¶ 1. Defendant appeals his conviction for sexual assault following a jury trial in Rutland Superior Court on May 22-24, 2012. On appeal, defendant argues that (1) the trial court erred by allowing certain hearsay testimony to be considered by the jury; (2) the trial court erred in scheduling a six-day delay between jury selection and trial without obtaining a waiver from defendant; and (3) the State’s use of inflammatory language and arguments regarding complainant’s character during closing arguments was plain error. We reverse defendant’s
¶ 2. Defendant was charged with sexual assault under 13 V.S.A. § 3252(a)(1) on October 15, 2008. At a hearing on March 27, 2012, the trial was set for May 22-24.
¶ 3. At trial, complainant testified that on July 28, 2008, she went out in downtown Rutland with friends, including her boyfriend, Jason Poljacik. She consumed approximately six drinks and admitted to being intoxicated. Eventually, complainant arrived at a party of ten to twelve people, including defendant, at the house of Nate Barrett and Nathan Cook. Earlier that night, Poljacik separated from the group to socialize with other friends, arriving at the party after the others, which “frustrated and irritated” complainant. After Poljacik arrived, they decided that she would spend the night at the friend’s house and that Poljacik would walk to the home they shared in Mendon so that they could get “a little bit of space” before talking things over in the morning.
¶ 4. Shortly after Poljacik left, complainant went to Barrett’s bedroom and made calls to a girlfriend, then to Poljacik. She testified that they both acknowledged that they had been drinking and making bad decisions, apologized and said they loved each other, and promised to talk about it in the morning. Complainant then fell asleep on the floor next to the bed. She awoke to an unknown person performing oral sex on her. Disoriented from being awakened, she told the unknown person to stop several times. The person then rolled her onto her back, and initiated sexual intercourse. Complainant continued to say stop, pushed the person off and ran out of the room. At this point, she was still wearing the same t-shirt and skirt she had been wearing earlier that evening. When she stood up, she recognized the perpetrator as defendant, whom she claimed to have met earlier that evening. Using vulgar terms, defendant stated to complainant that he had enjoyed himself.
¶ 5. Complainant made her way to Cook’s bedroom, where he was sleeping. According to complainant, defendant chased after her and tried to follow her into Cook’s room, but she shut the door to keep him out. Complainant unsuccessfully attempted to wake Cook by calling his name several times, then went downstairs before collapsing in front of her roommate and Barrett. She was very emotional and told them that “he had his fingers in me,” although she did not recall whether she said she was raped. She took a shower, still fully dressed. Her roommate and Barrett then drove her home and told Poljacik what had happened. Poljacik called the police to report the crime, and then took complainant to the police station and the hospital for an examination.
¶ 6. Barrett testified that he checked on complainant several times while she was in his bedroom before the incident. The first time, she was on the phone with Poljacik. The second time, complainant was sleeping on the floor next to the bed, and he moved her onto his bed. When Barrett checked on complainant for
a third time he found defendant, whom he had met for the first time that night, lying in bed with her. He moved defendant to the unoccupied room of a third roommate. Barrett was annoyed with defendant but thought defendant was merely looking for a place to sleep — defendant was apologetic and said he had been looking for a place to “pass out.” Barrett testified that defendant seemed to be awake, but was acting tired, groggy, and possibly drunk. Barrett returned to the downstairs porch, and approximately twenty minutes later, complainant appeared. She was hysterical, crying uncontrollably, hyperventilating, and, although having trouble speaking,
¶ 7. Poljacik then testified for the State. He confirmed that complainant was upset with him for separating earlier that night, that he had left complainant at the house party for the night, and that they had made up when she called him. He described complainant as hysterical when she arrived home, and he took her to the hospital.
¶ 8. On cross-examination, Poljacik testified that he had a phone conversation with Cook the day after the incident. Cook was good friends with both Poljacik and defendant, and Poljacik was upset with Cook as a result of the incident. Responding to defendant’s questions, Poljacik stated that Cook had told him that Cook did not believe complainant had entered his room the night of the incident. The State did not object to this testimony. On redirect, Poljacik testified:
[Prosecutor] Did Nate Cook in that same telephone conversation indicate to you that he was angry at Neiman Groce?
[Poljacik] Yes, he did.
[Prosecutor] Did he indicate to you that he thought Neiman Groce could have probably done it?
[Poljacik] Yes, he did.
¶ 9. The defense objected to these answers on hearsay and relevance grounds. The court overruled defendant’s objections, stating that defendant had “opened the door” by eliciting other hearsay statements from the same phone conversation. Prompted to answer the question a second time, Poljacik responded that “[Cook] thought that it was not beyond the realm of possibility that [defendant] had done this.”
¶ 10. Defendant then presented his case, claiming the incident was a consensual sexual encounter. Defendant argued that complainant’s fight with her boyfriend that night motivated her to have consensual sex with defendant. Defendant took the stand and testified that he witnessed complainant using cocaine that night. Defendant also presented expert testimony from a forensic toxicologist that analysis of complainant’s urine sample showed that she had used cocaine within two to four days of the incident, although they could not determine the specific day. The expert testified that cocaine use can cause an increased interest in sex, as well as paranoia and delusional thinking, and that alcohol use in conjunction with cocaine intensifies the cocaine high. The defense also highlighted inconsistencies in complainant’s story, such as defendant’s testimony that he had met complainant for the first time the previous summer and not that night; Cook’s testimony that he did not see complainant enter his room that night; and the lack of physical evidence corroborating complainant’s story. Finally, defendant argued that the State’s witnesses were predisposed to support complainant’s story because they were her friends or romantic partner.
¶ 11. During the State’s rebuttal, the prosecutor claimed that the defense had presented a version of events which, to be believable, required the jury to conclude that complainant “would go off and be a slut.” The State argued as follows:
Much was made of the fight [between complainant and her boyfriend]. There had to be a fight. There was, but that had — that importance has to be elevated [by defendant]. Why? Because it provides a reason for this woman to be angry at her boyfriend so that she would go off and be a slut. Is there evidence of this second path of that chain? She was not angry with her boyfriend whenshe fell asleep. She was happy with her boyfriend when she fell asleep. . . . There was no reason for [complainant] to want to have sex with Mr. Groce. There was, however, a reason for Mr. Groce to want to have sex with [complainant].
¶ 12. The jury spent several hours deliberating before indicating that they were hung. The court asked the jury to continue deliberating. Two hours later the jury returned a verdict of guilty. Defendant appeals.
¶ 13. Defendant first argues that the trial court erred by permitting the State to elicit Cook’s statement that “it was not beyond the realm of possibility that [defendant] had done this” through Poljacik’s hearsay testimony on redirect examination. We review the trial court’s evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion.
State v. Gender,
¶ 14. Under the “open-door” doctrine, also known as the doctrine of invited error or curative admissibility, a party’s use of evidence to create an incomplete or misleading picture opens the door so that the opposing side may, in the court’s discretion, use otherwise-inadmissible evidence to “complete the picture with appropriate detail.” See
State v. Malshuk,
¶ 15. The State argues that admission of Poljacik’s statement on redirect was necessary to correct the inaccurate impression defendant portrayed by asking only about aspects of the telephone call favorable to the defense — Cook’s memory of events that contradicted complainant’s testimony — while leaving out unfavorable information from the same conversation, including Cook’s opinion that defendant may actually have been capable of committing the assault. The State cites several of our cases for the proposition that a defendant “should not benefit from a selective presentation of the facts on cross-examination.”
Recor,
¶ 16. There are two significant differences between the cases cited by the State and the facts of this case. First, defendant’s questions here did not present a misleading depiction of the facts. See
Percy,
¶ 17. Second, even if defendant painted a misleading picture of events, the admission of Poljacik’s statements did not serve to rebut defendant’s portrayal. “Since the purpose of the [open-door] rule is to allow the other party to explain or meet the evidence which was improperly admitted, it should be applied only to the extent necessary to remove any unfair prejudice which might otherwise have ensued from the original evidence.”
Id.
at 482,
¶ 18. Since it was error for the court to admit the testimony, we must determine whether the error requires reversal of defendant’s conviction. The State argues for review under a plain error standard because, although defendant objected at trial, he did not request a limiting instruction. Contrary to the State’s argument, such an exacting request is not required. Rather, defendant’s “timely, specific objections when the issues were raised” were sufficient to preserve the objections for appeal.
State v. Fisher,
¶ 19. An error is harmless if, without considering the offending evidence, there is still “overwhelming evidence to support the conviction” and “the evidence in question did not in any way contribute to the conviction.”
State v. Shores,
¶ 20. Based on these factors, we conclude that the error was not harmless. Witness statements played a substantial role in supporting the jury verdict, making
¶ 21. Although other witnesses testified as to events immediately before and after the incident, only defendant and complainant testified as to what happened during the alleged sexual encounter. See
State v. Brillon,
¶ 22. The strength of the offending evidence also weighs against a finding of harmless error. Cook’s hearsay statements have little
probative strength because his speculative belief that the defendant could possibly commit the assault is not determinative of whether defendant actually committed the assault. Reporter’s Notes, V.R.E. 401 (evidence has probative value if it has “any tendency to establish (or refute) the proposition”). On the other hand, the testimony was highly prejudicial. The evidence was inculpatory because it went directly to the ultimate issue of defendant’s guilt — it was not peripheral, but rather went to the very heart of the State’s case. Moreover, the offending testimony was prominently featured in the trial, as the jury heard that Cook — defendant’s friend — thought that defendant could have committed the assault before Cook even testified. Poljacik was asked to restate Cook’s statements a second time following defendant’s objection, further reinforcing the point to the jury. Finally, the evidence was not cumulative or duplicative because the content was not repeated or echoed by any other testimony or evidence at trial. Cf.
State v. Burgess,
¶23. Finally, the fact that the trial nearly resulted in a hung jury, with the court prompting the jurors to continue deliberating before reaching a verdict, suggests the error may have impacted the jury verdict. Given how close the verdict was, we cannot conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the same verdict would have been reached if the erroneous evidence had been excluded. See
State v. Winter,
¶ 24. Because this error alone requires reversal and remand for a new trial, we do not reach defendant’s other arguments. Although we do not decide the case on these grounds, however, we would be remiss not to mention the offensive language — namely, the use of the term “slut” — used by the State during closing argument. We should not need to remind the state’s attorney’s office that this word has no place in the Vermont courts. Moreover, the argument underlying the State’s use of the term was misleading and inaccurate. From our reading of the transcript, defendant did not improperly malign complainant’s character: the State did, by drawing sexist inferences — that, if the encounter was consensual and motivated by complainant’s fight with her boyfriend, then she must be a “slut” — from defendant’s version of the facts. It has long been improper for defendants on sexual assault charges to characterize complaining witnesses in these terms. The State was on abundant notice that its argument was equally improper.
Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
Notes
Although not necessary to reach this conclusion, we have doubts as to whether the substance of Cook’s statements that he thought defendant could have committed the assault would have been admissible even if they had not been hearsay but rather testified to at trial by the declarant. First, the testimony speaks to defendant’s character, and is not admissible as proof that defendant acted in conformity with that trait on a particular occasion. V.R.E. 404(a)(1). Second, Cook’s statement as to whether he thought defendant could have done it was speculative and not based on any personal knowledge Cook possessed as to defendant’s actions on the night of the incident. See V.R.E. 602 (requiring lay-witness testimony to be supported by evidence showing “personal knowledge of the matter”). Finally, even if relevant, the statement was highly prejudicial, as it went to the ultimate issue to be determined by the jury — defendant’s guilt. Given that the statement’s probative value was tenuous at best, it would likely not survive the Rule 403 balancing test for admission.
