41 Mass. App. Ct. 496 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1996
1983, until his arrest in October, 1992, the defendant lived at home with his wife and family; two children, Ashley and John,
We conclude that the judge improperly admitted expert testimony on the characteristic profile of an incestuous family and other testimony directly linking the characteristics of sexually abused children to the complainants in this case. Consequently, we reverse the convictions.
The issue that requires our scrutiny pertains to testimony offered by the government’s expert, Dr. Denise Gelinas, a psychologist, and Maureen Brown, a school counselor and social worker, regarding “child disclosure processes” and on the behavior patterns of children who have suffered sexual abuse. It is settled that the trial judge has discretion to allow such expert testimony where it may assist the jury in deciding a contested issue, including “expert testimony on the typical symptoms of sexually abused children because the information is beyond the common knowledge of jurors and of assistance in assessing a victim witness’s testimony and credibility.” Commonwealth v. Dockham, 405 Mass. 618, 629-630 (1989), and cases cited. Though the Dockham court held that testimony about the behavioral signs and symptoms sexually abused children frequently exhibit may be admitted at the judge’s discretion, “the line between proper testimony as to patterns of disclosure of child sexual abuse victims and improper testimony constituting endorsement of the credibility of a victim-witness is indeed a narrow one.” Commonwealth v. Rather, 37 Mass. App. Ct. 140, 148 (1994).
The case at bar falls into the last category. The line was crossed when, over the defendant’s objection, Dr. Gelinas went beyond the description of general principles of social or behavioral science that might assist the jury in their deliberations concerning credibility and gave testimony concerning family dynamics that evolved into profile testimony that signaled the jury that the child complainants were sexually abused.
Maureen Brown, Ashley’s school counselor, over objection, offered her personal observations gleaned from regular counseling sessions with Ashley over several years. Before allowing Brown to give testimony concerning Ashley’s behavioral symptoms, the judge said that he was “a little leery of [Brown] giving an opinion on the ultimate issue in this case.” However, not having made a definitive ruling at that time, the judge permitted her to testify that “the biggest. . . sign[ ] that [she] observe[d] in [Ashley] that [she] could categorize as consistent with [her] experience dealing with traumatized children . . . would be [Ashley’s] need to present kind of a blank slate. Very often children who have been raised in abusive homes are clearly given a rule, don’t talk, don’t trust, don’t feel.” Over the defendant’s objection, Brown identified as “clinical symptoms” Ashley’s “[in]ability to deny or repress her feelings,” social isolation from her peers, resistance to “therapeutic relationships,” “stares or spaceyness,” and other diagnostic behaviors. She concluded that “[t]hese . . . things ... in my experience and in the literature are significant in determining an abused child.”
Together with Dr. Gelinas’s testimony that some children disassociate in order to adapt to sexual abuse and that one of the behaviors observed is that “the child will often look kind of spacey,” Brown’s testimony acquired the veneer of an expert. The danger of such implicit vouching is greater where, as here, the witness is testifying to actual interaction with the child.
Although Dr. Gelinas was not a treating therapist, somewhat lessening the risk that her testimony could “be construed as impliedly supporting the truthfulness of [the complainants],” Commonwealth v. McCaffrey, 36 Mass. App. Ct. 583, 591 (1994), that was not the case with Brown. Brown’s direct testimony about Ashley’s demeanor at school and behavior in regular small group discussions was highly suggestive.
In a recent decision, Commonwealth v. Brouillard, 40 Mass. App. Ct. 448, 453 (1996), we reviewed the testimony of a treating therapist who exceeded the permissible testimonial boundaries by explicitly connecting the complainants to the general syndromes associated with sexual abuse. In Brouillard, we also concluded that the evidence “had the effect of impermissibly vouching for the complainants’ credibility.” Id. at 451. As in Brouillard, the combination of Gelinas’s expert testimony and Brown’s testimony, while not directly vouching for the complainants’ credibility nor expressly connecting the children’s claim of sexual abuse to the defendant, served as the functional equivalent. See Commonwealth v. Trowbridge, 419 Mass, at 759-760. We conclude that such testimony is inadmissible because it usurps the jury’s traditional functions. Commonwealth v. Ianello, 401 Mass, at 202.
Having concluded that the direct testimony on credibility should not have been admitted, we turn now to the question of whether there was reversible error. Commonwealth v. Mon-tanino, 409 Mass. 500, 504-505 (1991). Part of that determination turns on what the prosecutor argued to the jury. We reprint in the margin a portion of the closing argument in which she urges the jury to consider whether the defendant’s wife had a motive to lie. The argument pushed nearly all of the “hot-button” issues and matched the inadmissible expert testimony.
To make matters worse, in another part of her argument the prosecutor emphasized that neither Dr. Gelinas nor the counsellor, Brown, had a motive to lie. There was no suggestion by the prosecutor that the witnesses’ opinion of the credibility of the complainants would ordinarily be inadmissible, and the judge’s charge merely repeated “boilerplate” instructions concerning credibility and the nature of expert testimony. Without more, there was a substantial likelihood that the jury would consider the sexual profile and opinion testimony as supportive of the accuracy, reliability, and truthfulness of the children’s testimony. Commonwealth v. Rather, 37 Mass. App. Ct. at 150-151.
Guilt or innocence on these charges ultimately turned on the question of the children’s credibility; evidence of sexual abuse was not overwhelming, and physical evidence of abuse was notably minimal. It cannot be said that the jury would have convicted even in the absence of the error in admitting the profile testimony and testimony linking characteristics of the child complainants to characteristics of sexually abused children. Commonwealth v. Rather, supra at 149.
Other issues. The other points raised by the defendant are either without merit or are unlikely to arise at any retrial. With regard to the defendant’s argument regarding the denial of his motion for a court-ordered polygraph test, we note that the Supreme Judicial Court has given no indication that it intends to abandon the formulation in Frye v. United States, 293 F. 1013 (D.C. Cir. 1923), in the polygraph contest. See Commonwealth v. Mendes, 406 Mass. 201, 205 (1989).
Judgments reversed.
Verdicts set aside.
We use pseudonyms, as is our custom.
At the time of the defendant’s trial, the mother was under indictment for rape of her children. She testified at her husband’s trial as a witness for the prosecution.
Several scholarly studies of incest families and sexually abused children caution that there are no “typical” traits or common characteristics that portray child sexual abuse. The literature casts considerable doubt on whether psychological expert testimony should be used to usurp the jury’s role in deciding guilt or innocence. See Friedrich, Child Abuse & Sexual
During the hearing on the Commonwealth’s motion in limine to allow Dr. Gelinas to testify on child abuse accommodation syndrome and delayed disclosure, the trial judge limited the scope of such testimony to the “area of descriptions of this syndrome, to offer some explanations as to why children would delay reporting.” The prosecutor assured the court that the testimony would be so limited. The trial judge assumed that the proffered profile would be focused on the victim and family traits in general, and not on the family traits of the accused.
The defendant’s wife has limited intellectual capacity and was allowed to testify only after the trial judge made a preliminary determination of competency.
Brown was not qualified by the judge to give an expert opinion, nor was she presented to the jury as an expert, and therefore any limiting instruction to the jury regarding evaluation of expert testimony would not have been considered in their assessment of Brown’s opinion testimony. That testimony based on literature and comparative observations of other abused children went beyond the range of testimony permissible by laypersons. Still, she was mistakenly permitted to offer a lay opinion on the subject based on her professional experiences dealing with Ashley. Consequently,
The prosecutor asked, “Did you ever see her stare?” Brown testified affirmatively, “mostly when we were in a small group situation with three girls her age. Usually when the conversation got onto a deeper level where the girls were sharing issues that were disturbing them, [Ashley] would lean back and withdraw from the conversation and often stare out a window or at a blackboard, definitely distancing herself from the group.”
“Did I have to ask [the mother] questions? Wasn’t this enough for you? Wasn’t this enough to tell you that something was wrong with this picture? Did you get any insight at all from watching [the mother] as to why these children weren’t protected? As to why the abuse went on for years and years and years? Did that help you to understand it? If that alone wasn’t enough, consider that in conjunction with Denise Gelinas’s testimony that in incest cases there is always, often a weaker parent and powerful parent. The powerful parent is the abuser. Who in this relationship was the powerful parent? the defendant, not [the mother].”