¶ 2. In August 2001, K.R. was in residential treatment at the Brattleboro Retreat. She was thirteen years old, and had been in the custody of the Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services for a number of years. Unhappy with the objections of staff to her plan to pierce her nose, K.R. ran away from the Retreat on August 13. She eventually ended up at a nearby Wal-Mart, where she met defendant, who offered her cigarettes and drove her back to his house. According to her testimony, K.R. was in the bathroom about to take a shower when defendant entered and kissed her. A short time later, defendant asked his daughter, who was eight years old, to go outside. He then put on a pornographic video and sat down to watch with K.R. Over her objections, defendant then removed K.R.’s pants, attempted intercourse, ejaculated, and engaged in oral sex. Later, defendant brought K.R. to a bus station, gave her cigarettes and money for a bus ticket to New York, and left. K.R. rode the bus to New York City, where the next day she was taken into custody by the police and brought to Bellevue Hospital. A forensic examination for sexual assault was performed, and the Brattleboro police were notified. They picked her up that day and returned her to the Retreat, where she was interviewed by the police, her SRS caseworker, and her treating psychologist, Dr. Sacco-Laurens.
¶ 3. Kathleen Faxon, who worked with defendant’s daughter through the Big Sister Program in Brattleboro, testified that defendant later told her about the incident, claiming that “[a]ll I did was whip my dick out in front of [K.R.].” The forensic examination performed in New York confirmed the presence of semen in K.R.’s anal area. K.R.’s journal for the period in question corroborated much of her testimony concerning the incident.
¶ 4. The jury returned a verdict of guilty on the charge of sexual assault.
¶ 5. Defendant first contends the evidence was insufficient to support the judgment of conviction of sexual assault based on contact between his mouth and the victim’s vagina, as charged in the information, because the only evidence in this
¶ 6. Defendant next contends the court erroneously denied his pretrial motion to compel disclosure of the victim’s mental health records and to order a psychological examination of the victim by the defense expert, thereby allegedly depriving him of his right to a fair trial. The record reveals the following pertinent facts. In October and November 2001, defendant sent the State requests for discovery, seeking — among other things — the victim’s SRS, mental health, and medical records. The deputy state’s attorney, in response, informed defense counsel by letter that any mental health records relating to the victim were not within the State’s custody and control and therefore not subject to compulsory disclosure under V.R.Cr.P. 16, and, moreover, that such material was privileged. In February 2002, defendant filed a motion to compel production of the SRS, mental health, and medical records which defendant had previously requested. Defendant argued that there was a strong likelihood the records would confirm that the victim has “a long history of mental illness which is so severe that it affects the reliability of her story.” Defendant cited previously disclosed information that the victim had informed the investigating officers that she had run away from the Brattleboro Retreat and had not taken her depression medication for several days prior to the assault. Defendant supplemented the motion to compel with a separate motion to dismiss for failure to provide discovery. The State opposed the motions, asserting that it had complied with defendant’s requests for discoverable material within its possession and control.
¶ 7. The court addressed defendant’s motions in a brief entry order in March 2002, ordering the State to produce certain SRS materials for in camera review, but declining to order disclosure of the victim’s mental health records on the following grounds: “The defendant has failed to make a particularized showing that mental health records are necessary to the defense. The State does not have these records in its possession, custody, or control,-they apparently are not relying on these mental health witnesses at trial and the items are protected by privilege.” The court subsequently disclosed some of the SRS records, including a redacted treatment plan, dated July 25, 2001, which listed a number of the victim’s psychiatric diagnoses, including “PTSD” (post-traumatic stress disorder), and the partial results and evaluation of the victim’s performance on a psychological test called “The Dissociative Experience Scale.”
¶ 9. The motion was heard in October 2002. Defendant argued that the mental health records and examination were necessary to provide an adequate basis for his mental health expert, Dr. Lawrence Bart, to diagnose the victim and determine whether she suffered from a mental illness which affected her ability to accurately perceive, recall, and recount events. The court, in response, questioned whether it had the authority to require the victim to submit to an independent psychiatric exammation absent a prior examination by the State’s expert, expressed “concerns about requiring a victim to undergo what really is the most intrusive sort of evaluation that a person could go through,” and ultimately denied the request for an examination, concluding that defendant had adequate alternative means of evaluating the victim’s mental health. In this regard, the court noted that its in camera review had resulted in disclosure of the victim’s previous diagnoses, that defendant’s expert could testify about the symptoms associated with these diagnoses, and that the expert could review the victim’s deposition to assess her emotional reactions and responses. The court did not specifically address the renewed motion to compel disclosure of the victim’s mental health records. Later, the court granted defendant’s supplemental request to have Dr. Bart in the courtroom during the victim’s testimony to allow additional observation and evaluation.
¶ 10. Turning first to defendant’s claim that the court erred in denying his request for the victim’s mental health records, we conclude — for the reasons explained below — that defendant failed to properly preserve this issue for review. In State v. Percy,
¶ 11. Second, we held that the procedural method utilized by defendant — a discovery request addressed to the State to
¶ 12. The procedure outlined in Esposito and utilized in many jurisdictions contemplates service of a subpoena duces tecum upon the custodian of the mental health records sought to be disclosed, in camera review of the records by the trial court, and a determination as to whether they contain information critical to the defendant’s ability to impeach the witness and therefore warrant disclosure. Esposito,
¶ 13. Here, despite repeated admonitions to defendant that the requested mental health records were not in the State’s custody and control, nothing in the record indicates — nor indeed does defendant even contend — that he attempted to subpoena the records from their custodian (the Brattleboro Retreat), as directed by Percy. Thus, the court was not afforded an opportunity to review the records 'in' camera and determine either that they contained material that should be disclosed, or that they revealed nothing critical to defendant’s ability to impeach the victim and order that they remain under seal and available for appellate review. It is defendant’s responsibility to ensure an adequate record for purposes of appellate
¶ 14. Defendant also contends the court erred in denying his motion to compel the victim to undergo an examination by his expert psychologist. Although we have alluded to the possibility that there may be cases which would warrant a court-ordered psychiatric examination of a victim, this is not such a case.
¶ 15. Based on these materials and observations, Dr. Bart was able to testify with a reasonable degree of medical certainty that the victim suffered from “post-traumatic stress disorder with some dissociative characteristics.” Dr. Bart explained at length the meaning of dissociation, which he described as a “method of protection in which memory is changed in order to not have to think about or re-experience the pain from an event.” People with the syndrome, he continued, “have some considerable difficulty knowing which of their information came from imagination and which of their information came from their environment. And ... they really have difficulty telling which is which.” Dr. Bart’s review of the victim’s diagnostic history and previous testing, and observations of “changes in her emotionality and in her affect in response to questions,” confirmed his diagnosis that she suffered from the kind of disorder “in which memory problems occur.” Indeed, he concluded that the victim “in fact does have significant
¶ 16. In view of the alternative sources of information that were made available to Dr. Bart, and his unequivocal testimony at trial relating to the victim’s credibility, we are unable to conclude that the trial court abused its discretion in finding that further invasion of the victim’s privacy through a court-ordered psychological examination was unnecessary. See Tonzola,
Affirmed.
Motion for. reargument denied March 3,2005.
Notes
A second count of unlawful restraint had been dismissed by the court at the close of the State’s evidence.
Although apparently contained in the SRS casefile, these documents appear to have been generated by other agencies.
. There is some conflict among the courts as to whether — having found that the records warrant disclosure — the trial court must obtain the victim’s waiver of the. physician-patient privilege prior to release, on penalty of precluding the victim from testifying, restricting the State’s ability to refer to the records, or some other appropriate sanction, see, e.g., Esposito,
See State v. Weeks,
Although other jurisdictions that have addressed the issue are divided on the question whether a court may order the complaining witness in a criminal case to submit to a psychiatric examination, see generally G. Samo, Annotation, Necessity or Permissibility of Mental Examination to Determine Competency or Credibility of Complainant in Sexual Offense Prosecution,
