United States v. Lyons

36 M.J. 183, 1992 CMA LEXIS 837, 1992 WL 358897
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedSeptember 30, 1992
DocketNo. 67,095; CM 8901426
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 36 M.J. 183 (United States v. Lyons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Military Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Lyons, 36 M.J. 183, 1992 CMA LEXIS 837, 1992 WL 358897 (cma 1992).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

WISS, Judge:

In a contested trial, a general court-martial with members convicted appellant of rape and adultery, see Arts. 120 and 134, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC [184]*184§§ 920 and 934, respectively, and sentenced him to a dishonorable discharge, confinement for 5 years, and reduction to the lowest enlisted grade. The convening authority approved these results, but the Court of Military Review affirmed1 only the conviction for rape and the sentence. 33 MJ 543 (1991).

Thereafter, we granted review of appellant’s claim that the military judge erred by admitting into evidence, over his objection, an unsworn, videotaped statement made by the victim, see Mil.R.Evid. 803(24), Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1984. Now, after full consideration, we conclude that no error occurred.

I

A

Appellant’s victim, Mechelle, was 17 years old, deaf, mute, and severely mentally retarded. The military judge found, on the basis of expert testimony and his own observation of her at trial, that Mechelle could function in her daily activities on the level of a normal 7-year-old and that she could communicate with others on the level of a normal 3-year-old.

Mechelle was trained to sign, but her retardation limited her signing vocabulary to about 200 words. As a result, she supplemented this mode of communication by pointing, gesturing, and grunting. Even so, Mechelle’s communicative skills were substantially limited, and getting her to respond to questions was a tortuous process that required expert assistance to ask the questions and to help understand her answers — whenever she, in fact, did answer at all.

The offenses with which appellant was charged were uncovered by Mechelle’s mother. When she returned home from work on the day when the offenses were alleged to have happened, she found Mechelle’s behavior unusual. She asked her daughter about her behavior, and Mechelle signed that she “hurt” and pointed to her groin. Then the mother saw Mechelle “walking wide-legged” as though in pain. She asked Mechelle why she was hurting, and Mechelle pointed to appellant’s house across the street. In response to the mother’s request to show her where “this person” had hurt her, Mechelle took her mother to appellant’s house. Because Mechelle had signed “sex” and had pointed to appellant’s house as the place it had occurred, the mother confronted appellant with the accusation that he had had sex with her daughter, but appellant denied the allegation.

A subsequent medical examination confirmed that Mechelle’s vagina recently had been penetrated forcibly. During the examination, Mechelle — with the interpretive help of her mother and one of her teachers named Dr. Seegert — repeated the same story she earlier had told her mother.

An investigation by the local Criminal Investigation Command (CID) followed. The day after the incident, Special Agent Walsh, with Dr. Seegert’s assistance, conducted a lineup. Shown three separate arrays, Mechelle pointed to appellant each time when Dr. Seegert asked her, “What man had sex with you?” After the lineup, Walsh interviewed Mechelle on videotape with Dr. Seegert’s communicative assistance, but Mechelle’s responses were limited to simply signing back what Dr. Seegert had signed to her.

Three days later, Walsh interviewed Mechelle again on videotape. This interview, conducted through interpretation of Robin Gordon, who is another of Mechelle’s teachers trained to work with learning-impaired students, included a “walk through” of the incident by Mechelle at appellant’s house. Mechelle’s reenactment shows her walking, across the street from her house to appellant’s, where he made her take a bath; watching a pornographic movie shown by appellant; and sexual intercourse between the two of them. The reenactment shows [185]*185Mechelle telling Ms. Gordon that she “told” appellant that intercourse was “bad” and that she was “mad” about appellant’s doing that to her.

B

The critical portion of the Government’s case against appellant, as is usually so in such prosecutions, was the victim’s version of the events. Mechelle was present and testified as a prosecution witness; however, her mental retardation caused her description of the events in the courtroom to be rather ineffective. Consequently, trial counsel sought to introduce the videotape of Ms. Gordon’s interview of appellant to supplement that testimony.

Notwithstanding defense’s objection, the military judge admitted the videotape pursuant to Mil.R.Evid. 803(24) as an exception to the rule against hearsay, see Mil.R.Evid. 802, and he entered detailed and specific factual findings to support his decision. His ruling, however, contained several restrictions.

First, the only portion of the videotape that he would permit was that portion beginning with Ms. Gordon asking Mechelle to “show me where it happened” and ending with Mechelle walking out of appellant’s residence — in other words, the reenactment. Second, he directed that the original videotape be copied to include only that portion of the tape and to include, as well, a simultaneous voice translation of the signing between Mechelle and Ms. Gordon. Finally, this tape was to be shown at the conclusion of Mechelle’s direct testimony in the courtroom so that defense counsel’s cross-examination could include the tape’s contents if he wished.

The trial itself proceeded as anticipated: Mechelle did testify; the tape was admitted immediately thereafter; and defense counsel cross-examined her. The substance of the cross-examination included her videotaped reenactment.

During the subsequent defense case-in-chief, appellant himself testified. He admitted to having sexual intercourse with Mechelle on the date in question, but he contended that the intercourse was consensual. As well, he revealed that they had engaged in intercourse under similar circumstances twice before the incident charged, also consensual.

II

This case presents a most unusual situation. Quite clearly, Mechelle was available as a witness at trial — indeed, she did appear as a witness. In the usual circumstance, Mechelle would have testified as to what occurred between her and appellant, and the videotape, as a prior consistent statement, normally would not have been admissible. See Mil.R.Evid. 613 and 801(d)(1)(B); United States v. Guaglione, 27 MJ 268, 273 (CMA 1988). See also United States v. Hurst, 29 MJ 477 (CMA 1990); United States v. Jones, 26 MJ 197 (CMA 1988); United States v. LeMere, 22 MJ 61 (CMA 1986).

Of course, this was not the usual circumstance. After a fairly extensive effort to obtain Mechelle’s testimony had demonstrated that her responses were largely substantively unintelligible because of her physical and mental infirmities, the military judge concluded that the only effective way to obtain her version of the events was to show her own videotaped recreation of those events. With persuasive logic, appellant contends in this Court that the military judge’s ruling, in effect, acknowledged that Mechelle was not meaningfully “available” for cross-examination and that, accordingly, admission of the videotape must clear not only the evidentiary hearsay hurdle but also the Constitution’s Confrontation Clause.

The Court of Military Review disagreed.

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Bluebook (online)
36 M.J. 183, 1992 CMA LEXIS 837, 1992 WL 358897, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-lyons-cma-1992.