Defendant, who was found guilty following a trial to the court on various sexual offenses, appeals. He contends that (1) the trial court erred in denying, in part, his motion to suppress inculpatory statements that he made during police interrogation; (2) the admission of a physician’s expert diagnosis, in the absence of diagnostic physical findings, that complainant had been sexually abused constituted plain error under
State v. Southard,
Defendant moved to suppress his statements, contending that he was in compelling circumstances during the questioning and, thus, should have received Miranda warnings. The trial court granted the motion, in part, reasoning that the officer’s statement described above was “a threat under all the circumstances here” and that, when the statement was made, “the circumstances became compelling and Miranda warnings were required.” The trial court thus suppressed the statements that defendant made after the officer’s threat but otherwise denied defendant’s motion.
Thereafter, defendant waived his right to a jury trial, and the case was subsequently tried to the court. During the state’s case-in-chief, complainant testified regarding defendant’s conduct. Additionally, complainant’s mother and the investigating officer testified. The state did not offer any eyewitness testimony or forensic evidence to corroborate the abuse.
The state did, however, offer testimony by Dr. Linda Lorenz, a pediatrician with CARES Northwest. Lorenz testified that “[her] diagnosis was that [complainant] had been the victim of sexual abuse.” Although there were no diagnostic physical findings of abuse, Lorenz explained that her diagnosis was based on a number of factors, including (1) complainant’s use of “[a]ge-appropriate language”; (2) “a number of details in [complainant’s] interview that were convincing”; (3) the consistency of complainant’s disclosures; (4) complainant’s disclosures concerning the abuse of others; and (5) the lack of “any reason why [complainant] would make this up[.]” (Emphasis added.) Further, Lorenz noted that, in this case, “law enforcement had provided us with information of a confession that [defendant] had made. That’s an important piece towards the diagnosis.”
Defendant also testified at trial. He denied that he had engaged in the alleged conduct. Further, he indicated that he made the inculpatory statements during questioning by the officers “so they would leave me alone, because I couldn’t take it any more.”
The trial court found defendant guilty, noting that the “evidence in this case is very, very strong.” Defendant appeals the resulting judgment.
As noted, defendant contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress his statements because the officers’ “failure to administer Miranda-like warnings violated defendant’s state and federal rights against self incrimination[.]” We reject defendant’s contention without extended discussion, noting only that, under the circumstances, the trial court properly suppressed the incul-patory statements that defendant made after the officer threatened to take him to jail unless he told the truth because, at that point, defendant was in compelling circumstances necessitating Miranda warnings.
With regard to defendant’s remaining contentions, we agree that the admission of Lorenz’s diagnosis of sexual abuse in the absence of physical findings and her explanation about why she made that diagnosis constituted plain error.
See Lupoli,
Further, the state also contends that, regardless of any distinction between a court trial and a jury trial, we should decline to exercise our discretion because the evidence of defendant’s guilt is “overwhelming.” In that regard, the state emphasizes the combination of complainant’s testimony at trial and defendant’s inculpatory statements to the police. The state’s characterization of the evidence, however, fails to acknowledge other arguably controverting evidence at trial. For example, although defendant testified that the unlawful contact did not occur, as we have noted, several of his inculpatory statements to the police were part of the record before the court. Further, complainant testified that one of defendant’s sisters — who was about the same age as complainant — was present at the time that defendant engaged in the alleged conduct. 1 However, that sibling did not testify at trial, the record before the court included evidence that the sibling was evaluated at CARES Northwest, and the written assessment indicates that the sibling “made no statements that were concerning for physical or sexual abuse.” Moreover, as noted, there was no eyewitness testimony or forensic evidence to corroborate the abuse.
In other words, this case reduced to a swearing contest in which a determination of credibility was paramount. The trial court was required to make multiple credibility determinations, and we cannot tell how the testimony of the physician affected those determinations. Under those circumstances, the physician’s diagnosis of sexual abuse and her description of the reasons that she made that diagnosis could have been material and probative of that determination.
In
State v. Childs,
Here, although the trial court indicated that the evidence was “very, very strong,” the court did not discuss the expert testimony in explaining its verdicts. As in
Potts,
under the circumstances of this case, we cannot conclude that there
was little likelihood that the erroneously admitted evidence affected the verdicts. Accordingly, and for the reasons stated in
State v. Merrimon,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
There is also evidence in the record that complainant reported that she had observed defendant having “sex” with his two younger female siblings.
