Khalid Misri Adem was convicted of first degree cruelty to children 1 and aggravated battery 2 for removing his daughter’s clitoris. On appeal, he contends that the trial court erred in rejecting his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.
To meet the first prong of this test, a defendant must overcome the strong presumption that his counsel’s performance fell within a wide range of reasonable professional conduct and his counsel’s decisions were made in the exercise of reasonable professional judgment. The inquiry focuses on the reasоnableness of counsel’s conduct from counsel’s perspective at the time of trial and under the circumstances of the case. 5
Both the performance and prejudice prongs of the ineffectiveness inquiry are mixed questions of law and fact. 6 In reviewing a trial court’s determination regarding a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, this court uрholds the trial court’s factual findings unless they are clearly erroneous; we review the trial court’s legal conclusions de novo. 7 Adem has not shown that the trial court erred by rejecting his ineffectiveness claim, and we affirm.
At trial, the state called as a witness the child’s mother, who by then was Adem’s former wife. She testified that she had married Adem in 1997 and that their daughter was born about two years later. A few days after their child turned three years old, Adem moved out of their home. Several months later, in January 2003, Adem called and asked to pick up their daughter. The child’s mother refused, and an argument ensued. The mother reminded Adem that he had mentioned wanting to circumcise their daughter. She told Adem, who had been born in Ethiopia and lived there until he was a teenager, that “bеcause of [his] culture” she was afraid that he would have their daughter circumcised. He retorted, “How do you know I haven’t already done it?” Then he added, “What’s already been done is done.”
Beginning the next day, the mother took the child for a series of medical examinations, which confirmed that the child’s clitoris had been removed. Only a “very thin line” remained as minimal scarring.
The child’s mother recollected at trial only one extended time period when Adem had spent an unusual amount of time taking care of, including diapering, their daughter. For about a week in October 2001, Adem had stayed home from work and not taken their daughter to any daycare, saying only that he wanted to spend time with his daughter.
The mother testified that, in light of the medical information she hаd learned about her daughter, she began taking her to a psychotherapist. That mental health professional testified at trial for the state as an expert in child trauma and child memory, as well as forensic interviewing and evaluating. The expert testified that during a forensic interview in March 2003, the child disclosed that her father had cut her “lun-lun,” a word the child used to refer to her рrivate area. The expert further opined that it was possible for the then three-year-old to have had an accurate memory of something that had been done to her more than a year earlier. She testified that children about two years old “can remember impactful episodes more acutely than they can remember ordinary episodes.” The expert also testified that, during the next two years of therapy, the child never recanted her disclosure. A video of the forensic interview was shown to the jury.
The state also called the child to the stand. Then seven years old, the child maintained, “[My father] cut my private part.” The child’s mother, who had conducted extensive
The counts of which Adem was convicted alleged that he had committed the underlying act between September 1 and Oсtober 31, 2001. He took the stand, denying the charges, denouncing FGM, and testifying that he had not stayed home from work as his wife had testified or for any prolonged period during the two-month time frame set forth in the indictment. To further buttress his defense, Adem called two expert witnesses, one in the field of FGM and the other in several fields related to psychology.
At the motion for new trial hearing, Adem’s trial lаwyer was the sole witness. He revealed the defense trial strategies and tactics. He testified that the defense had not focused on whether Adem’s child had been a victim of FGM. Instead, the overall defense was that Adem had not committed the act; it had been done by the child’s maternal grandmother. He testified that this theory was supported by several facts, including (i) the grandmothеr had been one of the three primary caretakers (in addition to the child’s parents) for his daughter and thus had significant access to the child; (ii) the grandmother was from a “particular area” of Africa that practiced female circumcision; (iii) research, as interpreted by the lawyer, had shown that in various African countries, female circumcisions were primаrily performed by elderly women, not by men; (iv) such a procedure would have required some level of skill to avoid complications such as infections or death; and (v) the grandmother worked as a registered nurse at a hospital and thus arguably had the requisite skills and medical supplies.
1. Adem argues that his attorney performed deficiently by failing to introduce into evidence сertain of his employment time sheets, asserting that such records would have proved that he had not been absent from work during the time frame alleged in the indictment. At trial, Adem’s lawyer sought to authenticate those documents through a witness who had assisted in checking and maintaining time sheets at Adem’s work place. Because the witness testified that he could not identify the proffered documents as true and correct copies of such employment time sheets, the court disallowed the documents in evidence.
Adem’s defense lawyer, whose practice was composed of about 50 percent criminal law, had also represented Adem in connection with his divorce, which became final in August 2003. The lawyer testified at the new trial hearing thаt, at Adem’s divorce trial, the same witness had laid an adequate foundation for the documents, and they were admitted in evidence. The lawyer recounted that, in preparing for Adem’s criminal trial, he had obtained confirmation from this witness that the witness remained “on the same page with [him].” The lawyer testified that, under those circumstances, he had expected the witness to again give testimony that would lay an adequate foundation.
Adem’s post-trial lawyer called no witness at the new trial hearing to authenticate either the excluded documents or any other documents as Adem’s time sheets showing whether Adem had been absent from work for any significant period during the pertinent time frame. Thus, Adem failed to demonstrate the claimed deficient performance by his trial lawyer. 8
2. Adem argues that his trial counsel performed deficiently by calling a witness who qualified as an expert in FGM, claiming
I have worked in the area of female genital mutilation for a little over 17 years today. I started doing this work when my first daughter was seven years old and was to have been mutilated by my ex-husband, which was also the very same reason why I separated from the marriage, because I disallowed my daughter from being circumcised. And so that prompted my interest in doing further work in this area of femаle genital mutilation.
At the new trial hearing, Adem’s trial lawyer recounted that he had consulted a great deal with this witness prior to trial; he explained further that he had called her as an FGM expert to support that aspect of Adem’s defense that Adem, having had no medical training, could not have performed the act and that his ex-wife’s mother could not be excluded as the perpetrator.
Accordingly, at Adem’s trial, the lawyer elicited testimony from the FGM expert that female circumcision was practiced not only in Adem’s home country of Ethiopia, but also, albeit sparingly so, in the African country from which the child’s mother and maternal grandmother had come. The lawyer further elicited from the expert testimony that female circumсisions traditionally are performed by individuals with certain “expertise” — either trained elderly women or male “traditional healers”; the latter, she defined as “like the doctors in the villages before the coming of western medicine.” The expert, who had witnessed numerous female circumcisions, testified that she had never seen an untrained man perform that procedure, explaining that “you have to be trained to be able to know how to perform the procedure.”
When asked at the new trial hearing about that part of her testimony about which Adem now complains, the witness expounded that it had not been her former husband who wanted their daughter circumcised; “[i]t was my mother-in law who wanted my daughter circumcised because that’s a subject the women discuss.” The expert stated that she had refused the demand of her mother-in-law, moved with her daughter to her own parents’ home, and was told by her mother-in-law not to come back to their house.
“In the realm of specific decisions regarding trial strategy, and in particular decisions about which witnesses should be called to testify, defense attorneys are affordеd wide discretion.” 9 Because the decision to call this expert witness in Adem’s defense was not unreasonable, 10 Adem has shown no deficient performance.
3. Adem argues that his trial attorney performed deficiently by calling another witness, a clinical psychologist. Adem asserts that his lawyer failed to adequately investigate the psychologist’s background, complaining that the psychologist had been suspended from his рrofession and that the state’s examination revealed that the psychologist had authored a book with a “crass” and “flippant” title: “Screw Your Spouse, Win the Kids, and Make Money Doing It.”
The psychologist acknowledged, when asked by the state, that he had been ordered to suspend giving testimony in “the narrow area of child custody,” but reported further that he had appеaled that ruling, that the decision was subsequently vacated by this court, and that his case had been remanded to the trial court for further consideration.
11
The psychologist steadfastly maintained that, notwithstanding that pending matter, he remained
Regarding his book, the psychologist testified that it dealt with “suggestibility and describes the strategies of winning children in custody battles by setting up false memories аnd suggestibility,” areas which he claimed to have thoroughly researched for four years while working on the book. The psychologist further testified that his book reviewed a series of case studies, wherein one parent had planted false accusations against the other parent in order to gain custody of their children and that, in many of those cases, the plotting pаrent was awarded not only custody of the children, but also a hefty child support award. When asked by the state on cross-examination about the title, he characterized it as satirical and stated that it was a parody of “the way the system works right now, how you can help plant false accusations and allegations.”
At the new trial hearing, Adem’s trial lawyer explained that he had called the psychologist to support that aspect of Adem’s defense of discrediting what had been presented to the jury as the child’s memory. Accordingly, after extensive voir dire at trial by the defense and prosecution, Adem’s lawyer presented (and the court accepted) the witness as an expert in child psychology, forensic interviewing of children, memory recall in children, false memories, and false beliefs. Next, Adem’s lawyer elicited testimony from the expert that, after viewing several times the video of the forensic interview of Adem’s child, he had concluded that the interview had been conducted improperly in many regards, which he detailed to the jury. The expert pointed to, among other things, instances in which he сlaimed the interviewer had demonstrated bias against the father and in favor of the mother and had otherwise made impermissible suggestions to the child that her father had hurt her. In addition, the expert cited areas that he claimed the interviewer should have explored with the child, given her responses and emotional reactions during the interview.
The expert testified that, generally, children the age of Adem’s daughter when interviewed have “very unreliable, very inconsistent” memories; that what they hear others say, particularly adult authority figures, “becomes their memory.” He stated that because of this and other potential intervening variables, it is essential to interview such a young child as soon as possible after the traumatic event. The expert оpined that there appeared to be a great possibility that Adem’s child’s allegations made during the forensic interview had been contaminated by improper influences, including “something that was told to her prior to the interview,” as well as “leading questions and words that were fed her during the forensic interview.”
Adem’s trial lawyer conceded at the new trial hearing that he had not known about the psychologist’s licensing issue, but nevertheless insisted that the defense needed expert testimony to discredit the evidence of the child’s memory. Furthermore, the lawyer recalled that he had been unable to obtain another expert in the pertinent areas, that Adem had no money, and that a request for additional funds had been denied. The lawyer testified, “So even if I would have known [about the psychologist’s licensing issue], I still would have brought him in. It’s better to have him, in my opinion, than nothing else at all.”
Under these circumstances, the trial court was authorized to conclude that calling the psychologist as a defense witness fell within the broad spectrum of reasonable trial strategy and that no deficient performance was shown. 12
4. Adem’s сriticism of the way his trial counsel phrased some of the questions he posed to witnesses falls short of demonstrating deficient performance. 13
5. Adem argues that his trial counsel performed deficiently by injecting his
Adem’s trial lawyer testified at the new trial hearing that the evidence was adduced to demonstrate a pattern of the child’s mother’s ongoing vindictive conduct, which had begun during the divorce proceedings and which had the objective of preventing Adem from seeing his child. This conduct included taking out restraining orders against him on two seрarate Valentine’s Days; and initially accusing him regarding their child’s FGM at a family dinner with his mother when she was visiting from Ethiopia. The defense thereby sought to show that the child’s mother was capable also of making false accusations against Adem.
Regarding the deportation, the lawyer testified that the evidence was presented merely to trace for the jury Adem’s time spent in Ethiopia and the United States. The lawyer had not believed that Adem’s deportation was particularly damaging. The trial transcript reveals that a few months after Adem married, he was deported because his work visa had expired; and that his wife joined him for several months in Ethiopia, where they had a second wedding ceremony before settling into their home in Georgia.
The citеd evidentiary decisions by trial counsel fell under the rubric of trial strategy and tactics. Pretermitting whether such decisions were unreasonable, there is no reasonable probability that the outcome of Adem’s trial would have been different but for evidence of the two restraining orders and his deportation. 14
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
OCGA § 16-5-70 (b).
OCGA § 16-5-24.
Conaway v. State,
Williams v. State,
Suggs v. State,
Id. at 88 (4).
See
Watkins v. State,
Simpson v. State,
See Fuller v. State,
See
Farrar v. Ga. Bd. of Examiners of
Psychologists,
See
Thomas v. State,
See Phillips v. State,
See
Lajara v. State,
