The defendant was convicted by a Superior Court jury of one count of rape of a child and five counts of assault and battery on the same child, his stepdaughter.
With new counsel, the defendant filed a motion for a new trial in which he argued that his trial counsel was ineffective for his failure to press for the pretrial production of certain privileged treatment records concerning the victim. Along with that motion, the defendant filed another motion for the discovery of additional records that he claimed his attorney should have obtained for use at trial but did not. Both motions were allowed by the same judge who presided over the trial. The judge later denied the Commonwealth’s motion for reconsideration, and this appeal followed.
Background. Approximately two months before trial, counsel obtained the victim’s pediatric medical records. Also in his possession prior to trial was a report of the victim’s evaluation performed in October, 2000, at the University of Massachusetts Memorial Children’s Medical Center in the Child Protection Program Clinic (UMass evaluation). These particular records contained references to the victim’s history of mental health issues which, according to the defendant, should have alerted trial counsel to potentially exculpatory evidence.
In his motion for a new trial, the defendant specifically faulted trial counsel for failing to follow up with a stage two Bishop-Fuller motion requesting all of the victim’s treatment records that related to an October 6, 2000, notation in the pediatric record indicating a referral to “emergency services at Herbert Lipton [Center],” a mental health treatment facility. See Commonwealth v. Bishop,
The defendant characterized such facts as amounting to “highly relevant and damaging information concerning [the victim’s]” psychiatric and substance abuse history that could have provided “the ammunition he needed to impeach the testimony of both [the victim] and the only fresh complaint witness offered in the case[, the victim’s stepmother].” Moreover, he claimed, as a result of trial counsel’s oversight he was deprived of the opportunity to reveal, through expert testimony, that the victim was “an extremely troubled child struggling with a serious mental illness complicated by hallucinogenic drug use,” in contrast to the Commonwealth’s portrayal of the victim at trial.
In support of his motion for a new trial, the defendant attached copies of the victim’s pediatric record and the UMass evaluation. He also provided copies of the Lipton Center records and other materials that he apparently obtained from the victim’s mother after the trial of this matter.
Discussion. In order to sustain a claim of ineffective as
The defendant’s Bishop-Fuller proffer, as presented in his motion for a new trial and now restated on appeal, fails in one important aspect that was not addressed in the judge’s memorandum of decision. The defendant essentially concludes, incorrectly, that trial counsel would have prevailed had he tried to obtain the Lipton Center records and other privileged materials referenced therein. Trial counsel cannot be faulted, however, for having failed to obtain such documents where they were not discoverable in the first instance. See Commonwealth v. Oliveira,
Under Fuller, to procure a pretrial inspection of privileged records such as those at issue here,
The motion’s broad claims concerning the victim’s lack of credibility as a result of mental health problems are entirely speculative and lack the specificity and reasonableness required under the heightened Fuller standard.
Here, the defendant’s proffer does not provide a factual basis for demonstrating that the privileged materials mentioned in either the victim’s pediatric record or the UMass evaluation were relevant and material to any issue in the case. For example, the defendant does not advance any specific, substantiated allegations concerning either the victim’s bias or motive to lie or her stepmother’s motive to downplay the victim’s purported
Given our determination that the defendant would thus not have been entitled to an in camera inspection of the Lipton Center records, we need not decide whether such records would have been useful at trial had they been obtained. Having examined the records at issue, however, we are of the opinion that the records would not have helped the defendant. The references to various psychiatric and other problems the victim appeared to be experiencing all occurred at or about the time she revealed the abuse and reasonably could be viewed as a consequence of the defendant’s abuse and the trauma of having to testify at trial, rather than as an indication of possible bias or motive to lie. See Commonwealth v. Vinton,
As to the defendant’s allegations concerning the victim’s competency as a witness, nothing in those records implies that, because of drug abuse or psychological problems, she was not able to testify.
In sum, the defendant failed in his burden to set forth with particularity some factual basis indicating how the privileged records were likely to be relevant and material to an issue in the case, and that an examination of those records would disclose exculpatory information material to the defendant’s guilt. There being no basis for concluding that a Bishop-Fuller motion would
The orders allowing the defendant’s motions for a new trial and discovery are reversed and the convictions are reinstated.
So ordered.
Notes
The defendant was acquitted of three rape charges alleging penile-vaginal intercourse, and convicted only of the count alleging digital rape. The judge determined that the defendant was not guilty on the count alleging dissemination of matter harmful to a minor.
The victim first disclosed the abuse in March, 2000, to her mother, who did not believe her. She then told her stepmother, who repeated the allegations to the victim’s father, who in turn informed the police. The victim then moved in with her father and stepmother.
The defendant’s direct appeal was stayed pending the outcome of the motion for a new trial and this appeal.
Neither the pediatric medical records nor the UMass evaluation refer to any illegal drug use by the victim at or about the time of her disclosures or before trial.
Although the defendant contended that the Lipton Center records would have provided him access to new information, a significant portion of those records merely supply more details concerning information included in the materials already in the defendant’s possession. For example, the pediatric records indicate that the victim had made a suicidal gesture and that she had failed in school, while the UMass evaluation indicates that she had been admitted after suicidal ideation, that she had failed in school, and that she had started counselling.
The defendant also argued that the Commonwealth withheld exculpatory evidence and that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to obtain affidavits from people who purportedly knew the victim’s reputation for truthfulness, all claims that were rejected by the motion judge.
The mother is married to the defendant and testified on his behalf at trial.
As the judge treated the records as privileged, and the parties do not contend otherwise, we treat them as such for purposes of this appeal and assume they would have met the requirements of stage one of the Bishop-Fuller protocol.
While the defendant also refers to the victim’s possible drug abuse, there was no indication in the pediatric records or the UMass evaluation of any illegal drug use by the victim at or about the time of her disclosures or before trial.
After oral argument in this case, the Supreme Judicial Court announced a new protocol for the pretrial inspection of third party records, including statutorily privileged records. See Commonwealth v. Dwyer,
The affidavit of the psychiatrist, based on his review of the victim’s records, is not sufficient to alter our analysis.
