UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Wayne Lewis CHARLEY, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 98-2087.
United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit.
Aug. 27, 1999.
189 F.3d 1251
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, we affirm the judgment and sentence of the district court.
Benjamin A. Gonzales, Assistant Federal Public Defender, Albuquerque, New Mexico, for Appellant.
Kathleen Bliss, Assistant United States Attorney (John J. Kelly, United States Attorney with her on the brief), Albuquerque, New Mexico, for Appellee.
Before SEYMOUR, Chief Judge, HOLLOWAY, PORFILIO, ANDERSON, TACHA, BALDOCK, BRORBY, EBEL, KELLY, HENRY, BRISCOE, LUCERO, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.
ORDER
This matter is before the court on defendant-appellant‘s petition for rehearing with
The rehearing petition and en banc suggestion were circulated to all the active judges of the court. A poll was called. Upon review, the en banc suggestion is denied. Judges Seymour, Ebel, Kelly, Henry, and Murphy would grant rehearing.
STEPHEN H. ANDERSON
Circuit Judge
Wayne Lewis Charley was convicted, after a jury trial, of seven counts of sexual abuse of a child in Indian country, in violation of
BACKGROUND
On April 11, 1997, Dorothy Kalleco took her daughters, 13-year-old D.J. and 10-year-old J.J.,1 to the Crownpoint Healthcare Facility in Crownpoint, New Mexico. There she told D.J.‘s pediatrician, Dr. Edward Junkins, that the girls had disclosed to her that an “uncle” had sexually molested them on numerous occasions over an extended period of time. II R. at 157. Defendant, 65-year-old Wayne Lewis Charley, the girls’ uncle by Navajo clan affiliation, was subsequently identified as the alleged abuser.
Dr. Junkins interviewed the girls out of the mother‘s presence. They provided detailed accounts of anal and genital contact by their uncle both with his fingers and his penis. A physical examination showed no evidence of abuse. Both girls had intact hymens,2 and the anal and genital areas appeared normal with no visible bleeding, bruising, scarring, tears, tags or discharge. According to Dr. Junkins, this circumstance was not inconsistent with sexual abuse since children‘s tissues heal quickly, although there may be residual scarring.
Dr. Junkins testified that the report of abuse had immediate significance to him as a possible unifying explanation for D.J.‘s extensive history of atypical and medically puzzling physical complaints and conditions. These included persistent bed-wetting, chronic urinary tract infections, chronic stomach pain, headaches, breathing problems and, recently, numbness of her arm, a burning feeling in her face, and pain in the side of her face, arm and leg. One April entry in D.J.‘s medical chart described her as anxious and crying. J.J.‘s medical chart did not show a similarly extensive history of complaints, except for persistent bed-wetting.
While the girls were at the Crownpoint Healthcare Facility, Dr. Junkins called the Crownpoint Police Department and reported the incident to Sergeant Daniel Zuni. Officer Zuni responded and conducted a preliminary interview with the girls. In the course of the interview, the girls told Zuni that the sexual abuse had occurred primarily at their residence and secondarily at the Elite Laundromat, located in the Crownpoint Shopping Mall where, beginning in January 1997, Defendant worked several evenings each week from 7:00 to 10:00 P.M. Both locations are within the boundaries of the Navajo Indian Reservation. Officer Zuni also ascertained that Defendant was the alleged perpetrator. He then went to Defendant‘s residence and determined that Defendant was a member of the Navajo Nation, as were the girls, thus making the alleged crime a federal offense.
Later that same evening, on April 11, criminal investigator Patricia Henry, to whom Officer Zuni had referred the matter, reported the circumstances to Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Agent John D. Tanburg, who then commenced an investigation. On April 30, 1997, Agent Tanburg visited the girls’ residence and interviewed the girls in detail. During the visit, Tanburg was accompanied by another investigator who inspected the girls’ residence. At some point, Tanburg obtained a warrant, arrested Defendant, and placed him in a secure halfway house.
In May 1997, about a month after the initial disclosures, the girls were referred to Western New Mexico Counseling Services in Gallup for supportive counseling. Joelle Baum, a registered nurse and registered health counselor, who also held a temporary license in art therapy, evaluated the girls and began a course of treatment for J.J. Kristine Lee Carlson, a clinical therapist and Sexual Assault Coordinator for Gallup, New Mexico, began a course of treatment for D.J.
On June 4, 1997, the girls were seen and examined by Dr. Renee Ornelas, a pediatrician at the University of New Mexico. Like Dr. Junkins, Dr. Ornelas also found the girls’ genital and anal areas to be normal, evidencing no signs of abuse. But, after receiving information from Ms. Kalleco about the girls’ medical history and reports of abuse, and after interviewing the girls, Dr. Ornelas concluded that the girls had been sexually molested.
On the same day as the Ornelas examination, June 4, 1997, a federal grand jury returned a seven-count indictment against Defendant, charging him with four counts of sexual abuse of a child in Indian country, in violation of
Well before trial in this case, the government notified defense counsel that it would call as witnesses certain health care professionals who had examined, counseled, or treated D.J. and/or J.J. In connection with that prospective testimony, the government also provided defense counsel with voluminous medical information and associated notes and records. However, it did not designate any of these witnesses as experts and, accordingly, did not provide defense counsel with any summaries of expert witness testimony pursuant to
On October 24, 1997, the Friday preceding the start of trial, defense counsel filed a motion in limine seeking to prevent any of the designated health care professionals from offering expert opinion testimony regarding whether D.J. or J.J. were in fact sexually abused or were being treated for sexual abuse. The district court addressed the motion on October 27, 1997, the first day of trial, and denied it on the government‘s representation that the witnesses in question were not being called as experts under
The government also called FBI Agent Tanburg and Navajo investigators Zuni and Sampson Cowboy. Tanburg and Zuni told the jury about their respective investigations of the allegations, and Cowboy testified about Defendant‘s 1994 abuse conviction.
Near the end of their presentation, the prosecutors called the two young girls to the stand. Both D.J. and J.J. testified, in graphic detail (mostly elicited by defense counsel on cross-examination), that Defendant had abused them in a variety of ways at various times and places. D.J. testified that Defendant molested her chiefly at her residence, and described sexual encounters with Defendant in her kitchen, hallway, and bedroom. D.J. testified that these incidents occurred primarily in the evening. She also testified to some incidents of molestation which occurred at locations outside her residence, in particular one instance in the parking lot of the Elite Laundromat in a truck. J.J., by contrast, testified that Defendant molested her chiefly at the laundromat, and described incidents in the employees’ room, the bathroom, and near the washing machines.
D.J. could not specifically recall whether Defendant had abused her in 1995, although she testified that the abuse had been occurring “[s]ince [she] was small,” and had begun before Defendant went to prison in 1994 and continued after his release. III R. at 358, 363.
Following the testimony of the girls, the government called Dr. Timothy Kern, a urologist and surgeon who performed prostate surgery on Defendant on September 29, 1995. Kern testified that 95% of men who undergo such prostate surgery have no erectile problems after the surgery. On cross-examination, Kern stated that patients such as Defendant are told, upon release from the hospital, that they should not engage in sexual activity for four to six weeks afterwards, because ejaculation during this post-operative period “usually” although “[n]ot necessarily in every case” causes bleeding which requires urgent medical attention. IV R. at 442, 449. Kern, testifying from medical records, stated that Defendant had come in for a post-operative checkup in late October, and no evidence of bleeding was apparent.
The government‘s final witness was Ms. Kalleco, who testified that, during the spring of 1997, she had often been out of the house in the evenings because she frequently traveled to Albuquerque to visit her sister who was in the hospital at that time. She stated that, on many of these occasions, the girls were home alone, because she took the girls’ siblings with her to Albuquerque. She also testified that Defendant frequently visited her house, ate some meals there, and on occasion asked questions designed to ascertain whether she expected to be away from the home in the evening.
The defense‘s primary theory of the case was that the girls’ mother was in a sort of a feud with Defendant‘s family over two separate incidents, one involving an automobile accident, and the other involving the sale of a pickup truck, and, in an
The defense also called Bucky Belen, Defendant‘s co-worker at the laundromat, who testified that he had seen the girls at the laundromat numerous times, where they would help Defendant and sometimes ask him for money, but that he had never seen Defendant act inappropriately toward them.
Defendant‘s son, Dwayne Charley, testified for the defense, and stated that he provided Defendant transportation to work each night, either by driving Defendant there himself, or by driving his truck to his sister‘s house and letting Defendant drive it to work from there. Dwayne Charley testified that, on the nights when he didn‘t personally drive his father to work, he delivered the truck to his sister‘s house at approximately 7:00 P.M., and that if Defendant had driven anywhere else on his way to work he would have been late.
The defense‘s final witness was Charley himself, who, through a Navajo interpreter, denied ever abusing or in any way inappropriately touching either of the girls. Defendant also denied ever being at the girls’ house. Additionally, Defendant stated that while the girls were at his workplace, they would never help him and that they never asked him for money. Defendant also testified that he had told the FBI about his first offense, in 1994, and that he had never denied his involvement in the first offense to the FBI.
After the defense presented its case, the government presented one rebuttal witness, FBI Agent Greg Calles, who had been assigned to investigate Charley‘s 1994 crime. Calles testified that Defendant had initially denied abusing his granddaughter, but that he later recanted and admitted molesting his granddaughter. After deliberating for about three hours, the jury convicted Defendant on all seven counts listed in the indictment. At sentencing, the district court, applying the United States Sentencing Guidelines, sentenced Defendant to life imprisonment.
DISCUSSION
I. Evidence of Prior Conviction for Sexual Molestation
Evidence of Defendant‘s prior conviction for sexual molestation of his granddaughter was admitted into evidence pursuant to
We recently held that Rule 414 is not unconstitutional on its face, “because Rule 403 applies to Rule 414 evidence,” and “[a]pplication of Rule 403... should always result in the exclusion of evidence that” is so prejudicial that it violates a defendant‘s due process right to a fair trial. United States v. Castillo, 140 F.3d 874, 883-84 (10th Cir.1998). Thus, when reviewing a district court‘s decision to admit evidence under Rule 414 and Rule 403, we must conduct a “case-specific inquiry”
In this case, the district court made the following findings with respect to the admission of Defendant‘s prior conviction for child sexual abuse:
For the record, I have made a balancing test under 403 and 41[4], and I find the testimony of the previous sexual activity by the defendant to outweigh any harm to come to him under 403. Specifically, under relevancy, in the discussions under Rule 413 it says, [“]The proposed reform is critical to the protection of the public from rapists and child molesters, and is justified by the distinctive characteristics of the cases it will affect. In child molestation cases, for example, a history of similar acts tends to be exceptionally probative because it shows an unusual disposition of defendant—a sexual or sadosexual interest in children—that simply does not exist in ordinary people. Moreover, such cases require reliance on child victims whose credibility can readily be attacked in the absence of substantial corroboration. In such cases, there is a compelling public interest in admitting all significant evidence that will illumine the credibility of the charge and any denial by the defense.[“] So I have conducted that balancing test. As I previously stated to you I found it was more probative than not under 4[0]3.
III. R. at 269-70 (quoting
II. Expert Witnesses
Defendant objects to the testimony of five health care professionals called as witnesses by the government: Dr. Junkins, Dr. Ornelas, Ms. Baum, Ms. Carlson, and school counselor Carolyn Joe.8 The government concedes that it elicited expert opinion testimony regarding sexual molestation of D.J. and J.J. from at least some of these witnesses, despite representing to the court that they were merely being called as lay or fact witnesses.9
As indicated above, our analysis of the testimony of these witnesses proceeds on the assumption that defense counsel made timely appropriate objections to the portions of their testimony disputed in Defendant‘s appellate briefs, and that the district court overruled those objections. Accordingly, we review those rulings under an abuse of discretion standard.10 See Kumho Tire Co. v. Carmichael, 526 U.S. 137, 119 S.Ct. 1167, 1176, 143 L.Ed.2d 238 (1999);11 United States v. Haslip, 160 F.3d 649, 653 (10th Cir.1998), cert. denied, 526 U.S. 1044, 119 S.Ct. 1346, 143 L.Ed.2d 509 (1999).
A. Rule 16 Violation
We agree with Defendant that the government violated
In this case, Defendant requested that the government turn over summaries of the testimony of all its expert witnesses. The government refused to comply with this request, because it maintained that each of its witnesses would be testifying as lay witnesses rather than as experts. Nevertheless, between July and September 1997, the government turned over to the defense copies of all medical and counseling records from which the witnesses would be testifying. Therefore, the government argues that the defense suffered no prejudice because it knew well in advance of trial who was going to testify and the nature and purpose of the expected testimony. Defense counsel had the opportunity to interview the government‘s witnesses prior to trial, and in fact questioned Dr. Junkins a few days before the trial began. Indeed, defense counsel himself has had a difficult time, even when directly questioned on the matter, identifying any particular prejudice. He does not identify, for example, any witnesses he would have called if the government had designated its health care professionals as experts prior to trial and furnished summaries of their testimony in addition to information already available to the defense. Nor does he specify any significant hindrance to his preparation for cross-examination of the witnesses in question. We note that in some ways, defense counsel may in fact have been better off with the actual records than with
In light of these facts, we cannot conclude that Defendant suffered any prejudice as a result of the government‘s failure to provide
B. Admissibility of the Testimony
Defendant‘s remaining arguments—that the challenged witnesses impermissibly vouched for the girls’ credibility, gave unduly prejudicial statements, and testified without adequate foundation—are grounded in
1. Dr. Junkins
Testimony admitted without objection established that Dr. Junkins is a board certified pediatrician who attended medical school at Johns Hopkins University. From 1994 through July 1997 he was employed by the Public Health Service serv-
In addition to these credentials, Dr. Junkins also had specific experience with child sexual abuse cases. He testified about the form he fills out and the list of things he covers in suspected abuse cases, and how he followed that form in this case. He testified that normal physical examinations can still be consistent with abuse, stating that “that‘s been my experience with child abuse examinations.” II R. at 165. He testified that he looks for scars and bruising, telling the jury that “I look for all that. I often don‘t find it, and so this did not surprise me in this case.” Id. at 166. He stated further that “a physical exam [in suspected abuse cases] is—you know, in my experience 90 percent of the time normal.” Id. at 220. In response from a question from the trial judge regarding the number of times he had testified in court, Dr. Junkins stated that although he had actually testified in court a handful of times, he had “been involved in cases at the initial evaluation probably two or three dozen times.” II R. at 223. And, again emphasizing the basis of his opinion in experience, he testified:
Q. And that‘s why, if you didn‘t see a traumatized area within 72 hours, so what?
A. Oh, that‘s what I—that‘s been my overwhelming experience with this. I would have been surprised in fact.
Id. at 217-18 (emphasis added). In light of this record evidence regarding Dr. Junkins’ qualifications, we cannot say that the district court abused its discretion in allowing him to offer expert testimony.
Dr. Junkins testified, also without objection, to the facts of the girls’ medical history and treatment,13 and the facts of his examination. He also related what the girls told him.14 He then offered two opinions to which Defendant objects. He testified, essentially, that while his physical examination revealed nothing remarkably abnormal, a normal examination is not necessarily inconsistent with a history of sexual abuse. More significantly, he linked the girls‘—especially D.J.‘s—atypical history of physical complaints and manifestations to the alleged sexual abuse:
Q. But, now, in light of knowing her whole history, what do you think was related to the urinary tract infections, the kidney infections, the bed wetting, the abdominal pain, the paralysis, the nausea?
MR. FINZEL: Objection, Your Honor.
THE COURT: Overruled. Go ahead.
THE WITNESS: What was related to all those things, the unifying diagnosis that could—could possibly pull all of it together would be an abusive situation, an incredibly stressful situation, such as sexual or physical abuse could—could describe or explain all of those problems. Could.
II R. at 219 (emphasis added).
This was a more qualified version of an earlier statement by him that abuse
The district court did not abuse its discretion by allowing these general and conditional opinions. Thus, for example, the court did not abuse its discretion by allowing Dr. Junkins to “summarize the medical evidence and express an opinion that the evidence is consistent or inconsistent with the victim‘s allegations of sexual abuse,” and allowing him to “inform the jury of characteristics in sexually abused children and describe the characteristics the alleged victim exhibits.”16
Defense counsel cross-examined Dr. Junkins in detail, was conversant with the subject matter, made no attempt whatsoever to challenge his experience, his training, his qualifications, or the basis for his opinions, and cites nothing to us on appeal which the defense was prevented from using to dispute any part of the testimony. There was no error in the admission of Dr. Junkins’ testimony.
2. Dr. Ornelas
Dr. Ornelas‘s credentials and expertise were also introduced without objection. Dr. Ornelas graduated from the University of Southern California (USC) with a degree in biology, and then went on to attend medical school at the University of California at Irvine. She completed a medical residency at the USC Medical Center in Los Angeles, and is now a pediatrician at the University of New Mexico (UNM). At the time of trial she had been in practice for eleven years. For the last seven years, she had been the head of UNM‘s Para Los Nios Program, which coordinates medical evaluations of children who are referred for concerns of sexual abuse. In view of this record evidence, we cannot say that the district court abused its discretion in allowing Dr. Ornelas to offer expert testimony.
Agent Tanburg reported his interview with D.J. and J.J. to Dr. Ornelas. On June 4, 1997, the day Defendant was indicted, Dr. Ornelas and her intake social worker saw the girls, examined and evaluated them. The girls’ mother provided information regarding the girls’ medical problems and their reports of abuse. Although the record is not entirely clear on the point, it appears that Dr. Ornelas did not obtain copies of the girls’ medical records from the Crownpoint Healthcare Facility or confer with Dr. Junkins or any other treating physician.17
At trial Dr. Ornelas did not testify to any further contact with or treatment of the girls beyond the examination and evaluation on June 4, 1997, except for a work-up on the condition of the girls’ kidneys in order to see if there was an anatomical problem which caused their frequent problems with bed-wetting.
Dr. Ornelas testified that her examination of the girls showed no physical evidence of sexual abuse. She found no bruising, bleeding, scarring or tags, and she found that the hymens were intact. Defendant, for obvious reasons, does not challenge this portion of her testimony which, in any event, was a factual recitation of the doctor‘s observations, not an opinion. She opined generally that penetration does not necessarily occur in abuse cases. Rather, coitus can occur externally, between the labia. She also generalized that abuse can cause symptoms and behavior such as headaches, numbness, urinary tract infections, and bed-wetting.18 As noted above, Defendant does not object to this particular testimony.
The problem with Dr. Ornelas’ testimony lies in the fact that she was permitted to give the jury her unconditional opinion that each of the girls was in fact sexually abused. She testified that her “final conclusion was that [D.J.] had been sexually abused,” III R. at 317-18, and that “[J.J.] also had a normal examination and also she—my conclusion is that she was also sexually abused,” id. at 323. Furthermore, Dr. Ornelas stated that “[t]he kind of contact that occurred is what‘s called labial coitus....” Id. at 322 (emphasis added).19
She evidently based this opinion on what the girls said, to her and others, as indicated by the following exchange on cross-examination:
Q. Then your assessment of child abuse is based on what [D.J.] told you about both [D.J.] and [J.J.]?
A. And what—the information from her mother and the information that we had that the children had given on prior interviews.
Q. Told the same—or—stories before?
A. Yes, well, had made disclosures before—
Q. Uh-huh.
A. —about sexual abuse.
Q. And, of course, the mother got the information she said from the children.
A. That‘s correct.
Id. at 344.
Regardless of whether Dr. Ornelas based her conclusion on the girls’ allegations of sexual abuse, or on the girls’ history of atypical medical symptoms, her testimony is problematic. If the conclusion was based on the girls’ medical symptoms, questions surrounding the reliability of such a conclusion arise. On the other hand, if the conclusion was based on the girls’ allegations, Dr. Ornelas was merely vouching for the credibility of the child complainants.
The opinion offered by Dr. Ornelas falls under
Here, no reliability determination was made at all with respect to Dr. Ornelas’ unconditional opinion that D.J. and J.J. were sexually abused. As a practical matter, that issue might have been disposed of simply by sustaining the objection, on
On the other hand, if Dr. Ornelas’ opinion was largely based on crediting the girls’ account, whether disclosed to her or others, she was essentially vouching for their truthfulness. In general, expert testimony which does nothing but vouch for the credibility of another witness encroaches upon the jury‘s vital and exclusive function to make credibility determinations, and therefore does not “assist the trier of fact” as required by Rule 702.21 See United States v. Azure, 801 F.2d 336, 339-40 (8th Cir.1986); see also United States v. Shay, 57 F.3d 126, 131 (1st Cir.1995); Whitted, 11 F.3d at 785-86;22 4 Weinstein‘s Federal Evidence § 702.03[5] (1998). Indeed, the government concedes that, in this case, testimony to the effect that D.J. and J.J. were “telling the truth... would be impermissible.” Appellee‘s Br. at 26.
Most courts that have considered the issue have concluded that expert testimony, based on the statements of the alleged victim, that sexual abuse in fact occurred is inadmissible under
3. Joelle Baum and Kristine Lee Carlson
Joelle Baum and Kristine Lee Carlson testified, without objection, that they practiced as licensed mental health counselors. Ms. Baum stated that she is a registered nurse and a registered mental health counselor, and was trained as an art therapist.24 At the time of trial, she was employed at Western New Mexico Counseling Services in Gallup, New Mexico, where she provided supportive counseling to both families and individuals. Ms. Carlson stated that she is a clinical therapist and the Sexual Assault Coordinator for the city of Gallup, New Mexico. She stated that, at the time of trial, she had approximately eleven years’ experience as a therapist, and had been employed as Gallup‘s Sexual Assault Coordinator for about eighteen months. Like Ms. Baum, Ms. Carlson stated that she counsels both families and individuals, and provides a full range of counseling services ranging from trauma to depression. In light of this record evidence regarding their qualifications, we cannot conclude that the district court abused its discretion in allowing these counselors to offer expert testimony.
Aside from alleging that these counselors were not properly qualified, Defendant objects to their testimony on three grounds. First, he argues that it was error to let Ms. Baum and Ms. Carlson testify at all because evidence of the referral of D.J. and J.J. to Western New Mexico Counseling Services for treatment of sexual abuse prejudicially presumes the fact in issue—that sexual abuse occurred. Second, he contends that they impermissibly vouched for the girls’ credibility. Finally, he asserts that their testimony contained numerous baseless statements (other than the fact of referral) that assumed the fact of sexual abuse.
With respect to Defendant‘s contention that evidence of the referral itself was prejudicial, we are, under the circumstances of this case, compelled to disagree. Ms. Baum testified that the referral came about because “the girls had disclosed sexual abuse and that they were having a real difficult time and needed... supportive counseling to help them cope.” III R. at 239. This does not go to the truth of the matter of sexual abuse, but, rather, to the reason for the referral. Likewise, statements by both Ms. Baum and Ms. Carlson that they were treating trauma associated with sexual abuse relate to the treatment.
As to Defendant‘s contention that the counselors vouched for the credibility of the children, we note that the counselors testified without objection regarding the facts of their observations of the girls, the nature of the treatment given, and what the girls said and did in connection with their treatment. For instance, Ms. Baum described J.J. as distressed and fearful when telling about really bad dreams she was having. She stated that J.J. drew a house and said she was having bad memories about experiences that had happened there. She also stated that J.J.‘s bed-wetting had decreased after counseling.
As to D.J., Ms. Baum testified that she was experiencing paralysis of her legs, that her brother had to carry her into the session, and that she seemed very uncomfortable and anxious and had difficulty talking about the situation. D.J. also said she was having bad memories from past experiences in her house. Both girls expressed fear of being at home without their mother there.
Ms. Carlson testified that D.J. complained of nightmares, was very fearful, did not like to wear dresses, and related distressing flashbacks and images. Also, Carlson testified that D.J. feared being away from her mother, disliked being touched, was afraid of strangers, and expressed fear of Defendant‘s wife. Finally, D.J. talked about ways to be safe at home and identified things to protect her such as ancestors, her dog, dragons and lions. She then created artwork in the form of a large shield. These unchallenged factual observations and statements were properly admitted, as expressions connected with treatment.
Both Ms. Baum and Ms. Carlson did express opinions:26 that the girls needed supportive counseling; that bed-wetting can be a symptom of anxiety; that once traumatized a child is slow to trust an adult; and that D.J.‘s symptoms were consistent with the symptoms of sexual abuse victims. These opinions, some of which were general and others qualified, did not constitute impermissible vouching, see Whitted, 11 F.3d at 785-86, and were not objected to in any event, see supra note 16.
However, Ms. Carlson‘s opinion that D.J.‘s symptoms were more consistent with the symptoms of children who have been sexually abused than with the symptoms of children who witness physical abuse of their mother was erroneously admitted.27 No sufficient foundation was laid for this kind of expert analysis. See Kumho Tire, 119 S.Ct. at 1175-76.
A. The home environment seems to have changed during that time and become more stabilized, so that the abuse that I have been dealing with her at this point in time seems to be recent.
Q. Although you‘re aware of abuse over an extended time of [D.J.], sexual abuse?
A. Oh, yes. Yes.
Id. at 258.
Q. And so if she had expressed a desire to not going to school or had problems that would prevent her from going to school, what would have been the reason for those based on your counseling sessions with [D.J.]?
A. I would have connected that—I do connect those to the trauma of the sexual abuse.
Id. at 258-59.
While the latter quote may also have been an opinion, it was also more particularly a statement of fact. It was error to admit these statements which were manifestly outside the counselors’ direct knowledge.28 Such statements had minimal probative value, and, in the context of this referral for treatment of problems allegedly connected with sexual abuse, they were unquestionably prejudicial. They also impermissibly invaded the province of the jurors. Accordingly, they were inadmissible under
C. Harmless Error
Finally, we must determine whether the district court‘s erroneous decisions to admit the conclusions of Dr. Ornelas, the prejudicial statements of Ms. Baum and Ms. Carlson, and the physical abuse-related opinion of Ms. Carlson were harmless. A non-constitutional error, such as a decision whether to admit or exclude evidence, is considered harmless “unless a substantial right of [a] party is affected.”
Harmless error is not an easy issue in this case. Defendant took the stand in his own defense and categorically denied ever inappropriately touching either of the girls. There was no physical evidence of abuse, and no eyewitnesses to the alleged misdeeds.
On the other hand, both girls testified, each corroborating the other. Both were old enough to understand the true nature of their accounts. D.J. especially had an undisputed and documented history of atypical medical conditions and complaints that was consistent with sexual abuse. In addition, both girls displayed symptoms of emotional distress that were consistent with sexual abuse. J.J. was distressed and fearful, and drew a picture of a house where she had had bad experiences. D.J. also had bad memories associated with a house, and complained of nightmares, expressed fear of strangers and Defendant‘s wife, and did not like to wear dresses.
Defendant had a prior conviction for sexual abuse of a child, for which he served one year in prison and three years on supervised release. Indeed, because Defendant was released from prison for this offense in 1995, and was on supervised release at the time of the events in question here, the prior conviction and sentence were proximate in time to the allegations underlying this case.
It is also undisputed that the girls were often left home alone in the evening. Thus, the evidence established that the Defendant had both the inclination and the opportunity to commit the crimes.
the dissent because, as discussed below, we do not have grave doubt that the errors had a substantial effect on the outcome. Grave doubt, by definition, does not refer to every
The problem facing us is the impact that the testimony of Dr. Ornelas, Ms. Baum, and Ms. Carlson might have had on the jury‘s deliberations under the circumstances outlined above. The admission of the expert conclusion of a highly credible physician that the girls were in fact sexually abused, coupled with the admission of the testimony of two counselors who assumed that the girls had been abused, and stated it as a fact, undoubtedly had some effect on the jury‘s deliberations. However, nearly all of Dr. Ornelas‘s, Ms. Baum‘s, and Ms. Carlson‘s testimony was properly admitted at trial, and, as discussed above, there is no evidentiary problem with the testimony of any of the other witnesses. Thus, only a small, albeit important, portion of the testimony admitted at trial was erroneously admitted.
Defendant calls to our attention several cases in which courts, when faced with similar situations, have found that the admission of expert testimony, in sexual abuse cases, which vouches for the credibility of other witnesses constitutes reversible or even plain error; and our own research has unearthed several other such cases. See, e.g., Whitted, 11 F.3d at 786-87 (plain error); United States v. Birdsall, 47 M.J. 404, 410 (C.A.A.F.1998); see also, level of doubt, and substantial influence, by definition, does not mean any or some influence.
However, after reading and re-reading the record, we are persuaded that the errors in admitting portions of the testimony of Dr. Ornelas, Ms. Baum, and Ms. Carlson did not affect a substantial right of a party. See
III. Insufficiency of the Evidence on Count I
Finally, we address Defendant‘s final argument—that the government presented insufficient evidence to convict him on Count I of the indictment. In conducting this inquiry, we must “determine whether the evidence, considered most favorably to the government, is sufficient to allow a reasonable jury to find [Defendant] guilty beyond a reasonable doubt” on Count I of the indictment. United States v. Perez, 959 F.2d 164, 168 (10th Cir.1992); see also United States v. Wacker, 72 F.3d 1453, 1462-63 (10th Cir.1995) (stating that all evidence is to be viewed “in the light most favorable to the government” and that “[w]e reverse only if no rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt“).
Defendant asserts that there is insufficient evidence in the record which points toward abuse of D.J. “on or about” October 1995. The record evidence on this point is as follows: D.J. stated at trial that Defendant had been abusing her “[s]ince [she] was small,” III R. at 358; D.J. testified that Defendant had abused her both before he went to prison and after he got out of prison; D.J. testified that Defendant abused her “more than five times,” and that not all of these times were in 1997, id. at 394; and J.J. testified that Defendant had abused D.J. when the girls were little.
However, there is no direct evidence of even any contact between Defendant and D.J. during the entire year 1995, let alone evidence of sexual abuse during October of that year. Defendant was in prison for the first half of 1995, and D.J. testified that she could not remember any abuse in 1995, or even being with Defendant at any time in 1995. In addition, Dr. Kern testified that Defendant, due to his prostate surgery, would likely have demonstrated signs of bleeding had he tried to ejaculate during the period between September 29, 1995, and late October 1995, and that no such signs of bleeding were apparent.
We have stated that, where, as here, time is not an element of the offense, and where “the phrase ‘on or about’ is used in an indictment in connection with a specific date ..., if the prosecution proves that the offense was committed within a few weeks of the date, the proof will be deemed sufficient to hold [the] defendant responsible for the charge.” Kokotan v. United States, 408 F.2d 1134, 1138 (10th Cir.1969). Indeed, “[a] variance between
However, no such evidence exists in this case. Had D.J. been able to more specifically recall abuse which could be indexed to late 1995, such as, for instance, abuse soon after Defendant‘s release from prison, or abuse while D.J. was in a certain grade in school or while D.J. had a certain schoolteacher, or abuse coincident with some family event, our conclusion would likely be different. On this record, however, we are compelled to conclude that the government has not met its burden of proving Defendant guilty on Count I. See Tsinhnahjinnie, 112 F.3d at 990-92 (finding the evidence insufficient in a similar case, where the alleged victim could not recall abuse in 1992 as charged in the indictment, and there was no other evidence of abuse in 1992). Accordingly, we reverse Defendant‘s conviction on Count I and remand to the district court for the entry of a judgment of acquittal.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the district court erred by admitting the conclusions of Dr. Ornelas that the children had in fact been sexually abused, the prejudicial statements of the counselors assuming that abuse had occurred, and the physical abuse-related conclusion of Ms. Carlson, but that these errors were harmless. Furthermore, we conclude that the government presented insufficient evidence to support the jury‘s verdict as to Count I of the indictment. Accordingly, we REVERSE Defendant‘s conviction on Count I, and REMAND the case to the district court with instructions to enter a judgment of acquittal on Count I.31 We AFFIRM Defendant‘s convictions on all other counts.
HOLLOWAY, Circuit Judge, concurring and dissenting:
I
I concur in Part I of the majority opinion and its conclusion that we cannot say the trial judge abused his discretion in admitting the evidence of Defendant‘s prior conviction in light of United States v. Castillo, 140 F.3d 874 (10th Cir.1998). I also join in Part III of the opinion, reversing the Defendant‘s conviction on Count I and remanding for the entry of a judgment of acquittal on that Count. I also concur
However, I disagree with the majority on several critical questions, which I shall briefly set out now with a full explanation to follow. First, I would hold that there was error in the admission of Dr. Junkins‘s testimony that sexual abuse “would” explain, and was a “unifying diagnosis” of, D.J.‘s symptoms and history. As explained below, I believe that the prejudicial effect of this crucial testimony was too great to have been cured by Dr. Junkins‘s later, subtle shift to say that sexual abuse “could” explain D.J.‘s problems. Therefore I cannot join Part II-B(1) in holding there was no error or only harmless error in the admission of the testimony of Dr. Junkins. Second, with or without consideration of the error in the admission of such testimony of Dr. Junkins and the other errors discussed below, I cannot concur in Part II-C of the opinion holding that the numerous substantial errors the majority concedes occurred in the admission of doctors’ and counselors’ testimony were harmless and must respectfully dissent from that holding. I would have grave doubt about the influence of this evidence on the jury‘s verdict, even if I were in agreement that the errors identified in the majority opinion were the only errors that occurred in this trial.
Finally, under the particular circumstances present in this case, I disagree with the majority‘s refusal to consider arguments made in the petition for rehearing, which the majority justifies on the grounds that the points were not previously raised on appeal. Defendant Charley‘s petition for rehearing on these points is based on an intervening change in the law: Kumho Tire Co. v. Carmichael, 526 U.S. 137, 119 S.Ct. 1167, 143 L.Ed.2d 238 (1999), made a clear holding that the trial court‘s “gatekeeping” obligation applies to all expert testimony, not just “scientific” testimony, id. at —, 119 S.Ct. at 1174, and thus overruled our narrower, contrary rule in Compton v. Subaru of America, Inc., 82 F.3d 1513, 1518, 1519 (10th Cir.1996). For the reasons explained below, I would hold that the issues are properly raised and would decide them in favor of the Defendant.
Accordingly, I would reverse the convictions on Counts II through VII and remand for further proceedings on those Counts.
II
A
I turn first to my disagreement with the harmless error conclusion of the majority opinion. As the opinion notes, we are instructed by Kotteakos v. United States, 328 U.S. 750, 66 S.Ct. 1239, 90 L.Ed. 1557 (1946), on the strict standard that applies for a conviction to be upheld despite error. The test that controls is clearly laid down by the Court:
But if one cannot say, with fair assurance, after pondering all that happened without stripping the erroneous action from the whole, that the judgment was not substantially swayed by the error, it is impossible to conclude that substantial rights were not affected. The inquiry cannot be merely whether there was enough to support the result, apart from the phase affected by the error. It is rather, even so, whether the error itself had substantial influence. If so, or if one is left in grave doubt, the conviction cannot stand.
328 U.S. at 765, 66 S.Ct. 1239. See also United States v. McVeigh, 153 F.3d 1166, 1203 (10th Cir.1998), cert. denied, — U.S. —, 119 S.Ct. 1148, 143 L.Ed.2d 215 (1999). And, as the majority further notes, the government ordinarily has the burden of proving that a non-constitutional error was harmless. United States v. Rivera, 900 F.2d 1462, 1469 n. 4 (10th Cir. 1990) (en banc). In the instant case, however, the government in briefing for this court took an all-or-nothing stand that
Against this backdrop I will explain my reasons for being unable to join the majority‘s harmless error conclusion. The prejudicial, substantial damage done to the Defendant‘s case by the erroneous admission of evidence is treated below.
1. Dr. Edward P. Junkins, Jr.
In Dr. Junkins‘s testimony, he first described the various symptoms for which he and others at the Crownpoint Healthcare Facility had seen D.J. in the past, before they were aware of any allegations of sexual abuse. These included several visits from April 7 through April 10, 1997. He was then asked if he had seen D.J. after April 10, 1997, and he said that he had. Then the following exchange occurred:
Q. And what, if anything, did she present to you that [sic] the point?
A. Yeah, it was at this point that I was asked to see her personally by her mother. Her mother caught me during my office time and said that there was something that she needed to tell me and that she had brought [D.J.] as well as her sister, [J.J.], and it was this visit on April the 11th that I became very concerned, and at the same time it became clear to me as a pediatrician what had been going on and what‘s the cause of all these problems.
II R. at 155 (emphasis added). Dr. Junkins went on to read from the form that he fills out in suspected cases of abuse, at the bottom of which, he testified, he had added, “This patient presented finally when she had been seen several times for abdominal pain, urinary tract infections, neurologic symptoms, enuresis.” This question and answer followed:
Q. What did you mean by that?
A. I meant to make it clear in the chart that I thought that this, the history offered, of suspected abuse by her, would help me explain a lot of the symptoms. It was a unifying diagnosis, and—and evaluated, I think, as being clear by all of the symptoms that she had had and the history that was offered. That‘s why I wrote that finally she had—she had something which I felt helped to bring all of these problems together.
Id. at 161-62 (emphasis added). As explained below, I believe the admission of this testimony by Dr. Junkins was in error for reasons the majority opinion gives as to Dr. Ornelas‘s opinion. Maj. op. at 1266-68.
The majority cites testimony by Dr. Junkins on re-direct examination which was qualified—that is, testimony that sexual abuse could explain the other symptoms D.J. had reported—as “the essence of Dr. Junkins’ opinion, and what the jury was left with by way of information.” Maj. op. at 1264-65. I am not persuaded that the later testimony cured the error in the earlier testimony which clearly stated that suspected abuse “would” help explain many symptoms. There was no emphasis or clarification making it plain to the jury that Dr. Junkins was really saying that abuse “could” explain the symptoms. Dr. Junkins did not disclaim his testimony given on direct examination, did not assert that he was modifying or restricting that testimony, and in fact did not even refer to his testimony on direct examination when he gave the testimony on re-direct examination. Lacking anything of substance on which to justify ignoring Dr. Junkins‘s testimony on direct examination, the majority resorts to a “characterization” of it (slip
Dr. Junkins‘s unqualified opinion was nearly as forceful as that of Dr. Ornelas and was admitted in error for the same reasons explained so clearly by the majority with respect to the latter.1 The majority is wrong in dismissing this testimony and analyzing the issues as if these prejudicial statements had not been uttered. Also troubling is the majority‘s facile statement that any error in the admission of Dr. Junkins‘s unqualified opinion was harmless. I disagree with this conclusion and I believe that the majority shortchanges Defendant Charley by here focusing on this error in isolation, ignoring it when undertaking the more comprehensive harmless error analysis in Part II-C of the opinion.
In sum, when considered with the other erroneously admitted evidence, I believe this error had substantial influence or leaves me in “grave doubt” whether the jury concluded that Dr. Junkins‘s diagnosis was that D.J. had in fact been sexually abused. I believe that admission of Dr. Junkins‘s opinion was error for the same reasons explained by the majority in its discussion of Dr. Ornelas‘s testimony. Maj. op. at 1266-68 (improper vouching for the testimony of D.J. and J.J. or error due to the lack of a reliability determination as required by Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 113 S.Ct. 2786, 125 L.Ed.2d 469 (1993), and Kumho).
The majority holds that Defendant Charley‘s Daubert objections as to certain expert testimony were forfeited by failure to raise them until the petition for rehearing. Maj. op. at 1264 n. 16. I disagree with that holding. However, I do not understand the majority to hold that the Daubert errors were forfeited as to the unqualified opinions given by Dr. Junkins as discussed above (testimony that history of abuse “would help [Junkins] explain a lot of the symptoms.“). Accordingly, I must also dissent from the majority‘s application of an erroneous standard of review and its implicit holding that the record in this case is adequate for consideration of reliability by this court, positions which are inconsistent with our precedents.
The majority states that the standard of review on the reliability issue is abuse of discretion. Maj. op. at 1261. This conflicts with our holding in United States v. Call, 129 F.3d 1402, 1405 (10th Cir.1997), that we first conduct de novo review as to whether the district court “properly followed the framework set forth in Daubert.” I would hold that the district court erred in not applying Daubert (even though the error was perhaps in reliance on Compton). On this record, this conclusion is inescapable.
Yet another problem lies in the majority‘s treatment of the Daubert issues. The majority states that the trial court‘s “evidentiary decisions do not warrant reversal if it determined, in ‘some apparent manner,’ that the expert testimony it admitted was reliable.” Maj. op. at 1261 n. 11. I must confess that I do not know how this statement relates to the majority‘s analysis, for I do not find that the majority opinion at any point actually shows that the trial court here determined in some apparent manner that any of the expert testimony admitted was reliable. I must disagree with any suggestion that this record supports a finding that any of these witnesses’ opinions were reliable under Daubert, and I am distressed by the majority‘s suggestion that the district judge here undertook some such reliability inquiry. It is painfully obvious that the trial judge made no such determinations. The government recognizes that “the district court did not make the preliminary determinations of relevance and reliability now required by Kumho Tire.” Opposition To Petition for Rehearing at 14. Instead, the
2. Dr. Renee Ornelas
I concur in the majority‘s analysis that there was error in admission of the testimony of Dr. Ornelas. I add my observations to explain why I reach a different conclusion on harmless error than the majority. I am particularly concerned about Dr. Ornelas‘s statement of her unqualified opinion of sexual abuse immediately in response to the early questions concerning D.J. The prosecutor‘s questioning of Dr. Ornelas began by eliciting general information on her position and procedures. Then the first specific question asked about this case was whether she had examined D.J., to which Dr. Ornelas responded that she had. This colloquy immediately followed:
Q. And what were your findings based upon her medical history?
A. Was that she had a normal genital exam and that—my final conclusion was that she had been sexually abused.
III R. at 317-18 (emphasis added).
I join the majority opinion‘s analysis and conclusions that there was error in the admission of Dr. Ornelas‘s testimony. As persuasively explained by the majority opinion, Dr. Ornelas was erroneously permitted to testify it was her unconditional opinion that both D.J. and J.J. had been sexually abused. III R. at 317-18; 323. As the majority opinion points out, if those conclusions were based on the girls’ symptoms, those
3. Joelle Baum and Kristine Lee Carlson
I agree with the majority opinion‘s holding that there also was error in the admission of portions of the testimony of the counselors, Ms. Baum and Ms. Carlson.2
Ms. Carlson‘s opinion that D.J.‘s symptoms were more consistent with those of children who have been sexually abused than with those of children who had witnessed physical abuse of their mother was erroneously admitted.3 No sufficient foundation had been laid for such statements, and no reliability analysis was made. Maj. op. at 1270. I agree and also join the holding that the counselors were erroneously permitted to give testimony that assumed the fact of abuse, which was for the jury to determine, and was “manifestly outside the counselors’ direct knowledge“; those statements were inadmissible under
As noted by the majority, Baum and Carlson did express other opinions. I would hold that these opinions were admitted in error because there was no Daubert screening of the opinions for the reliability of the methods, if any, used in reaching the witnesses’ conclusions. This brings me to the question whether this Daubert reliability objection to these witnesses’ opinions is properly before us. I am convinced that it is.
4. Effect of change in controlling law.
The majority applies Daubert, as made applicable to all expert testimony by Kumho, where the majority deems the point to have been properly raised. Thus the majority properly recognizes that Kumho should be applied by us as the prevailing law at the time of our decision. The government defends the trial judge‘s failure to perform the gatekeeper function as to Ms. Carlson‘s testimony that D.J.‘s symptoms were consistent with symptoms of child sexual abuse. It argues that the judge “understandably did not specifically apply Kumho Tire because it was not decided at the time of trial.” Opposition To Petition For Rehearing at 13-14.
However, the rights of the parties, under our precedent, should be decided under the case law in effect at the time of our decision. Peterson v. Shearson/American Express, Inc., 849 F.2d 464, 466 (10th Cir.1988). Thus the failure to consider and decide reliability is not justified. Moreover, no defense for that failure can be grounded on a suggestion that the trial judge simply did not “specifically apply Kumho Tire,” by chapter and verse. The error was in not doing any reliability assessment under Daubert or Kumho standards. What the majority does not come to grips with is the impact of Compton v. Subaru, which was the prevailing law in our Circuit until months after oral argument of this appeal. In Compton we had held that Daubert applied only to testimony “based upon a particular methodology or technique,” 82 F.3d at 1519, not expert testimony based on the witnesses‘s training and experience.
In light of Compton, and its being overruled by Kumho, I believe that Defendant should be allowed to assert his Daubert argument as to all of the opinion testimony. To hold, as the majority decision does, that Charley cannot raise additional Daubert issues for the first time in his petition for rehearing here is to ignore the precedent of Compton v. Subaru, to hold counsel to an impractical and unfair standard for raising issues controlled by adverse
The rights of the parties, under our precedent, should be decided by this appellate court under the case law in effect as the time of our decision. Thus the sufficiency or defects in the records pertaining to the expert opinions and the assessment of their reliability should be weighed under Daubert and Kumho. See, e. g., United States v. Byers, 740 F.2d 1104, 1115 n. 11 (D.C.Cir.1984) (en banc); Nations v. Sun Oil Co., 695 F.2d 933, 936 (5th Cir.1983). In Byers, it appears that all twelve members of the court accepted the general proposition that an intervening change in the law may justify raising an issue for the first time on petition for rehearing, although two members of the court were of the view that in the exercise of judicial discretion the court should not have considered the issue raised there. See id. at 1132-35 (Robinson, J., concurring in the judgment).
Precedent of our court supports permitting a party to raise a new issue on appeal, contrary to the general rule, because of an intervening change in the law. E.g., Peterson v. Shearson/American Express, Inc., 849 F.2d 464, 466 (10th Cir.1988) (absent injustice, an appellate court should apply case law in effect when its decision is rendered; before new decision, it would have been difficult to argue that assertion of new rule had a basis in existing law, as required by
[W]e have frequently allowed parties to raise issues for the first time on appeal when there has been a significant change in the law since the trial. This principle has most often been applied in proceedings relating to criminal prosecutions, but it has also been invoked in purely civil cases. The principle has not been limited to constitutional issues, and the Court has permitted consideration on appeal of statutory arguments not presented below. In deciding whether such new arguments can be considered, we have primarily considered three factors: first, whether there has been a material change in the law; second, whether assertion of the issue earlier would have been futile; and third, whether an important public interest is served by allowing consideration of the issue.
Standard Industries, Inc. v. Tigrett Industries, Inc., 397 U.S. 586, 587-88, 90 S.Ct. 1310, 25 L.Ed.2d 590 (1970) (Black, J., dissenting, joined by Douglas, J.). And Judge Posner has observed for the Seventh Circuit:
A party should be allowed to take advantage of a decision rendered during the pendency of his case, even if he had not reserved the point decided, if the decision could not reasonably have been anticipated. A contrary rule would induce parties to drown the trial judge with reservations.
McKnight v. General Motors Corp., 908 F.2d 104, 108 (7th Cir.1990).
In sum, the circumstances and precedents support the right of Defendant to have us consider this expanded Daubert and Kumho issue here. Doing so, I find fatal defects as to expert opinions admitted in evidence.
B
Because of the combined impact of the evidence outlined above, I cannot agree with the harmless error conclusion of the majority. The several prejudicial errors at trial convince me that we cannot say with fair assurance, as Kotteakos and our precedent require, that after pondering all that happened, we believe the judgment was not substantially swayed by the errors that occurred. In any event, the damage done by those errors leaves me in grave doubt so that I cannot agree to let the convictions on Counts II through VII stand. Kotteakos, 328 U.S. at 765, 66 S.Ct. 1239.
As the majority opinion notes, the Defendant took the stand in his own defense and categorically denied the abuse of either D.J. or J.J. charged against him. IV R. 569, 571, 573-74, 575-76, 579-80. The opinion acknowledges that there were no eyewitnesses to the alleged misdeeds. Maj. op. at 1272. Furthermore, although repeated physical abuse of both D.J. and J.J. was alleged, there was no physical evidence of abuse noted, id., despite physical examinations of both girls by two pediatricians called by the government, Dr. Junkins and Dr. Ornelas. II R. at 142; III R. 313. Dr. Junkins did comment from his April 11, 1997, examination that D.J. had an abnormality, “a little small irregularity at the base of the hymen.” He just used his naked eyes with no means of magnification. II R. 163. Dr. Junkins said that unless a child is examined within 72 hours of an act, the findings are overwhelmingly normal. Id. at 166.
Dr. Ornelas testified that D.J. had “a normal genital exam,” III R. 317, but added in her opening remarks that “my final conclusion was that she had been sexually abused.” Id. at 317-18. She said “there weren‘t any scars or tears or lacerations or defects in the hymen, those kinds of things.” Id. at 321. She made her abuse diagnosis because of the way she said the contact occurred, by “labial coitus.” Id. at 322. Dr. Ornelas said that J.J. “also had a normal examination” but said she concluded that J.J. was also sexually abused. Id. at 323. This was based on J.J.‘s “history that we had from her sister” and from other information. Id. Doubt about what was related by J.J. is raised by the testimony of Dr. Ornelas explaining that children want to be polite saying “yes” or “no” to everything, but relating this information about J.J.‘s interview: “And so what [J.J.] said in this case was that she had just been playing, that she wasn‘t serious and that, in essence, nothing happened, and she didn‘t want to talk about it.” Id. at 324 (emphasis added). Dr. Ornelas said this did not change her diagnosis as to J.J.
As to D.J., Dr. Ornelas testified that from her examination of the hymen, the vagina, the clitoris, the labia minora and labia majora, and the posterior fourchette—she found all were within normal limits with no tags, no tears, no bruising and no discharge. III R. at 332. J.J.‘s examination by Dr. Ornelas also was completely, in every regard, within normal limits. Id. at 333.
Thus at trial substantial doubt was raised about the reported sexual abuse of D.J. and J.J., considering the record as a whole. Their own testimony, if truthful and accurate, did present a shocking view of Defendant Charley‘s conduct and laid a strong basis for the prosecution‘s case. Nevertheless, our question is “not whether, omitting the inadmissible statements, the record contains sufficient evidence for a jury to convict the defendant,” United States v. Tome, 61 F.3d 1446, 1455 (10th Cir. 1996), as the majority opinion notes. Even where the government‘s case against a defendant in a child sexual abuse case was “very strong,” the Eighth Circuit held such sufficiency of the evidence alone was not enough to support a finding of harmless error. United States v. Azure, 801 F.2d at 341. We must determine whether in light of the whole record, the erroneously admitted evidence substantially influenced the outcome of Defendant‘s trial, or whether we are left in “grave doubt” as to whether it had such an effect. Tome, 61 F.3d at 1455. If the answer to either inquiry is yes, the errors require reversal for a new trial. Id.
The review of the record made carefully by the majority opinion and the further references to the evidence I have presented above compel me to respectfully dissent as to the harmless error holding. Because of the lack of physical evidence, and the absence of other witnesses to the alleged conduct, this case turned almost entirely on the credibility of D.J. and J.J. By the time the two victims took the stand, their credibility had been improperly enhanced by the testimony of four witnesses who, although not formally proffered as experts, likely were very impressive to the jurors because of their professional standing. Whether the improperly admitted opinion evidence is considered as vouching for D.J.‘s and J.J.‘s testimony, or as lacking the proper foundation of a reliability determination by the judge, is not of controlling importance, once we reach the stage of determining whether the errors were harmless. Either way the expert opinions are analyzed, the result was unfairly prejudicial to Defendant.
Although I cannot say that Mr. Charley likely would have been acquitted if not for the erroneously admitted testimony, nevertheless I cannot say that the errors did not have substantial influence on the verdicts. In any event, I am in grave doubt as to the latter question, and accordingly I cannot hold that the errors were harmless. Therefore, I respectfully dissent from the affirmance of the convictions on Counts II through VII. I would reverse those convictions and remand for a new trial free of the serious errors in the admission of testimony.
UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
COLORADO SUPREME COURT, Grievance Committee of The Colorado Supreme Court, and Colorado Supreme Court Disciplinary Counsel, Defendants-Appellees,
No. 98-1081.
United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit.
Sept. 1, 1999.
Notes
So since Daubert if we had notice they intended to use them as experts we would be prepared to challenge their expertise on the basis that it‘s not scientifically reliable nor is it necessarily accepted in the community, the basis for their opinions.
Id. at 118. When the mental health therapists’ testimony, “art therapy,” and the children‘s drawings were brought up, defense counsel Finzel objected: “[I]t‘s my position that that could never pass the Daubert test for
Although relevant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.
In a criminal case in which the defendant is accused of an offense of child molestation, evidence of the defendant‘s commission of another offense or offenses of child molestation is admissible, and may be considered for its bearing on any matter to which it is relevant.
If scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise.
It is axiomatic that “[p]etitions for rehearing are permitted to enable parties to notify, and to correct, errors of fact or law on the issues already presented; they are not meant to permit parties to assert new grounds for relief.” Sierra Club v. Hodel, 848 F.2d 1068, 1100-01 (10th Cir.1988) (per curiam) (also stating that “[a] party cannot on petition for rehearing shift his position” (citation omitted)).[Dr. Junkins] testified, as is allowed by law, that his findings and review of the [medical] history were consistent with allegations of sexual abuse.... We did not object to that particular testimony, and I would say right now that we don‘t object to it today. That is permitted by law. It was his going to the ultimate conclusion, where he said that the “unifying diagnosis” was that sexual abuse was the cause of the children‘s symptoms [that was objectionable].... The case that I base my entire argument on is [Whitted].
Thus, we do not purport to make any kind of independent appellate determination that such “consistent with” statements—or any other statements, for that matter—pass muster under Daubert or Kumho Tire. We were not even asked to make such a determination with respect to the “consistent with” statements. Indeed, we decline Defendant‘s invitation, raised for the first time on appeal in a petition for rehearing, to evaluate the reliability of these statements under Daubert. We cite Whitted and the other Eighth Circuit cases because Defendant relied on them so heavily, and because we disagree with Defendant (and with the dissent) in our characterization of Dr. Junkins’ testimony. Under our characterization, Dr. Junkins substantially presented “consistent with” testimony, and was not testifying that the girls were in fact abused. Thus, under the very cases cited to us by Defendant, such testimony is admissible. Defendant‘s attempt, at the rehearing stage, to introduce new issues into this case is unavailing.
III R. at 351 (emphasis added).Q. Okay. So you‘re saying that painful urination would be a symptom consistent with sex abuse?
A. Yes. It certainly could be.
