At his jury trial on indictments charging him with two counts of indecent assault and battery on a child under the age of fourteen years and two counts of rape of a child by use of force, there was evidence of uncharged bad acts by the defendant and of fresh complaint by the two victims, sisters. The defendant claims on appeal, as to the bad acts, that this evidence was inadmissible, overwhelmingly prejudicial, and insufficiently instructed upon by the trial judge. In respect to the fresh complaint testimony, he argues that the complaints were not prompt and that the trial judge failed to include a limiting instruction in his final charge to the jury. The principles of law controlling on all these issues are established. Applying these principles to the facts of this case, we affirm the convictions.
1. The evidence. We assign fictitious names to the victims. The time period set out in the indictments is January 1, 1985, to on or about April 23, 1987. The indictments were returned on June 16, 1987, and trial commenced on March 1, 1989. On that date, the victims, Jane and Linda, were fifteen and thirteen years of age, respectively.
Jane related that she had known the defendant since she was a little girl. Her mother was friendly with the defendant’s mother. During this time, she would see the defendant about once a week. When she was about nine years old, she and her family (mother, brother, and Linda) moved in with her grandmother and uncle. After the move, they lived
It was in December, 1985, when the sexual abuse of Jane began. Jane was babysitting for the defendant’s son, who was visiting from Ohio. She was asleep in the Lanning guestroom when the defendant arrived home sometime between 1:00 and 2:00 a.m. She testified that she awoke when he got into her bed. He was naked, and she hit him. He hit her back and held her down on the bed. He then had vaginal and anal intercourse with her. She did not cry out, because she was afraid that his parents would hear her. The defendant left the room, and Jane went back to sleep. She went home that morning, telling no one what the defendant had done to her.
The second incident occurred on the date Jane experienced her first menstruation. She called her mother from school and asked to be brought home. Her mother did not have a car, and she sent the defendant in her stead. Jane related that the defendant brought her to his house and told her how he would have intercourse with his wife while she was menstruating. Jane asked the defendant to take her home, but he would not. He penetrated her vagina with his fingers and tongue. During the final act of abuse to which Jane testified, forcing her to perform oral sex on him and to fondle his genitals, the defendant threatened her: if she told anyone about what he had done, he would commit these same acts upon Linda. She also related that on one occasion the defendant punched her in the eye.
In addition to this testimony supporting the acts charged in the indictments, Jane described how she and her friends had watched pornographic movies with the defendant at his house. She also related an incident involving the defendant’s use of her hair clip on her girlfriend’s breasts.
The acts committed upon Linda were no less horrible and began when she was about nine years old. At first, the abuse
There were threats of harm if Linda ever told anyone about these acts. On one occasion, the defendant held a BB gun to Linda’s head and stated that if she told anyone, he would kill her. Another time, he took a doll that he had given her and stabbed and decapitated it with a steak knife. Should she tell anyone, he would do the same to her. Linda testified that the last incident of sexual abuse by the defendant was about two weeks before Easter, 1987.
Discovery of the defendant’s conduct came about on April 14, 1987. As Linda’s aunt was driving Linda to a previously scheduled appointment with a doctor, Linda told her about what the defendant had been doing to her.
2.
Evidence of other misconduct.
In addition to the testimony of Jane and Linda concerning the pornographic films and Jane’s hair clip, three of their friends related that they had been in the defendant’s house with one or the other sister and had seen pornographic movies or books. On some occasions, the defendant was present. One of the girls related that while she was watching such a film with Jane, another friend, and the defendant, the defendant fast-forwarded the film to the more explicit scenes and asked whether they would like to perform the depicted activity when they were older. The defendant lodged objections to all this testimony. He did not object at trial but now complains about the testimony of another friend. This witness testified that she and Jane were watching a pornographic movie at the defendant’s
Another friend testified that the defendant had shown pornographic books to her and Jane at his house and, on three or four occasions, had grabbed her buttocks and fondled and kissed her. He told her that he wished she were older so that he could do things to her that he had done with her mother.
Susan Lynch, an investigative social worker with the Department of Social Services (DSS), testified, as fresh complaint evidence, that when she interviewed Jane, Jane told her how the defendant had placed her hair clip on her friend’s breast. There was no specific objection by the defendant to this evidence, other than his earlier request for a “continuing objection to the summary nature” of the testimony.
“Evidence of independent . . . [misconduct] unconnected with the crimes for which the defendant is on trial may not be used to show commission of the crime [s] charged.
Commonwealth
v.
Imbruglia,
When Linda was asked on redirect examination why she continued to return to the Lanning home throughout this period of abuse, she replied: “Because I was trying to help the mother, his mother from getting beaten.” The prosecutor
Nor do we see a risk of a miscarriage of justice in the trial judge’s final instructions to the jury on this issue: “[T]here is no indecent assault and battery count here for anyone but [Jane and Linda]. There is no other child involved in whatever evidence you may have in mind of indecent assault and battery. The only charge against this defendant that has to do with indecent assault and battery is on one or the other . . . [Jane or Linda].” Not only did the defendant not object to this instruction, he expressly stated that he was “satisfied” with it.
3.
Evidence of fresh complaint.
There were four witnesses who testified to fresh complaint by the victims: the victims’ young cousin, the victims’ aunt, the DSS social worker, and an investigator from the district attorney’s office. Before any of the fresh complaint evidence was presented to the jury, there was a bench conference. At this time, the trial judge had heard the testimony of Jane and Linda concerning the relationship between their family and the defendant and his family, as well as the threats of the defendant. The expected
The victims’ cousin testified that Jane told her that the defendant made her take her clothes off and do things she did not like or want to do. Jane was crying when she told her cousin about the defendant. The defendant objected to this testimony on the stated basis that it referred to events outside the period to which the bill of particulars spoke. We see no error.
When the witness was asked when this conversation with Jane took place, she responded: “I don’t know. Probably about three years ago.” The trial judge allowed the evidence to show a common pattern of behavior.
Assuming but specifically not deciding that the trial judge erred in admitting the evidence on the basis that he did, but see
Commonwealth
v.
Machado,
The fact that fresh complaint was made in the course of interviews by the social worker and investigator does not preclude the Commonwealth’s use of those statements. See
Commonwealth
v.
Amirault,
It is also the defendant’s claim that the testimony of the social worker and investigator should have been excluded from evidence because the complaints to them were not reasonably prompt and because the complaints were related in summary, yet graphic, form. In respect to the issue of delay, we have considered (as did the trial judge) the ages of the victims, the relationship between the families of the victims and the defendant, the time period involved, and the defendant’s threats to the victims. We conclude that the admissibility of this testimony is supported by the precedents collected in Appendix B to
Commonwealth
v.
Dion,
There can be no question that the fresh complaint statements related by the social worker and the investigator were more graphic and explicit than the victims’ testimony. Additionally, portions of their testimony could be read as including some details to which the victims did not testify. However, “[ujnlike other jurisdictions, the rule in Massachusetts
It is also the defendant’s contention, as we understand it, that the trial judge was required to conduct a voir dire of each fresh complaint witness and make individual preliminary determinations as to the promptness of the complaints. Although it is “proper practice for the trial judge to face the question of law squarely and make a distinct ruling,”
Commonwealth
v.
Dion,
There was, however, no instruction on this evidence in the trial judge’s final charge to the jury. Although the defendant requested no such instruction, took no objection, and stated that he was “satisfied” with the charge, his appellate counsel complains about this omission. In concluding that we see no
4. The medical evidence. Called to testify by the defendant, the doctor who examined Linda stated that his physical examination of her revealed that her hymenal ring was intact. On cross-examination by the prosecutor, the doctor was asked, “[Bjased upon the history that you elicited from or with respect in this case, were you able to form an opinion as to whether or not intercourse had occurred?” The doctor responded that he had “concluded that full vaginal penetration had not occurred,” that is, that “penetration had not occurred sufficiently to disrupt her hymen.” He was next asked whether his opinion would be consistent with the “insertion of the tip of the penis into her genitalia?” He answered, “Yes,” and, in response to further questions, described the female anatomy.
It is the defendant’s argument that the doctor’s opinion was inadmissible because it was based upon “history” which included the aunt’s account of Linda’s statements to her. For the following reasons, we conclude that if there was error, it was harmless. The import of the defendant’s direct examination of the doctor was to establish that Linda had not been raped, as shown by the fact that her hymenal ring was intact. The prosecutor elicited the doctor’s opinion to correct the false notion that an intact hymenal ring excludes, or is inconsistent with, penetration. See
Commonwealth
v.
McCan,
The defendant argues that the doctor’s opinion reasonably could have been understood to mean that “some penetration may have occurred.” As construed, the argument continues, the opinion was based solely on the aunt’s statements and was, therefore, inadmissible. We think the argument ignores Linda’s testimony that the defendant did not penetrate her deeply. See
Department of Youth Servs.
v.
A Juvenile,
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
As this testimony could be viewed as favorable to the defendant, we attribute the lack of an objection to a tactical decision.
The defendant makes the same argument — entitlement to a mistrial — in respect to the prosecutor’s question, on cross-examination of the defendant’s father, whether it was true that the defendant’s son no longer wished to visit with his father. The trial judge admonished the prosecutor and excluded the question. The request for a mistrial was not pursued.
