Stroud v. State

644 S.E.2d 467, 284 Ga. App. 604, 2007 Fulton County D. Rep. 1130, 2007 Ga. App. LEXIS 374
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 28, 2007
DocketA06A1817
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 644 S.E.2d 467 (Stroud v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stroud v. State, 644 S.E.2d 467, 284 Ga. App. 604, 2007 Fulton County D. Rep. 1130, 2007 Ga. App. LEXIS 374 (Ga. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Phipps, Judge.

Darrell Stroud was convicted of committing numerous sexual offenses against his stepdaughters, C. S. andher younger sister, Q. S., between November 9, 1995, and March 23, 2001. On appeal, he contends that the evidence was insufficient and that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance. Because Stroud has demonstrated no reversible error, we affirm.

The evidence showed that in 1996, when Q. S. was in nursery school, she complained to her aunt that her “bottom” was hurting. The aunt testified that Q. S. told her that Stroud had been “messing with her private areas.” When Q. S.’s mother learned of the allegation, she asked Q. S. about it. Q. S. told her mother that it had not been Stroud, but a boy in her school. An ensuing police investigation into the matter concluded that the allegation regarding Stroud was unfounded.

In March 2001, when C. S. was in the fifth grade, she wrote a letter to her school principal, stating:

I hat my stepdaddy. He thinks that he can beat on us. But we are going to get an atroney. But my grandmother is going to help us get out of this house. But well leave and live with my grandmother at her house. I will tell her that he raped me and he said if I said something about to anyone he will kill me. I would never tell nobodoy with my mouth. I will tell by letters and writing. If my mother trie to stop me. I will take matter and stop them. But most of them me and my sister will handuly them. But If I don’t won’t let us be use. But he want him to die cause he beats me and my sister and my mother want do nothing about it. . . .

The principal summoned a social worker. When questioned by the social worker, C. S. indicated that it was painful for her to speak about what was happening to her. Therefore, she instead wrote the principal another letter, stating, “He Raped!... When we were living in Oakland apartments in my room were apartment that was over thir by. a other set of apartments were, a my gread mothers house, nobody caus he say if I tell he will kill me, he did it.”

*605 Since the fall of the year before, the social worker had been working with the Department of Family and Children Services (DFCS) on a case involving C. S.’s family. According to the social worker, that case “involved an alleged sexual abuse, child molestation.” In interviews with the social worker during those months, C. S. and Q. S. denied that they had been sexually abused. Only after writing the letters to her principal did C. S. reveal to the social worker that Stroud had been sexually abusing her. The social worker testified that she could not remember whether Q. S. ever personally told her of any sexual abuse.

The investigation into whether Stroud had sexually abused C. S. or Q. S. broadened. A police officer assigned to the case testified that Q. S. told her that Stroud had been sexually abusing her; the record is silent whether C. S. told the officer that Stroud had sexually abused her.

The DFCS referred the girls to Booker Poe, M.D., who saw them in March 2001. C. S. made claims of sexual abuse; Q. S. denied that she had been sexually abused. His physical examinations of the girls found no bruises or lacerations around their genital areas. He testified, however, that a child could be sexually abused and yet later have no physical manifestations of the abuse, depending on the type of abuse and the length of time that has passed since the abuse.

Psychotherapist Harriet Davis interviewed each girl in April 2001, and the video recordings of the interviews were played for the jury. C. S., then ten years old, told Davis she preferred to write, rather than speak, about some of the things Stroud had done to her. Then, either writing or speaking, C. S. related to Davis that during the last two years, Stroud had frequently touched her inappropriately when no other adult was around. C. S. stated that Stroud had raped her more than once. Defining “rape,” C. S. wrote, “[H]e got on top of me and put his private in mine.” C. S. clarified that she used “private” for his penis and for her vagina. She told that after putting his private into her private, Stroud would “move ... side to side.” C. S. said that she had seen something that looked like “white, thick milk” come out of Stroud’s private. She stated that, sometimes, this substance would go “inside” her private and that “[wjhen he finish, I go to the bathroom; and that’s when I see it.” C. S. further stated that Stroud had rubbed her “behind” with his hands. On more than one occasion, Stroud had put Vaseline on his private and then put his private into her “behind.” C. S. stated, “because it kept on slipping out,” the “white, thick milk” substance from his private went “outside,” not “inside,” her “behind.” C. S. stated that during the sexual episodes, Stroud’s private sometimes changed: “It got longer; sometimes, it was shorter.” C. S. told that to make it change, “He would play with it.” She detailed, “He’ll put his hand in his pants and make, and then, he’ll *606 grab it, and then... he’ll make his hand go up and down.” C. S. stated that a few times Stroud made her put her mouth on his private; that he had “licked” her private; that he had “stuck” his “hand” in her private; and that he had placed his hands on her chest.

C. S. stated that she had not reported these acts by Stroud to her mother because she did not think her mother would believe her. She had remained silent also because Stroud had repeatedly threatened to kill her if she told anyone. But after the last episode in March 2001, C. S. told Davis, she gathered the courage to write a letter to her principal, whom she knew was her grandmother’s friend.

Q. S., who was nine years old when interviewed by Davis, told the psychotherapist that when she was four years old, Stroud got on top of her and put his “frontside” into her “backside” and “moved up and down.” She described that it was painful and that she told him to get off her, but “he didn’t and he just kept on going.” She stated that since that one episode, Stroud had not done anything sexual to her. However, she complained that he threw things at her and whipped her, leaving marks and scars on her body.

At trial, Davis testified as an expert in forensic interviewing and in the therapy and treatment of victims of child sexual abuse. She stated that she had conducted the girls’ interviews based upon guidelines recommended by the American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children. Davis testified that disclosure of sexual abuse is often a process. Regarding children, she explained, “[A]s adults, we often expect a child’s disclosure to be all at one time and in a certain order, and very clear when, in fact, it actually happens in stages.” Further, she testified that a child may disclose a fact to one person, but not to another and that “it’s very unusual that a child would make their first disclosure to their mom and even more so if the abuser is somebody that their mom cares about.”

In May 2001, Randell Alexander, M.D. saw the girls. C. S. passively acknowledged that she was there because of allegations about sexual abuse. Q. S. was more talkative, however, and said that Stroud had touched her vaginal area during the summer of 2000, but that there had been no oral sex. Alexander’s physical examination of the girls found no injuries, scarring, or abnormalities. At trial, Alexander testified as an expert in pediatrics and child abuse.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
644 S.E.2d 467, 284 Ga. App. 604, 2007 Fulton County D. Rep. 1130, 2007 Ga. App. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stroud-v-state-gactapp-2007.