App. LEXIS 1284 (N.C. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

GREENE, Judge.

David Eugene McGill, Jr. (Defendant) appeals from convictions of four counts of first-degree sexual offense upon a minor child (G.H.) and of two counts of indecent liberties with G.H.

Pre-trial

On 18 May 1998, Defendant filed motions requesting the right to inspect records of G.H. from the Cherokee County (CCDSS) and Gaston County (GCDSS) Departments of Social Services for exculpa *99 tory information. Defendant believed these records would “show that the State’s [p]rosecuting [witness, [G.H.], filed formal complaints against... Defendant in said Counties], and Defendant believes such records will show exculpatory material contained therein.” On 21 May 1998, the trial court, after conducting an in camera inspection of the file of CCDSS, identified four pages of materials from the file as “possibly exculpatory” and ordered them to be given to Defendant and ordered a copy of the entire file be sealed and deposited for further in camera review, should it be necessary. The four pages given to Defendant contained allegations of abuse and neglect made in December 1996 against Lynn Hampton (Hampton), G.H.’s mother, and Defendant, Hampton’s boyfriend. At the time these allegations were made, Hampton stated G.H. “was bad to set fires.” Also contained in the four pages given to Defendant was an interview with the elementary school principal of G.H. and his younger brother R.H., in which the principal stated “he feels like [G.H. and R.H.] are prone to exagérate [sic] and make things bigger than they are.”

On 19 October 1998, prior to jury selection, the trial court stated it had reviewed the records of GCDSS and “found nothing exculpatory in them. It’s all inculpatory.” The trial court then sealed the records of GCDSS for further in camera inspection if necessary.

State’s evidence

G.H. testified that in 1997 and the early part of 1998, when he was nine years old, G.H., R.H., and Hampton lived with Defendant in Murphy, North Carolina. In November 1997, Defendant awakened G.H. at approximately 12:00 a.m. and made G.H. “come in the living room and sit on his lap.” Defendant made G.H. sit there and watch a pornographic movie as he “touched [G.H.’s] privates . . . and made [G.H.] take [Defendant’s] pants off.” G.H. was in the living room with Defendant for approximately one hour.

In January 1998, Defendant awakened G.H. from his sleep at around 2:30 a.m. and made G.H. watch the same video he had seen in November. Shortly after the video ended, Defendant made G.H. take off Defendant’s pants and then Defendant went into the bathroom. Defendant made G.H. enter Defendant’s bedroom and Defendant removed G.H.’s clothes. G.H. testified Defendant made him “suck [Defendant’s] peter” and made G.H. kiss him. G.H. stated “this whole thing” lasted “[a]bout five hours,” while Defendant “stuck his tongue in[to G.H.’s] butt,” bit G.H.’s penis, and put [Defendant’s] penis into *100 G.H.’s “butt.” On cross-examination, G.H. stated he wanted to live with his grandmother, even during the time period he was living with Defendant.

R.H. testified that in November 1997, G.H. was crying and G.H. told him Defendant made him watch a pornographic movie and made G.H. pull Defendant’s pants off. R.H. recalled that during the “second time,” which he believed occurred in November 1997, G.H. went into Defendant’s bedroom and Defendant closed the door. The next morning, G.H. told R.H. Defendant “molested him in the behind.” On cross-examination, R.H. testified he wanted to live with his grandmother because Defendant “would be mean to [him]” and Defendant would tell him to do his homework and chores. If R.H. or G.H. did not do their homework or chores, they “would get a whipping.” R.H. denied ever watching pornographic videos at his grandmother’s house.

Hampton testified that a week after the November 1997 incident, G.H. told her Defendant “got [G.H.] up in the middle of the night and had [G.H.] come and watch [television] with [Defendant] . . . and [Defendant] had [G.H.] take [Defendant’s] pants off.” G.H. told Hampton Defendant “pulled [G.H.] down toward[] [Defendant’s] penis.” In January 1998, when she arrived home from work during the early morning hours, Hampton found Defendant who was naked under the covers and G.H. in the bed together.

On cross-examination, Hampton testified when she and Defendant, along with R.H. and G.H., lived in Gastonia, before their move to Murphy in 1996, she and Defendant were investigated concerning allegations about sexual contact with G.H. and R.H. Hampton recalled making a statement about G.H. “watching dirty movies at [his grandmother’s] house and looking through a peephole and watching” his uncle and another man engaging in sexual acts. After finding G.H. in the bed with Defendant in January 1998, Hampton never saw any “blood or feces” in G.H.’s underwear and did not inspect the sheets in Defendant’s bedroom. In addition, Hampton did not notice any discomfort in G.H. subsequent to the incident in January of 1998.

Chanda Enand (Enand), a physician’s assistant at Carolina Medical Center in Charlotte, North Carolina, examined G.H. on 30 April 1998 after the reported sexual abuse. Enand testified G.H.’s physical exam was “normal,” however, the overall assessment, “including [an] interview and physical exam [was] consistent with probable sexual abuse.” Enand revealed “[s]ixty or seventy percent of the children who are sexually abused” have normal exams.

*101 Defendant’s evidence

Defendant testified he did not sexually assault G.H. nor did he make G.H. watch a pornographic video. In addition, Debra Sears (Sears), the Child Protective Services Supervisor for CCDSS, testified Hampton and Defendant had previously been investigated concerning allegations of sexual abuse and “nothing was found.”

Closing arguments

In closing arguments, Defendant argued testimony G.H. and R.H. watched pornographic videos and G.H. and R.H. saw their uncle and another man engaging in sexual acts provided “the source of the information where some child ten years old could get. . . these types of allegations.” The State, however, argued G.H.’s exposure to pornography did not provide a basis for his allegations. The State contended “what happened to [G.H.] that night was . . . awful.... Do you think [G.H.] saw that on a pornographic video?”

The dispositive issue is whether the records from GCDSS concerning prior allegations of sexual abuse by G.H. contain information that is favorable to Defendant and material to his guilt or punishment.

Defendant argues the trial court erred in refusing to give him access to the records of GCDSS. He asks this Court to review the records to determine whether they contain any exculpatory information.

A defendant who is charged with sexual abuse of a minor has a constitutional right to have the records of the child abuse agency that is charged with investigating cases of suspected child abuse, as they pertain to the prosecuting witness, turned over to the trial court for an in camera review to determine whether the records contain information favorable to the accused and material to guilt or punishment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
539 S.E.2d 351, 141 N.C. App. 98, 2000 N.C. App. LEXIS 1284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcgill-ncctapp-2000.