Julie Ann BLIND-DOAN, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Bron SANDERS, Officer, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 00-17194
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit
May 28, 2002
291 F.3d 1079
ORDER
The Opinion filed November 29, 2001 in Bennett v. Mueller, 273 F.3d 895 (9th Cir. 2001), is hereby WITHDRAWN. Appellant‘s request for a petition for rehearing is GRANTED.
Argued and Submitted March 13, 2002.
Filed May 28, 2002.
Larry F. Peake, Wall, Wall & Peake, Bakersfield, CA, for the defendant-appellee.
Before REINHARDT, NOONAN and FERNANDEZ, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge NOONAN; Dissent by Judge FERNANDEZ.
OPINION
NOONAN, Circuit Judge.
Julie Ann Blind-Doan (Doan or the plaintiff) appeals the judgment following jury trial in the Eastern District of California in favor of Bron Sanders (Sanders or the defendant) in her action under
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
We begin with the undisputed facts and go on to the facts that Doan unsuccessfully sought to prove. On the evening of Friday, January 31, 1997, the plaintiff and her companion Terry Doan turned themselves in to the Taft City Police after having been told the police were looking for them on a child neglect charge. They were booked and held in the local jail. Sometime early Saturday morning, the plaintiff repeatedly and noisily called out for needed toiletries. Dispatcher Kelly Layton summoned Sanders, a sergeant on the Taft police force, who responded to Doan‘s requests and eventually allowed her to call her mother. He escorted her back to her cell.
After this point the facts are disputed. Doan‘s testimony was that Sanders entered her cell, told her he was going to teach her a lesson, overpowered her, and inserted his police baton into her vagina. Sanders denied the assault, testifying that he did enter the cell but did not carry his baton with him or assault her.
Only one other witness observed any part of the contact of Sanders and Doan. This witness was Layton, the dispatcher on duty at the time at a desk with windows on the jail cells and an audio picking up sounds from the cells. Layton testified that she saw Sanders bring Doan back to her cell and that he did not have his baton with him; that she saw no bodily contact between Doan and Sanders; and that she heard no threats from Sanders to Doan. She further testified that Lavanda Fisher, whom Sanders later married, had come into the dispatch area and was waiting for Sanders at the time he was in contact with Doan.
Other witnesses testified to various circumstances supporting or refuting Doan‘s allegation. For example, plaintiff‘s witness, Dr. Tony Carey, examined Doan on March 5, 1997 and found a healing process at work in her vaginal area, for which the source injury could have occurred five weeks earlier. Defense witness, Dr. Elliott Schuman, testified there were no objective findings of trauma to the plaintiff‘s external genitalia. The case depended, however, on whether the jury believed Doan or believed Sanders and Layton.
The Excluded Evidence. Doan listed seventeen witnesses who would testify to other, assertedly relevant acts of Sanders. The proffered testimony is reviewed below under Analysis. All of it was excluded in limine on motion by the defendant. The magistrate judge made the exclusion at argument, vaguely identifying why two types of proffered testimony should be excluded. The exclusion was finalized by means of a one-sentence order without findings or any explanation for his decision.
On October 2, 2000, trial began and lasted four days. After two and one-half days of deliberation the jury returned a verdict
Doan appeals.
ANALYSIS
We review the rulings of the district court on evidence for abuse of discretion. Monotype Corp. v. International Typeface Corp., 43 F.3d 443, 448 (9th Cir. 1994). We will reverse if an erroneous ruling more probably than not affected the jury‘s verdict. Pau v. Yosemite Park & Curry Co., 928 F.2d 880, 887 (9th Cir. 1991). Doan urges the admissibility of her proffered evidence under
Evidence of Other Offenses of Sexual Assault. Under
Conduct proscribed by chapter 109A “Sexual Abuse” refers to
In Doe v. Glanzer, 232 F.3d 1258 (9th Cir. 2000), this court set out what a trial court must do in ruling as to evidence proffered under § 415. We recognize that Glanzer was filed a month after the trial in the instant case, so that the magistrate-judge was unaware of its requirements. Nonetheless, we see no reason why Glanzer should not be applied.
Glanzer began by recognizing that
In addition to proffers under
Doan did argue that the proffered testimony was admissible under the exceptions of
As to opportunity, Sanders testified that he believed that he could be seen from the dispatch area when he was in Doan‘s cell and that he “had every hope that he was being watched.” In the closing argument his counsel argued “the incredulousness” that Sanders would have overpowered Doan for two or three minutes “with two individuals on the other side of this two-way glass, with clear audio going around him.” Sanders’ opportunity to commit the crime was thus at issue.
Doan proffered the testimony of Yoshihiro Nishide that he was waiting to sign a citation and be released from the Taft jail when Sanders made purposeful attempts to annoy him by knocking on a nearby counter louder and louder. When asked to stop, Sanders replied, “This is my jail.” When Nishide mumbled something else, Sanders placed him in wrist locks, first on his right and then his left arm. Nishide refused to sign the citation, and Sanders punched him in the face with a closed fist and then applied a choke hold and a carotid hold. Sanders then asked the sheriff‘s deputy who was present if she “had a problem” with what had occurred.
This evidence tended to render less probable his defense that the presence of a police witness meant he had no opportunity to assault Doan. Its probative value should have been weighed against the danger of “unfair prejudice” to Sanders and the other factors set out in
Cumulatively, the evidence of the sexual assault offered under
For these reasons, the judgment of the district court is REVERSED, and the case is REMANDED.
FERNANDEZ, Circuit Judge, Dissenting.
I dissent because I do not agree that a district court must explicitly set out its
Therefore, I respectfully dissent.
