People of Michigan v. John Butsinas ( 2018 )


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  •                            STATE OF MICHIGAN
    COURT OF APPEALS
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,                                    UNPUBLISHED
    January 23, 2018
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v                                                                   No. 327796
    Macomb Circuit Court
    JOHN BUTSINAS,                                                      LC No. 2014-001163-FH
    Defendant-Appellant.
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v                                                                   No. 327799
    Macomb Circuit Court
    JOHN BUTSINAS,                                                      LC No. 2014-000167-FC
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Before: SHAPIRO, P.J., and GLEICHER and O’BRIEN, JJ.
    O’BRIEN, J. (concurring in part and dissenting in part).
    The majority’s holding is limited to (1) affirming defendant’s conviction for witness
    intimidation in Docket No. 327796 and (2) vacating defendant’s CSC convictions and remanding
    for a new trial in Docket No. 327799 because the prosecution allegedly withheld two CPS
    reports, which the majority believes constituted a Brady1 violation. I agree that there was
    sufficient evidence to support defendant’s conviction for witness intimidation, but I disagree that
    defendant’s CSC convictions should be vacated. Therefore, with regard to that portion of the
    majority’s holding, I respectfully dissent.
    This Court reviews due process claims, such as allegations of a Brady violation, de novo.
    People v Dimambro, 
    318 Mich App 204
    , 212; 897 NW2d 233 (2016). “[T]he components of a
    1
    Brady v Maryland, 
    373 US 83
    ; 
    83 S Ct 1194
    ; 
    10 L Ed 2d 215
     (1963).
    -1-
    ‘true Brady violation,’ are that: (1) the prosecution has suppressed evidence; (2) that is favorable
    to the accused; and (3) that is material.” People v Chenault, 
    495 Mich 142
    , 150; 845 NW2d 731
    (2014).
    Accepting the majority’s conclusion that the prosecution should be held responsible for
    possessing the 2010 and 2013 CPS reports2 and that those reports should have been provided to
    defense counsel at trial, a new trial is not necessary because the reports are not material when
    viewed in totality. “To establish materiality, a defendant must show that there is a reasonable
    probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding
    would have been different.” Chenault, 495 Mich at 150 (citation and quotation marks omitted).
    “ ‘A “reasonable probability” is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the
    outcome.’ ” Id. quoting United States v Bagley, 
    473 US 667
    , 682; 
    105 S Ct 3375
    ; 
    87 L Ed 2d 481
     (1985). “The question is whether, in the absence of the suppressed evidence, the defendant
    ‘received a fair trial, understood as a trial resulting in a verdict worthy of confidence.’ ”
    Chenault, 495 Mich at 150-151, quoting Kyles v Whitley, 
    514 US 419
    , 434; 
    115 S Ct 1555
    ; 
    131 L Ed 2d 490
     (1995). In other words, “the materiality inquiry is not just a matter of determining
    whether, after discounting the inculpatory evidence in light of the undisclosed evidence, the
    remaining evidence is sufficient to support the jury’s conclusions,” but rather “the question is
    whether ‘the favorable evidence could reasonably be taken to put the whole case in such a
    different light as to undermine confidence in the verdict.’ ” Strickler v Greene, 
    527 US 263
    , 290;
    
    119 S Ct 1936
    ; 
    144 L Ed 2d 286
     (1999), quoting Kyles, 
    514 US at 435
    .
    First, addressing the 2013 report, nothing in the report can reasonably be taken to put the
    case in a different light so as to undermine confidence in the jury verdict. The majority first
    points to an inconsistency between Abro’s trial testimony and his statement in the 2013 report
    regarding why Kr was not taken to Care House. This information could certainly have provided
    defendant with impeachment material, but the majority does not explain the significance of this
    material. The only significance of taking Kr to Care House was that she would have been
    2
    I find the majority’s extensive discussion about whether the trial court possessed the 2010 CPS
    report to be unnecessary given its conclusion that the government is held responsible for CPS
    reports, regardless of whether their existence was known to the prosecution. Moreover, this
    discussion is made even more unnecessary given the lack of clarity in the record. While the
    record supports that that trial court should have reviewed the 2010 report, the trial court never
    explicitly stated that it reviewed the 2010 report, and the record is anything but clear as to which
    report the trial court actually possessed. In fact, the record is so unclear that, at oral arguments
    before any party was aware that the 2010 report actually existed, defendant’s appellate counsel
    admitted that it was unclear which report the trial court reviewed at trial, and she went on to state
    that she suspected that there was no 2010 report. After the 2010 report was discovered,
    defendant’s appellate counsel changed her position and asserted in a motion that “[i]t is clear
    from the record that both the prosecutor and the trial court had the 2010 CPS report.” (Emphasis
    added). Furthermore, the majority seems to take a contradictory position by crediting an
    “untainted” statement made by the prosecution before the 2010 report was discovered, while
    ignoring one made by defendant.
    -2-
    forensically interviewed, and defense counsel already emphasized at trial that Abro did not have
    Kr forensically interviewed and instead chose to conduct his own interview. While any
    impeachment evidence may affect a witness’s credibility, this impeachment evidence would have
    done so only minimally at best. More importantly, Abro’s testimony itself was largely
    inconsequential to the allegations in this case, and the majority does not contend otherwise.
    Further, the fact pointed to by the majority that Abro did not want a forensic interview conducted
    in Texas was in the Texas CPS report that was provided to defendant, so defendant already had
    this information at trial. 3
    The majority also identifies an inconsistency between Kr’s trial testimony and
    information from the 2013 report: Kr testified “that the assaults occurred at night while everyone
    was sleeping, but she told Abro [in the 2013 report] that they occurred while her mother was at
    work.” Again, while the majority is correct that this would have provided defendant with
    impeachment material, defense counsel already extensively impeached Kr with prior inconsistent
    statements at trial, including numerous inconsistent statements from her interview with Abro.
    Defense counsel also discussed those inconsistencies at length with Abro during his testimony.
    This impeachment material would have, at best, minimally impacted Kr’s credibility.
    Lastly, the majority points to an excerpt from the 2013 report where the CPS worker
    detailed how Ka contacted the family that Kr was staying with in Texas so frequently that the
    family was “considering getting a PPO against Ka.”4 I am puzzled how this information in any
    way “suggests that Ka harbored a bias against defendant.” This writer finds the excerpt quoted
    by the majority to be immaterial. In sum, from the 23 page 2013 report, the majority only points
    to two inconsequential pieces of impeachment evidence, which do not, in any conceivable way,
    undermine confidence in the jury verdict.
    Turning to the 2010 CPS report, contrary to the majority’s conclusion, the report does not
    undermine confidence in the jury verdict because information in the report is cumulative to the
    information presented at trial. The majority points out that the 2010 report indicated that the
    victim did not disclose that she was being sexually abused during an interview with a CPS
    worker in 2010. However, all of the witnesses testified that the victim never disclosed to anyone
    any information regarding sexual abuse in 2010. This was a delayed disclosure case. The victim
    alleged that the abuse began when she was eight or nine and continued until she was 12 years
    old, and she admitted that she never told anyone. Further, Ka testified that she reached out to
    CPS in 2010 to report her suspicions and that nothing came out of her complaint; defense
    counsel used this to his advantage during closing arguments by repeatedly emphasizing that there
    3
    As the majority acknowledges, the statement in the 2013 report that “Kr was forensically
    interviewed in [Michigan]” was apparently not true. Kr was only interviewed by Abro in 2013.
    The Texas CPS report, which defense counsel possessed at trial, accurately reflected this.
    4
    In the 2013 report, it reflects that Laura Daugherty explained to the CPS worker that Ka was
    contacting her husband on his work phone, that her husband was required to answer those calls,
    and that doing so placed her husband in a “dangerous situation due to his job as an officer,”
    which led them to consider the PPO.
    -3-
    was a 2010 CPS complaint made regarding defendant and that, because nothing came from it,
    defendant was vindicated. Thus, the fact that the victim did not disclose defendant’s sexual
    abuse to a CPS worker who questioned her about defendant in 2010 is consistent with the
    testimony at trial that she did not disclose the abuse to anybody in 2010, 5 and defense counsel
    already placed before the jury the fact that nothing came out of the 2010 CPS complaint.
    The majority also points to the fact that, in the 2010 CPS report, “Kr denied that there
    was ‘anything she did not like’ about defendant.” However, the victim testified at trial that she
    did not like defendant but acted like nothing was wrong, and continued to act like nothing was
    wrong after her family moved in with defendant. The fact that she told the CPS worker in 2010
    that she liked defendant is consistent with this testimony. 6
    The majority also asserts that “[t]he results of Kr’s 2010 forensic interview contradicted
    Kr’s trial testimony.” However, based on my review of the report, nothing in the 2010 report
    supports the majority’s assertion.7 Everything from the 2010 report corroborates Kr’s trial
    testimony. The majority does not cite a single example to support its assertion that the report
    contradicted Kr’s testimony. I strongly disagree with the majority’s conclusion that a Brady
    violation exists where there is not a single contradictory statement in the suppressed evidence,
    5
    I am puzzled by the majority’s summation of my argument; it states that I would hold “that the
    CPS reports were immaterial [because] Kr’s denials of sexual contact during the forensic exam
    were consistent with her testimony that fear of defendant kept her from disclosing the abuse.”
    This is not my argument. Rather, in my opinion, the 2010 CPS report is consistent with Kr’s
    testimony that she never disclosed sexual abuse to anyone in 2010, regardless of her reason for
    not doing so. In fact, I can find no information in the 2010 CPS report that is inconsistent with
    Kr’s testimony, and, if these inconsistencies exist, the majority does not raise them in its opinion.
    6
    In its materiality analysis, the majority states that the 2010 report “would not have been
    used . . . merely to impeach Ka or Kr.” The majority never specifies how, or even whether, the
    2010 report was material with respect to Ka’s testimony. Presumably, the majority is referring to
    its earlier statement that the 2010 report “exposed bias on the part of Ka that could have been
    used by the defense during Ka’s cross-examination,” and this was material because the “case
    hinged on Kr’s credibility, bolstered by Ka’s testimony.” If this is part of the majority’s
    reasoning for why the 2010 report is material, it completely ignores the fact that Ka testified at
    trial that she did not like being around defendant and that she “would get into arguments” with
    him. More poignantly, the majority ignores that, during closing arguments, defense counsel
    repeatedly emphasized that Ka did not like defendant. Thus, Ka’s “bias” was clearly already
    before the jury. The majority points to no statements from the 2010 report that contradicted Ka’s
    trial testimony, and any exculpatory statement from Kr about Ka in the report was cumulative to
    the evidence already before the jury.
    7
    In relevant part, the 2010 report found that “there is not a preponderance of evidence that there
    has been . . . sexual abuse in the home.” Simply put, the 2010 report reflects that the forensic
    interview and accompanying investigation did not reveal any signs of sexual abuse. This in no
    way “contradicts” Kr’s trial testimony that the abuse was occurring but she did not tell anyone.
    -4-
    see, e.g., Kyles, 
    514 US at 442-443
     (finding a Brady violation when the government suppressed
    statements made by two key witnesses to police immediately after the crime that were “vastly
    different” from their trial testimony and tended to exculpate the defendant), especially in light of
    the other evidence against defendant, as will be explained, see, e.g., Strickler, 
    527 US at 293-294
    (finding no Brady violation where evidence was suppressed that could have been used to
    “severely impeach[]” the “eyewitness testimony” that “provided the only disinterested, narrative
    account of what transpired” because, due to the other evidence against defendant, the suppressed
    material did not cast the case in a different light).
    I disagree with the majority’s assertion that “the evidence against defendant was far from
    overwhelming.” The victim provided ample testimony of defendant’s guilt. While this
    testimony rested on her credibility, defense counsel used police reports and preliminary exam
    testimony to impeach the victim on many small details, sufficiently bringing Kr’s credibility
    before the jury. The majority also ignores the other evidence of defendant’s guilt. Defendant’s
    guilt was evidenced by his actions towards the Dunns to prevent Margaret from testifying against
    him following Margaret’s disclosure to CPS,8 and by defendant’s proposals to Marrow to pay
    him to prevent witnesses from testifying against defendant. Further, and importantly, the
    majority ignores the victim’s mother’s testimony of three corroborating events she had
    knowledge of, which both gave credibility to Kr and evidenced defendant’s guilt.
    The majority focuses its materiality analysis of the 2010 report on the fact that, unlike
    Kr’s nondisclosure to everyone else in 2010, the nondisclosure in the 2010 report occurred
    during a forensic interview. The majority reasons that
    armed with the report, defendant likely would have called the CPS forensic
    examiner to educate the jury regarding the techniques routinely employed to elicit
    truthful information in similar circumstances. Alternatively, defendant would
    have called his own expert witness to present this testimony. In either event,
    defendant could have used the CPS reports to develop a defense strategy focusing
    on the general accuracy and reliability of forensic interviews and interviewing
    techniques.
    However, this reasoning for finding a Brady violation “is based on mere speculation, in violation
    of the standards” established by the United States Supreme Court. Wood v Bartholomew, 
    516 US 1
    , 6; 
    116 S Ct 7
    ; 
    133 L Ed 2d 1
     (1995). Moreover, I do not understand how defense counsel
    could have developed a new “defense” based on the forensic interview results; were defense
    counsel to “focus[] on the general accuracy and reliability of forensic interviews and
    forensic-interviewing techniques,” all that defense counsel would do is bring Kr’s credibility into
    8
    During the Ginther hearing, defendant’s trial counsel did not agree that this case was based
    solely on Kr’s credibility due to the fact that defendant “threatened the Dunns.” According to
    defendant’s trial counsel, the Dunns’s testimony showed that defendant “was volatile, he lashed
    out, he was uncontrollable, he was irrational and he’s making threats and talking about millions
    of dollars.” The majority completely ignores defendant’s actions that evidence his guilt after he
    was charged in this case.
    -5-
    question, which was the defense already used at trial. Thus, the strategy speculated at by the
    majority is “consistent with [defendant’s] preestablished defense” and does not support that a
    new trial is warranted. 
    Id. at 6-7
    .
    Moreover, I am not in agreement with the majority’s conclusion, unsupported by any
    caselaw, that withholding the results of an exculpatory forensic interview, without any other
    exculpatory evidence, constitutes a Brady violation. Without a doubt, Kr’s “testimony was
    prejudicial in the sense that it made [defendant’s] conviction more likely than if she had not
    testified, and discrediting her testimony might have changed the outcome of the trial,” but this
    “is not the standard that [defendant] must satisfy in order to obtain relief.” Strickler, 
    527 US at 289
    . And I certainly agree that, had the 2010 report been disclosed, “there is a reasonable
    possibility” that a different result would have produced; however, again, this is not the correct
    standard. 
    Id. at 291
    . The proper standard for determining whether defendant is entitled to a new
    trial based on the withholding of exculpatory evidence is whether there is a “reasonable
    probability of a different result,” which is simply not present in this case. 
    Id.
    While I do not intend to in any way detract from the importance of forensic interviews,
    there is no consensus regarding the efficacy of forensic interviews, even when properly
    conducted,9 and I do not believe that defendant is entitled to a new trial in this case solely
    9
    For example, in one study of the disclosure process of sexually abused children, “nearly eighty
    percent of the children denied their abuse or were tentative about disclosing” during “early
    therapy interviews.” Myers, Saywitz & Goodman, Psychological research on children as
    witnesses: Practical implications for forensic interviews and courtroom testimony, 28 Pac L J 3,
    45 (1996-1997), citing Sorensen & Snow, How Children Tell: The Process of Disclosure in
    Child Sexual Abuse, 70 Child Welfare 3, 11 (1991). In another study, 28 children with sexually
    transmitted diseases “were interviewed by a social worker who was ‘trained in abuse disclosure
    techniques,’ ” and “[o]nly forty-three percent of the children ‘made a verbal disclosure of sexual
    abuse in the initial interview.’ ” Psychological research on children as witnesses, 28 Pac L J at
    46, quoting Lawson & Chaffin, False Negatives in Sexual Abuse Disclosure Interviews:
    Incidence and Influence of Caretaker’s Belief in Abuse Cases of Accidental Abuse Discovery by
    Diagnosis of STD, 7 J. Interpersonal Violence 532 (1992). That same study provided the
    following:
    Surveys of adult survivors indicate that they rarely reported sexual abuse when
    they were children, and the child abuse field has continued to struggle with
    questions regarding “hidden victims.” The present findings provide additional
    reason to be concerned about underidentification of sexual abuse in the current
    generation of young child victims. Even when directly interviewed by a trained
    specialist who was sure the child had been molested, the majority of these . . .
    victims did not make even minimal disclosure . . . . [False Negatives in Sexual
    Abuse Disclosure Interviews, 7 J. Interpersonal Violence at 536.]
    By presenting these studies, I am not attempting to undermine forensic interviewing or the
    methodologies behind it, but rather am merely illustrating why we should consider what
    -6-
    because the results of a forensic interview were part of the 2010 report. To bolster its reasoning
    that the inclusion of the forensic interview in the 2010 report undermines its confidence in the
    jury’s verdict, the majority cites to two excepts from the introduction of the Michigan
    Governor’s Task Force on Forensic Interview Protocol; an excerpt from the introduction of the
    American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children practice guide to forensic interviewing
    children suspected of child abuse; and a sentence from the overview section of Child Welfare
    Information Gateway’s factsheet on forensic interviewing. All of these quotes from the
    introduction sections of their respective sources relate to the goals of forensic interviewing.
    While these goals are laudable, they are only goals. The majority provides no caselaw, nor any
    other authority, to support its assertion that forensic interviews are the best “potential source of
    evidence . . . pertinent to whether [a victim’s] allegations should [be] believed.”
    Rather than focusing solely on the goals and principles of forensic interviewing and
    forensic interviewing techniques, I believe that the proper approach in determining the 2010
    report’s materiality is to consider what actual information from the 2010 report would have been
    placed before the jury. There is nothing in the 2010 report that contradicts what was already
    before the jury. The 2010 report contained information that Kr stated that Ka did not like
    defendant, that Kr stated that she liked defendant, and that Kr did not disclose any sexual abuse
    in 2010 during an interview with a CPS worker. At trial, Ka admitted that she did not like
    defendant, Kr stated that she acted as though she liked defendant, all witnesses testified that Kr
    did not disclose any sexual assault to anyone in 2010, and defense counsel argued during closing
    that a complaint with CPS was filed against defendant in 2010 and nothing came from it.
    This, taken together with the minor impeachment material from the 2013 report, is not
    sufficient to undermine my confidence in the verdict in light of the other evidence: Kr presented
    ample evidence of defendant’s guilt and her credibility was already sufficiently brought before
    the jury; Kr’s mother provided three corroborating incidents that gave credibility to Kr and
    evidenced defendant’s guilt; and defendant’s guilt was evidenced by his actions towards the
    Dunns to prevent Margaret from testifying and his proposals to Marrow to pay him to prevent
    witnesses from testifying. Because the information in the 2010 CPS report was already before
    the jury, the evidence in the 2013 report provided only minor impeachment material, and in light
    of the other evidence in this case, there is not a reasonable probability that the result of trial
    would have been different had the suppressed documents been disclosed to defendant.
    Because I would leave untouched the jury’s verdict in this case, I respectfully dissent to
    the majority’s finding of a Brady violation.
    /s/ Colleen A. O'Brien
    substantive information was contained in the 2010 report rather than focusing solely on the
    forensic interview.
    -7-