Case Information
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16-P-1355 Appeals Court
COMMONWEALTH vs. RAYMOND HAMPTON.
No. 16-P-1355.
Barnstable. June 5, 2017. - July 24, 2017. Present: Sullivan, Henry, & Shin, JJ.
Indecent Assault and Battery. Minor. Evidence, Admissions and confessions, Relevancy and materiality.
Complaint received and sworn to in the Barnstable Division of the District Court Department on November 2, 2015.
The case was tried before John M. Julian, J.
Darla J. Mondou for the defendant.
Elizabeth M. Carey, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
SULLIVAN, J. The defendant, Raymond Hampton, appeals from his conviction of indecent assault and battery on a minor under the age of fourteen, in violation of G. L. c. 265, § 13B. The defendant contends that the trial judge abused his discretion when he allowed the Commonwealth to introduce evidence that the defendant had watched adult pornography. We agree that the admission of this evidence was error, but, under the circumstances presented, we affirm.
Background. Adele testified that she lived at home with her parents, her sister, other tenants, and the defendant. The defendant was the child's great uncle. While living in the home, the defendant slept in a bedroom belonging to Adele and her sister. For this reason, the sisters slept on the couch or with their parents. The sisters often went back to the bedroom to play games, get toys, or watch movies on the defendant's computer.
On October 1, 2015, Adele, then nine years old, was in the defendant's room, when the defendant grabbed her wrist tightly. At trial she testified that he put her hand under his clothes, forcing her to touch the skin of his penis. Before trial, Adele told an interviewer that the defendant forced her to touch him over his clothes. Adele also testified at trial that the defendant touched her chest, a fact not previously reported. A pseudonym. Adele told her sister about the incident the next day, but told her not to tell anybody.
The second reported incident occurred on October 4, 2015. Adele testified that the defendant touched her vagina with his finger, under her clothes, and caused her to bleed. The defendant told her not tell anybody about what happened. Adele told her sister about this incident at some later point.
Adele did not tell anyone else about the incidents until October 21, when she told her counselor. The counselor then called the child's parents, who called the police.
The defendant was arrested on October 30, 2015. During an interview with Detective David Foley, the defendant denied the allegations of abuse. He also denied watching pornography with the children. The detective asked the defendant whether, if he got a search warrant for the computer, he would find any pornography related to children. The defendant told the detective that "he had recently watched a pornographic movie involving two Chinese girls, but that they were not children."
Before trial, the defendant filed a motion in limine to exclude testimony regarding his statement, and any description or portrayal of the images found after a forensic analysis of the computer. The trial judge allowed the motion in part, ruling that the images could not be introduced, but that the detective would be allowed to testify to what the defendant said. [4] At trial, the defendant renewed his objection, which was overruled. [5]
Discussion. The defendant contends that the trial judge
abused his discretion when he allowed the Commonwealth to
introduce evidence that the defendant had recently watched adult
pornography. We review the trial judge's ruling for prejudicial
error. Commonwealth v. Coates,
1. Relevance. "All evidence, including that of a violent
or sexual nature, must meet the threshold test of relevancy."
Id. at 738, quoting from Commonwealth v. Carey,
2. Prejudice. It remains to assess whether the error was
so prejudicial as to warrant a new trial. Here the objection to
the evidence was repeatedly preserved. See note 5, supra. In
these circumstances, a conviction will be affirmed only if the
appellate court can say "with fair assurance . . . that the
judgment was not substantially swayed by the error."
Commonwealth v. Meas,
As the defendant points out, there was no limiting
instruction cautioning the jury not to conflate an interest
adult pornography with a propensity to engage in sexual behavior
with children. Compare Christie,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
[1] The defendant was charged with two counts of indecent assault and battery on a minor under the age of fourteen; he was acquitted of one charge.
[3] The counselor testified as a designated first complaint witness. The defendant did not object to Adele's testimony that she had also told others. At trial, inconsistencies in the child's reports formed one basis of the defense.
[4] The defendant waived his Miranda rights.
[5] At the time of the motion in limine, the prosecutor
represented that the child had seen a pornographic cartoon on
the defendant's computer. No cartoon pornography was found on
the computer. Over objection, the judge allowed testimony about
the defendant's statement, and the detective's description of
what he found, but not the pictures or videos themselves. At
trial, the child testified, over objection, that she saw
something she shouldn't have on the defendant's computer,
without elaboration. The detective testified to what the
defendant said, but nothing else. The judge admitted the
statement on the basis that "this is a sex crime," but later, at
the defendant's urging, precluded the prosecutor from using the
statement for impeachment purposes and barred any reference to
it in closing argument. Because the interview with the
defendant was not recorded, the judge also gave a DiGiambattista
instruction. See Commonwealth v. DiGiambattista,
