This is an appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court prohibiting M.W. from visiting his daughter D.B. We affirm.
I. Factual Background
D.B. was born on October 26, 1996, and lived with her mother and four sisters until she was committed to the District of Columbia Child and Family Services Agency after her mother entered into a stipulation of neglect on August 9, 2001. Appellant, her father, had visited D.B. and her older sister C.B.
On October 3, 2001, the Superior Court prohibited appellant from visiting D.B. and C.B. pending a criminal investigation into allegations of sexual abuse. Appellant repeatedly sought to reinstate his visitation rights, and in an order filed on November 25, 2002, the court scheduled an evidentia-ry hearing. That order explicitly notified the parties that hearsay would be admissible. The four-day hearing was held on December 12 and 20, 2002, and January 17 and 31, 2003, but appellant attended only the first day. On January 31, 2003, the court found clear and convincing evidence that appellant had sexually abused C.B. and D.B. Therefore, it continued to prohibit appellant from visiting his daughter D.B.
The court admitted a variety of evidence at the hearing. The girls’ foster mother testified that both children told her that appellant touched them inappropriately, and C.B. also said that appellant engaged in various sexual acts with each of them. The foster mother said that D.B. was afraid of appellant. She also testified that both girls exhibited highly eroticized behavior, which she described in detail.
A doctor who examined the girls explained that highly eroticized behavior, like that described by the foster mother, can be a child’s response to sexual abuse. The doctor also testified that C.B. had an abnormally “notched” hymen, a condition consistent only with sexual penetration. C.B. tested positive for chlamydia, a sexually transmitted disease.
Other evidence included interviews of D.B. and C.B. taped at the Children’s Advocacy Center.
II. Legal Analysis
An order denying a parent the right to visit his child may be appealed to this court, In re D.M.,
Appellant asserts that the trial court committed reversible error by admitting hearsay and violated his due process rights by relying on such evidence to make such an important decision. He contends as well that the court erred in considering his previous sodomy conviction. Finally, appellant argues that the record is insufficient to permit meaningful appellate review because the taped interviews of C.B. and D.B. are missing.
A. Hearsay Was Admissible
Appellant contends that the trial court erred when it allowed the foster mother to give hearsay testimony about her conversations with D.B. and C.B. and
Appellant argues that D.C.Code § 16-2816(b) (2001), which provides that “[e]vi-dence which is competent, material, and relevant shall be admissible at factfinding hearings,” prohibited the use of hearsay at an inquiry of this kind.
This was a hearing to determine the visitation rights of a non-custodial parent of a neglected child. The District of Columbia’s statutes and rules of court do not specify how to conduct this type of inquiry.
As the statutes and rules in effect at the time of this hearing make clear,
Neither does our decision in Ko. W. support appellant’s argument. In that neglect proceeding, there had been accusations of sexual abuse, and “the father [was] denied all visitation with his sons without ever having been given the opportunity to rebut the serious hearsay allegations against him.”
Our opinion in Ko. W. apparently contemplates that hearsay evidence will be admitted,
B. Due Process
Appellant contends that even if hearsay is admissible at some proceedings addressing the issue of visitation, reliance on it in this case offended due process because the court effectively terminated his parental rights by completely prohibiting him from visiting his child. Stated abstractly, this is by no means a frivolous claim. A parent has a fundamental liberty interest in the care and custody of his child, Santosky v. Kramer,
“The amount of process due depends on the particular circumstances of each case because procedural due process is a flexible right.” In re Pamela A.G.,
We need not confront those issues directly, however, because our review is very limited. Appellant’s hearsay objection was insufficient to preserve his due process argument for appeal. Cf. Long v. United States,
Under the test for plain error, appellant first must show (1) “error,” (2) that is “plain,” and (8) that affected appellant’s “substantial rights.” Even if all three of these conditions are met, this court will not reverse unless (4) “the error seriously affects the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” Thomas v. United States,
Appellant was given ample opportunity to test the reliability of the hearsay presented. In accordance with Judge Keary’s pre-hearing order, the government notified appellant’s counsel that it planned to call the foster mother and the doctor and intended to introduce the tape of C.B.’s second interview. Its brief summary made clear that much of the evidence would be hearsay.
Moreover, the government’s case did not rest upon hearsay alone. Both C.B. and D.B. had engaged in eroticized behavior, which was circumstantial evidence corroborating their statements that they had
Appellant certainly had ample opportunity to abuse both girls and, contrary to his suggestion, the record supports the trial court’s conclusion that the girls were referring to him when they indicated that “Moe” or “daddy” had abused them. Moreover, the court properly drew an adverse “inference from [appellant’s] failure to challenge these specific allegations.”
Relying on Jam. J., a decision issued after the hearing in this case was
Although its analytical framework is instructive, the holding in Jam. J. does not govern this case. That decision did not discuss the issue of visitation. Moreover, the court did not suggest, and certainly did not hold, that the government is obliged to call the children to the stand.
Because our review is limited, we do not attempt to establish due process requirements that might apply in other circumstances. Appellant certainly has not established that plain error was committed in his case.
C. Use of Appellant’s Prior Conviction
Appellant also argues that the trial court committed reversible error when it concluded from the judgment and commitment order, introduced as a government exhibit, that his 1986 sodomy conviction involved a victim who was a minor. The government led the court to believe that the statute underlying appellant’s conviction applied exclusively to sodomy of a minor. That statute in fact prohibited sodomy of any person, whether an adult or a child, but it authorized enhanced punishment if the victim was under the age of sixteen. D.C.Code § 22-3502 (1981) (repealed).
Appellee used the prior conviction primarily to impeach the credibility of appellant’s character witness, who claimed to
Even if we assume that appellant’s unclear objection preserved this issue for appeal, and that we review under the harmless error standard, we find no reversible error. The harmless error standard allows us to reverse only if, “after pondering all that happened[,]” we “cannot say, with fair assurance, ... that the judgment was not substantially swayed by the error[.]” In re Ty. B.,
Judge Keary explained that the impeachment questions had “undermined” the character witness’s testimony because “he knew nothing about the fact that [M.W.] had been convicted of a serious criminal act, conviction of sodomy, several years ago and had been imprisoned for a substantial period of time.” As a result, the court did not consider the character testimony “significant in the Court’s evaluation of whether or not in fact there was strong evidence of sexual abuse in this case.” The court did not mention the victim’s age at all when explaining its assessment of the witness’s testimony. In any event, the error in interpreting the judgment and commitment order is of no consequence because appellee represents, and appellant seems to agree, that the victim in appellant’s criminal case was in fact a seventeen-year-old boy — a teenager, as the guardian ad litem had represented in his question.
The court committed no error in allowing appellant’s prior conviction to be used in this manner. See Devore v. United States,
The government also urged the court to take into account the nature of the crime. Although the court did not consider the conviction to be “significantly weighty,” it did treat it as “some additional evidence.” We are skeptical that sodomy of a teenage boy would establish any unusual sexual preference pertinent to this case. See, e.g., Pounds v. United States,
We review decisions to admit evidence, including evidence of other crimes, for abuse of discretion. Sanders v. United States,
D. The Missing Tapes
Finally, appellant contends that the record is inadequate to permit meaningful appellate review because the video tapes of the interviews with D.B. and C.B. at the Children’s Advocacy Center have been lost. The court reporter did not make verbatim transcripts of the tapes because the court watched them in chambers. The contents of those interviews are included in the record only through “transcripts” created pursuant to D.C.App. R. 10(d).
In circumstances like these, we must review the record “to determine whether it is adequate to permit appellant a meaningful opportunity to locate and challenge errors ..., and to permit this court to exclude the possibility of any error other than harmless error.” Cole v. United States,
Through diligent effort, the parties reconstructed the taped interviews using a variety of sources, including the assistant attorney general’s handwritten page of notes regarding the second interview of C.B.; the guardian ad litem’s e-mail responding to questions from appellant’s counsel about the interviews;
Even -with the assistance of these resources, appellant has not identified any specific error he wishes to raise for which the reconstructed record is inadequate. See Lucas v. United States,
Furthermore, it would be almost impossible for appellant to establish reversible error in the admission of the initial interviews of D.B. and C.B. because he is the one who offered them into evidence. Indeed, he even argued that those interviews refuted the foster mother’s testimony. Although C.B. implicated appellant in her second interview, appellant’s counsel, who had watched that tape, did not object when the government moved for its admission. Having failed to object, he would have an uphill battle to establish that admitting that tape constituted reversible error. For all these reasons, we are confident that this record is adequate to permit meaningful appellate review.
III. Conclusion
Appellant has not shown that the trial court committed any errors that would justify reversal under the applicable standards of review. Accordingly, we affirm.
Notes
. The District of Columbia has filed a motion to dismiss this appeal as moot because a petition to adopt D.B. was granted by the Superior Court. The adoption is not final, however, because it has been appealed to this court. Therefore, we decline to dismiss for mootness.
. Appellant initially believed he was the father of both girls, but a subsequent paternity test showed that C.B. is not his child.
. The interviews took place in late October of 2001. D.B. was interviewed four days before her fifth birthday. C.B. was slightly more than six years old.
. When it scheduled the hearing, the trial court notified the parties that hearsay would be admissible. Appellant’s counsel nevertheless objected on hearsay grounds early in the foster mother’s testimony. The court overruled his objection, confirming that hearsay was admissible: "That’s the law. You are also on notice of it with the Order that I put in place structuring the hearing.”
. In making this argument, appellant assumes that hearsay evidence must be excluded because it is not "competent.” We have found no explanation of what this statute means by "competent” evidence, but we have said in the criminal law context that "hearsay is deemed competent when other indicia of reliability make up for the absence of live testimony.” Johns v. United States,
. Appellant did not live with D.B., her sisters, and their mother, and the neglect petition made no allegations concerning him.
. However, we have held that "[n]othing in the statute requires that a finding of neglect must first have been entered against a noncustodial parent before the court may order a disposition over that parent’s objection.” In re S.G.,
. Many of the relevant statutes and rules have since been amended. Unless we indicate otherwise, we will refer to and quote from the rules in effect at the time of the hearing.
. The neglect petition in that case contained no allegation against the father. In re Ko. W.,
. For example, "we [did] not suggest that in-court testimony by K.W. [one of the sons] is the only possible way of ascertaining the facts....”
. Appellant appropriately refrains from arguing that he was denied the Sixth Amendment right of confrontation, which applies only to criminal cases. See, e.g., In re J.D.C.,
. The government revealed that the foster mother would testify about "[disclosures made to her by [C.B. and D.B.] in or around September, 2001, concerning various forms of sexual contact made by [M.W.] on both girls,” and the doctor would testify about "[d]iagnosis and treatment of [C.B.] for chlamydia [and] the likely cause of [the] disease.” The government also indicated that in the taped interview C.B. disclosed sexual contact by M.W.
. We have recognized that "[t]he potential importance to the parent of being able to elicit the child’s live testimony is heightened where ... the proof of neglect depends critically on the admission of accusatory statements that the child herself made outside of the courtroom.” In re Jam. J.,
. The court noted that appellant "sat through all of that testimony [from the foster mother], ... heard the testimony of Dr. Able and chose to absent himself from the next two now three hearings at which he could have responded and offered contradictory testimony.”
. This adverse inference does not violate appellant’s constitutional right against self-incrimination. See Mitchell v. United States,
. Instead, we noted that "[t]he potential importance to the parent of being able to elicit the child’s live testimony is heightened where, as in the present case, the proof of neglect depends critically on the admission of accusatory statements that the child herself made outside of the courtroom.”
. At a previous hearing, the guardian ad litem explained that he had seen the arrest records, which revealed that M.W.’s victim was a teenager at the time of the offense.
. The guardian ad litem accompanied both children to the interviews. He was not in the interview room with them, but he watched through a one-way mirror.
