Walker v. State

709 A.2d 177, 121 Md. App. 364, 1998 Md. App. LEXIS 100
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 5, 1998
Docket1612, Sept. Term, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 709 A.2d 177 (Walker v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. State, 709 A.2d 177, 121 Md. App. 364, 1998 Md. App. LEXIS 100 (Md. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

DAVIS, Judge.

Appellant Johnny Walker was tried and convicted by a jury in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City of child abuse and second degree sexual offense committed on two daughters of his former girl Mend. He was thereafter sentenced to concurrent terms of fifteen years for sexual child abuse and twenty years for the second degree sexual offense. From these convictions, he appealed to this Court raising the following questions, which we restate for clarity:

I. Did the lower court deprive appellant of his constitutional right to a public trial by excluding all of appellant’s family members from the courtroom during the testimony of the two alleged victims?

II. Did the lower court err by refusing appellant’s request for a jury instruction that the State must prove that the crime against Salaunah occurred between 1992 and 1996 as alleged in the indictment?

III. Did the lower court err by not ruling on appellant’s objection to the prosecutor’s jury argument that appellant was an “animal”?

*367 IV. Did the lower court err by overruling appellant’s objection to the prosecutor’s rebuttal argument to the jury to “remember that the only evidence you will receive in this case has come from the State” and that the State’s “evidence remains uncontroverted”?

Because we answer question I in the affirmative, we reverse the judgment of the lower court and we do not reach questions II and IV; however, we address question III for the guidance of the lower court on remand.

FACTS

For more than ten years, appellant had a romantic relationship with the mother of the two victims. At the same time, according to Tuleeya, the eldest of the two daughters — who was seventeen years old at the time of trial — appellant began, when she was eight years old, touching and feeling her inappropriately and, when she was nine and ten years old, he demanded that she perform fellatio on him. Because of his inability to penetrate the young victim, appellant was unsuccessful in his attempts to engage in coitus with the victim. Appellant ultimately relented when the victim was fourteen years old, because she was then more physically able to resist his sexual advances.

Twelve year old Salaunah testified that appellant took her into the bathroom, ostensibly to brush her teeth, but instead covered her eyes with his hand and then inserted something that “sort of felt like when you put your hand in your mouth. It felt like skin.” Thereafter, Salaunah heard appellant pulling up his pants and then the noise of his zipper being pulled up. This occurred before the witness began attending school.

The mother of the two victims, Zelma B., testified that, approximately two days after she ended her relationship with appellant, Tuleeya advised her that appellant had sexually abused her. Salaunah previously had related the incident to her in which appellant had told the younger daughter to close her eyes so that he could brush her teeth, but, when the *368 witness (Zelma B.) confronted appellant, he had denied that the incident occurred.

Prior to trial, the prosecutor asked that members of appellant’s family be excluded from the courtroom during the testimony of the two victims because they had said things to the two victims and “they [the two victims] feel very frightened and very intimidated by that.” The court indicated when the witnesses were called to testify, “I’ll hear from [appellant’s counsel] and I’ll deal with it at that time.” Additional facts will be supplied in conjunction with the discussion that follows.

i

In granting the request to exclude appellant’s family members from the courtroom, the following colloquy transpired:

[PROSECUTION]: Your Honor, at this time, the State would like to renew its motion to have the courtroom emptied of any of the [appellant’s] relatives or — with respect to this case, inasmuch as the victims , are child witnesses and they’ve had some problems in the past in terms of intimidation by the family of the [appellant]. So, I would just ask that this courtroom be cleared of them at the time Tuleeya and Salaunah ... testify with respect to this, this matter.

THE COURT: How old are the witnesses, [prosecutor]?

[PROSECUTION]: The oldest witness is 17 and the youngest is 12.

THE COURT: And are the witnesses related to the [appellant’s] family?

[PROSECUTION]: Well, the [appellant] is the stepfather of the witnesses. The mother of the children was in a relationship with the [appellant] for 10 years. He lived in the home during that period of time.

THE COURT: And have the children expressed — the witnesses expressed any concern to you about testifying in the present (sic) of the [appellant’s] family?

[PROSECUTION]: Yes, they have, Your Honor. They have, and that’s why I’m making the request of the Court, *369 because they have expressed concerns in terms of having to testify in their presence.

THE COURT: [Appellant’s Counsel], do you wish to be heard?

[APPELLANT’S COUNSEL]: Except that we would object. We believe that these witnesses are not of tender years. And if the State felt there was [sic] some problems, then made arrangements to have [sic] testify via the TV camera. But this is an open proceeding. My client’s family has been very supportive throughout this whole situation. They are here, they’ve always been here. I don’t believe that inside the courtroom they pose any threat. We don’t believe that there ever has been a threat by the family with respect to these particular witnesses, and that’s not their purpose for being here. If these witnesses made allegations, then now’s the time to express them in front of — in court and in an open courtroom. We believe that this should be an open proceedings and that their ages, Your Honor, would make them competent witnesses and, as I stated earlier, that there’s nothing that would prevent them from testifying in open court.

THE COURT: Okay. Well, certainly the [appellant] has a right to a public trial and the public has a right to attend the trial, and the [appellant’s] family is part of the public. I do think, however, the Court is obliged to assure that witnesses are permitted to testify freely—

Are you having a problem, [prosecutor]?

[PROSECUTION]: —thank you, Your Honor.

THE COURT: —testify freely and without any fear of intimidation. And I understand that in a case such as this where families are essentially — wind up pitted against one another as a result of these allegations which are incredibly disruptive and destructive to a family that opinions can overflow on the witness and make the witness, whether the witness is a child or an adult, feel intimidated and feel threatened in some way, not only in *370 the courtroom itself but after the proceedings are over, as to what the consequences of their testimony may be perceived to be by the family of the [appellant].

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
709 A.2d 177, 121 Md. App. 364, 1998 Md. App. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-state-mdctspecapp-1998.