Following a jury trial, defendant was convicted of first-degree criminal sexual conduct. MCL 750.520b; MSA 28.788(2). He pled guilty to habitual offender, fourth felony and was sentenced to eighty to two hundred years in prison. MCL 769.12; MSA 28.1084. He appeals as of right. We affirm the convictions but remand for resentencing.
Defendant’s victim was a twelve-year-old girl who had gone to her friend’s house to play one Sunday afternoon in December, 1983. The house belonged to defendant, and the friend was his daughter. Defendant detained the complainant at his house after his daughter left on the pretext that he needed a babysitter for his other children. He promised complainant to drive her home in his pickup. Instead, he took her to an unlit, unpaved area and forced her to have vaginal intercourse.
The complainant told no one about the rape. When she discovered she was pregnant, she disclosed her condition to defendant who denied it was his child. The complainant went through the entire pregnancy revealing it to no one else.
On September 11, 1984, when she realized she had gone into labor, the complainant closed herself in the family’s bathroom and delivered the child. Her brother heard her crying out. She then told him that defendant had raped her.
Defendant continued to deny paternity. Blood tests called human leukocyte antigens (hla) typing
Defendant offered alibi testimony for each of the possible dates on which the assault could have occurred. However, he admitted to his wife that he had intercourse with the complainant.
Defendant raises numerous issues on appeal. First, he argues that the prosecution failed to bring him to trial within 180 days as required by MCL 780.131(1); MSA 28.969(1X1).
Prison inmates against whom charges are pending must be brought to trial within 180 days of incarceration.
People v Hill,
Next, defendant claims the court erred in denying his motion to suppress the results of the hla testing. We disagree.
Dr. Richard Walker, an expert in hematology, pathology and percentage testing, testified that hla blood grouping analysis has been done in Europe since 1944. In 1976 the American Medical Association endorsed hla testing. Dr. Walker stated that the scientific community accepts these tests as reliable. The American Association of Blood Banks has developed procedural standards to ensure the reliability of the results. See also
Pizana v Jones,
In performing the blood analysis, Dr. Walker examined eleven systems containing approxi
The admissibility of the results of hla testing in a criminal action has not been addressed in Michigan. However the results are admissible by statute in a paternity action. MCL 722.716; MSA 25.496.
The generally accepted rule for the admissibility of scientific evidence is that the procedure used must be sufficiently established to have gained general acceptance in its particular field.
Frye v United States,
54 App DC 46; 293 F 1013 (1923). Hla testing is widely accepted in the scientific community as an accurate method of determining paternity probabilities. See
Little v Streater,
Defendant claims that the results were inadmissible, because the child’s blood was illegally drawn. He cites the paternity statute which requires that the child’s testing shall not be undertaken before the age of six months. MCL 722.716(1); MSA 25.496(1). The child here was two months old.
Dr. Walker explained that the age limit relates to the method of obtaining the blood sample. The method used in this case did not violate the statute. Age may also affect three of the eleven systems tested. In this case, two systems only were affected, and the paternity probability was accordingly revised downward to ninety-seven percent.
The testimony presented at trial supports the reliability of hla testing. The results were relevant to show a connection between defendant and
We also reject defendant’s contention that the blood testing violated his right against self-incrimination. Certain acts which compel a defendant to provide real or physical evidence do not violate the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination.
Schmerber v California,
Defendant claims the trial court improperly excluded evidence of the complainant’s previous sexual activity. He presented the testimony of an eighteen-year-old who claimed to have seen his brother engage in sexual intercourse with the complainant in October or November, 1983. The court granted the prosecutor’s motion to strike this evidence.
The rape shield statute provides that evidence of specific instances of a victim’s sexual conduct shall only be admitted under certain circumstances which include showing the source of pregnancy. MCL 750.520j(l)(b); MSA 28.788(10)(l)(b). Defendant did not comply with the notice provisions of the statute. Moreover the evidence has no value regarding the source of the pregnancy. In order to render it probative, defendant would have had to show that complainant carried the baby for ten or eleven months.
Defendant argues the evidence should have been admitted for impeachment purposes. The complainant testified that she never had sexual intercourse prior to the rape.
There is no necessary connection between a
Next, defendant claims the court erroneously instructed the jury on the meaning of "on or about.” He contends that one instruction, as given, allowed the jury to find that the rape occurred on a date other than the three dates alleged in the information. We disagree.
The court instructed the jurors pursuant to CJI 4:12:01(2). It provides:
When, as in this case, it is charged that the crime was committed "on or about” a certain date, it is not necessary that the proof show that it was committed on that precise date; it is sufficient if the proof shows that the crime was committed reasonably near that date.
The instruction did not mislead the jury. The complainant was certain the crime occurred on December 4, 11, or 18, 1983. This was not a case where the prosecutor introduced other evidence of sexual conduct between the parties or where the prosecutor sought to prove more than one sexual act.
People v Howell,
Defendant claims the court erred in allowing the prosecutor to amend the information to allege three dates rather than a single date on which the incident might have occurred.
The information must contain the time of the offense. However a variance is not fatal unless
Defendant was not prejudiced or otherwise denied due process by the amending of the information. He was allowed to conduct an evidentiary hearing after the amendment. His trial did not begin until three months later. We find no error.
Defendant also contends there was insufficient evidence to sustain a guilty verdict. He argues that his alibi evidence for each of the three dates charged precludes the jury from finding that he committed the offense.
In so arguing, defendant ignores the fact that the jurors decided not to believe his alibi witnesses. Yet, unquestionably, credibility is their province.
People v Boynton,
Next, we find the court did not abuse its discretion in denying defendant’s motion for a new trial based on new evidence. Defendant contended that complainant’s medical records from September 11, 1984, showed she had received a blood transfusion after delivering the baby. He sought an evidentiary hearing to determine its effect on paternity testing. Defendant failed to demonstrate that this evidence was newly discovered or that it probably would have resulted in a difference on retrial.
People v Sharbnow,
Defendant also alleges two instances of prosecutorial misconduct. First, he claims the prosecutor unduly pressured the complainant to establish the date of the incident. The prosecutor has a duty to make a reasonably thorough investigation to guard against a deficient information.
People v Naugle,
Secondly, defendant claims the prosecutor failed to investigate a police report that the complainant’s mother stated her boyfriend had raped complainant. We have not been given a copy of this alleged police report. Further, defense counsel had an opportunity to cross-examine complainant and her mother about the alleged statement. We find no evidence of prosecutorial misconduct. Plaintiff received a fair trial.
People v Burnett,
Defendant claims he was denied the effective assistance of counsel. We find the allegation merit-less under either standard commonly used by this Court.
Strickland v Washington,
Our review of the issue is limited to the record before us.
People v Walker,
a) Defendant, himself, agreed to the stipulation to blood reports, scientific tests, and to the adequacy of the chain of evidence. Defense counsel appropriately challenged the results of the blood tests at trial.
b) Failure to object to the testimony of complain
c) Defendant failed to identify the specific jury instructions that he claims defense counsel did not object to.
d) No support for the mother’s allegation concerning a different perpetrator of the rape has been found. Therefore, we cannot say that failure to cross-examine regarding this issue constituted inadequate representation of counsel.
We reject defendant’s claim that he was denied due process arising from cumulative errors in his trial.
People v Anderson,
Defendant’s claim that the criminal sexual conduct statutes are unconstitutional is without merit for the reasons cited in
People v Clopton,
Defendant’s last two issues concern his sentence. First, he claims the court erred in requiring that he make financial restitution without conducting a hearing on his ability to pay. He is incorrect. Defendant’s ability to pay need be determined only after an assertion of inability to pay is made.
People v Music,
Secondly, defendant argues that his sentence is excessive. He was thirty-nine years old at the time of sentencing. His sentence was eighty to two hundred years. The entire interval between defen
Defendant’s convictions are affirmed. Remanded for resentencing.
