Webster v. State

827 A.2d 910, 151 Md. App. 527, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 79
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 27, 2003
Docket2508, Sept. Term, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 827 A.2d 910 (Webster 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
Webster v. State, 827 A.2d 910, 151 Md. App. 527, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 79 (Md. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

ADKINS, Judge.

In this appeal from a child sexual assault conviction, we must decide whether a four-year old victim’s description of the assault communicated to a nurse trained in Sexual Assault Forensic Examination (“SAFE”) was admissible under Md. Rule 5-803(b)(4), the hearsay exception covering statements made “for purposes of medical diagnosis or treatment.” We shall hold that it was, even though there were dual medical and forensic purposes for the challenged statement.

*531 FACTS AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

On the evening of August 6, 1999, Evelyn Francis hosted a “safe sex” meeting sponsored by the health department. Children of the guests and Francis’ four-year old daughter, Tiarah E., heard the ice cream truck, got money from their parents, and went to get snowballs. Tiarah dropped hers. Neighbor Joy Reid told her to go into her apartment and get an icee out of the freezer. Tiarah went into Reid’s apartment unattended.

While in the apartment, Tiarah used the bathroom. Tiarah reported that she was seated on the toilet when a strange man came into the bathroom. According to Tiarah, the man licked her “tu-tu all the way inside.” She asked him to stop, but “he keeped on and keeped on.” Francis explained that “tu-tu” or “do-do” was her daughter’s name for her vagina.

When Reid came inside looking for Tiarah, she saw Tiarah with Webster, whom she recognized as an occasional companion of Reid’s mother. Webster was touching Tiarah’s pants.

Reid took the crying child to her mother. Reid and Francis returned to Reid’s apartment with the child. There, Reid beat Webster with a broom, and Francis threw a beer bottle at him. Webster then fled the apartment building.

Police arrived shortly after the incident. The first officer on the scene was Deputy First Class Dawn Wolf of the Harford County Sheriffs Office. Wolf spoke with Tiarah, Francis, and Reid. She and Francis then took Tiarah to Fallston General Hospital, where they were met by Corporal Michael Crabbs, a detective with the Harford County Sheriffs Child Advocacy Center.

The hospital had staff doctors and nurses trained to conduct sexual assault forensic examinations. SAFE nurse Linda Holden interviewed Tiarah before she and SAFE physician Dr. Steven Bentman examined the child. Tiarah told Holden “that a man that she didn’t know had licked her do-do and she told him not to and he said he was going to keep on doing it.”

Crabbs met with Webster three days after the incident. On August 9, 1999, Webster walked into the police station and *532 asked if there was any “paperwork” for him. The officers on duty said no, then contacted Crabbs. Crabbs asked Webster if he would voluntarily meet with him. Webster told him that he would be “more than happy to come in and talk” about the incident. During the ensuing interview, Webster gave a recorded statement, a transcript of which was admitted into evidence at trial. He left after the interview.

Six days after the incident, Crabbs interviewed Tiarah along with licensed clinical social worker Kimberly Parkes-Bourn. A videotape of that interview was played for the jury. 1 Tiarah acknowledged that she had met Crabbs “at the hospital____ [w]hen I had a needle.” She showed her interviewers the needle mark on her arm. •

Parkes-Boum asked what Tiarah talked to Crabbs about at the hospital. She replied, “I was talking about that man that licked me on my tu-tu.” She explained that he was “a stranger” who was at Reid’s home “[w]hen Joy told me to get an icee.”

Ms. Parkes-Boum: At Joy’s house? And there was a man at Joy’s house?
[Tiarah]: Yeah. And there was a stranger. He licked me. When Joy came and saw it. I asked him—I asked her where he did it and she—and she start the whipping. When I was in the bathroom, when I had to use the bathroom a man came beside me, he turned off the light, he closed the door.
Ms. Parkes-Boum: When you were in the bathroom? [Tiarah]: Yeah.
Ms. Parkes-Bourn: He turned off the light, and closed the door. Where did this happen?
[Tiarah]: At Joy house. And I was screaming.
*533 Ms. Parkes-Boum: You were screaming?
[Tiarah]: Yeah.
Ms. Parkes-Bourn: What happened after the lights were turned off and the door was closed?
[Tiarah]: I turned them back on and he was going to sleep. I went out the door.
Ms. Parkes-Boum: Okay. You said that he came in when you were going to the bathroom?
[Tiarah]: Yes, when I had to use the bathroom. He licked it all inside.
Ms. Parkes-Bourn: He—he licked what?
[Tiarah]: My tu-tu all the way inside. He pulled down my stuff and he licked it all the way down.
Ms. Parkes-Boum: And this was when the lights were off in the bathroom and the door was closed?
[Tiarah]: No. The light was off and the door was not closed. The door was open.
Ms. Parkes-Boum: The door was open?
[Tiarah]: And he keeped on and keeped on. When he was bending down he did that.
Ms. Parkes-Boum: When he was bending down?
[Tiarah]: And he put his chin next to me. Then he licked it.

As the interview proceeded, Tiarah said that the assault occurred in various other locations, including the living room, hallway, patio, and even her own home. Her description of what happened that day became increasingly confused. Among other things, she said that her assailant “snatched my toys” and “swallowed” one until his throat was “cut off,” that he “peed on [m]y head and I changed my head,” that “[h]e broke my fingers” but “my mommy fixed it,” that he “put his finger in my mouth” and it was broken, and that “his whole body was burned.” She also described “[a] different stranger” who “digged his finger in my tu-tu” and “bit my nail off,” and “another stranger coming across the lake, ... a stranger boy” who “was trying to grab me” and “put me in the water,” but “I changed my clothes and he peed on me.”

*534 In October, Crabbs received notice from the crime lab that “amylase,” which is an indicator for human saliva, had been detected on the inside crotch of Tiarah’s underpants and on one of two labial swabs. At trial, serologist Argiro Magers testified that only saliva would generate the dark blue hue that appeared when Tiarah’s labial swab and underpants were tested. Amylase may be present in smaller amounts in other body fluids, including gastrointestinal fluids, but Magers could not say whether saliva present in vomit would produce a similar hue.

Subsequent DNA testing showed that the same underwear tested positive for mixed DNA from two people.

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Bluebook (online)
827 A.2d 910, 151 Md. App. 527, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webster-v-state-mdctspecapp-2003.