Court Opinion

ID: 29925
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2010-04-25 09:47:32+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:50:00.193477
License: Public Domain

REVISED JANUARY 27, 2003
               IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                       FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
                       _____________________

                            No. 01-51113
                       _____________________

          UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

                               Plaintiff-Appellee

          v.

          JOHN T HEFFERON

                               Defendant-Appellant

_________________________________________________________________

           Appeal from the United States District Court
                 for the Western District of Texas
_________________________________________________________________
                          December 9, 2002
Before KING, Chief Judge, and JONES and EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit
Judges.

KING, Chief Judge:

     Defendant John T. Hefferon (“Hefferon”) appeals from a jury

conviction for knowingly engaging in a sexual act with a victim

under the age of twelve in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2241.          Upon

consideration, we affirm.

                       STATEMENT OF THE CASE

     In January 2001, the seven-year-old victim, Alejandra, was

residing with her family at Lackland Air Force Base’s temporary

lodging facility in San Antonio.       The family was awaiting a move to

                                   1
Germany in connection with their father’s position as a Captain in

the Air Force.       On January 1, 2001, at approximately 11:00 p.m.,

Alejandra’s    parents    left    her   and   her   eleven-year-old   sister,

Arlene, in the care of their thirteen-year-old brother, Orlando.1

Alejandra and Arlene went with Orlando to the laundry room, which

was located near their own room on the facility.                 Although she

initially followed her brother to the laundry room, Alejandra then

started back to the family’s room (room 105) by herself.                   She

testified that at this time “Big John” spotted her.                 All three

children testified that “Big John” was the name they used to refer

to the man in room 205.           Hefferon, a retired Navy officer, was

staying at the temporary lodging facility in room 205 with his wife

and son.

     “Big John” tricked Alejandra into going with him by the trees

near the playground by asking her to find a place to go “pottie.”

Once there, “Big John” told Alejandra to “squeez[e] [his] private,”

which she did.       After Alejandra told him that Arlene and Orlando

were approaching, “Big John” then tricked Alejandra into selecting

a new place for him to go to the bathroom.            She suggested that he

go by some garbage dumpsters located on the facility property.

Once in this area, “Big John” again told Alejandra to squeeze his

penis,   but   not   so   hard;   she   complied    with   his   demand.    He

     1
          The parents were apparently taking Alejandra’s younger
sister to a friend’s house to be blessed. She had been recently
hospitalized for a hurt leg.

                                        2
thereafter told her to place his penis in her mouth.                She again

complied.    “Big John” then moved her head back and forth, telling

her that it was getting bigger.        Before he let her go, “Big John”

told Alejandra this was their “little secret.”

       Arlene, who had been searching for her sister, saw Alejandra

with “Big    John”    and   heard   “Big    John”   tell   her,   “[r]emember,

Alejandra, it is our little secret.”          “Big John” then told Arlene

that he had found Alejandra hiding from her.

       Once in the family’s room, Alejandra began spitting in a trash

can.   She refused to explain what was wrong with her, stating only

that it was “too gross” and that she could not reveal where she had

been because it was “her little secret.”             She finally agreed to

discuss the encounter with her siblings if they went to a place

where “he” could not hear them since he was right above her.             It is

undisputed that room 205 is located directly above her family’s

room, room 105.      Once in the family’s restroom, Alejandra told her

siblings about the encounter.

       Orlando called his parents.         Because Alejandra was too upset

to talk to her parents, Orlando gave his father the details of the

encounter as recently told to him by Alejandra. Alejandra’s father

immediately called the military police.

       After speaking to Alejandra and her mother, the military

police officers confronted Hefferon, who was found walking briskly

from his room (at approximately midnight) toward his car, which was

parked in the slot closest to the stairs leading down from his

                                      3
room.    The trunk of the car was open and Hefferon was carrying

suitcases when found by the officers.           The officers detained

Hefferon.     Shortly thereafter, Alejandra positively identified

Hefferon as her assailant at a show-up conducted at the temporary

lodging facility.

     On October 18, 2000, a jury found Hefferon guilty of knowingly

engaging in a sexual act with a victim under the age of twelve in

violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2241.       At sentencing the district court

departed upward on several grounds: (1) Hefferon’s criminal history

does not adequately represent his prior criminal conduct (increase

of Hefferon’s criminal history score from a I to a IV); (2) the

victim   suffers   from   an   extreme   psychological   injury   (upward

departure of three levels); and (3) Hefferon’s offense involved

multiple acts of criminal sexual abuse of the same victim (upward

departure of two levels).       The district court further found that

Hefferon had “abducted” his victim within the meaning of the

Sentencing Guidelines and adjusted his base level upward four

levels. Hefferon’s offense level of forty and his Criminal History

Category of IV resulted in a Guideline imprisonment range of 360

months to life.     The district court sentenced him to a 420-month

imprisonment term, followed by a five-year term of supervised

release.    No fine was assessed.

     Hefferon raises several arguments on appeal related to the

alleged insufficiency of the government’s evidence to prove that he

was Alejandra’s assailant.        Hefferon also appeals the district

                                    4
court’s upward adjustment for abduction and the district court’s

upward     departure   for   inadequacy     of    criminal   history,    extreme

psychological injury of the victim and multiple assaults of the

victim.

                                    ANALYSIS

I.    Evidence of Identity

      Hefferon avers that the out-of-court identification of him by

Alejandra     (and     the   in-court       use    thereof),    the     in-court

identification of him by Orlando, and the out-of-court statements

by Alejandra and her siblings admitted into evidence constitute

reversible error.        Hefferon also generally maintains that the

evidence introduced at trial was insufficient to prove his identity

as   the   assailant   beyond   a    reasonable     doubt.     Each     point   is

addressed below.

      A.     The One-On-One Show-Up

      Prior to trial, Hefferon moved to suppress any in-court

identification of him by Alejandra because she identified him as

her assailant at a show-up alleged to be impermissibly suggestive.

The district court denied the motion.                 Hefferon appeals this

denial.

      When reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress,

this court accepts the trial court’s purely factual findings unless

clearly erroneous or influenced by an incorrect view of the law.

United States v. Maldonado, 735 F.2d 809, 814 (5th Cir. 1984).

                                        5
Whether identification is constitutionally admissible is a mixed

question of fact and law.       Peters v. Whitley, 942 F.2d 937, 939

(5th Cir. 1991).

     A show-up differs from a line-up in several key respects.

Rather than having a group of individuals generally fitting the

victim’s   description   of    the   assailant     line   up   together   for

identification     purposes,    a    single      individual     fitting   the

description is presented to the victim for identification. In Neil

v. Biggers, 409 U.S. 188, 193 (1972), the Supreme Court rejected a

per se approach to whether a suggestive show-up automatically

violates a defendant’s due process rights, holding instead that

suggestive identification procedures do not violate due process if,

on balance, the relative reliability of the show-up guards against

the likelihood of misidentification.           Id. at 199.    In so doing, it

counsels us to employ a “totality of the circumstances” test to

determine if an identification procedure is violative of the Due

Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.            To apply this test, the

court is to consider the following factors: the opportunity of the

witness to view the assailant at the time of the crime, the

witness’s degree of attention, the accuracy of the witness’s prior

description of the assailant, the level of certainty demonstrated

by the witness at the confrontation, and the length of time between

the crime and the confrontation.         Id.

     The facts of the Neil case are instructive.                  There, the

alleged assailant defendant was identified by the rape victim in a

                                     6
one-on-one show-up at the stationhouse seven months after her

encounter.   Id.   Following a hearing, the district court held that

the stationhouse identification procedure was so suggestive that it

violated the defendant’s due process rights.       Id.   The court of

appeals affirmed.    Reversing, the Supreme Court held that:

     [T]he District Court’s conclusions on the critical facts
     are unsupported by the record and clearly erroneous. The
     victim spent a considerable period of time with her
     assailant, up to half an hour. She was with him under
     adequate artificial light in her house and under a full
     moon outdoors, and at least twice, once in the house and
     later in the woods, faced him directly and intimately.
     She was no casual observer, but rather the victim of one
     of the most personally humiliating of all crimes . . .
     She had “no doubt” that respondent was the person who
     raped her.
     . . .
     There was, to be sure, a lapse of seven months between
     the rape and the confrontation.        This would be a
     seriously negative factor in most cases. Here, however,
     the testimony is undisputed that the victim made no
     previous identification at any of the showups, lineups,
     or photographic showings. Her record for reliability was
     tu ago oe a sehdpeiul rsse waee sgetvns ihrsi asou.
      hs od n, s h a rvosy eitd htvr ugsiees nee n hwp
Weighing all the factors, we find no substantial likelihood of
misidentification. The evidence was properly allowed to go to the
jury.

Id. at 200 (footnote omitted).

     As the Supreme Court did in Neil, we review the facts of this

case to determine whether “the identification ‘was so impermissibly

suggestive’ as to give rise to a very substantial likelihood of

irreparable misidentification.”       United States v. Burbridge, 252

F.3d 775, 780 (5th Cir. 2001) (quoting Simmons v. United States,

390 U.S. 377, 384 (1968)); United States v. Watkins, 741 F.2d 692,

                                  7
694 (5th Cir. 1984) (holding that an identification procedure

violates due process when it is unnecessarily suggestive and

conducive to irreparable mistaken identification).

      Hefferon pointed the district court to several alleged “unduly

suggestive” circumstances of the show-up, such as the timing of the

show-up (it took place at midnight, at least two hours after

Alejandra’s normal bedtime and at least an hour-and-a-half after

the encounter), the presentation of Hefferon to the victim (the

handcuffed Defendant was presented to the victim flanked by two

armed military officers) and the alleged preparation of the victim

for the identification (the identification took place after the

victim overheard a conversation between the investigating officer

and her parents regarding Hefferon).       The district court rejected

these arguments.      It found that while Hefferon’s hands were cuffed

behind his back, the victim could not see the handcuffs, and that

although it was midnight, the identification area was well lit.

Further, although the identification took place several hours after

Alejandra’s normal bedtime, the facts demonstrate that Alejandra

was alert at the time of the identification.      For example, when she

first saw Hefferon before formally identifying him, Alejandra

visibly reacted in fear by jumping behind her mother.       This is not

the   reaction   of     a   sleepy-eyed   seven-year-old.    She   then

affirmatively answered “Yes” to the officer’s question whether

Hefferon was her assailant. Officers Davis and Long, who witnessed

the identification, testified that the victim’s identification of

                                     8
Hefferon was certain and positive.

     Hefferon contends that Alejandra’s fearful reaction was caused

by the armed officers rather than him.   We are not persuaded.   The

incident occurred at a military base.    Her father is a Captain in

the military and the family has resided at various military bases

throughout the world.   The presence of armed military officers is

not novel for this child.   Support exists for the district court

finding that the fearful stimulus was Hefferon.

     The district court also found that because “the assailant

forced the seven-year-old victim to perform an act of fellatio, she

tragically had ample opportunity to view her assailant at the time

of the crime, and her attention was focused in a way she will not

soon, if ever, forget.”     We agree.    Both Alejandra and Arlene

testified that the assailant spoke to Alejandra, telling her to

keep the encounter a secret, and Alejandra testified that her

assailant played a game with her which required her to find a

hiding place for him.     During this time, her focus was on her

assailant.   She clearly had the opportunity to view her assailant

carefully.   Moreover, the length of time between the encounter and

the confrontation was minimal — a one-to-two hour gap between the

encounter and the confrontation — and significantly shorter than

the seven-month gap addressed in Neil.

     The show-up identification procedure employed at the temporary

lodging facility was not impermissibly suggestive to Alejandra who

                                 9
had already identified “Big John” as her assailant.2                  However, even

if   the    show-up    were     found    to     be    unduly     suggestive,      the

identification procedure used did not result in a substantial

likelihood of misidentification.               See Manson v. Brathwaite, 432

U.S. 98, 105 (1977) (although the identification procedure was

suggestive in that only one photograph was used and no emergency or

exigent    circumstance       required    this       type   of   procedure   to   be

employed,      no      substantial            likelihood         of    irreparable

misidentification existed where the              identification was made by a

trained police officer); Neil, 409 U.S. at 200 (even if unduly

suggestive, the victim’s good record for reliability led the court

to find no substantial likelihood of misidentification); United

States v. Merkt, 794 F.2d 950, 957 (5th Cir. 1986) (female photo

array was unduly suggestive, but the witness’s identification of

the defendant was sufficiently reliable to outweigh the corruptive

effect of the array).          A thread of reliability supporting this

conclusion    runs    throughout    this      out-of-court       identification     —

     2
          We distinguish this case from the factual scenario
encountered by our court in United States v. Shaw, 894 F.2d 689,
692 (5th Cir. 1990). There, an alleged bank robber was presented
in a one-on-one show-up to a bank teller witness, in handcuffs,
flanked by police officers. The witness had no prior knowledge
of the defendant and could not identify him in a black and white
photo array presented to her before the show-up. Thus, while the
one-on-one show-up was found to be reliable, it was held to be
unduly suggestive under the totality of the circumstances test.
Id. Contrarily, Alejandra knew “Big John” and had previously
identified him by name and room. Further, there were no prior
attempts to have Alejandra identify her assailant by line-up or
photo array.

                                         10
Alejandra knew her assailant.      Before the show-up, Alejandra had

already identified her assailant as the man in room 205, the room

indisputably assigned to Hefferon.      She had previously gone to his

room in search of his son, who she and her siblings referred to as

“Little John.”   She and her siblings knew “Big John” and played

with “Little John.”    Alejandra testified that she was afraid to

tell her brother and sister about her assailant because “he” was

right above them, in room 205.     The record is replete with indicia

of reliability bolstering the out-of-court identification.3           The

unique circumstances of this case, particularly the immediate

fearful reaction evoked from Alejandra upon seeing Hefferon and the

victim’s prior knowledge of Hefferon, belie a holding that a

substantial   likelihood   of   misidentification   resulted   from   the

identification procedure employed.

     B.   Comment by the District Court

     Hefferon alleges that his due process and fair trial rights

     3
          Contrary to Hefferon’s assertions, the reliability of
the show-up identification is not lessened by Alejandra’s
inability to identify him as “Big John” in court. The government
offered testimony at trial from an officer who compared a
photograph of Hefferon at the time of his arrest to Hefferon’s
in-court appearance. He noted that Hefferon was wearing glasses
and a suit in court, had lighter hair than he did at the time of
his arrest and had lost a significant amount of weight while
incarcerated before his trial setting. The officer himself
testified that he initially had trouble identifying Hefferon in
the courtroom. The fact that neither Alejandra nor Arlene could
recognize “Big John” over ten months after the encounter when his
appearance had undoubtedly changed was properly weighed by the
jury. However, it does not dictate a bar, on due process
grounds, of the out-of-court identification.

                                   11
were violated when the district court inappropriately commented on

the evidence.

     Neither Alejandra nor Arlene could identify Hefferon in court.

Following a recess, Orlando was able to identify Hefferon as “Big

John.”   On cross-examination, when asked by the defense counsel if

the prosecutor told him to “[m]ake sure that you say that is Big

John,”   Orlando   responded   affirmatively.4   On   redirect,   the

government elicited testimony from Orlando that the prosecutor had

first asked him if he could recognize anybody in the courtroom and

that he, on his own, responded by stating that he recognized “Big

John.”   All three children were also questioned extensively by the

defense counsel on the government’s preparation of them, including

the number of times the prosecutors met with them and whether the

prosecutors repeatedly asked them the same questions to help

     4
           The cross-examination of Orlando, in relevant part,
reads:

Q:   Do you recall the recess, the break?
A:   Yes.
. . .
Q:   Do you remember this lady coming up to you and looking at
     that man?
. . .
A:   No, it was the man sitting next to him [sic].
. . .
Q:   And, did he look at the man [the Defendant] at the table
     over there?
A:   Yes.
Q:   Okay. And did he tell you, “Make sure that you say that is
     Big John?”
A:   Yes.

                                  12
prepare them for in-court questioning.5

     Later in the trial, during the cross-examination of the

defense expert, John Guerrero, the government was able to get the

expert to concede that given Alejandra’s prior interactions with

Hefferon, the out-of-court identification of Hefferon by Alejandra

“look[ed] real good.”   On re-direct, the defense sought Guerrero’s

opinion on the effect of coaching on a witness’s testimony.       The

government objected and the district court overruled the objection.

In so doing, it made the comment at issue on appeal during the

following exchange:

     Q:   How good is the ID looking when the Prosecutors
          tell the child “make sure that when you go into
          court you say that it is Big John”

     Mr. Contreras: Objection, Your Honor.        There   is no
                    evidence of that.

     The Court:       There is no evidence that that occurred.

     Mr. Villarreal:Your Honor –

     The Court:       No, there is not. Now if you can give me
                      some proof that they did that I will put

     5
          For example, the following exchange took place between
the defense counsel and Alejandra:

Q:   Did you feel you already knew what questions they were going
     to ask you?
A:   Umm, some of them.
Q:   Because, they had spoken to you five or four times.
A:   Yes.
Q:   And, when they came back to talk to you some more, you
     already had an idea of what questions they [the prosecutors]
     were going to ask?
A:   Yes.
Q:   So, to you, was it kind of like practicing your answers?
A:   Yes . . . .

                                 13
                     them in jail.    This is the fourth or
                     fifth time you say they are doing
                     something and they are not. Now, you can
                     proceed.

     Hefferon   maintains   that   he   was    attempting   to   prove   the

prosecution coached the child witnesses to identify Alejandra’s

assailant as “Big John,” and that the district court’s comment

improperly informed the jury that this defense was without merit.

     It is well-settled that it is “within the prerogative of a

federal judge to manage the pace of a trial, to comment on the

evidence, and even to question witnesses and elicit facts not yet

adduced or clarify those previously presented.”              E.g., United

States v. Reyes, 227 F.3d 263, 265 (5th Cir. 2000); see also Calif.

Ins. Co. v. Union Compress Co., 133 U.S. 387, 417 (1890) (“In the

courts of the United States, as in those in England, from which our

practice was derived, the judge, in submitting a case to a jury,

may, at his discretion, whenever he thinks it necessary to assist

them in arriving at a just conclusion, call their attention to

parts of it which he thinks important, and express his opinion upon

the facts . . . .”) (quotation and citation omitted); United States

v. Blevins, 555 F.2d 1236, 1240 (5th Cir. 1977).       This prerogative,

however, is curtailed by the requirement that the trial judge not

give the appearance of partiality, a determination which is made by

examining the record in its entirety.         See United States v. Cantu,

167 F.3d 198, 202 (5th Cir. 1999); see also United States v. Munoz,

150 F.3d 401, 413   (5th Cir. 1998) (“We must determine whether the

                                   14
trial judge’s inquiry was so prejudicial that it denied [the

defendant] a fair, as opposed to a perfect, trial.”).

     In the context of this case, the comment by the district court

did not have a significant impact on the jury and did not give the

appearance of partiality.    The questions posed to Mr. Guerrero by

the government related to Alejandra’s out-of-court identification

(the show-up) of Hefferon.      When pressed by the prosecutor, the

expert admitted that the one-on-one identification of Hefferon by

Alejandra gained reliability from Alejandra’s prior knowledge of

her assailant and the prior identification of her assailant by name

and room location.   The defense counsel’s re-direct, to which the

trial court’s comment was directed, focused on testimony elicited

by the defense from Orlando, not Alejandra, regarding alleged

“coaching” by the government.    In context, therefore, the comment

from the district court that “there is no evidence that that

occurred,” is technically true as to Alejandra. The district court

appears to have been legitimately concerned with poisoning the

identification made by Alejandra with the testimony of Orlando.

And while perhaps overcompensating for this concern, the single

comment made by the district court in the context of a two-day

trial, in which thirteen witnesses testified, does not require

reversal.   See Reyes, 227 F.3d at 265-66 (questions by the trial

judge to six of the seven witnesses which apparently favored the

prosecution, though improper in at least two instances, did not

                                  15
have    the   cumulative    effect    of   depriving   defendant   of   his

constitutional rights);        Munoz, 150 F.3d at 401 (there was no

possibility that the trial judge’s role was confused with that of

the jury through his questions to the witness; viewed as a whole,

the    intervention   was     not    quantitatively    and   qualitatively

substantial enough);       United States v. Wallace, 32 F.3d 921, 926

(5th Cir. 1994) (improper comments by the trial court allegedly

bolstering the government witness’s credibility and statements in

front of the jury that the defense motion was frivolous did not

substantially     prejudice    the    defense,   especially    where    the

instruction to disregard comments cured error); United States v.

Carpenter, 776 F.2d 1291, 1295-96 (5th Cir. 1985) (comment by the

trial court to the defense counsel that it had still not heard a

defense was improper but not so substantial or prejudicial as to

require reversal).

       Quercia v. United States, 289 U.S. 466, 468-69 (1933), the

case principally relied on by the Defendant in support of his

position that the district court took a critical issue away from

the jury, is distinguishable from this case.           The trial judge in

Quercia stated that he was “going to tell you [the jury] what [he]

th[ought] of the defendant’s testimony,” and proceeded to state the

following: “You may have noticed, Mr. Foreman and gentlemen, that

he wiped his hands during his testimony.          It is rather a curious

thing, but that is almost always an indication of lying.”               Id.

This statement is tantamount to saying the defendant is guilty.          As

                                      16
found by the Supreme Court, the trial judge put his own experience

in the scale against the accused.      Id. at 472.   The comparatively

mild comment by the trial court in the instant case simply does not

cripple Hefferon’s defense in the manner demonstrated in Quercia.

Hefferon was allowed to pose a substantial number of questions to

all   three    children   regarding    the   government’s   method   of

interviewing and preparing the child witnesses.      Further, the jury

charge included the following curative instruction:

      Also, do not assume from anything I have done or said
      during the trial that I have any opinion concerning any
      issues in this case. Except for the instructions to you
      on the law, you should disregard anything I may have said
      during the trial in arriving at your own findings as to
      the fact.

Juries are presumed to follow their instructions. Zafiro v. United

States, 506 U.S. 534, 540-41 (1993); see also United States v.

Garcia Abrego, 86 F.3d 394, 401-02 (5th Cir. 1996) (curative

instruction to the jury remedied any prejudice arising from the

district court’s comment on defendants’ nationality during voir

dire).     The comment in this case does not require reversal.

      C.     Excited Utterance

      Prior to and during trial, Hefferon objected to testimony from

Alejandra and the members of her family regarding Alejandra’s out-

of-court statements about “Big John” and “the man in room 205,”

arguing that the statements were unreliable hearsay and that any

probative worth was outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.

                                  17
The district court overruled the objections and admitted the

statements.    Hefferon appeals this ruling, contending that the

statements do not fall within the excited utterance exception to

the hearsay rule because they were not closely related in time to

the occurrence and there was ample opportunity for others to

influence Alejandra’s responses.

      The court reviews a district court’s exclusion of evidence for

an abuse of discretion.      See Guillory v. Domtar Indus. Inc., 95

F.3d 1320, 1329 (5th Cir. 1996).       Furthermore, if this court finds

an abuse of discretion in the admission or exclusion of evidence,

we review the error under the harmless error doctrine, under which

we   will affirm   the   evidentiary   rulings   unless   they   affect a

substantial right of the Defendant.       See United States v. Skipper,

74 F.3d 608, 612 (5th Cir. 1996).

      Following a suppression hearing, the trial court made several

findings regarding the victim’s emotional state. It found that the

victim was still highly traumatized by the event at the time she

made statements to her family members and to the security officer

who investigated the assault and that these statements were all

made within one-to-two hours of the encounter.       The district court

also found that the statements of her two minor siblings regarding

the encounter were made under the trauma of their sister’s assault

and likewise bear adequate “indicia of reliability.”

      The admission of the statements made by Alejandra was not an

abuse of discretion.       The statements indisputably relate to a

                                  18
startling event or condition, and Alejandra was under the stress of

excitement caused by the event when she made them.             See FED. R.

EVID.   803(2)   (rule   excepting    from    hearsay    definition    those

“statement[s] relating to a startling event or condition made while

the declarant was under the stress of excitement caused by the

event or condition”).      Several courts of appeals have lowered the

evidentiary bar to the admission of like-related evidence when the

victim declarant is a young child, recognizing that the possibility

of fabrication and coaching are limited and the likelihood that the

trauma from the startling event will remain with the child for some

time after the encounter is strong.          See, e.g., United States v.

Rivera, 43 F.3d 1291, 1296 (9th Cir. 1995) (statement made a half

hour after an assault occurred qualified as an excited utterance

because “[r]ather than focusing solely on the time a statement was

made,   we   consider    other   factors,    including   the   age    of   the

declarant, the characteristics of the event and the subject matter

of the statements”); United States v. Farley, 992 F.2d 1122, 1123

(10th Cir. 1993) (statement of a young child made the day following

molestation could have been admitted as an excited utterance where

the child was described as frightened and on the verge of tears);

Morgan v. Foretich, 846 F.2d 941, 947 (4th Cir. 1988) (four-year-

old’s statements made within three hours of returning from sexually

abusive father’s home fell within exception because “courts must

also be cognizant of the child’s first real opportunity to report

the incident”); United States v. Iron Shell, 633 F.2d 77, 85-86

                                     19
(8th Cir. 1980) (nine-year-old’s statements elicited by a police

officer between forty-five minutes and one hour and fifteen minutes

after an assault fell within the excited utterance exception);

United States v. Nick, 604 F.2d 1199, 1202 (9th Cir. 1979) (three-

year-old’s statements within hours of molestation were admissible).

     We turn next to the district court’s conclusion, in its order

on Hefferon’s motion in limine, that the out-of-court statements of

Arlene and Orlando fall within the excited utterance exception.

Assuming, without deciding, that the statements are hearsay and

fall outside the excited utterance exception, the district court’s

pre-trial ruling — admitting in blanket form statements made by

Arlene and Orlando — nevertheless constitutes harmless error.   See

Skipper, 74 F.3d at 612 (we review the error under the harmless

error doctrine, under which we will affirm the evidentiary rulings

unless they affect a substantial right of the Defendant).

     We note that while Hefferon generally objects to the district

court’s motion in limine ruling on the admission of statements by

Alejandra’s siblings under the excited utterance exception and the

district court’s ruling on Hefferon’s running objection in court to

the admission of these statements, he does not point the court to

any specific out-of-court statement by the siblings that was

erroneously admitted over his objection.   The only references to

out-of-court statements by the siblings found by this court in its

independent review of the record are references in the testimony of

                                20
Alejandra’s mother and father.6             Both testified about Orlando’s

out-of-court statements to his father regarding Alejandra’s account

of the encounter.          They also recalled Arlene’s out-of-court

statement of how she had seen Alejandra with “Big John.”              However,

Orlando’s    statements    simply     retrace    what   Alejandra    told     her

siblings, which, as stated above, is admissible under the excited

utterance exception and was testified to by Alejandra, Arlene and

Orlando. Further, Arlene herself testified in court as to what she

witnessed.    As such, the testimony was cumulative and the error

harmless.    See Skipper, 74 F.3d at 612.            A substantial right of

Hefferon    was   not   affected.      Id.;    see   also   United   States    v.

Williams, 957 F.2d 1238, 1244 (5th Cir.1992)(“In a harmless error

examination, ‘[w]e must view the error, not in isolation, but in

relation to the entire proceedings.’”) (quoting United States v.

Brown, 692 F.2d 345, 350 (5th Cir. 1982)).

     Finally, Hefferon’s argument that the trial court erred in

admitting the evidence over his Federal Rule of Evidence 403

objection is without merit.         It is axiomatic that Alejandra’s out-

of-court statements regarding her encounter with “Big John” are

prejudicial to Hefferon. However, on balance, the district court’s

determination that this prejudice is outweighed by the probative

     6
          Orlando himself testified that because Alejandra was
too upset to explain to her father what had happened, he told his
father what Alejandra had previously said to him and Arlene.
However, he does not specifically testify as to the substance of
his speech. Thus, his explanation of events does not implicate
the hearsay rules of evidence.

                                       21
value of the evidence is not improper.              Green v. Bock Laundry

Machine Co., 490 U.S. 504, 506 (1989) (discussing the balancing

test under FED. R. EVID. 403); United States v. Asibor, 109 F.3d

1023, 1034 (5th Cir. 1997) (same).

      D.    Sufficiency of the Evidence

      Clearly, the contested issue at trial was whether Hefferon was

Alejandra’s assailant.      There was no physical or medical evidence

linking Hefferon to the alleged assault.          Nevertheless, the facts

of this case, particularly the fact that the victim knew her

assailant,    support    the   jury’s      conviction.    In   addition   to

Alejandra’s out-of-court statements regarding “Big John” and “the

man in room 205" as her assailant, Arlene witnessed “Big John”

reminding Alejandra that the encounter was to be kept secret.             See

United States v. Garcia-Flores, 246 F.3d 451, 453 (5th Cir. 2001)

(evidence must be reviewed in the light most favorable to the

prosecution to determine whether any reasonable jury could have

found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable

doubt).      Ample support exists for the jury finding that the

government met its burden of proof on identity.

II.   Defendant’s Sentence

      Hefferon also disputes the district court’s imposition of an

upward adjustment for abduction of the victim, and an upward

departure    for   the   inadequacy   of    Hefferon’s   criminal   history,

extreme psychological injury to the victim and multiple assaults of

                                      22
the victim.

     We review the application of the sentencing guidelines de novo

and the district court’s findings of fact for clear error.       United

States v. Jefferson, 258 F.3d 405, 411 (5th Cir. 2001); United

States v. Wimbish, 980 F.2d 312 (5th Cir. 1992).

     A.     Abduction of the Victim

     Hefferon received a four-level upward adjustment (from a base

offense level of twenty-seven) for his “abduction” of Alejandra.

Hefferon    contests   this   adjustment,   contending   that    to   be

“abducted,” a victim must be physically forced from one location to

another.7

     The Criminal Sexual Abuse Guideline, § 2A3.1(b)(5), states,

under the Specific Offense Characteristics subsection, that “[i]f

the victim was abducted, increase by 4 levels.”          U.S. SENTENCING

GUIDELINES MANUAL, § 2A3.1(b)(5). The Criminal Sexual Abuse Guideline

itself does not define “abduction.” However, the commentary to the

Application Instructions define “abducted” to mean “that a victim

was forced to accompany an offender to a different location.          For

example, a bank robber’s forcing a bank teller from the bank into

a getaway car would constitute abduction.”     U.S. SENTENCING GUIDELINES

MANUAL, § 1B1.1 cmt. (1)(a) (2000).

     In United States v. Hawkins, 87 F.3d 722 (5th Cir. 1996), this

     7
          Hefferon objected to the probation officer’s
recommended adjustment for abduction in a Sentencing Memorandum
submitted to the district court. He also objected to the
adjustment at the sentencing hearing.

                                  23
court considered whether the district court erred in imposing an

upward adjustment for abduction under the robbery Guideline.                         Id.

at 726. There, following beatings by the defendant at one location

in   the    parking      area,    the    defendant’s     victims     were   forced    at

gunpoint to move to another location in the same parking area some

fifty-to-sixty          feet     away.       The    defendant       objected    to   the

adjustment, averring that movement some fifty-to-sixty feet in the

same parking area did not constitute “a different location” within

the meaning of the commentary.                 After surveying case law on the

issue      from    other   courts       of   appeals,    we   joined    those    courts

interpreting the term “a different location” “to be flexible and

thus susceptible of multiple interpretations, which are to be

applied case by case to the particular facts under scrutiny.”                        Id.

at 728.

      Hawkins is instructional to us in at least two respects.

First, it aids us in reaching the conclusion that Alejandra was

moved      “to    a   different     location”       within    the    meaning    of   the

commentary.           Hefferon moved Alejandra from some trees near the

playground, where he first sexually assaulted her, to the garbage

repository, where he again assaulted her.                       Application of the

adjustment provision under § 2A3.1(b)(5) is not precluded merely

because the different location is on the same lodging facility

property.         As we stated in Hawkins, the term should not be applied

“mechanically based on the presence or absence of doorways, lot

lines, thresholds, and the like.”                  Id.

                                             24
     Hawkins is helpful in another respect.                      As discussed below,

its liberal construction of the term “a different location”                           is

persuasive in our interpretation of the word “forced” in the term

“forced to accompany” found in the commentary to the Application

Instructions.

     Hefferon      maintains     that       implied    in   the    term    “forced    to

accompany” is a requirement that the force or coercion be physical.

Because Hefferon did not utilize physical force on his victim when

he enticed her with trickery to move from her room to the trees

near the playground and then to the garbage repository, he contends

the adjustment was improper.               We cannot concur.

     The Seventh Circuit considered a case in which a defendant,

pretended to be “Kyle,” a fifteen-year-old boy and later his

twenty-year-old       brother,        to     the     twelve-year-old        victim    he

corresponded with over an internet site devoted to UFO’s.                         United

States v. Romero, 189 F.3d 576, 578 (7th Cir. 1999), cert. denied,

529 U.S.    1011     (2000).      The       defendant    dominated        the   victim’s

vulnerable state (the victim was young, had severe emotional

problems, and had been diagnosed with Attention Deficit Disorder)

and ultimately enticed the victim to run away with him.                         Id.   On

appeal,    the   defendant      argued       the    district      court    erroneously

enhanced his sentence for abduction where no actual or threatened

force was applied to the victim.                   Id. at 589.      Disagreeing, the

Seventh    Circuit    held     that    for       purposes   of    “abduction”     under

U.S.S.G. § 2A3.1(b)(5), it did not matter whether the kidnapping

                                            25
was committed by physical force or a “force substitute” such as

inveigling.   Id. at 590.

     Likewise, the Eighth Circuit in United States v. Saknikent, 30

F.3d 1012, 1013 (8th Cir. 1994), considered a factual circumstance

similar to Romero.     The victim in Saknikent was a child under

twelve whose mental development was substantially below normal.

The victim disappeared from a convenience store and was later found

with the defendant, miles from her South Dakota town.           Id.   On

appeal, the defendant argued that because there was no evidence

that he forced the victim to accompany him, the adjustment for

abduction was erroneous.      Like the Seventh Circuit, the Eighth

Circuit rejected this narrow definition of “force,” and stated

that,

     Abduction increases the gravity of sexual assault or
     other crimes because the perpetrator’s ability to isolate
     the victim increases the likelihood that the victim will
     be harmed. Any concomitant assault is tangential to the
     rationale for the increased penalty. Also, “forced” does
     not necessarily imply a physical assault. To “force”
     means to compel “by physical, moral, or intellectual
     means,” or “to impose” or “to win one’s way.” WEBSTER’S
     SEVENTH NEW COLLEGIATE DICTIONARY 326 (1970). “Force” can also
     mean “constraining power, compulsion; strength directed
     to an end.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 644 (6th ed. 1990). The
     level of “force” necessary to overcome another’s will to
     resist is directly proportional to the development of the
     other’s will. [The defendant’s] interpretation of “force”
     ignores this fact, and would result in less punishment
     for those who isolate the very young and very vulnerable
     whose wills are either undeveloped or can be overcome
     with less than a full blown assault. Such inconsistency
     cannot be intended.

Id. at 1013-14 (internal footnote omitted).
                                26
     We think the term “forced to accompany” was not meant to

preclude adjustments where the force applied was by means of

“veiled coercion” rather than brute physical strength, at least in

a situation, such as that before the court, where the victim is

easily     overcome   by   veiled    coercion.8    We   reject    the   rigid

definition of “forced” urged by Hefferon. The word “forced” in the

term “forced to accompany,” like the term “a different location,”

is   “to     be   flexible     and     thus   susceptible    of    multiple

interpretations, which are to be applied case by case to the

particular facts under scrutiny . . . .”          Hawkins, 87 F.3d at 726.

     8
          The First Circuit encountered a situation under the
Extortion Guideline in which to define the parameters of the word
“forced.” United States v. Cunningham, 201 F.3d 20 (1st Cir.
2000). The victim, an adult male with no stated developmental or
emotional difficulties, failed to make payments on a loan made to
him by the defendant at an extremely high interest rate. Id. at
27. The defendant tricked the victim into moving to “another
location” by telling him that a good friend of his needed to
speak with him. When the victim arrived at the new location, the
defendant and several others beat him with lead pipes and tire
irons. Id. The First Circuit noted that the factual scenarios
addressed by the Seventh and Eighth Circuits both “involve the
abduction of children by trickery or inveigling,” but
nevertheless stated that “the age of the victim need not be
dispositive.” Id. at 28. It then adopted a definition of
“force” that encompassed its “common meaning” – to compel by
physical, moral, or intellectual means. It thus held that “the
word ‘force’ in no way suggests that the force exerted must be of
a physical or violent nature. There is nothing in the plain
meaning of the guideline to suggest that the force used must be
physical.” Id.; see also United States v. Whooten, 279 F.3d 58,
61 (1st Cir. 2002) (“This Court has observed that the abduction
enhancement is intended, at least in part, to protect victims
against additional harm that may result from the victim’s
isolation, and thus applies whether the abduction is carried out
by threat or by physical force.”), cert. denied, 122 S. Ct. 2376
(2002). The case before our court does not require us to opine
on whether we would define “abduction” as flexibly as the First
Circuit apparently has.
                                27
At sentencing, the district court found,

     the Defendant abducted the victim by appealing to a
     seven-year-old sense of obedience to adults and because
     of her inability to make assessments of that kind,
     Defendant was able to abduct her through a means of
     veiled coercion. He was able to isolate the victim by
     dominating her lack of intellectual ability, and also by
     appealing to the credulous nature of a seven-year-old.

The district court correctly held that Alejandra was “abducted”

within the meaning of the Guideline.

     B.     Upward Departure

     A    district   court   may   depart    upward   from   the     Sentencing

Guidelines if the court finds the existence of an aggravating

circumstance that was not adequately taken into consideration by

the Guidelines.      18 U.S.C. § 3553(b); United States v. Koon, 518

U.S. 81, 96-100 (1996) (enunciating the standard of review for

upward departures); United States v. Ashburn, 38 F.3d 803, 807 (5th

Cir. 1994) (en banc).        If the district court departs upward, it

must state the specific reason for doing so.             Id. We review the

district court’s decision to depart upward for abuse of discretion

and shall affirm an upward departure if (1) the district court

gives acceptable reasons for departing, and (2) the extent of the

departure   is   reasonable.       Id.      The   district   court    has   wide

discretion in determining the extent of departure.             Id.

            1.   Inadequacy of the Defendant’s Criminal History

     The Sentencing Guidelines permit an upward departure, “if

reliable information indicates that the criminal history does not
                                     28
adequately reflect the seriousness of the defendant’s past criminal

conduct or the likelihood that the defendant will commit other

crimes.” U.S. SENTENCING GUIDELINES MANUAL, § 4A1.3 (2000).           Section

4A1.3(e) of the Guidelines also specifies that departure may be

based upon “prior similar conduct not resulting in a criminal

conviction.”     Id. § 4A1.3(e); see also United States v. Ashburn, 38

F.3d 803, 808 (5th Cir. 1994) (upholding district court’s upward

departure of more than twice the recommended guideline range on

grounds     that    the    defendant’s      criminal       history   category

significantly underrepresented the seriousness of his criminal

history and the likelihood that he would commit similar crimes in

the future).

     The Pre-Sentence Report included four examples of Hefferon’s

alleged involvement in sexual conduct with minors.            At sentencing,

the government presented the testimony of a number of victims from

these alleged incidents.        A ten-year-old child testified that on

three separate occasions Hefferon exposed himself to her when she

was six.    A nineteen-year-old testified that Hefferon fondled her

against    her   will   when   she   was   fifteen.    A    sixteen-year-old

testified that Hefferon tricked her into entering his apartment

when she was six.         Before she could leave the apartment, she

alleged that he showed her a pornographic movie, dropped his pants,

put an elephant mask around his penis, and asked her to take her

                                      29
pants    off.9   The   district   court   found   the   testimony   of   the

witnesses credible.     It further found that this criminal behavior

had persisted for a long time.     Holding that the Guidelines did not

fully consider his criminal history in determining the range for

sentencing, it departed upward.

     The district court did not abuse its discretion in departing

upward based on the inadequacy of Hefferon’s criminal history. The

three incidents considered by the district court all involved young

girls as the victim and the behavior attributed to Hefferon was

sexual in nature. We disagree with Hefferon’s assertion that these

incidents are factually dissimilar to the instant incident for

departure purposes.

            2.   Extreme Psychological Injury to the Victim

     Hefferon also contends that the district court erred in

departing upward based on the extreme psychological injury suffered

by Alejandra.    Section 5K2.3 provides,

     If a victim or victims suffered psychological injury much
     more serious than that normally resulting from commission
     of the offense, the court may increase the sentence above
     the authorized guideline range. The extent of the
     increase ordinarily should depend on the severity of the
     psychological injury and the extent to which the injury
     was intended or knowingly risked.

     Normally, psychological injury would be sufficiently
     severe to warrant application of this adjustment only

     9
          A woman who formerly worked at a day care operated out
of Hefferon’s home also testified that Hefferon massaged a
sixteen-month-old’s vagina. The district court did not consider
this incident credible.
                                30
     when there is a substantial impairment of the
     intellectual, psychological, emotional, or behavioral
     functioning of a victim, when the impairment is likely to
     be of an extended or continuous duration, and when the
     impairment manifests itself by physical or psychological
     symptoms or by changes in behavior patterns. The court
     should consider the extent to which such harm was likely,
     given the nature of the defendant's conduct.

U.S. SENTENCING GUIDELINES MANUAL, § 5K2.3 (2000)     We have previously

stated that “[a] psychological injury is sufficiently severe where

there exists (1) a substantial impairment of the intellectual,

psychological, emotional, or behavioral functioning of a victim,

(2) which is of an extended or continuous duration, and (3) which

manifests itself by physical or psychological symptoms or by

changes in behavior patterns.”      United States v. Anderson, 5 F.3d

795, 804 (5th Cir. 1993).

     Using this framework as a guidepost, we hold that the district

court did not abuse its discretion in departing upward for extreme

psychological   injury.     At   sentencing,    it   found   credible   the

representation of Alejandra’s treatment manager (Dr. Rotering) that

the victim will suffer long-term psychological affects, such as

lack of trust (especially of adults), that are excessively severe.

Dr. Rotering testified that she has evaluated hundreds of victims

of sexual abuse and that Alejandra’s trauma was “the most severe of

anybody [she] ha[d] ever worked with.”         Additionally, the record

demonstrates that the trauma suffered by Alejandra manifests itself

physically. On several occasions, when Alejandra was asked to talk

about the incident, she became physically ill.               This physical

                                   31
manifestation (severe crying, vomiting, and fever) was described by

Dr. Rotering as a symptom generally associated with a patient

suffering    from     Post   Traumatic    Stress   Disorder,     a   disorder

characterized    by    Dr.   Rotering    as   having   ongoing   and   severe

symptoms.   Family members also testified that Alejandra had become

introverted and aggressive.       The district court did not abuse its

discretion in departing upward.10

            3.   Multiple Assaults

     Comment 5 to      § 2A3.1 of the Criminal Sexual Abuse Guideline,

in effect at the time Hefferon was sentenced, provides that,

     if a defendant was convicted (A) of more than one act of
     criminal sexual abuse and the counts are grouped under §
     3D1.2 (Groups of Closely Related Counts), or (B) of only
     one such act but the court determines that the offense
     involved multiple acts of criminal sexual abuse of the
     same victim or different victims, an upward departure
     would be warranted.

U.S. SENTENCING GUIDELINES MANUAL, § 2A3.1 cmt. 5 (2000).        Pursuant to

this comment, the district court departed upward two levels because

it found the offense at issue involved multiple acts of criminal

     10
          The fact that Alejandra’s physical manifestations did
not appear in Dr. Rotering’s notes does not require vacation of
the sentence. Adequate support exists in the record for the
trial court’s finding that the psychological injury manifested
itself physically. At sentencing, the trial judge remarked that
he “was the closest person to that child [the victim] and that
child was most visibly trembling and frightened beyond any
measure.” Further, several family members testified that
Alejandra became physically ill whenever she was asked to discuss
the encounter. Moreover, the government represented that when
investigators traveled to Germany to talk to Alejandra about the
incident, she became physically ill and could not speak to them.

                                     32
sexual abuse of the same victim.      As stated by the district court,

“[f]irst [the Defendant] coerced her to touch his penis, then he

essentially let her go, only to coerce her again.          On the second

occasion he not only coerced her to touch his penis[,] he also

forced her to perform oral sex on him.”      The district court did not

err in determining that Hefferon’s offense involved multiple acts

of criminal sexual abuse of the same victim.        See United States v.

Jefferson, 258 F.3d 405, 411 (5th Cir. 2001); see also Williams v.

United States, 503 U.S. 193 (1992) (“Although the Act established

a limited appellate review of sentencing decisions, it did not

alter a court of appeals’ traditional deference to a district

court’s   exercise   of   its   sentencing   discretion   .   .   .   .   The

development of the guideline sentencing regime has not changed our

view that, except to the extent specifically directed by statute,

‘it is not the role of an appellate court to substitute its

judgment for that of the sentencing court as to the appropriateness

of a particular sentence.’”) (citation omitted).

                                CONCLUSION

     The evidence was sufficient for the government to prove its

case beyond   a   reasonable    doubt.   Further,    no   error   requires

vacation of the sentence imposed by the district court. Hefferon’s

conviction and his sentence are AFFIRMED.

                                    33