Timothy Barlow was convicted of two counts of child molestation. He appealed, enumerating as error the trial court’s refusal to permit him to introduce expert evidence concerning the techniques used by a police detective in a videotaped interview of the victim. The Court of Appeals affirmed.
Barlow v. State,
Although this case is one of first impression in Georgia, we have found considerable guidance from other jurisdictions. “Opinions of experts on improper or suggestive techniques employed by individuals investigating allegations of sexual abuse of children have been allowed in several jurisdictions.”
State v. Sloan,
Special interviewing processes are necessary to get information from child victims, who are often immature, inarticulate, frightened, and confused about the abuse they have received. Most jurors lack the knowledge of accepted practices in interviewing child victims, and expert testimony on the issue is therefore admissible.
State v. Gersin,
The defendant in a child molestation case is entitled to a thorough and sifting cross-examination of the State’s witnesses. How *55 ever, “cross-examination of a child witness could be ineffectual if the child sincerely takes his or her recollections to be grounded in facts and does not remember the improper interview procedures which may have suggested them.” State v. Kirschbaum, supra at 467. Similarly, cross-examination of the interviewer is not necessarily sufficient.
Child sexual abuse cases are a special lot. A major distinguishing aspect of a child sexual abuse case is how the victim came to relate the facts which led to the bringing of criminal charges. A defendant not only should be able to cross-examine prosecution witnesses regarding how they obtained their information, but also should have the chance to present expert testimony as to how such information is ideally obtained. Prosecutors are free to cross-examine, or to question the idea that there is only one blanket method of interviewing that should be applied to every child.
State v. Gersin, supra at 488.
Of course, an expert witness for the defense cannot give an opinion that the victim made false allegations of molestation, because such testimony directly addresses the credibility of the victim.
Campbell v. State,
The Court of Appeals has previously permitted a law enforcement officer to testify as an expert witness, based upon his experience in investigating sex offenses and his training in the techniques associated with interviewing child victims of such offenses.
Bevil v. State,
Certainly, a trial court has the discretion to exclude expert testimony regarding how techniques of law enforcement officers and caseworkers could cause false memories or mistaken attributions, where the proffered testimony is not based upon either the facts within the expert’s knowledge or other facts admitted in evidence.
Lane v. State,
Judgment reversed.
