Opinion
The defendant, Roberto Rivera, appeals from the judgment of conviction, rendered after a jury trial, of three counts of sexual assault in the second degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-71 (a) (1) and three counts of risk of injury to a child in violation of General Statutes § 53-21 (a) (2). On appeal, the defendant claims that the court’s instruction on evidence admitted pursuant to the constancy of accusation exception to the hearsay rule violated his due process rights. The defendant’s argument is foreclosed by State v. Antwon W.,
The jury reasonably could have found the following facts. The victim
After they had spent time together, the defendant told the victim about a group called “HNIC” or “Head Niggas In Charge,” (group) and asked the victim if he wanted to join it. The victim said he did. The victim understood that the group sold drugs. Later in the summer of 2006, after discussing the group with the victim, the defendant took the victim to his apartment and told . the victim to make a decision about whether he wanted to join the group. At the same time, he asked the victim if he knew what the difference between a male and a female was, and the victim answered that he did know. The defendant told the victim he needed to complete a “mission” to join the group, which the victim understood to mean fighting or robbing another person. The defendant left the room, and when he returned he told the victim that he had to have sex with him to complete the “mission.” The victim said he did not want to have sex with the defendant, but the defendant told him he would not like what happened if he did not. The defendant sexually assaulted the victim. After the assault, the victim went to the bathroom, cried, and went home. He did not tell anyone of the incident.
The victim went to stay with his mother in Chicago again after the incident with the defendant. He returned to Bridgeport to live with his father in 2007. After returning to Bridgeport, the victim saw the defendant again. On one evening, the victim was walking with his girlfriend and the defendant pulled up alongside them in his car. He asked the victim if he wanted to get out of the group, and the victim replied that he did. Later, the victim and the defendant were together, and the defendant took the victim to a studio apartment on Wood Avenue. The defendant told the victim that to finish with the group he had to do the same “mission” as in 2006. The victim said he would not do it. The defendant again sexually assaulted the victim. The victim did not tell anyone about this incident at the time it occurred.
The victim started skipping school and selling drags with his friends. His father did not approve of either of these activities and beat the victim when he discovered that the victim was participating in them. During one incident with his father, the victim decided that he “was just fed up with everything . . . [and] didn’t want to go through it no more” and he told his father about the incidents with the defendant. His father called the police, but the victim jumped out of the window of his father’s second-floor apartment because he did not want to “deal with [the defendant] in that way.” Later, the victim spoke with the police, but declined to give details regarding the incidents.
The final incident between the victim and the defendant occurred in March, 2008. The victim was walking in Bridgeport and the defendant confronted the victim in a Walgreen’s parking lot. The defendant called to the victim, and the victim got into a car with the defendant. After dropping others off, the defendant took the victim to a location in the Beachwood neighborhood. The defendant pulled up to an apartment complex and both he and the victim got out of the car in an underground parking garage. The defendant told the victim he had to perform the “mission” again. The defendant again sexually assaulted the victim. Afterward, the victim ran home and told his cousin what had happened. The victim, his father, and another individual went looking for the defendant but did not find him; when they returned home, they called the Bridgeport police. The victim was taken to the St. Vincent’s hospital where he was examined
The defendant was charged, by way of a long form amended information, with three counts of aggravated sexual assault in the first degree, three counts of sexual assault in the second degree, and three counts of risk of injury to a child. The defendant was tried before a jury in May, 2011. During the direct examination of the victim’s father, defense counsel objected to the testimony regarding what the victim told his father. Without the jury present, the prosecutor discussed his intention to present the father as a constancy witness to testify to the “who, what, when and where” of the victim’s accusation. The court allowed the testimony of the victim’s father pursuant to the constancy of accusation exception to the hearsay rule, and the victim’s father testified to that information before the jury. Following the conclusion of the state’s evidence, the defendant moved for judgment of acquittal on the basis that the state had not provided sufficient evidence to prove beyond a reasonable doubt the defendant’s age, the alleged inappropriate conduct, or the presence of a weapon. The court denied the motion.
In its instructions to the jury, the court specifically discussed the constancy of accusation exception to the hearsay rule. It stated, in relevant part: “The State offered evidence of out-of-court statements made by [the victim] to his father; that the defendant sexually assaulted him. So [the victim’s] father testified as to the statements [the victim] made regarding the defendant sexually assaulting him. This evidence by the father is to be considered by you only in determining the weight and credibility you will give to [the victim’s] testimony as it pertains to the present charges. The evidence of out-of-court statements made by [the victim] of a sexual assault against him by the defendant is not to be considered by you to prove the truth of the matter asserted in those out-of-court statements testified to by his father.
“In determining whether or not these out-of-court statements corroborate the testimony of [the victim] here in court, you should consider all of the circumstances under which they were made, to whom they were made, and whether the statements made to the father were or were not consistent with [the victim’s] testimony in court.” (Emphasis added.) The defendant did not submit a specific request to charge, and he did not object to the instructions at the time they were given.
The jury returned a verdict of guilty as to the three counts of sexual assault in the second degree in violation of § 53a-71 (a) (1) and the three counts of risk of injury to a child in violation of § 53-21 (a) (2). The court rendered judgment in accordance with the verdict on August 26, 2011, and sentenced the defendant to seventeen years imprisonment, execution suspended after eleven years, with twenty-five years probation on each of the counts of sexual assault in the second degree, and eleven years imprisonment for each of the counts of risk of injury to a child. The court ordered the sentences on all counts to run concurrently. This appeal followed.
The defendant claims that the court’s instructions violated his due process rights. Specifically, he argues that the court’s instructions on constancy of accusation encouraged the jury to use the
The defendant failed to preserve this claim at trial, as he neither submitted a request to charge the jury on the issue, nor objected to the court’s instructions. The defendant requests review pursuant to State v. Golding,
The admissibility of constancy of accusation testimony in Connecticut is well established. “Connecticut is one of only five states that continues to permit testimony regarding the details of a sexual assault victim’s complaint even if such testimony is not otherwise admissible”; (footnote omitted) State v. Troupe,
When considering instructions on admitted evidence, our Supreme Court has noted that “every claim of instructional error is not truly constitutional in nature.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. LaBrec,
The defendant argues that we should depart from Antwon W. here because the instruction invites the jury to make inculpatory evidence “out of nothing.” We are not persuaded. The court specifically stated how the jury could use the testimony from the victim’s father regarding the victim’s explanation of the alleged abuse. The court stated in relevant part that “evidence by the father is to be considered . . . only in determining the weight and credibility you will give to [the victim’s] testimony as it pertains to the present charges.” (Emphasis added.) We do not agree with the defendant that this encouraged the jury to find for the state or to give undue weight to the testimony of the victim’s father. Rather, the jury was instructed, as in Antwon W., on the appropriate use of constancy of accusation evidence and its relationship to the victim’s testimony.
The introduction of constancy of accusation testimony for the purposes of corroborating the fact of a victim’s complaint does not violate the constitutional fair trial rights of defendants in sexual assault cases. State v. Troupe, supra,
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
In accordance with our policy of protecting the privacy interests of the victims of sexual abuse, we decline to use the victim’s name or to identify members of the victim’s family through whom the victim’s identify may be ascertained. See General Statutes § 54-86e.
Dr. Marsha Zellner, the physician who examined the victim, testified that the ldt involved: a complete head to toe physical examination, looking for bite marks, dirt, and other abnormalities; an anal swab; an anal smear; and a penile swab.
The defendant also argues that this claim is reviewable under plain error. Upon review of the entire record, we conclude that the present case does not present one of the truly extraordinary situations in which the existence of the claimed error is so obvious that it affects the fairness and integrity of, and public confidence in, the judicial proceedings. See State v. Cutter,
In State v. Antwon W., supra,
“This evidence of out-of-court statements by the complainant of a sexual assault against her by the defendant is not to be considered by you to prove the truth of the matter asserted, the truth of what is said, in those out-of-court statements, but it is presented for you to consider in assessing the credibility you will give to the complainant’s in-court testimony.
“In determining whether these out-of-court statements are corroborative or not corroborative of the complainant’s testimony in court, you should consider all the circumstances under which these out-of-court statements were made and to whom and whether the statements made to those persons were or were not consistent with the complainant’s testimony in court.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
