This case involves a judgment of conviction for aggravated second-degree child sexual abuse.
1
Appellant, Christo
FACTUAL SUMMARY
Before trial commenced in this case, the defense lodged a notice of filing, indicating that it would seek to introduce expert testimony through Dr. Susan Robbins.
3
In response, the government filed a motion
in limine
to exclude Dr. Robbins’s testimony.
4
Over a two-day period, between breaks in a motions hearing, the trial court held fairly extensive discussions with defense and government counsel about the proposed expert testimony. Initially, the trial judge declared that she did not have specific concerns about Dr. Robbins’s qualifications. Rather, her concern was relevance, that is, “[wjhether or not this is ... so outside of the ken of the [c]ourt that I can’t make the factual determinations that could lead to a determination that a child is ... not credible for a variety of reasons.” Throughout the discussions, the trial judge reiterated three themes: that both the subject area and the issues the court needed to decide were not beyond the court’s or her ken; that she did not see how the testimony would be helpful to her; and that “her job is to assess credibility” and to “make determinations as to whether or not [she] believe[s] people.” Furthermore the judge declared that she could make the necessary determinations with questioning of witnesses by counsel and the court. As the judge put it: “I don’t see how this body of knowledge is outside of my ken such that the level and discernment that ... I’ve tried to articulate here does not address those issues with the right level of questioning on [defense counsel’s] part or even on my part if I have some concerns.” As the trial judge further posited: “Perception, memory ..., manifestations of falsity ... are all areas that are legitimate areas of cross-examination with the right questioning, with the right discernment on the part of the
Defense counsel contended that the subject area was beyond the ken “because there have been specific scientific studies that the [c]ourt could not and [defense counsel] could not know about[,] that only an expert that’s in that field could know about.” Counsel stressed the science and the fact that more is involved than a credibility determination:
[Dr. Robbins] has an expertise in cognition[,] about how children make false allegations of child abuse. This is [n]ot just a credibility determination, that is the [c]ourt’s job. This witness has done studies, has participated in specific cognitive studies about how false allegations manifest in children. It’s just much different from a credibility determination.
Defense counsel provided a lengthy description of the specific areas Dr. Robbins would cover and how her testimony would be helpful to the fact-finder and the defense, particularly in assessing the video interview of the children, which was conducted at the Child Advocacy Center (“CAC”). The trial court inquired as to why defense counsel could not accomplish that same objective by examining fact witnesses with respect to “the interview techniques and ... the potential impact of those techniques ... vis-a-vis the value or the efficacy or the accuracy or the truth of the assertions being made of the person interviewed?” Defense counsel responded: “Quite frankly, because all of the science behind what ... the doctor can testify to is beyond my ken as well[,] [a]nd that’s exactly why I would need to have an expert testify ..., because specifically what [Dr. Robbins] looks at with respect to interviewing techniques, leading questions, sug-gestivity of an eight-year-old and a [ten]year-old is quite honestly beyond my ken as well.”
In addition to quoting the Dyas test in its written opposition to the defense’s expert notice, government counsel orally opposed the testimony, at length, during the pre-trial hearing. She cited the three Dyas criteria, 5 discussed other case law, and argued that the proposed testimony did not meet any of the Dyas prongs. She concluded that the subject area here “is not beyond the ken of the average juror, and it’s certainly not beyond the ken of the fact finder”; she added, “[e]specially in this instance, a very experienced trial court judge.” She agreed with the trial court that the proposed testimony concerned credibility, and that defense counsel could cross-examine witnesses to show a lack of credibility. Government counsel contended that “the defense is merely attempting to transparently disguise it[]s attempt to have one witness comment on the credibility of another witness.” She contested the relevance and helpfulness of many of the studies identified by Dr. Robbins, because they relate to “pre-school aged children” rather than eight and ten year-old children. In addition, she questioned the qualifications of Dr. Robbins, as well as the state of the science.
In reaching her decision to exclude Dr. Robbins’s testimony, the trial judge reaffirmed her conclusion that the matters as to which Dr. Robbins would testify were not outside of the court’s ken or her ken. The judge announced that she would not address the second and third criteria of the Dyas test.
At trial, the government presented as its major witnesses the two minor children
C.N., who was eleven-years-old when she testified, indicated that Mr. Girardot was part of her school carpool. C.N. visited his house on five occasions to watch movies or bake cookies. On the birthday of one of Mr. Girardot’s sons, around December 2005, C.N. was in Mr. Girardot’s living room, watching a movie with several of the children in her carpool. She was seated on appellant’s lap when he “put his hands down [her] pants.” He “went under [her] skirt and into [her] shorts,” and “was rubbing [her] ... vagina.” C.N. moved to the other couch in the living room and “sat down with her sister and [one of Mr. Gir-ardot’s sons].” After C.N.’s father told her “what happened to other girls with Mr. Girardot,” C.N. tearfully informed her parents about the incident with appellant. She also spoke with the CAC.
The defense theory was general denial and fabrication by the children. Two of the other children who were in Mr. Girar-dot’s living room at the time of the alleged incidents against J.B. and C.N. testified that they did not see any inappropriate acts by Mr. Girardot. Appellant’s wife stated that she and her husband had babysat for three of the B. siblings, including J.B., in December 2005, while their mother was away with the oldest sibling and their father was at work. When Mr. Girardot’s wife was in the living room, J.B. was not on her husband’s lap. During his testimony, appellant denied any inappropriate touching of the children.
ANALYSIS
Mr. Girardot claims that the trial court erred by ruling that the proposed testimony of Dr. Robbins did not meet the first prong of the
Dyas
test, and by not ruling on the second and third
Dyas
criteria. Relying on two cases,
Mindombe v. United States,
The government argues that Mr. Girar-dot’s claim of error as to the first
Dyas
prong was not preserved because he stated in the trial court that “Dr. Robbins’s proposed testimony was ‘beyond the ken’ of
Applicable Legal Principles
Our analysis of the issues in this ease is guided by the following legal principles. A trial judge “ ‘has wide latitude in the admission or exclusion of expert testimony, and [her or] his decision with respect thereto should be sustained unless it is manifestly erroneous.’ ”
Jones v. United States,
“Although the admission of expert testimony falls within the discretion of the trial judge, we have cautioned that because the right to confront witnesses and to present a defense are constitutionally protected, ‘[i]n exercising its discretion, the trial court must be guided by the principle[ ] that the defense should be free to introduce appropriate expert testimony.’ ”
Benn, supra,
“Fairness dictates a balanced judicial approach in permitting use in criminal trials of expert testimony concerning subtle psychological factors that might affect witnesses.”
Benn, supra,
Preservation of the Dyas First Prong Issue
We first address the government’s contention that Mr. Girardot did not preserve the claimed error relating to the first
Defense counsel’s extensive proffer sought to demonstrate to the trial court that more is involved in this case than the usual credibility determinations of the trial judge; that (1) for psychological reasons related to a child’s cognition, children may make false allegations about child abuse, and (2) scientific studies, which have delineated these cognitive factors and psychological dynamics, will be helpful to the trial court in resolving this case, or as we said in
Burgess,
to “aid [... the trial court] in the search for truth.”
Id.
at 1062 (brackets in original). Given the defense proffer and the government’s specific reference to
Dyas,
we believe the trial court was “fairly apprised as to the question on which [she] [was] being asked to rule.”
Bean v. Gutierrez,
Bench Trials and the Dyas Criteria
The trial court interpreted the first Dyas prong in terms of her own knowledge, not the ken of the average lay person. Similarly, after referencing Dyas’s first prong during the pre-trial hearing, government counsel argued that Dr. Robbins’s proposed testimony was “certainly not beyond the ken of the fact finder, ... [especially in this instance, a very experienced trial court judge.” On appeal, the government states that “the trial judge studied [the] detailed proffer of Dr. Robbins’s proposed testimony, read Dr. Robbins’s curriculum vitae, and heard [defense] counsel’s lengthy descriptions of the gravamen of Dr. Robbins’s opinions and, after doing so, declared that the subject matter was known to her and, far from rejecting it, she ‘routinely’ applied the same factors when making reliability and credibility determinations.” Thus, the government suggests that when the Dyas issue is presented in a bench trial, the proper standard is the “ken of the [presiding] trial judge,” not that of the “average lay person.”
We recognize the substantial judicial experience of the trial judge in this
Moreover, it would be exceedingly difficult to conduct appellate review of a matter based on the trial court’s unstated personal knowledge or on such a subjective standard. This record is inadequate for us to make a principled conclusion that the ken of the trial judge who presided over Mr. Girardot’s bench trial is equivalent, as a standard, to the ken of the average lay person with respect to a jury trial.
See Lentino v. Fringe Employee Plans, Inc.,
Therefore, we must determine whether the trial court applied an incorrect legal standard under our existing case law. We recognize, as important legal principles, that “the defense should be free to introduce appropriate expert testimony,”
Bern, supra,
So ordered.
Notes
. The trial court found Mr. Girardot guilty of two counts of aggravated second-degree child
.Proposed expert testimony must be scrutinized under the test articulated in Dyas:
(1) the subject matter must be so distinctively related to some science, profession, business or occupation as to be beyond the ken of the average lay [person]; (2) the witness must have sufficient skill, knowledge, or experience in that field or calling as to make it appear that his opinion or inference will probably aid the trier in his search for truth; and (3) expert testimony is inadmissible if the state of the pertinent art or scientific knowledge does not permit a reasonable opinion to be asserted even by an expert.
. The ten-page notice provided detailed background information on Dr. Robbins, summarized the specific areas her proposed testimony would cover, and listed numerous works (articles and books) comprising the relevant scientific literature.
. The government quoted the three Dyas criteria in its opposition, and essentially claimed that Dr. Robbins's proposed testimony was "irrelevant,” failed to satisfy the Dyas admissibility standard, and was designed to "usurp" the fact-finder's credibility determination.
. When she recited the first Dyas criterion, government counsel used the phrase “average juror” instead of "average layman” or "average lay person.”
. The government used a transcript of the CAC interview to refresh J.B.'s recollection.
. What the Third Circuit stated in Lentino, albeit a different type of case, is instructive here. The court decided that "the better approach is to apply the same requirement to both bench and jury trials” with respect to the standard of care in legal malpractice cases because:
First, although the judge may be competent to evaluate defendant's conduct in light of the relevant standard of care, the actual standard of care itself is a question of fact that is best left to the presentation of evidence with the opportunity for cross-examination and rebuttal. Second, we do not believe that a practicable standard exists which takes into account the trial judge's knowledge. Such a subjective standard, which would allow the trial judge to use [her] own knowledge if [she] were familiar with the appropriate standard of conduct, would effectively change a question of fact-finding into one of discretion and require appellate courts to undertake the unwanted task of evaluating the trial judge's personal knowledge. Finally, in the interest of uniformity, we prefer not to unnecessarily establish a different substantive requirement for bench trials than for jury trials.
Lentino, supra,
