Aрpellant challenges her convictions of voluntary manslaughter while armed (D.C.Code 1973, §§ 22-2405, -3202) and carrying a pistol without a license (D.C. *854 Code 1973, § 22-3204) on numerous grounds. She claims that the motions judge erred in failing to suppress her orаl and written confessions, that the trial court erroneously denied her right to be present during the impaneling of the jury, and that it incorrectly excluded; 1) testimony as to the decedent’s boasts of having killed a man, 2) expert tеstimony regarding the ability of victims of gunshot wounds to move after being shot and, 3) evidence supporting her belief that retreat from the decedent was impossible. Lastly, she claims she was denied her Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel. 1 We find that the trial court erred in denying appellant her right to be present at voir dire and in excluding evidence as to the decedent’s boasts. We conclude, on this record, that the former error requires reversal and, thus, need not consider the impact of the second.
Factually, it will suffice to say here that the government’s evidence showed that one Benorais T. Webster was found dead in his home, the victim of a shooting at point blank range in the back of his head. Police investigating the murder first contacted appellant’s mother late on the morning of May 16, 1979, some seven days after the approximate date of death. The two women immediately appeared at the homicide office and, in the discussions that followed, appellant blurted out “I didn’t want to hurt anyone. I thought he loved me, but he used me.” She then sаid that she shot the decedent in self defense. After she was arrested and advised of her rights u
nderU
.S. 436,
Appellant testified at trial as to her relationship with the decedent, the violence he had exhibited toward her and others, her fear for her life on the night that she shot the decedent, his threatening her life that night and her inability to escape from his аdvances. 3 Photographs of appel *855 lant showing injuries allegedly inflicted on her by the decedent were introduced into evidence. Other witnesses testified as to the decedent’s violent temper and his reputation as a dangerous man. The parties stipulated that the decedent had been convicted in 1970 of assaulting a police officer with a dangerous weapon. The court ordered the striking, as hearsay, of testimony by appellant that thе decedent earlier had boasted to her of having murdered a man and gotten away with it. 4 The jury returned a verdict of voluntary manslaughter although appellant was charged with second-degree murder.
On this appeal, we need concern ourselves at length only with appellant’s challenge to the trial court’s refusal to permit her to be present at the bench during the bulk of the voir dire portion of her trial. 5
In
Hopt v. Utah,
Appellant contends that reversal is mandated because the triаl court violated the letter and spirit of Rule 43(a) and the aforementioned authorities by, contrary to a re
*856
quest by her counsel, conducting portions of voir dire at the bench while she remained at counsel table. While we agree with appellant that Rule 43(a) was violated here, we question whether we are in a position to adopt the proffered
per se
rule,
see Bunch v. State,
On this record we cannot find that the trial court’s error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
See United States v. Crutcher,
Reversed.
Notes
. We reject at the outset appellant’s Sixth Amendment claim. Despite appellant’s contention to the effect that trial counsel’s “stewardship was not the model of trial advocacy . . .
Jennings v. United States,
D.C.App.,
. The record in this case substantially supports the motions court’s denial of appellant’s motion to suppress her inсriminatory oral and written statements. “[A] court’s conclusion that [a] statement was voluntarily made will not be overturned unless it was without substantial support in the evidence.”
Taylor v. United States,
D.C.App.,
.The trial court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to permit testimony on surrebuttal which appellant contends would havе shown that she reasonably believed she had no avenue of escape from the decedent’s house on the night of his death. On direct, she testified that she was frightened because the downstairs door was locked and “it’s bars upstairs all around the windows. There is no way out.” In rebuttal, Detective Fickling testified that there were no bars on the upstairs windows. Appellant attempted, on surrebuttal, to present
*855
testimony to the effect thаt “someone looking out the window ... could have assumed or thought there might have been bars on the window.” The court refused to admit the testimony stating that “[t]he issue is whether or not there are bars on the second floor windоw.” Since “[t]he decision to allow rebuttal evidence is committed to the discretion of the trial judge; we will reverse her decision only for an abuse of discretion.”
Fitzhugh v. United States,
D.C.App.,
. The trial court clearly erred in striking as hearsay, testimony as to the decedent’s boast to appellant of having earlier murdered a man. “[Ajccounts of violence told to the [defendant] and repeated by [her] on the stand serve to establish the reasonableness of [her] mental judgments and physical responses at the time of the encounter” and are admissible hearsay (or nonhearsay).
King v. United States,
D.C.Mun.App.,
In view of our disposition of this case we do not reach the question of whether in the circumstances of this case the error was harmless.
See Kotteakos v. United States,
. We find no merit to appellant’s final contention that the trial court abused its discretion in not admitting the expert testimony of two World War II veterans proffered by appеllant to recite their experiences in “seeing men die, in the process of dying.”
See Dyas v. United States,
D.C.App.,
