Dеfendant was tried at the 23 February 1998 session of Durham County Superior Court on two counts of first-degree statutory rape, one count of statutory rape of a person fourteen years of age, one count of first-degree statutory sex offense, and three counts of taking indecent liberties with a minor. The alleged offenses occurred in December 1993, January 1994, and February 1996. The jury returned a verdict of guilty as to all charges, and defendant now appeals.
At trial, the State presented several witnesses who testified defendant sexually abused N beginning when she was five years old. N herself specifically testified that defendant sometimes forced her to perform fellatio upon him up to three times a week. At that time, defendant was living in the same household with N, N’s mother, and N’s siblings. Sometime shortly thereafter, N moved to live with defendant’s mother. When N wаs ten years old, she moved back in with her mother, her siblings, and defendant. N testified that, upon her moving back, defendant immediately began physically abusing her; his sexual abuse of her resumed a few months later. Other witnesses for the State testified defendant beat N with boxing gloves, twisted and broke her arm, fractured her ribs, put a knife to her throat, put a gun to her head, and even threatened to kill her. When the Department of Social Serviсes initially investigated, N did not report defendant for fear of being beaten.
The State’s evidence further established that, in December of 1993, when N was twelve years old, defendant showed her a pornographic video, assaulted her with a dildo, and then engaged in intercourse with her. Defendant and N again had intercourse in January of 1994. N ran away from home in February of 1996, but later got into defendant’s cab, went to a hotel, аnd had intercourse with him, after which he gave her money. A Durham police officer located a receipt, introduced at trial, that indicated defendant and N had stayed at the hotel on 16 February 1996.
Several witnesses at trial, including N and one of her brothers, testified that defendant also physically abused N’s siblings and the family cat. Specifically, the evidence showed that defendant hit the siblings with boxing gloves, forced them to fight еach other with boxing gloves, beat one brother with a cane, burned the leg of another brother by igniting lighter fluid on it, and strangled and drowned the family cat. This abuse occurred in N’s presence.
*303 In his first four assignments of error, defendant contends the trial court admitted improper evidence in violation of Rule 404(b). Specifically, he contests admission of the alleged sexual acts committed on N when she was five years old, somе seven years before the first charged offense here, and sexual acts committed on N when she was ten years old, some two years before the first charged offense. Defendant also contests the evidentiary basis for admitting his alleged physical abuse of N’s siblings and his alleged abuse of the family cat.
Our Supreme Court has clarified that Rule 404(b) is “a clear general rule of
inclusion
of relevant evidence of other crimes, wrongs or acts by a defendant, subject to but
one exception
requiring its exclusion if its
only
probative value is to show that the defendant has the propensity or disposition to commit an offense of the nature of the crime charged.”
State v. Coffey,
We begin with the evidence of dеfendant’s prior sexual abuse of N. Our state is quite liberal with respect to the admission of evidence of other sex offenses when those offenses involve the same victim as the victim of the offense for which defendant is being charged.
State v. Miller,
“When evidence of the defendant’s prior sex offenses is offered for the proper purpose of showing plan, scheme, system, or design . . . the ‘ultimate test’ for admissibility has two parts: First, whether the incidents are sufficiently similar; and second, whether the incidents are too remote in time.”
State v. Davis,
Q: Did you have any sense or feeling, did you know before the sexual abuse would happen that it was about to happen?
A: Yes, I did.
*304 Q: Was there a pattern or some signals?
A: Yes.
Q: What were the patterns or indications that would let you know that you were about to have to perform oral sex with him again?
A: Would send my mother away and if the children were downstairs he’d sеnd them upstairs, vice versa.
(1 Tr. at 78-79.)
See also State v. Spaugh,
With regard to the second part of the test, defendant contends the alleged prior acts were too remote in time. We disagree. “When similar acts have been performed continuously over a period of years, the passage of time serves to provе, rather than disprove, the existence of a plan.”
State v. Shamsid-Deen,
We next consider whether the trial court improperly admitted the evidence of defendant’s prior physical abuse of N’s siblings and his physical violence against the cat. We again emphasize that “evidence of other offenses is admissible so long as it is relevant to any fact or issue other than the character of the accused.”
State v. Weaver,
In sex abuse cases, the victim’s state of mind can be relevant.
State v. Bynum,
We do express caution with a trial court’s admitting evidence of аnimal abuse and/or physical abuse in cases only involving sex abuse. Such evidence must be relevant, and being lewd and despicable does not necessarily make it relevant. Furthermore, such evidence has the potential of being highly prejudicial to a defendant and thus should be scrutinized carefully by the trial judge. We emphasize that the only reason the evidence is admissible here is because the physical and *306 аnimal abuse was done in N’s presence and because defendant specifically made N’s state of mind relevant. To the extent evidence of physical and/or animal abuse not done in N’s presence was admitted, such admission was error, but would not have changed the outcome so as to require a new trial. We therefore reject defendant’s first argument.
In his next assignment of error, defendant claims the State failed to turn over certain exculpatory evidence in violation of
Brady v.
Maryland,
“[Suppression by the prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused upon request violates due process where the evidence is material either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the prosecution.
Id.
at 87,
Here, the trial judge viewed N’s DSS records in camera and concluded they contained no exculpatory evidence that was material to defendant at trial. He then sealed these records for our appellate review. He thus complied with the procedural mandates of Hardy. We have reviewed the DSS records ourselves and agree with the trial judge. The only potentially exculpatory information contained in the records involves N’s mother’s denial that her children were being abused by defendant and N’s own initial denial that she was being abused by him. As evidence of these denials was already introduced by defendant at trial, the DSS records contained no “new” material evidence that warranted their being turned over to defendant.
With respect to N’s medical records, however, the trial judge never performed an
in camera
inspection nor sealed the records for
*307
appellate review. But just because defendant asks for an
in camera
inspection does not automatically entitle him to one. Defendant still must demonstrate that the evidence sought to be disclosed might be material and favorable to his defense.
See State v. Phillips,
Next, defendant argues he was deprived of his right to a fair trial because the judge unnecessarily rushed the proceedings. “Court proceedings should not be hurried in such a manner as to deprive a litigant of his rights, but the court should see that the public time is not uselessly consumed.”
State v. Davis,
Juror: With all due respect my concern is if we’re all planning our Fridays I’m not sure that the defendant is going to get a fair discussion and that concerns me.
Court: He will. He will. That’s what my job is.
Juror: I’m concerned we’re all planning Friday out. That just concerns me.
*308 Court: Believe me, [defendant] was the first person I talked to. Somebody else have a concern?
(No response.)
(2 Tr. at 52-53.) Third, during the charge conference (and thus outside the presence of the jury), the trial judge stated, “I want a reаson why we’re doing it [giving the jury a certain instruction]. We’ve got to finish this trial sometime today. I got to go through and pull all these instructions and put them together.” (3 Tr. at 66).
We do not believe the above comments illustrate any intent on the part of the trial judge to unfairly rush through defendant’s trial. The prosecutor had a personal commitment on the following Monday; any effort to finish the trial by that Friday were seemingly to accommodate her. Defense counsel even agreed that the trial would finish by then. More important, however, the trial judge emphasized to both defendant and the jury on at least two occasions that the Friday deadline was not rigid and set in stone, but would depend on several factors. We therefore conclude that the trial judge did not act inappropriately in his time management of the trial.
Defendant also contends the trial court erred by refusing to allow him to cross-examine N a second time. On re-direct, N read to the jury “My Nightmare,” a story she wrote for her therapist that recounted the sexual abuse she had experienced. Defendant then sought to recross-examine N about some particulars of this story. The trial court denied defendant’s request.
Once a witness has been cross-examined and reexamined, counsel does not havе the right to a second cross-examination unless the re-direct examination brings forth new matter.
State v. Moorman,
*309 Next, defendant claims the trial court erred by invoking the rape shield statute to prevent him from attacking N’s credibility. N testified that defendant gave her gonorrhea through unprotected sex. On cross-examination, defendant sought to introduce certain medical records of N that stated her “partner” had been treated for gonorrhea as well. Defendant tried to use these records to suggest N’s “partner” was someone other than defendant. The trial court refused this request, concluding that the records were inadmissiblе under Rule 412. Defendant also tried to question Willie Gibson, a DSS social worker, as to whether N’s DSS records included any accusations by her of people other than defendant abusing her, or included any accusations that turned out to be false. The trial court prohibited this line of questioning as well, again invoking Rule 412.
The rape shield statute, codified in Rule 412 of our Rules of Evidence, is only concerned with the
sexual activity
of the complainant.
State v. Guthrie,
But just because Rule 412 is inapplicable does not mean defendant may examine or cross-examine at will. His questioning still must be relevant for the purpose for which it was offered, i.e. to impeach N’s credibility.
See id.
at 167,
The questions regarding N’s DSS records were equally irrelevant. No evidence at trial was introduced to suggest that N had ever made any false accusations, and defendant’s proffer of evidence here made no such showing either. Essentially, defendant was on a fishing expedition. Absent some definitive evidence that N had previously made false accusations, we cannot say the trial court committed prejudicial error by preventing this line of questioning.
See generally State v.
Anthony,
Finally, defendant asserts error in his sentence. Following his conviction, the trial court sentenced defendant to three life sentences plus a term of 288-355 months, all to be served consecutively. The judge made no findings as to why he was ordering consecutive, as opposed to concurrent, sentences. Defendant contends the imposition of consecutive sentences here was unwarranted. We disagree.
The imposition of consecutive sentences is neither violative of the Eighth Amendment,
State v. Ysaguire,
Nonetheless, defendant contends that our statutes give the trial judge too much discretion and should at least require the judge to make specific findings with respect to the issue of consecutive or concurrent sentences. We respond to defendant’s argument the same way we responded to a similar argument recently made to this Court: “This is, at best, a question for the legislature to resolve, but for our
*311
purposes it is an argument without merit on appeal.”
State v. Love,
No error.
