Teoume-Lessane v. United States

931 A.2d 478, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 684, 2007 WL 2489697
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 6, 2007
Docket04-CF-904
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 931 A.2d 478 (Teoume-Lessane v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Teoume-Lessane v. United States, 931 A.2d 478, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 684, 2007 WL 2489697 (D.C. 2007).

Opinion

KRAMER, Associate Judge:

This appeal is from the second of two trials arising from the same set of facts. 1 Following a hung jury at the conclusion of the first trial, the government sought a superceding indictment that charged appellant, Sennayi Teoume-Lessane (hereinafter, Lessane), with First-degree Child Sexual Abuse (vaginal penetration) and First-degree Child Sexual Abuse (anal penetration). The jury found him guilty of First-degree Child Sexual Abuse by vaginal penetration, but acquitted him of the anal penetration count. Lessane was subsequently sentenced to six years of incarceration, to be followed by a five-year period of supervised release with the conditions that he register as a lifetime sex offender and undergo sex offender treatment.

Lessane now raises several allegations of error. First, he argues that his conviction must be reversed because, contrary to provisions of the Innocence Protection Act of 2001 codified in D.C.Code § 22-4132 (2006 Supp.), the trial court failed to inform him before trial and on the record of his rights with respect to independent testing of the government’s biological evidence. He also asserts that reversal is required because the addition of a new charge to the superceding indictment on retrial — ie., First-degree Child Sexual Abuse (anal penetration) — triggers an un-rebutted presumption of prosecutorial vindictiveness. Finally, Lessane alleges several instances of prosecutorial misconduct, including impermissible burden-shifting and prejudicial comments made by the prosecutor during summation. Finding no reversible error, we affirm.

I.

A. The Uncontested Facts

Evidence adduced by the parties at trial established the following sequence of events. On January 14, 2002, the complaining witness, J.P., then 14 years of age and a resident of Fairfax County, Virginia, took a dose of a friend’s Aderall (a prescription amphetamine variant) while at school. She then left school early without permission and went to a friend’s house in Fairfax County, where she spent the remainder of the afternoon using intoxicants, including alcohol and marijuana, that caused her to hallucinate. Later that day, J.P. was told that her parents were looking for her, and she became worried that she would get in trouble if her parents found out about the day’s events. 2 Thus, she left her friend’s house and made her way to the District of Columbia, where she and appellant Lessane, then age 32, shared drinks and conversation at'a Georgetown *483 bar. At approximately 12:30 a.m., J.P. and Lessane took a taxi back to Lessane’s apartment in Southeast, where J.P. spent the night. The next morning, J.P. called a friend’s mother, Virginia Wilson, from the District and told her that she had awakened in a strange man’s apartment and could not remember what had transpired. Ms. Wilson instructed J.P. to take a Me-trorail train back to Fairfax County.

At the train station in Virginia, J.P. was met by Fairfax County police officers and was eventually transported to the Wood-burn Mental Health Center (Woodburn) in Fairfax County for a mental health evaluation. The supervisor of Woodburn’s Emergency Service Crisis Intervention Team interviewed J.P. and her parents separately and then together and determined that J.P. did not require psychiatric commitment. When she was first interviewed, J.P. claimed that she had been abducted and raped, but she did not admit what she herself had done in the hours leading up to those alleged events. J.P. later testified at trial that she wanted to tell the truth, but she still feared the consequences of her parents finding out about her misbehavior. Eventually, however, she realized that “no one believed [her],” and that she would have to tell the truth to “get any help.” J.P. therefore admitted that she had left school early the day before, used intoxicants, gone to a bar in Georgetown, met a man (i.e., Lessane), and accompanied him back to his apartment. There, she said, the man had forcibly raped her.

As a result of these disclosures, J.P. was taken to Children’s National Medical Center (Children’s Hospital) in the District during the night of January 15 to 16, 2002, where she was interviewed and examined by medical personnel, and a sexual assault kit was completed. No ligature marks or other external injuries were observed. The sexual assault examination, however, revealed a posterior fourchette 3 tear that would have occurred in the preceding 72 hours. Swabs were taken from inside J.P.’s vagina and rectum, as well as from her lips and the panties she wore during the night she spent in the District. She was also interviewed at Children’s Hospital by a Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) detective, who then drove her through Southeast, where she identified Lessane’s apartment building as the scene of the assault. J.P. additionally provided the detective with a description of her attacker, as well as a camera and film she had with her on the night in question which she had used the next morning to photograph the exterior of her assailant’s apartment building. Twelve days later, J.P. viewed a nine-person photographic array arranged by the MPD and unhesitatingly chose a picture of Lessane as depicting her assailant. Subsequently, Lessane was arrested, a search warrant was executed at his apartment, and he was required to provide blood, hair, and saliva samples for DNA analysis; this analysis revealed that Lessane’s DNA matched that of semen traces recovered from the swabs taken inside J.P.’s vagina and rectum during her sexual assault examination.

B. Additional Government Evidence

The government’s theory was that Les-sane approached J.P. in Georgetown, bought her drinks at a bar, and then took her back to his apartment, where he forcibly penetrated her vagina and then penetrated her anus after she lost consciousness following the initial assault. Dr. Ann *484 Abel, an expert in pediatrics, child sexual abuse, and child sexual abuse examinations, testified as to the significance of the sexual assault examination’s findings. A posterior fourchette tear, she stated, is ordinarily caused by a fall onto a penetrating object, such as a picket fence, or “direct sexual trauma” from a rigid object such as an erect penis. Given that J.P. had no other injuries, Dr. Abel surmised that direct sexual trauma was the most likely cause of the injury. Dr. Abel also testified that recent research in the field of sexual assault examinations has established that such assaults often leave no visible injuries. Finally, she noted that “it is more common for [youthful victims of sexual assault] not to immediately disclose [the assault] than it is for them to immediately disclose [it].”

J.P. herself testified that on the evening in question, she had left her friend’s house in Fairfax County alone. She first went to a Virginia Railway Express station to catch a train to the District. The trains had stopped running by that time of the night, however, so she caught a ride into the District with an elderly gentleman who had also missed his train.

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Bluebook (online)
931 A.2d 478, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 684, 2007 WL 2489697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teoume-lessane-v-united-states-dc-2007.