State of Iowa v. Patrick Michael Dudley ( 2014 )


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  •                        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 3-1084 / 12-0729
    Filed February 5, 2014
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    PATRICK MICHAEL DUDLEY,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Marion County, Darrell J. Goodhue,
    Judge.
    Patrick Dudley appeals his judgment and sentence for two counts of
    second-degree sexual abuse. REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    Kent A. Simmons, Davenport, for appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Sheryl A. Soich, Assistant Attorney
    General, Ed Bull, County Attorney, and Nicole Olson, Assistant County Attorney,
    for appellee.
    Heard by Danilson, C.J., and Vaitheswaran and Mullins, JJ. Goodhue,
    S.J., takes no part.
    2
    VAITHESWARAN, J.
    Patrick Dudley appeals his judgment and sentence for two counts of
    second-degree sexual abuse.         He raises several arguments in support of
    reversal, one of which we find dispositive: whether the district court abused its
    discretion in admitting a psychologist’s opinion that a child’s physical
    manifestations and symptoms “were consistent with a child dealing with sexual
    abuse trauma.”
    I.     Background Facts and Proceedings
    Patrick Dudley and his wife took their nine-year-old granddaughter to visit
    a friend.   After returning from the trip, the child told her mother that Dudley
    molested her.
    The State charged Dudley with two counts of second-degree sexual
    abuse. Dudley moved to enforce a claimed agreement with the prosecutor to
    dismiss the charges if he passed a polygraph test before the prosecutor spoke to
    the complaining witness.      Following a hearing at which Dudley’s attorney
    testified, the district court denied the motion.        The court concluded the
    prosecutor’s offer was withdrawn before Dudley took the polygraph test.
    Prior to trial, Dudley filed a motion in limine challenging proposed
    testimony from the complaining witness’s psychologist, Mary Casey.           Dudley
    argued that Casey would impermissibly vouch for the child’s credibility.        The
    district court denied the motion.
    At trial, the State called several witnesses, including the child, the child’s
    mother, the psychologist, and a neighbor to whom the child narrated the incident.
    Before the psychologist testified, the child’s mother painted a “before and after”
    3
    picture of the child, stating she changed from a “girly girl” to “more of a tomboy.”
    She recounted that the child turned white when she saw the cars her grandfather
    drove.
    Dudley testified and denied the allegations. Following trial, the jury found
    Dudley guilty as charged. Dudley appealed.
    II.      Agreement to Dismiss Charges
    Dudley contends the district court should have granted his motion to
    enforce an “executory” agreement to dismiss the charges. As noted, the State’s
    offer to dismiss the charges was predicated on Dudley’s completion of a
    polygraph test before the prosecutor spoke to the complaining witness. Dudley
    did not complete the test within that time frame. Because the offer was off the
    table when he took the test, the district court did not abuse its discretion in
    denying the defense motion.
    III.     Admission of Expert Testimony
    At trial, Casey testified that she began treating the child based on
    “concerns over her well-being due to child sexual abuse.”            The treatment
    spanned thirteen sessions and resulted in diagnoses of posttraumatic stress
    disorder and generalized anxiety disorder. Casey defined posttraumatic stress
    syndrome as “a disorder that happens because of a traumatic event,” is initially
    characterized by “intrusive thoughts centered around the traumatic event,” and is
    followed by “a sense of avoidance and numbing.” She went on to state that the
    physical manifestations of posttraumatic stress disorder would be “different in
    degree” depending on the nature of the trauma. When asked about “the telltale
    triggers for child or adolescent sexual abuse,” she stated, “The number one
    4
    would be if they actually saw the perpetrator or if they anticipate that a certain
    event or somewhere where they might be in the general public where they
    anticipate that they may see that person, if there’s something that they may
    identify with the person such as the person’s car.” She continued, “[T]he one
    thing we have to remember is it depends on the relationship that that person has
    with the perpetrator and how well they know that person, and then those triggers
    . . . can vary or be more severe.” Casey agreed with the prosecutor that sexual
    abuse victims in the child or adolescent range “frequently change their dress or
    appearance,” going to the extremes of either layering their clothes or becoming
    “quite provocative.” She also opined that numbing, characterized by constriction
    of the individual’s facial muscles, was “consistent with child or adolescent sexual
    abuse “if the child is experiencing posttraumatic stress disorder.”
    At this juncture, Casey was asked, “Did you observe changes in [the
    child’s] physical manifestation or the way she was presenting herself while you
    worked with her?”       Over defense counsel’s objection, Casey responded,
    “Definitely constricted affect, kind of a slower—you know, when I first met her,
    she was very constricted and slow in her response. She was layered. She had
    lots of little layers, you know, a couple tanks and, you know, sweater, and she
    typically, you know, didn’t do that. Her clothing changed several times actually.”
    Casey also testified that she had seen changes in hairstyles among
    adolescents or children who experienced posttraumatic stress syndrome as it
    related to sexual abuse. She agreed that this was “consistent with the concept”
    of changes in personal behavior. When asked if she observed the child “have
    5
    changes in hairstyling or length,” she responded, “Well, I haven’t thought of this
    but she did. She cut her hair. She had her hair cut. She wanted her hair cut.”
    Next, Casey was asked whether anniversaries were important triggers.
    She responded, “Yeah, it’s a trigger.” She was then asked, “[D]id [the child]
    demonstrate any trauma or trigger around [the anniversary date of the incident]?”
    She responded, “[H]er clothing was very different. We didn’t talk about the date
    or anniversary, but she was dressed very boyish. She was in . . . clothes that
    I’ve never seen her before . . . baggy clothes, baggy sweatshirt.” She agreed
    with the prosecutor that this was very “relevant and noteworthy.”
    Finally, the prosecutor asked the following question: “[D]o you have an
    opinion based on your line of work again, based on your credentials as to
    whether or not her symptoms were consistent with a child dealing with sexual
    abuse trauma?” Casey responded, “Yes, her symptoms were.”
    On cross-examination, defense counsel sought to clarify Casey’s opinion.
    He asked whether her testimony was that “[t]he [child’s] symptoms were
    consistent with sexual abuse.” She responded, “Yeah.”
    Dudley contends the district should not have admitted Casey’s opinion
    testimony because its “obvious purpose” was to “bolster the credibility of the
    complaining witness.”       The State responds that Casey’s testimony was
    admissible because she did not “testif[y] that [the child] had been sexually
    abused, [the child] was telling the truth, or that Dudley had sexually abused her.”
    In superb oral arguments, both sides explored the precedent on either side of the
    issue.
    6
    Counsel began with State v. Myers, 
    382 N.W.2d 91
    , 91 (Iowa 1986), an
    appeal of a conviction and sentence for indecent contact with a child. There, a
    school principal and a child abuse investigator testified that children rarely lied to
    them about sexual abuse. Myers, 
    382 N.W.2d at 91
    . In considering the propriety
    of this testimony, the court stated “expert opinions on the truthfulness of a
    witness should generally be excluded because weighing the truthfulness of a
    witness is a matter reserved exclusively to the fact finder.” 
    Id. at 95
    . The court
    acknowledged that “experts will be allowed to express opinions on matters that
    explain relevant mental and psychological symptoms present in sexually abused
    children.” 
    Id. at 97
    . The court cautioned, however, that “[t]here is a fine but
    essential line between testimony that is helpful to the jury and an opinion that
    merely conveys a conclusion concerning the defendant’s guilt.”           
    Id.
     (internal
    quotation marks omitted). The court explained that, in the view of most courts,
    the line is crossed where “expert testimony [] either directly or indirectly renders
    an opinion on the credibility or truthfulness of a witness.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added).
    The court concluded the opinions of the principal and investigator were “the
    same as directly opining on the truthfulness of the complaining witness.” 
    Id.
    The parties agree Casey made no direct comments on the child’s
    credibility. They disagree on whether she made indirect comments on the child’s
    credibility. As the State points out, this is a nuanced issue that requires a close
    examination of post-Myers precedent.
    Shortly after Myers, the Iowa Supreme Court decided State v. Brotherton,
    
    384 N.W.2d 375
    , 377 (Iowa 1986), an appeal of a judgment and sentence for
    second-degree sexual abuse. Brotherton contended the district court abused its
    7
    discretion in admitting a counselor’s opinion that a three or four-year-old child
    could not fantasize sexual activity between the child and another person. The
    court concluded the opinion was inadmissible because the counselor “indirectly
    opined on the truthfulness of the complaining witness rather than explained
    relevant mental and psychological symptoms present in a sexually abused child.”
    Brotherton, 
    384 N.W.2d at 379
    . The court nonetheless found the admission of
    the testimony harmless because “although inadmissible, [it] was merely
    cumulative to previous testimony in the record concerning the believability of
    children’s reports of sexual abuse.” 
    Id.
    We agree with the State that Brotherton provides a classic example of an
    impermissible indirect comment concerning a complaining witness’s credibility.
    Subsequent opinions fall closer to the “fine line.”
    In State v. Gettier, 
    438 N.W.2d 1
    , 4 (Iowa 1989), an appeal of a conviction
    for third-degree sexual abuse, an expert testified to “the classic characteristics
    that are exhibited after people have experienced a trauma.” The court noted the
    testimony “was framed in a general context, equally applicable to any major
    trauma such as natural disasters, combat/wartime encounters, muggings or
    sexual assault.” Gettier, 
    438 N.W.2d at 4
    . The court also explained that “[w]hile
    [the expert’s] testimony centered around a particular aspect of this syndrome,
    commonly described as ‘rape trauma syndrome,’ this term was not specifically
    referred to in the trial.” 
    Id.
     The court concluded:
    The testimony in the present case showed only the typical
    symptoms exhibited by a person after being traumatized.
    Independent evidence showed that the complainant had
    experienced some of the symptoms of PTSD. Consequently, the
    evidence was relevant as tending to show that she had been
    8
    traumatized. We see little, if any, prejudicial effect in the admission
    of this testimony. The more prejudicial term rape trauma syndrome
    was not used. We do not believe the evidence misleads the jury.
    In fact, there is little, if any, in the testimony which is not within the
    jury’s own common sense evaluation.
    
    Id. at 6
    .
    Gettier is instructive because the testimony was along the same lines as
    Casey’s testimony.      The testimony was deemed permissible because it was
    general in nature.
    The Iowa Supreme Court reaffirmed this distinction in State v. Payton, 
    481 N.W.2d 325
    , 327 (Iowa 1992). There, a therapist explained why child sex abuse
    victims delay reporting abuse. Payton, 
    481 N.W.2d at 327
    . The therapist did not
    say anything about the complaining witnesses, a factor that, according to the
    court, placed her testimony on the right side of the fine line drawn in Myers. See
    
    id.
    Shortly thereafter, the court decided State v. Tracy, 
    482 N.W.2d 675
    , 679
    (Iowa 1992). The case involved “prosecutorial maneuvering” to admit otherwise
    inadmissible evidence. Tracy, 
    482 N.W.2d at 679
    . In that context, the State
    called a psychiatrist who “testified, without objection, that there was evidence that
    K.A. was suffering from child sexual abuse accommodation syndrome.” 
    Id. at 678
    . The psychiatrist also testified “that in his opinion, K.A. was telling the truth
    when she first reported sexual abuse by her stepfather.” 
    Id.
     The court stated,
    “Dr. Comly’s testimony regarding child sexual abuse accommodation syndrome
    and the general truthfulness of child abuse victims was relevant to the
    prosecution’s case only insofar as it tended to discredit K.A.’s testimony. Thus, if
    K.A. had not testified, [] Dr. Comly’s testimony . . . would [not] have been
    9
    admissible.” 
    Id. at 679
    . In short, the court found the expert’s direct comment on
    the witness’s truthfulness as well as the indirect comment on child sexual abuse
    accommodation syndrome impermissible.
    The Iowa Supreme Court next decided State v. Allen, 
    565 N.W.2d 333
    (Iowa 1997), an appeal from a conviction for sexual exploitation of an adult by a
    counselor, which, in the State’s view, signaled a retreat from the “indirect”
    language of Myers. Two experts who treated the complaining witness for mental
    illness arising from sexual and mental abuse as a child testified about the low
    potential for false memories during hypnotherapy and the absence of a
    connection between mental illness and credibility. Allen, 
    565 N.W.2d at 338
    .
    The court concluded the experts “did not directly evaluate [the complaining
    witness’s] credibility” but “gave their opinions concerning the effects of her mental
    condition on her ability to tell the truth.” 
    Id.
     The court stated the testimony “was
    permissible to help the jury understand the evidence it heard about [the
    complaining witness’s] mental illness.” 
    Id.
    We believe an expert opinion “concerning the effects of [a complaining
    witness’s] mental condition on her ability to tell the truth” could be seen as an
    evaluation of the complaining witness’s credibility. Be that as it may, we are not
    persuaded by the State’s assertion that Allen retreated from the “indirect”
    language of Myers.     We believe the court simply had no reason to address
    indirect comments because the comments made by the experts were direct.
    The question of whether an expert opinion amounted to an indirect
    comment on witness credibility was again addressed in State v. Seevanhsa, 
    495 N.W.2d 354
     (Iowa Ct. App. 1992), an opinion on which the State heavily relies.
    10
    Seevanhsa argued the district court improperly elicited testimony from a child
    protective center coordinator regarding child sexual abuse accommodation
    syndrome (CSAAS). Seevanhsa, 
    495 N.W.2d at 355
    . The court stated, “[E]xpert
    testimony regarding CSAAS may, in some instances, assist the trier of fact to
    both understand the evidence and to determine facts in issue.” 
    Id. at 357
    . The
    court found the testimony admissible because the “expert limited her discussion
    of CSAAS to generalities. She did not testify she believed the complainant was
    credible nor did she testify that she believed the complainant had been sexually
    abused. She limited her discussion to an explanation of the symptoms common
    to children who have been sexually abused.” 
    Id. at 357
    .
    The court reached the opposite conclusion in State v. Pansegrau, 
    524 N.W.2d 207
     (Iowa Ct. App. 1994), an appeal from a conviction for third-degree
    sexual abuse of an adult. There, the State called a rebuttal witness, who testified
    to “sexual abuse trauma” and opined that a hypothetical woman with the same
    characteristics as the complaining witness suffered sexual trauma and could be
    expected to delay reporting the sexual abuse incident. Pansegrau, 
    524 N.W.2d at 210
    . The court stated, “The evidence was not of a general symptom. The
    hypothetical question outlined all the events the alleged victim had testified
    preceded the alleged rape. This personalized the opinion and conclusion [and
    went] beyond the careful exception carved in Gettier.” 
    Id. at 211
    . The court
    concluded the “testimony exceeded the permissible limits” and reversed and
    remanded for a new trial. 
    Id.
    In a third opinion decided by this court, State v. Tonn, 
    441 N.W.2d 403
    ,
    404-05 (Iowa Ct. App. 1989), a clinical psychologist testified to general as well as
    11
    specific behaviors. Deciding the case under an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel
    rubric, the court concluded the testimony was not “necessarily inadmissible.”
    Tonn, 
    441 N.W.2d at 405
    . The court reasoned that “the opinion evidence could
    help the jury in understanding the evidence because it explained the delayed
    reporting symptom that existed in children who were sexually abused.” 
    Id.
     The
    court cited a Washington opinion approving the admission of “statistics that
    supported [the expert’s] opinion that delay in reporting is not unusual and that the
    length of delay correlates with the relationship between the abuser and child.” 
    Id.
    (citing State v. Petrich, 
    683 P.2d 173
    , 180 (Wash 1984) (overruled on other
    grounds by State v. Kitchen, 
    756 P.2d 105
     (Wash. 1988))).               However, the
    Washington court also concluded that, on retrial “expert testimony should be
    excluded that invites the jury to conclude that because of defendant’s particular
    relationship to the victim, he is statistically more likely to have committed the
    crime.” Petrich, 683 P.2d at 180. It is unclear to what extent the ineffective-
    assistance-of-counsel standard affected the outcome in Tonn.
    The pattern we discern in the post-Brotherton opinions involving indirect
    comments      in   sex   abuse   cases—Gettier,     Payton,    Tracy,    Seevanhsa,
    Pansegrau—is that it is permissible to offer general expert testimony about
    symptoms or characteristics of sex abuse, but the “fine line” is crossed when that
    general testimony is tied to the specifics characteristics of the complaining
    witness. At that point, the testimony becomes an impermissible comment on
    witness credibility.
    Casey’s testimony crossed the “fine line.” While Casey could permissibly
    testify to her diagnoses of the child, and, under Myers, could testify to the classic
    12
    manifestations and symptoms of the diagnosed conditions (posttraumatic stress
    syndrome and anxiety disorder), her testimony went much further.                   She
    described the physical manifestations of sexual abuse, focusing almost
    exclusively on the manifestations the child’s mother observed in this child. She
    went on to opine that the child’s manifestations were consistent with sexual
    abuse.    If the operative distinction between permissible and impermissible
    testimony is the specificity with which the expert ties the general characteristics
    of the disorder to the complaining witness, there is no question in our minds that
    Casey’s testimony was impermissible.
    We recognize that the Iowa Supreme Court has approved expert
    testimony on key elements of the State’s case.           See State v. Meyers, 
    799 N.W.2d 132
    , 146 (Iowa 2011) (citing expert testimony on ability of child to
    consent to sex act and giving weight to district court’s credibility finding in favor of
    that testimony). But testimony on an element is not the same thing as testimony
    about witness veracity or the guilt or innocence of the defendant. See State v.
    Hulbert, 
    481 N.W.2d 329
    , 332 (Iowa 1992) (stating expert psychological evidence
    may not be used to merely bolster witness credibility or be employed as a direct
    comment on guilt or innocence of the defendant)1; see also State v. Chancy, 
    391 N.W.2d 231
    , 234 (Iowa 1986) (approving testimony of complaining witness’s
    mental condition and specifically noting the case was not controlled by Myers
    because Myers involved “a direct comment by an expert on the credibility of a
    witness” and the testimony in Myers was not directed at a fact in issue). Casey
    1
    Hulbert prohibits direct comments on a defendant’s guilt, but, as noted, Myers is
    broader, at least with respect to comments on witness veracity.
    13
    commented on both, albeit indirectly.           By stating that the child’s physical
    appearance was “consistent with sexual abuse,” Casey impermissibly reinforced
    the child’s version of events, obliquely commented on Dudley’s guilt, and
    usurped the jury’s role in deciding whether Dudley committed sexual abuse. For
    these reasons, Casey’s opinion that the child’s physical manifestations were
    consistent with sex abuse should have been excluded.2
    We turn to the question of whether Dudley was prejudiced by Casey’s
    testimony. Casey’s opinion was not duplicative of duly-admitted testimony. See
    Brotherton, 
    384 N.W.2d at 379
    . Her reference to “sex abuse trauma” is a hair’s
    breadth away from the “rape trauma syndrome” and “child abuse accommodation
    syndrome” references condemned in Gettier and Tracy. Finally, the fact that
    Casey was the complaining witness’s treating counselor added gravitas to her
    opinion.   We conclude her comments prejudiced Dudley.                Accordingly, we
    reverse and remand for a new trial.
    We find it unnecessary to address the remaining issues raised by Dudley.3
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    2
    This court recently decided several opinions on this issue. See State v. Brown, No. 12-
    1633, 
    2013 WL 5743652
    , at *5 (Iowa Ct. App. Oct. 23, 2013) (reversing where expert
    testimony crossed the “fine line” into the realm of an opinion on the credibility of the
    victim); State v. McEndree, No. 12-0983, 
    2013 WL 3458217
    , at *5-7 (Iowa Ct. App. July
    10, 2013) (concluding court did not abuse discretion in admitting expert testimony to
    explain generally delayed reporting in children who were sexually abused and in
    excluding proposed testimony that indirectly rendered an opinion on the credibility or
    truthfulness of a witness).
    3
    We question the State’s reliance on the excited utterance exception to the hearsay rule
    for admission of the neighbor’s narration of what the child told her. In light of our
    reversal on another ground, we need not address this issue.