Luis Albert Gillespie appeals his conviction by a jury of causing the transportation of a person in interstate and foreign commerce for illegal sexual purposes (18 U.S.C. §§ 2(b), 2421 (1987)) and of directly and indirectly importing an alien for immoral purposes (8 U.S.C. § 1328 (1982)).
The government’s case was based primarily on the testimony of Isabel Anderson, who testified she saw the appellant with his pants down rubbing himself against his three-year-old goddaughter while she lay on a bed with her underwear off and her nightgown drawn up. Anderson also testified that, a few weeks. earlier, she saw blood on the child’s underwear after she had been with the appellant a few hours. Anderson further testified that David Gillespie, the appellant’s adoptive father, used a false birth certificate to obtain an Ecuadorian court decree granting him custody of the child and a visa to bring her to the United States. At trial, the appellant denied that he ever abused the child.
On appeal, the appellant contends the trial court abused its discretion in 1) admitting evidence from which the jury could infer that he and David Gillespie had a homosexual relationship; 2) admitting expert testimony
on
characteristics common to child molesters; and 3) admitting evidence concerning anatomically correct dolls without qualifying it under the test in
Frye v. United States,
The conviction is reversed and the case remanded for a new trial.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
In 1983 the appellant, a native of Ecuador, traveled from the United States to Ecuador to visit his family. In Ecuador, he agreed to act as godfather to a one-year-old girl. Later in 1983 David Gillespie, a single male age 54, obtained a California decree of adoption, adopting the appellant, a male of 32 then separated from his wife.
In 1984, the appellant and David Gillespie visited Ecuador and decided to bring the little girl back to Los Angeles. Using a false birth record, David Gillespie obtained an Ecuadorian court decree granting him custody of the child. He flew her to Honduras and left her with Isabel Anderson, a Canadian nanny he had hired. Pursuant to David Gillespie’s instructions, Anderson used the false birth record and the Ecuadorian custody decree to obtain a United States visa for the child from the American authorities in Honduras.
Anderson and the child flew to New York, met David Gillespie, and then flew to Chicago for the wedding of David Gillespie’s sister. The appellant flew from Los Angeles to Chicago on the same day, arriving at approximately 7:15 p.m. David Gillespie, the child, and the appellant had dinner at David Gillespie’s sister’s house and returned to their hotel sometime after 10:00 p.m. At trial, Anderson testified she *478 saw blood on the child’s underwear that night.
Anderson also testified that one night approximately four weeks after the Gilles-pies returned from the Chicago wedding to Los Angeles, she saw the appellant sexually molesting the child. The appellant testified that he never abused the child.
A Dr. Higgins testified the child suffered vaginal trauma consistent with sexual abuse but he could not determine how recently or by what means the abuse had been inflicted. The child’s therapist testified the child’s behavior with anatomically correct dolls showed she had been molested by an adult male using his penis and not by a woman. The appellant does not dispute that the child was sexually abused, but suggests the abuse occurred in Ecuador or when Anderson performed an unauthorized vaginal examination.
The government filed an indictment charging the appellant with violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2 and 2421 and 8 U.S.C. § 1328. He was convicted on both counts after a four week jury trial.
DISCUSSION
I. Evidence of Homosexuality
The appellant contends the trial court abused its discretion by admitting various witnesses’ testimony indicating he and David Gillespie had a homosexual relationship. The appellant’s contention has merit. 1
We review admission of evidence for abuse of discretion.
United States v. Rubio,
Anderson and other prosecution witnesses testified the appellant slept with his adoptive father. The government contends the evidence was admissible because the defense raised the issue of homosexuality in its opening statement. Alternatively, the government contends it did not present that testimony to prove the appellant, as a homosexual, was more likely to sexually abuse a child, but offered it under Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b) to show the appellant’s motive, intent, plan, and design for bringing the child to the United States. The government argues that evidence of the sleeping arrangements in the Gillespie household shows the appellant invented the facade of a father-son relationship to cover up his incestuous lifestyle, and that he intended to extend that facade to the child in order to cover up his true, illicit purpose for bringing her to the country.
We reject the government’s arguments and hold it was error to admit evidence from which the jury could infer the Gilles-pies had a homosexual relationship. The defense did not raise the issue of homosexuality. Rather, the defense moved in li-mine that the trial court exclude evidence of homosexuality. The trial court did not rule on the motion until the jury selection was completed. During opening argument, the government told the jury the appellant and David Gillespie slept in the same bed. The first evidence of homosexuality was presented during the government’s case in chief when it asked Anderson about the sleeping arrangements in the household. In examining the defense’s opening statement, we cannot conclude that the defense raised the issue of homosexuality.
• Nor can admission of the evidence be justified under Rule 404(b). The evidence neither proved nor disproved that the appellant molested the child. It was offered to show that the men differed from what they held themselves out to be, but none of the testimony about their sexual relationship helped the trier of fact decide whether the appellant was guilty of the offense *479 charged. 2
Evidence of homosexuality is extremely prejudicial.
Cohn v. Papke,
The government’s argument that admission of the evidence of homosexuality was harmless because the trial court gave a limiting instruction is unconvincing. This case is centered around the appellant’s denial of Anderson’s eyewitness testimony. The verdict probably depended on the jury’s assessment of the credibility and character of the appellant and Anderson. Under these circumstances the trial court’s curative instruction to the jury was not sufficient to obviate the prejudice. Therefore, the admission of evidence of homosexuality was not harmless error.
II. Evidence of Characteristics of a Child Molester
The appellant contends the district court erred in admitting the testimony of clinical psychologist Dr. Maloney on characteristics common to child molesters. The appellant contends he did not put his general character at issue and did not assert his character was such that he could not sexually abuse a child. He argues that under such circumstances Dr. Maloney’s testimony was irrelevant except for the unpermitted purpose of showing he had a propensity to molest the child because his background matched that of a typical child molester.
Generally, we review the trial court’s admission of evidence for abuse of discretion.
United States v. Hernandez-Cuartas,
Evidence of a person’s character or a trait of character is not admissible for the purpose of proving action in conformity therewith on a particular occasion, except....[ejvidence of a pertinent trait of character offered by an accused, or by the prosecution to rebut the same.
Fed.R.Evid. 404(a)(1).
A defendant puts his character at issue when he offers testimony as to honesty or his good reputation.
Michelson v. United States,
The government called Dr. Maloney allegedly to rebut what it termed the appellant’s testimony he could not have molested the child. Dr. Maloney testified that the characteristics of a molester include an early disruption in the family environment, often with one parent missing: a relationship with the parent of the opposite sex who is dominant; unsuccessful relationships with women; a poor self-concept; and general instability in the background.
The trial court’s admission of the testimony was an abuse of discretion. Neither the appellant, his witnesses, nor his lawyer put his general character at issue or testified he had any specific character traits that rendered him incapable of molesting a female child. The appellant’s testimony as to his childhood was general background information, which did not put his character at issue.
See McLister,
We have stated in dictum that testimony of criminal profiles is highly undesirable as substantive evidence because it is of low probativity and inherently prejudicial.
See Hernandez,
III. Testimony Concerning Anatomically Correct Dolls
The appellant contends that the district court erred in admitting testimony of Mary Lou Conner, the child’s therapist, without qualifying it as reliable under
Frye v. United States,
The
Frye
test requires that when expert opinion based on a “scientific principle or discovery” is proffered, “the thing from which the deduction is made must be sufficiently established to have gained general acceptance in the particular field in which it belongs.”
Frye,
The trial court has wide discretion in determining whether particular scientific tests are reliable enough to permit expert testimony based upon their results.
Gwaltney,
We apply the
Frye
test to expert opinion testimony that is “based on a novel scientific technique.”
See, e.g., Solomon,
We have not previously ruled on the specific question of whether expert opinion testimony based on play therapy with anatomically correct dolls is subject to the
*481
Frye
test. However, we find persuasive the reasoning of
In re Amber B.,
The court’s ruling during the course of the trial that Conner’s testimony was admissible as non-scientific expert opinion, which did not need to qualify under the Frye test, 3 was manifestly erroneous. The testimony concerning anatomically correct dolls was crucial because it directly rebutted the defense’s theory that Anderson rather than the appellant might have abused the child. The testimony was made before the jury by a witness who stated that she was an expert by virtue of both her academic credentials and her clinical experience. Therefore, lack of evidence as to the scientific reliability of this technique was not harmless error. 4
IV. Government’s Emphasis on the Gil-lespies’ Wealth.
The appellant contends the trial court erred in permitting the prosecutor to emphasize the Gillespies’ wealth. This contention is without merit.
This case could not have been tried without some reference to the Gillespies’ wealth. Defense counsel in opening statement told the jury, “Let me talk to you about David Gillespie. This man’s richer than any man that I’ve ever known, I think. You’ll hear evidence about how he flies around the world, has a jet, a home in Hancock Park, has an island off of Victoria, a hotel in Honduras.” In fact, the defense went so far as to introduce into evidence the provisions of David Gillespie’s will. The prosecutor made several improper references to a “bought defense” in closing argument; however, the defense’s objection to those remarks was sustained.
V. Brady Violations
The appellant contends the prosecution committed misconduct justifying reversal under
Brady v. Maryland,
We review an alleged
Brady
violation de novo.
United States v. Lehman,
We find no Brady error. Moreover, the defense is now sufficiently familiar with *482 any alleged Brady material to obviate any problem with it on retrial.
CONCLUSION
The trial court erred in admitting evidence the appellant and David Gillespie had a homosexual relationship, admitting expert testimony on characteristics common to child molesters, and failing to subject the evidence concerning anatomically correct dolls to the Frye test. Accordingly, the appellant’s conviction is reversed, and this case is remanded for a new trial consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Because we conclude evidence of the Gilles-pies’ sexual relationship was inadmissible, we need not reach the appellant’s contention that the trial court erred in failing to ask his proposed voir dire question concerning homosexuality.
. The government relies on various cases where evidence of sexual activity was admitted under Rule 404(b) to show motive, intent, plan, or design. However, the evidence of sexual activity in those cases was relevant because it related directly to the victim or was the same type of sexual activity that the defendant allegedly performed with the victim.
See, e.g., United States v. Bradshaw,
. The trial court stated in its order denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial that Conner’s testimony was admissible as lay opinion pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 701. However, Conner testified before the jury that she was an expert in family counseling and in treatment of abused children using play therapy with anatomically correct dolls. Also, she testified before the jury that her conclusion the child had been molested by a male and not by a female was based on her professional experience with abused children and anatomically correct dolls. Therefore, Conner’s testimony as received by the jury cannot be characterized as'lay opinion under Rule 701. Moreover, while Conner’s testimony as to her observations of the child’s actions with the dolls might be characterized as lay opinion, Conner’s conclusions as to the meaning of the child’s actions cannot be admitted as lay opinion because they do not meet Rule 701(b)’s requirement of being helpful to the jury: the jury could have drawn its own conclusions based on Conner’s testimony as to what the child did with the dolls.
. Because we rule that the trial court erred in admitting Conner’s testimony without qualifying it under Frye, we do not reach the appellant’s contention that Conner’s testimony was inadmissible hearsay.
