After a three day bench trial, Henry Obiazor, appellant, was found guilty of two counts of misdemeanor sex abuse under D.C.Code § 22-3006 (2001) and one count of simple assault under D.C.Code § 22-404 (2001). Appellant raises two issues on appeal. First, appellant contends that he was deprived of his Sixth Amendment constitutional right to confront his accuser and present a full defense where he was prevented from introducing evidence to support a bias theory of a key witness. Second, appellant asserts that the trial court erred in excluding cross-examination and evidence about three prior claims the complainant, T.D., made regarding her abuse by adults or the source of marks on hеr body that were allegedly later determined to be false. We reverse and remand for a new trial because the trial court erred in precluding appellant from cross-examining T.D. for bias and by excluding evidence of other false claims of abuse, and under the circumstances of this case, the error was not harmless beyond a rеasonable doubt.
I.
Appellant’s convictions arose from a December 20, 2003 incident in which T.D., the twelve-year old daughter of Henry Obia-zor’s girlfriend, Krishanna D., accused Mr. Obiazor of touching her buttocks, touching his penis to her thigh and giving her a hickey between her collarbone and shoulder. At the time, T.D. lived with and was taken care of by Angel D., her mother’s cоusin. T.D.’s mother and siblings lived separately with Mr. Obiazor in a one room apartment. On the night of December 19, 2003, T.D. arrived at her mother’s apartment to spend the weekend. T.D.’s grandmother, Ingrid D., was also spending the weekend at the apartment. The next afternoon Ingrid D.
1
took one of T.D.’s siblings to a birthday party, leaving T.D. in the apartment with Mr. Obiazor and the
According to Garnet Coad, the hotel bellhop, T.D. seemed upset when she entered the hotel. Coad asked T.D. what was wrong and T.D. told him that Mr. Obiazor “tried to touch her.” Coad helped T.D. place a call to Angel D. and then helped T.D. catch a cab bаck to Angel D’s. Detective Williams arrived at Angel’s apartment that evening and photographed the bruise on her neck and collarbone. A few days later, on December 23, 2003, Detective Williams conducted a videotaped interview of T.D.
II.
We have held that cross-examination of bias is always proper, subject to reasonable limits.
Clayborne v. United States,
Appellant asserts that he was deprived of the ability to show his accuser’s motive for lying because the trial court did not allow him an opportunity to cross-examine her about relevant prior sexual incidents. Specifically, when T.D. was five years old she alleged that her grandmother’s boyfriend had sexually assaulted her. In that instance T.D. received a hickey mark in the same location (between her collar bone and shoulder) where she claims to have received a hickey mark in this instance from Mr. Obiazor. Appellant makes two assertions with regards to this evidence. First, appellant contends that the remarkable similarity between the two incidents is an improbable coincidence that tends to make the truth of T.D.’s allegation against appellant “less probable than would be the case without that evidence.”
Punch v. United States,
The government first asserts that the two incidents are insufficiently similar to sustain the appellant’s theory of improbable coincidence. In response to appellant’s second contention the government asserts that appellant’s bias theory is too vague and tenuous because the incidents оccurred six or seven years apart and there is no evidence in between those times showing that T.D. did things to receive affection from her mother. The government’s argument overlooks appellant’s first contention that the striking similarities between the two incidents makes it more likely that the latter incident is a fabrication. Further, the government cites no authority to support their assertion that a prior incident must have happened within a limited time frame, or that there must have been intervening incidents to establish a nexus between the prior incident and the current one.
In
Roundtree v. United States,
The facts of this case are squarely outside the realm of Roundtree. In the case before us, the significance of the prior allegation does not rise and fall on the truth or falsity of the allegation. Rather, its arguable significance lies in the improbability of the same kind of injury having been inflicted on the child’s body at the same location by two diffеrent men. In other words, the appellant’s argument is that the earlier incident involving the grandmother’s boyfriend gave T.D. a scenario, retrieved from memory, from which to falsify an accusation that another adult had given her a hickey in the same place. As defense counsel argued during oral arguments, if this were a signature crime being introduced as evidence against the defendant it would be admissible to establish a probability. Similarly, here, the striking resemblance between the two incidents leans in favor of admissibility to challenge T.D.’s credibility. Based on this reasoning, we think there was a sufficient proffer to warrant, at a minimum, some degree of cross-examination into the facts and circumstances of the prior incident with T.D.’s grandmother’s boyfriend.
We think that appellant’s second contention that T.D. was biased because of her motive to evoke the same caring reaction she got from her mother after she
This proffer was sufficient to imply that the prior incident was still vivid in T.D.’s mind and thus, an arguable motivator of her present accusations. The foundational requirement necessary to support a line of questioning into bias is a “fairly lenient” one, particularly in criminal cases where cross-examination is typically exploratory rather than accusatory.
Clayborne,
In this case the trial court prevented inquiry into the possibility of a motive for bias. When defense counsel attempted to ask T.D. about the prior incident, the government objeсted and the trial court sustained the objection. Where defense counsel attempted to solicit information about the relationship T.D. had with her mother, the trial court continued to bar the line of questioning. Appellee argues that defense counsel did not ask T.D. whether she fabricated the story against appellant to get attention from her mother, even though the trial court stated that it would permit it. While this is true, even if defense counsel had asked T.D. if she had fabricated the charges, it would not have had the same effect as permitting questions about the prior charges to corroborate the defense’s bias theory. The trial court’s disal-lowance of any inquiry into аppellant’s bias theory prevented the appellant from exercising his Sixth Amendment right to confrontation.
See Brown,
Whether appellant’s bias theory was based on facts or “well-reasoned suspicion” could not be determined without some degree of inquiry.
Id.
at 124-25. In fact,
Appellant’s second challenge on appeal arises from the trial court’s exclusion of cross-examination and evidence about three prior claims T.D. made regarding her abuse by adults or the source of marks on her body that were allegedly later determined to be false. Appellant first notes an incident where T.D. falsely told school officials that Angel D. had inflicted the bruises that officials observed on her. Another incident involved Melodie S., a woman who became T.D.’s foster mother after she left Angel’s care. There, she falsely told Melodie S. that a cat had caused “passion marks” on her body, but then later admitted a boy had given them to her. Finally, appellant describes an incident where T.D. told Melodie S. that her godfаther had bitten her on the neck, but when confronted about the truth, she conceded that it was false. The trial court denied admission of these prior incidents as evidence of T.D.’s lack of credibility, deeming them irrelevant to T.D.’s veracity.
The trial court excluded evidence of the prior false allegations on the ground that they were not sufficiently similar to the current incident to be probative. Particularly, the trial court noted “a hickey and a bruise ... they may look like the same thing, but their origins are different.” Based on that distinction, the trial court held that the evidence of prior allegations was not probative of the current incident. We disagree. Contrary to the government’s assertion, there is nothing in our case law to suggest that prior allegations must be factually similar to the issue on trial to be admissible. See
Shorter, supra,
To defeat appellant’s claim of a Sixth Amendment Confrontation Clause violation the government must demonstrate that any error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
Chapman v. California,
T.D. was the government’s key witness, without whom Mr. Obiazor would not have been convicted. T.D.’s сredibility might have been undermined had the defense been permitted to pursue the theory that T.D.’s allegation against appellant was similar to her allegation against her grandmother’s boyfriend because she realized from her previous experience that making such an allegation would be a way to evoke the attention and affection she sought from her mother. Additionally, the defense should have been allowed to argue that the remarkable and unusual similarities of the two allegations cast further doubt on the veracity of the allegation against appellant. Similarly, evidence that T.D. made false sexual allegations in the past would have weakened the impact of T.D.’s testimony. Thus, because we conclude that it was error to bar this evidence and that the error contributed to the verdict, it was not harmless error. We therefore reverse Mr. Obiazor’s convictions and remand the case to the trial court for a new trial.
So ordered.
Notes
. We use first names in reference to T.D.’s family members for purposes of anonymity and clarity.
. The trial court concluded that there was an insufficient "nexus” between the two incidents to support such an inference.
. The record does not reflect that the government disputed the falsity of these prior allegations. As such, it cannot now argue that the allegations were true where appellant cannot go back in time to recreate the record with additional proffers to show the falsity of the allegations.
