Court Opinion

ID: 1043691
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-08 00:25:11.233581+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:31:17.351154
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2012 VT 65

State v. Reid (2011-082)
 
2012 VT 65
 
[Filed 10-Aug-2012]
 
NOTICE:  This opinion is
subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal revision
before publication in the Vermont Reports.  Readers are requested to
notify the Reporter of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@state.vt.us or by
mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109 State Street, Montpelier, Vermont
05609-0801, of any errors in order that corrections may be made before this
opinion goes to press.
 
 

2012 VT 65 

 

No. 2011-082

 

State of Vermont

Supreme Court

 

 

 

On Appeal from

     v.

Superior Court, Lamoille Unit,

 

Criminal Division

 

 

Richard Reid

April Term, 2012

 

 

 

 

Dennis
  R. Pearson, J.

 

Christopher C. Moll, Lamoille County Deputy State’s
Attorney, Hyde Park, for 
  Plaintiff-Appellee.
 
Allison N. Fulcher
of Martin & Associates, Barre, for Defendant-Appellant.
 
PRESENT:  Reiber, C.J.,
Dooley, Skoglund, Burgess and Robinson, JJ.
 
 
¶ 1.            
REIBER, C.J.   Defendant Richard Reid appeals from his
conviction for aggravated sexual assault in violation of 13 V.S.A. § 3253(a)(8).  Defendant asserts that the trial court committed
reversible error in admitting hearsay evidence under Vermont Rule of Evidence 804a because the State failed to establish that the time,
content, and circumstances of the child-victim’s statements provided
substantial indicia of trustworthiness.  We affirm.  
¶ 2.            
In the summer of 2008, when she was six years old, the child, A.V., made
statements to her neighbors indicating that defendant had sexually abused
her.  On August 26, a neighbor filed a report with the Vermont Department
for Children and Families (DCF).  The following day, a DCF investigator and
a police officer went to A.V.’s school to question her about the alleged
abuse.  The investigators found that there was sufficient evidence that
defendant had sexually abused A.V., and she was transported to the hospital for
further examination.  At the hospital, an experienced and trained Sexual
Assault Nurse Examiner (SANE) questioned A.V. and conducted a brief physical
examination.  Defendant was charged with aggravated sexual assault on
August 28.  In October 2008, the State provided notice that it intended to
offer into evidence hearsay statements made by A.V. through various witnesses
pursuant to V.R.E. 804a.  On November 19, 2009, pursuant to Rule 804a, the
court held a pretrial hearing to determine the admissibility of the
statements.  The following evidence was presented at the hearing.
¶ 3.            
A.V. first disclosed the alleged sexual abuse by defendant to her friend
and neighbor, Ariel.  Ariel testified that during the summer of 2008,
while riding bikes with A.V., A.V. told her that defendant “sticks it in her
butt and in her mouth, and that the white stuff makes people stronger and that
the white stuff gets inside her.”  She also testified that at one point
she noticed a bruise on A.V.’s head.  When she asked A.V. about it, A.V.
told her that it was from defendant “hitting her head off the headboard when
she told him no.”  
¶ 4.            
Ariel’s sister, Tammy, testified that A.V. had told her about the abuse
while the three of them were sitting on the porch.  A.V. said that if she
told her mother, defendant would “give it to her even harder.”  Tammy
noticed that A.V. looked scared and was almost crying.  Tammy further
testified that she remembered one instance when A.V. held her crotch while
playing and complained that she was sore.  
¶ 5.            
Leola, another one of A.V.’s neighbors, testified that A.V. often played
with her daughter, and on several occasions, she took the girls to play at her
mother’s house.  Leola stated that while at her mother’s house, A.V. ran
around pulling on the crotch area of her pants.  When A.V. was asked why,
she said that defendant “had stuck his fingers in her too-too.”  Leola
also testified that A.V. did not want to be home alone with defendant, and that
she would “break down crying and screaming.”  Leola also testified that
A.V. had been exposed to some of the neighbors’ daughters fighting.  The
girls argued loudly in public and used graphic language that was sexual in
nature.  One of the girls taunted the other by accusing her of sleeping
with her own father.  
¶ 6.            
Leola’s cousin, Christie, was the last of A.V.’s neighbors to testify at
the hearing.  Christie testified that Leola urged A.V. to tell Christie
her “secret.”  A.V. seemed very upset and scared, and looked at the
ground.  A.V. disclosed that defendant had touched her and told her not to
tell anyone.  She said defendant “put it . . . in
the back.”  She also stated that defendant put it in her vagina, for which
she had a certain name, though Christie could not recall what it was. 
After, defendant gave A.V. candy or a popsicle. 
The following day, on August, 26, 2008, Christie filed a report with DCF. 

¶ 7.            
A.V.’s mother testified that A.V. had previously complained that she was
experiencing a burning sensation when she urinated.  She took A.V. to the
pediatrician who did not find any infection, but asked whether A.V. might have
been abused or molested.  At the time, A.V.’s mother did not suspect
anything, and answered “no.”  There were no other physical or medical signs
of abuse.  A.V.’s mother also reported that she had previously noticed
that A.V. had a bruise on her head.  She asked A.V. about it, but A.V. was
evasive, claiming she could not remember what had happened.  Defendant
told A.V.’s mother that A.V. had been playing by the windowsill and had banged
her head.  
¶ 8.            
The DCF investigator testified that she and a police officer conducted
an interview with A.V. at her school on August 27, 2008.  The DCF
investigator explained that she was not a principal investigator for DCF, but
had attended a few training sessions on interviewing techniques for
children.  The court listened to the recording of the interview, and found
the following.  
¶ 9.            
The interview began around 10:30 a.m. and ended after the school day
concluded.  They took several breaks, including one for lunch. 
Before lunch, the investigators asked fairly general questions, mostly related
to A.V. and her family, in order to allow A.V. to become comfortable with the
interviewers.  A.V. seemed “personable, engaging, and animated,” but
repeatedly asked to return to her classroom.  When the interviewers asked
about defendant, A.V. became more withdrawn and actively changed the subject to
avoid talking about him.  She appeared distracted and her responses were
“flighty.”  
¶ 10.         The
investigators attempted to get A.V. to discuss defendant by prompting her in a
number of ways.  They asked her about what she told her neighbors, but
A.V. remained evasive.  They occasionally reminded A.V. that “it was good
to tell the truth,” but despite their efforts, A.V. continued to deny that she
had been abused.  
¶ 11.         The
morning interview lasted approximately an hour and a half.  During lunch,
the DCF investigator conferred with her district director, and the police
officer spoke with A.V.’s neighbors.  Both concluded that, given the
specificity of the reports and others’ statements that defendant had threatened
A.V. so that she would not say anything, A.V. could be at risk of further abuse
and therefore the interview should resume in the afternoon.  
¶ 12.         The
interview with A.V. continued after lunch with “more pointed questions.” 
The investigators told A.V. that they had spoken with her neighbors, they “knew
something was going on at home,” and again, they asked her “what she had told
Ariel.”  A.V. became more uncomfortable.  She put her head down and
was hesitant to talk.  She continued to ask if she could return to her
classroom.  Eventually, A.V. described being sexually assaulted by
defendant.  Specifically, A.V. described a purple bottle of oil that
defendant kept by the bed and used to “lubricate” his “too too.”  She also
stated that when she was five years old, “it hurt worse” and she
“screamed.”  A.V. discussed particular instances of defendant’s sexual
abuse with graphic detail and stated that she was concerned that defendant
would find out.  
¶ 13.         The
interview concluded at the end of the school day.  The investigators found
that there was sufficient evidence that defendant had sexually abused A.V. and
she was transported to the hospital for a medical examination, where her mother
joined her.  The SANE nurse questioned A.V. further and conducted a brief
physical examination.  Prior to the examination, the DCF investigator
provided the nurse with a brief summary of A.V.’s statements from earlier in
the day.  At first, A.V. was reluctant to talk with the nurse, but
eventually she became “pretty verbal and did not need a lot of
prompting.”  
¶ 14.         Defendant’s
expert, Dr. Mantel, testified at the 804a hearing on the issue of forensic
interviewing methods.  He testified that there are at least six
well-developed protocols for forensically interviewing alleged child victims of
sexual abuse, which contain five common elements: (1) rapport-building; (2)
establishing and testing conversational ground rules; (3) competency
examination; (4) the abuse inquiry, using nonleading
questions and a nonconfirmatory structure; and (5)
validation review, in which the interviewer reviews the evidentiary record to
determine the possibility that the child gave a false positive or a false
negative.  He opined that the interview at the school was a failure
because there was no phased structure, it was coercive and marked by confirmatory
bias, the interviewers relied on leading or suggestive questions, and they
failed to explore alternate explanations for A.V.’s statements.  He also
opined that the interview at the hospital was improper because the DCF
investigator was present, she provided the SANE nurse with information which
she used to formulate questions, and A.V.’s mother was present.  
¶ 15.         In a
January 14, 2010 order, the trial court found that A.V.’s statements possessed
sufficient indicia of trustworthiness.  In particular, responding to Dr.
Mantel’s testimony that the interviews were defective, the court noted that
“[t]he idiosyncratic details spontaneously supplied by A.V. in her statements
to the investigators, which have been independently verified and confirmed . . . are sufficiently
compelling that the interview defects noted by Dr. Mantel[] are
overcome.”  Although the court noted that some questions may have been
leading or suggestive in nature, they did not irretrievably taint the substance
and content of A.V.’s overall disclosures.  The court also found that the
interview with the DCF investigator and the police officer was long, but not
coercive, and also, that during the lunch break, A.V. had no contact with
anyone who had an interest in the outcome or substance of her statements. 

¶ 16.         The
court further found that the timing of A.V.’s disclosures followed a reasonable
progression in that she made statements to various neighbors with whom she was
comfortable, and those statements were reported to DCF as soon as they reached
a certain level of specificity.  If the jury credited the statements, the
court said, they indicated that the abuse was “fresh” because it continued to
occur in the apartment to which she had recently moved.  The court found
that A.V.’s statements were sufficiently explicit and graphic, as well as
biologically and anatomically correct.  It also noted that the statements
were internally consistent within the DCF interview, and externally consistent
when compared to statements she had made to others.  Finally, the court
found that A.V.’s demeanor and emotional affect were appropriate when making
the disclosures.  Based on the totality of the circumstances, the court
found substantial indicia of trustworthiness and allowed the statements to be
admitted, finding that the statements met Dr. Mantel’s ultimate criteria of
inherent plausibility, consistency, biological and anatomical accuracy, and
detail.  
¶ 17.         The
court included a “confidential finding,” which was provided to counsel under
seal as an attachment to the rest of the order.  In the “finding,” the
trial judge disclosed that he had presided over a juvenile proceeding involving
A.V., and had heard testimony by DCF relating to A.V. that, if believed,
potentially provided additional indicia of trustworthiness.  The “finding”
related some of the DCF testimony in that juvenile matter.
¶ 18.         At
trial, which commenced in October 2010, the witnesses gave substantially the
same testimony.  In addition to those witnesses, A.V. was called by the
prosecution as a witness, and testified briefly that defendant lived in her
house, and that she told the truth when she spoke to the police.  No
cross-examination was conducted.  The State also presented Dr. Patnoe, a pediatrician specializing in the area of child
abuse, who had conducted a physical exam of A.V.  Dr. Patnoe
stated that, based on A.V.’s disclosures, “it was highly probable that she was
sexually abused.”  Defendant was convicted, and the court imposed a
sentence of twenty-five years to life.
¶ 19.         On
appeal, defendant claims that the court committed reversible error when it
allowed the State to introduce A.V.’s statements made in the interviews under
Vermont Rule of Evidence 804a.  Specifically, defendant argues that the “time, content, and circumstances of the statements” do
not “provide substantial indicia of trustworthiness.”  V.R.E. 804a(a)(4).  He contends that the interview with
A.V. was unduly coercive and that the State’s expert relied upon inadmissible
statements in rendering her conclusion that A.V. likely was sexually abused.
 
¶ 20.         Our
review with regard to admission of a child-victim’s statements under Rule 804a
is deferential.  The trial court has “great discretion” in determining
whether to admit evidence under the rule, and we do not reverse its decision
unless “there has been an abuse of discretion resulting in prejudice.”  State
v. Willis, 2006 VT
128, ¶ 20, 181 Vt. 170, 915 A.2d 208 (quotation omitted).  We uphold
the trial court’s conclusion that hearsay statements are trustworthy under Rule
804a(a)(4) if it is supported by the findings, which
must be supported by credible evidence in the record.  State
v. Gallagher, 150 Vt. 341, 348, 554 A.2d 221, 225 (1988).
¶ 21.         Rule
804a allows admission of statements by a child who is twelve or under if the
statements are offered in an aggravated sexual assault case in which the child
is the alleged victim, the statements were not taken in preparation for a legal
proceeding, the child is available to testify, and “the
time, content, and circumstances of the statements provide substantial indicia
of trustworthiness.”  The rationale behind the rule is that “a
child-victim’s early communications are often highly trustworthy,” and thus the
rule allows admission of the child’s statements “when there is minimal risk of
fabrication.”  Reporter’s Notes, V.R.E. 804a.
¶ 22.         Defendant
concedes that the court’s extensive findings were supported by credible
evidence, but argues that the findings do not support the court’s conclusion
that A.V.’s statements possessed sufficient indicia of trustworthiness. The
starting point for defendant’s argument is that neither interview was conducted
pursuant to accepted protocols for interviewing alleged child victims of sexual
assault.  Defendant argues that the DCF investigator and the police
officer had been previously informed of A.V.’s statements to neighbors, and
were thus seeking to confirm the preconceived notion that she had been sexually
assaulted by defendant.  He alleges that the investigators used leading
questions and did not explore other explanations or sources for the information
elicited from A.V.  Further, defendant contends that the improper
interview techniques infected the statements later obtained by the SANE nurse
and A.V.’s mother.    
¶ 23.         This
Court has acknowledged the existence of “interviewing protocol,” but we have
not adopted or endorsed any particular methodology, and we specifically decline
to do so here.  Instead, we have approved of a multi-factored approach to
determine whether a child’s statements possess sufficient indicia of
trustworthiness, in which the interview forum and methodology may be
relevant.  See, e.g., Willis, 2006 VT 128,
¶¶ 16, 20 (noting that victim consistently described abuse, and there had
been no coaching, suggestive questions, or significant breaches in interviewing
protocol that had compromised result of interview).  The ultimate
question is whether, taking all the facts and circumstances together, the
conclusion that the child’s statements display signs of trustworthiness is
supported by the court’s findings.  
¶ 24.         There
are several nonexclusive factors that are relevant in determining whether a
child’s statements have the requisite substantial indicia of
truthfulness.  See State v. Tester, 2006 VT 24,
¶ 17, 179 Vt. 627, 895 A.2d 215 (mem.)
(use of nonleading questions, consistency of
disclosures, appropriate body language); State v. LaBounty,
168 Vt. 129, 136-38, 716 A.2d 1, 7 (1998) (freshness, spontaneity, internal
consistency, timing and conduct of interviews, and accuracy with respect to
peripheral detail); State v. Fisher, 167 Vt. 36, 40-41, 702 A.2d 41, 44
(1997) (risk of fabrication); State v. Lawton, 164 Vt. 179, 190, 667
A.2d 50, 59 (1995) (circumstances of initial disclosure, evidence of coercion
or manipulation); In re M.B. & E.B., 158 Vt. 63, 69, 605 A.2d 515,
518 (1992) (setting in which disclosures were made, person to whom disclosures
were made, internal consistency, corroboration by medical and other evidence); State
v. Gallagher, 150 Vt. 341, 348, 554 A.2d 221, 225 (1988) (manner with which
interview was conducted, internal consistency and detail of child’s story,
child’s affect, intelligence, memory and concern for the truth).
¶ 25.         The
court’s findings support the conclusion that A.V.’s statement to the
investigators bore sufficient indicia of reliability.  One pertinent
consideration in this assessment is the propriety of the child’s demeanor,
including body language and affect.  See Tester, 2006 VT 24,
¶ 17; Gallagher, 150 Vt. at 348, 554 A.2d at 225.  Here,
A.V.’s demeanor and emotional affect during both interviews was appropriate for
the gravity of the disclosures she was making.  
¶ 26.         In
addition, throughout the interview, A.V. provided new information upon
prompting and spontaneously provided idiosyncratic details, such as the purple
bottle beside the bed.  She spontaneously told the investigators that
“sometimes it hurts a little” and spontaneously described the times that the
abuse occurred.  These details, the court found, were not supplied by, or
within the investigators’ questions.  At trial, Dr. Mantel conceded on
cross-examination that several of A.V.’s inculpatory
statements were spontaneous and provided as answers to open-ended
questions.  
¶ 27.         Peripheral
detail is another factor that we have looked to in determining
trustworthiness.  In LaBounty, for
example, the children provided accurate peripheral details, such as the
defendant’s appearance and clothing on the day of the incident, the interior of
the house, the defendant’s wife’s activities on the
same day, and the rooms in which the incident occurred.  168 Vt. at 138, 716 A.2d at 7.  We noted that the peripheral detail of
the children’s statements was a factor supporting the trial court’s finding of
trustworthiness.  Id.  In this case, A.V. accurately described
peripheral details, such as the bedroom and furnishings.  She also
described the location and color of the bottle of lubricant used by defendant,
which she said defendant would use to “lubricate” his penis.  Furthermore,
as in LaBounty, A.V. provided information
about her mother’s—defendant’s girlfriend’s—activities during the assaults,
stating that the abuse occurred when her mother was not home.  
¶ 28.         Another
factor articulated in LaBounty is the
biological and anatomical accuracy of the children’s statements.  In that
case, the children stated that the defendant had put his “peepee”
in their mouths, and one child provided additional details about the assaults;
we stated that the detail of the children’s statements supported the
trustworthiness finding.  Id.  Furthermore, in general,
extensive precocious sexual knowledge provides indicia of the reliability of a
child’s hearsay statements.  See State v. Swan,
790 P.2d 610, 630-33 (Wash. 1990) (en banc) (cited in State v. Oscarson, 2004 VT 4, 176 Vt.
176, 845 A.2d 337).  Likewise, here, the substance of A.V.’s
disclosures was biologically and anatomically correct.  She provided,
using age-appropriate terminology, details about defendant’s anatomy, the
conduct of the assaults, and the relationship between defendant’s body and her
own.  
¶ 29.         A.V.’s
statements were also consistent within the interview, and when compared to
statements she had made to others.  As in Tester, where the
children consistently described the abuse and identified the defendant as the
perpetrator, 2006 VT 24, ¶ 17, and in M.B., where the children’s
statements were consistent internally and with each other, 158 Vt. at 69, 605
A.2d at 518, A.V.’s subsequent statements were consistent with her initial
disclosures of abuse and consistent within the interview itself.  
¶ 30.         Finally,
during the interview at the hospital, once A.V. began talking, she became
“pretty verbal” and did not need more prompting or repeated questions. 
She spoke so fast, in fact, that the SANE nurse had to ask her to stop or slow
down to take notes.  During this interview, A.V. was looking around,
attentive, and making eye contact with the SANE nurse and her mother.  Her
statements provided additional detail, were graphic, and were consistent within
that interview and with statements she had previously made.  
¶ 31.         Defendant
argues that the interviews at school and at the hospital were improper, and
that these interviewing failures counter any conclusion that A.V.’s statements
contained sufficient indicia of truthfulness.  The interview at the school
was lengthy, but was not egregiously coercive, A.V. did not feel overwhelmed or
coerced, and her statements were freely made by conscious decision and through
negotiation.  The DCF investigator and the police officer asked some
leading or suggestive questions based on the independent information they had
received, but A.V. did not simply parrot the questions or repeat back the same
information.  She remained “strong, smart, [and] resilient,” and appeared
to be “in control of the substance of the interview” and the timing of the disclosures. 
During the interview at the hospital, the DCF investigator and the police
officer told A.V. to tell the SANE nurse what she told them, and that it was
important to tell the truth.  A.V.’s mother was present.  However,
A.V. was talkative and attentive, and did not need repeated questions for
prompting.      
¶ 32.         The
leading questions and failure to evaluate alternative explanations for A.V.’s
statements are countervailing factors in the multi-factored approach.  See
Willis, 2006 VT 128, ¶¶ 16, 20.  However, the court found that
there was minimal risk of fabrication in A.V.’s recall and relay of abuse,
despite the perceived interview failures.  Specifically, the court found
that the failure to follow the approach suggested by Dr. Mantel did not “irretrievably
taint[] the substance and content of the overall
disclosures made by A.V.”  Because there was no compelling indication that
A.V.’s statements in either interview were in fact the result of coercion and
because the questioning did not appear to taint her overall disclosures, it
cannot be said that whatever interview failures occurred here are sufficient to
overcome the determination that the findings support the conclusion that A.V.’s
statements contained substantial indicia of trustworthiness.  See id.
¶ 20 (rejecting defendant’s argument that breaches in protocol rendered
statements without sufficient indicia of truthfulness and holding that this
Court’s job is not to reweigh evidence or reassess credibility).  
¶ 33.         Defendant
next argues that the trial court’s reliance on the “confidential finding” in
reaching its conclusion that A.V.’s out-of-court statements were admissible
under Rule 804a fatally compromised the court’s conclusion.  He contends
that the evidence reflected in the “finding” was gathered in a proceeding in
which defendant had no opportunity to participate, cross-examine, or otherwise
assess its accuracy.  
¶ 34.         Although
the court characterized the paragraph describing the DCF testimony as a
“finding,” the court did not indicate its own acceptance of the testimony, and
a recitation of testimony is not a finding of fact.  Krupp
v. Krupp, 126 Vt. 511, 514, 236 A.2d 653, 655 (1967).  In fact,
the court specifically stated that it was not deciding the truth of DCF’s
assertions.  Moreover, the court made clear that the information “should
not play a principal role, if any at all,” in the court’s Rule 804a
determination.  The court specifically stated that A.V.’s statements must
possess inherent indicia of reliability, that they must stand
on their own, and that the impact of the DCF testimony was secondary to
the evidence in this case.  The court explained that the “confidential
finding” was a way to disclose the court’s role in the juvenile proceeding, and
not a basis for the decision.  For those reasons, we conclude that the
“confidential finding” was not a finding of fact, and that the trial court’s
conclusion that A.V.’s statements bore substantial indicia of truthfulness did
not rest on that information.  As noted, the court’s ultimate conclusion
on the Rule 804a issue was amply supported by the court’s other findings,
without any reference to the sealed attachment to its order.
¶ 35.         Defendant’s
final contention is that Dr. Patnoe’s testimony about
the likelihood that A.V. had been sexually abused created prejudice because she
made that conclusion based upon the Rule 804a statements.  Defendant
acknowledges that counsel made a strategic judgment at trial to waive any
objection to the testimony based on State v. Catsam,
148 Vt. 366, 534 A.2d 184 (1987), and
therefore does not claim that the testimony itself was error.  Rather,
defendant argues that the testimony was tainted by virtue of her reliance on
what he contends are inadmissible statements.  Because we conclude that
A.V.’s statements during the initial DCF interview were admissible, we reject
defendant’s argument that consideration of the statements tainted Dr. Patnoe’s conclusions.
Affirmed.
 
 

 

 

FOR THE COURT:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chief
  Justice

 
 
¶ 36.         SKOGLUND,
J., concurring.   I would affirm the
trial court’s conclusion that the time, content, and circumstances of the
child-victim’s statements provided substantial indicia of trustworthiness, in
part because our review of the admission of hearsay evidence under Vermont Rule
of Evidence 804a is deferential, but also because I agree that the child’s
provision of new information and idiosyncratic details provides substantiating
content.  However, I cannot agree with the trial court or this Court that
what the child endured in the August 27 interview was not coercive. 
Rather, I agree with the expert testifying that the two-part interview of A.V.
was egregiously coercive for a six-year-old.  But, as noted by the trial
court, “[t]here is no compelling indication that A.V.’s statements were in
fact the product, or result of any coercion, as opposed to a ‘conscious’
decision . . . that it was simply time . . . to tell
what had happened.”  
¶ 37.         I
believe it noteworthy that the court found the DCF investigator had “not
received extensive training in interview techniques for children, but ha[d]
attended a few training sessions.  There was no evidence as to [the police
officer]’s training, if any.”  As found by the court, the interview of
this six-year-old child lasted “the better part of the entire day.” 
During the morning session she repeatedly asked to return to her
classroom.  She was “more withdrawn,” actively “changed the subject to
avoid talking about Reid,” and essentially denied there was any problem with
him.  The court noted, “[n]otwithstanding the
investigator’s efforts, and the repeated questions and length of the morning
interview, A.V. continued to deny that Defendant (or anyone) had committed any
abusive acts.”  However, the court below also found that “[a]lthough the morning interview did last a long time, the
questions were persistent, and A.V. did make repeated requests about lunch, she
did not ask, or insist specifically that the interview be stopped.”  Really?  After being reminded that she was talking to a
police officer and an investigator, this little girl did not insist the
interview stop?   
¶ 38.         The
interview resumed after lunch with the interviewers “asking A.V. more pointed
questions. . . .  A.V. again instead kept asking,
repeatedly, to go back to the classroom, and became increasingly more
discomforted, and at the same time hesitant to talk, with her head down.” 
As with the morning session, the court noted that she never “said emphatically
that she would not talk any more about the topics insisted upon by the
investigators.”  According to the findings of the court below, the
interview did not end until after the school day was over.    
¶ 39.         Dr.
David Mantel is, as the court recognized, “a highly experienced, and
well-respected child psychologist who has been active in this field of
interviewing alleged child victims of sexual abuse for many years.” 
According to Dr. Mantel in his testimony at the Rule 804a hearing, there are at
least six well-developed protocols for forensically interviewing alleged child
victims of sexual abuse.  He described the interview at the school as
lacking any phased structure, marked by confirmatory bias, and using leading or
suggestive questions.   
¶ 40.         According
to Dr. Mantel, all of the recognized protocols involve a “ ‘phased’
interview process, and all of them discourage use of, or at least over-reliance
on ‘leading questions,’ repeating the same question in succession, and
incorporation of outside information for which the investigator is simply
seeking confirmation, or repetition by the child.”  He described the
August 27interview as “a failure” and an “egregious case.”  He
testified that the entire interview was “ ‘inherently
coercive,’ and even ‘brutally coercive’ because of the length, and the
investigators’ decision to ignore A.V.’s repeated requests to go to lunch (in
the morning) or go back to her classroom (in the afternoon).”  As found by
the trial court, Dr. Mantel was “ ‘flabbergasted’
by what he viewed as the unprofessional techniques used by” the two
investigators.  Ultimately, as the court noted, Dr. Mantel declined to
express “any opinion as to the actual credibility or truthfulness of the
content or substance of the statements made by A.V.”  Properly
so.  Ultimately, that is a decision for the court.
¶ 41.         Dr.
Mantel also had criticisms for the interview with the nurse at Copley Hospital,
but I believe the point has been made.  It is not that the interviewers
were malicious or ignorant.  Rather, the case suggests—strongly
suggests—that they were, at best, poorly trained.  While this Court has
not reviewed or endorsed any particular protocol for conducting interviews of
suspected child abuse victims, our decisions focus on several common factors
for assessing reliability and trustworthiness of out-of-court disclosures made
by children.  These include “freshness, spontaneity, internal consistency,
and accuracy with respect to surrounding detail” as well as the “timing and
conduct of the interviews.”  State v. LaBounty,
168 Vt. 129, 136-38, 716 A.2d 1, 6-7 (1998).  For
example, in LaBounty we noted that neither of
the interviewers had been informed of the details of the alleged abuse prior to
the interviews, so neither was seeking to confirm any preconceived ideas of
what the children should be disclosing.  Id. at 138, 716 A.2d at 7.  Again in State v. Tester, the
Court noted that the child’s interview “had been conducted in a highly
professional manner, without suggesting answers or content.”  2006 VT 24, ¶ 28, 179 Vt. 627, 895 A.2d 215 (mem.). 
That was certainly not the case here.  The interviewers were seeking
confirmation of preconceived and expected content.
¶ 42.         When
the afternoon interview began, the interviewers reminded A.V. that they had
talked to her neighbor Ariel, her cousin, and her sometime childcare provider
and asked A.V. again to tell them, for example,  “what she told Ariel”
because they “knew something was going on at home.”   What follows is
a small sample: 
S.M.
[interviewer]: Okay.  I talked to Ariel, I talked to Christy, and I talked
to Leola, all of them.  And they told me something.  Do you know what
they told me? 
A.V.:
What?
S.M.:
They all told me that you told them something that’s going on at home that they
were a little bit concerned about. . . .  So I know that
you told them something.  And remember what I told you that it’s okay to
tell us the truth?
A.V.:
Yeah.
S.M.:
That you’re not going to be in any trouble.
A.V.:
Yeah.
S.M.:
It’s very important that I just want you to tell us the truth, okay? 
Because I already know that you told them something that’s going on at home.
A.V.:
Yeah.
S.M.:
Do you want to talk to me about that?
A.V.:
Can I just say one thing and go back to my classroom because I want to.
S.M.:
Okay.  But we need to talk to you about this.  Okay?
A.V.:
Okay.
S.M.:
And after we’re done talking about it, you can go to your classroom.
A.V.:
I will just—how about I just say one thing and I can go back to my classroom?
How about that?
S.M.:
What do you want to tell me?
A.V.:
Um, sometimes when my mom is going to work, sometimes she comes back
at—sometimes she comes back in morning, sometimes she comes back at night.
 
This type of questioning is what
Dr. Mantel believed “infected” the interview by “‘confirmatory bias’ because
the investigators repeatedly used outside information to frame their
questions.”  
¶ 43.         The
court below also noted that the State presented no counterpoint to Dr. Mantel’s
testimony.  Thus, the court had to find that the interview was not
coercive in spite of this noted expert’s opinion that this all-day interview
was seriously flawed.  I cannot understand the basis for the court’s
contrary conclusion.  In this case, the court found enough in the child’s
responses to validate it for trustworthiness.  However, it cannot be
ignored that the substantial failure by the DCF investigator and the police
officer to follow recognized and established child-interview protocols weighed
heavily against the necessary determination of inherent trustworthiness and
reliability.  I agree that, in this case, the child’s eventual discussion
of the abuse had new information and idiosyncratic details that provided
substantiating content and, as found by the trial court, that “[t]here is no
compelling indication that A.V.’s statements were in fact the product,
or result of any coercion.”  (Emphasis added.)  However, I cannot
help but be concerned that proper training is not being provided in this
extremely critical and highly sensitive area of investigation. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Associate Justice