Tracy Will Vaughn v. State of Arkansas

Arkansas Court of Appeals
Tracy Will Vaughn v. State of Arkansas, 598 S.W.3d 549 (2020)
2020 Ark. App. 185

Tracy Will Vaughn v. State of Arkansas

Opinion

Cite as

2020 Ark. App. 185

ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION I No. CR-19-591

Opinion Delivered March 18, 2020 TRACY WILL VAUGHN APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE WHITE COUNTY V. CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 73CR-18-151] STATE OF ARKANSAS APPELLEE HONORABLE ROBERT EDWARDS, JUDGE

AFFIRMED

BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge

This criminal appeal, with a state-law-privilege twist, concerns whether the State

failed to provide material evidence to Vaughn’s defense attorney in violation of Brady v.

Maryland,

373 U.S. 83

(1963). Brady’s essence is that “the suppression by the prosecution

of evidence favorable to an accused upon request violates due process where the evidence

is material either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the

prosecution.”

Id. at 87

.

A White County Circuit Court jury convicted Tracy Vaughn of sexually assaulting

nine-year-old K.H. and sentenced him to five years’ imprisonment. The jury acquitted

Vaughn on two counts of sexual indecency with a child, charges that involved K.H. and

her friend, B.W. This appeal centers on counseling that K.H. received, the content of

certain records, and whether Vaughn’s counsel should have been allowed access to them. K.H. received mental-health counseling before and after the events that led to the

sexual-assault charges against Vaughn occurred. Vaughn argued in the circuit court that he

should have been given access to K.H.’s counseling records because they likely contained

evidence favorable to his defense. The court ultimately denied Vaughn access and did not

perform a Brady analysis. The court reasoned that the counseling records were absolutely

privileged under Arkansas Rule of Evidence 5011 and

Ark. Code Ann. § 17-27-311

(Repl.

2018).2 Consequently, the circuit court rejected Vaughn’s argument that he was entitled to

potentially exculpatory evidence contained in K.H.’s mental-health records under

Pennsylvania v. Ritchie,

480 U.S. 39

(1987). Ritchie is a post-Brady case that held a defendant

has a due process right to require a state agency to disclose exculpatory or impeachment

evidence that it possesses. Ritchie,

480 U.S. at 57

. In this case, the circuit court ultimately

ruled that “the patient/client/therapist privilege is paramount and irrespective of

exculpatory evidence. These [mental-health] records are not subject to inspection.”

1 The circuit court miscited Arkansas Rule of Evidence 501. The psychotherapist- patient privilege of Ark. R. Evid. 503 is at issue in this appeal. 2 This statute states:

(a) For the purposes of this chapter, the confidential relations and communications between a licensed counselor and a client, a licensed associate counselor and a client, a licensed marriage and family therapist and a client, or between a licensed associate marriage and family therapist and a client are placed upon the same basis as those between an attorney and a client.

(b) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to require that any privileged communication be disclosed.

2 The court’s decision was one of federal constitutional magnitude because, in this

case, it was the prosecution who procured the counseling records as best we can tell. More

specifically, the State appears to have provided the disputed counseling records to the court

during a pretrial hearing after procuring them using subpoenas. (More on this later.) It also

appears that neither K.H. (acting through a parent or guardian) nor her health providers

raised any evidentiary privilege to block the prosecuting attorney from receiving confidential

communications that occurred between K.H. and her counselor.

Vaughn argues to this court that the circuit court erred when it denied him access to

the counseling records, which violated his federal and state constitutional rights. Vaughn

seeks a new trial because, in his view, being kept in the dark about the counseling records’

content prejudiced him at trial.

I. K.H.’s Counseling Records

Vaughn appears to have first learned about the counseling issue from an affidavit that

the State attached to its initial criminal information. That affidavit recited that K.H. had

“recently disclosed during her therapy session that Tracy [Vaughn] exposed his penis and made

her touch it.” (Emphasis added.) This revelation prompted Vaughn’s counsel to move the

court to compel the prosecuting attorney to disclose K.H.’s counseling (or mental-health)

records pursuant to due process rights he claimed under the Fourteenth Amendment to the

United States Constitution. See Brady,

373 U.S. 83

; United States v. Bagley,

473 U.S. 667

(1985); Ritchie,

480 U.S. 39

; article 2, section 8 of the Arkansas Constitution; Arkansas Rules

of Criminal Procedure 17.1(a)(iv) and 17.4(a). In his motion, Vaughn argued that “the

State has waived any privilege, or should be estopped from asserting it, inasmuch as the

3 affidavit accompanying the felony information asserts that an accuser ‘recently disclosed in

her therapy session that Tracy exposed his penis and made her touch it.’” According to

Vaughn, Arkansas’s psychotherapist-patient privilege set forth in Johnson v. State,

342 Ark. 186

,

27 S.W.3d 405

(2000), and Holland v. State,

2015 Ark. 341

,

471 S.W.3d 179

, does not

apply because “the counseling would have been part of the investigative and prosecutorial

process and not independent of it . . . [and] those state law privileges must fall before due

process guarantee set forth in Ritchie.” He therefore asked the circuit court to compel the

State to disclose these records to him. Alternatively, he asked the court to review the records

in camera and assess them for exculpatory or impeachment material.

The circuit court held a pretrial hearing on motions that included Vaughn’s discovery

motion. The prosecuting attorney arrived at the pretrial hearing with K.H.’s counseling

records. The circuit court received them from the prosecutor and placed three exhibits

under seal in three separately sealed envelopes. They are labeled court’s exhibits Nos. 1, 2,

and 3. The first exhibit contains the alleged Brady material that Vaughn says prejudiced his

case when the prosecutor refused to disclose it. Court’s exhibit No. 1 covers K.H.’s records

that were generated by one counselor who treated K.H. from approximately January 2011

through January 2018 (Provider A).

Court’s exhibit No. 2 contains the following: K.H.’s records from a second provider

(Provider B) that were generated in 2018; a copy of a 10 May 2018 subpoena from the

White County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office to the “Keeper of the Records [of Provider

B]”; and a fax transmittal sheet from Provider B to the prosecuting attorney.

4 Court’s exhibit No. 3 consists of: B.W.’s July 2016 records from Provider C, which

is an outpatient service provider, and a White County prosecutor subpoena demanding

those records.

During the pretrial hearing, the prosecuting attorney argued that sealed exhibits 1, 2,

and 3 should not be disclosed to defense counsel:

[Vaughn] acts as if these—both of these girls, the first time they ever go to treatment is after this case and they are sent there by the State. Both of them were in treatment with those same providers previously. Now, yes, they did go back after this happened, but they’ve not been ordered there by the State and we’ve not—up until the Court asked the State to get the records, we did not have access, we did not seek to admit those records[.] . . . And we would argue that they [the victims] have not waived that privilege that allows them to get assistance that they need, other than if there is something exculpatory to the Defendant. (Emphasis added.)

The record is not clear on which provider’s records, if any, the court asked the State to get,

in what manner the court communicated its request, or when this occurred. Nor is it clear

whether Vaughn’s counsel was told that the court asked the State to get some of K.H.’s

counseling records, if it in fact did so.

What we do know is that the prosecutor’s office sent a subpoena demanding K.H.’s

records to Provider B and a subpoena demanding B.W.’s records to Provider C. How the

prosecutor procured Provider A’s records (the ones at issue here) is unclear because the

record does not contain a subpoena from the prosecutor’s office as to that provider. We

assume a third subpoena was used but cannot state that as a fact. No party below made a

good record on how the records were procured from the various providers. And no party

made a good record on whether K.H.’s parent(s) or legal guardian(s) were made aware of

what was going on. There is no written authorization in the records from a person legally

5 empowered to permit the State to get confidential health information. Nor, as we have

said, is there anything in the record showing that the three separate care providers, or K.H.

herself through a representative, attempted to resist the subpoenas for the same reasons the

State now says that Vaughn was never entitled to receive them. No statutory authority was

cited, or otherwise obviously invoked, for the disclosure of the confidential information.

Despite the unknowns, we know that defense counsel argued during the hearing

that, among other things, he needed to know “whether they’re telling the truth or not and

that records of treatment would be the best evidence.” He also argued that the recorded

statement Vaughn gave to the police in 2016 contained statements by police officers “about

whether the girls are going to have to go to therapy” and that “some of these [records]

appear to be the records of the therapy that is referred to [in the police interview].” Vaughn

asked to examine the records with the prosecutor “sitting right there so I can discuss

particular issues more cogently . . . and we can do this under seal.”

The court ruled from the bench that the State did not send the girls to therapy “for

investigative purposes” because the “first 118 pages” of the records “occurred in 2011

through ’14, before these allegations came to light in 2016[.]” Although it is clear enough

that the court reviewed the records to some extent, it is not clear to what extent or to what

depth, content-wise, the court did so. In the end, the court ruled from the bench that

K.H.’s records were absolutely privileged under Arkansas law and therefore could not be

disclosed to Vaughn under any circumstance.

In response to Vaughn’s request for a more specific ruling, the court said this:

With respect to Ri[t]chie, that is a case that dealt with the Pennsylvania statute that made the entire investigative file of the Child Protective Services

6 Agency in Pennsylvania privileged and not specifically address patient/client records, therapists, interviews. . . . I am going to stand by my ruling, that the patient/client/therapist privilege is paramount and irrespective of exculpatory evidence. These records are not subject to inspection of admissibility and your objection—exceptions are noted. . . . I’m finding that the privilege granted to a child in seeking therapy with a licensed associate counselor or doctor—I hate to use this word, trumps the due process, confrontation and other Constitutional rights you claim. . . . That’s for the Appellate Court to determine if they think I’m wrong on the privilege issue.

Despite numerous proffers as to what the undisclosed records might contain, the

court rejected all of Vaughn’s requests and arguments to that effect before and during the

trial. During a bench conference held while K.H. was on the stand, Vaughn explained why

court’s exhibit No. 1 (Provider A’s records) would aid his cross-examination.

It is—it is my—it is my belief that . . . the girl has been coached and— and to make the allegation of touching—touching by Mr. Vaughn, . . . her testimony is she—she made the claim first only to this Ms.—the counselor after she’s denied it the second time. Anyway, and then, of course, I’m going to need the records for that, obviously, you’re denying it[.]

The circuit court replied, in part:

I have made my ruling a number of times that the counseling records are not admissible and that the statements she made to the counselor were not admissible. . . . I am not going to let you do anything with the counseling records based on my prior ruling. Period.

The case was fully tried, and Vaughn was convicted of one count of sexually

assaulting K.H. in the second degree. Vaughn filed his notice of appeal and, in due course,

the record.

After the record was lodged with this court’s clerk, Vaughn’s counsel moved this

court for access to the three sealed court exhibits, which he had never seen. We granted

the motion and allowed both parties access to the sealed exhibits so that they could make

7 informed arguments on appeal regarding the correctness of the circuit court’s decision to

deny Vaughn access to the disputed therapy records.

A. Did the State Access and Withhold K.H.’s Records and Thereby Trigger Brady?

In a typical case—meaning absent a statutory exception, the victim’s consent, or a

court order—a person’s health records are not any more accessible to a prosecuting attorney

than to a defense attorney. Here, however, the prosecuting attorney possessed the records

at issue. Whether that was done at the behest of the circuit court, or on the lawyer’s own

initiative, Brady was triggered. See, e.g., State v. Allen,

1999 WL 5173

(Tenn. Crim. App.

Jan. 8, 1999). But the circuit court did not fully perform a Ritchie/Brady analysis because it

hung its decisional hat solely on Arkansas privilege law. That decision was an error of law

on these facts.

A criminal defendant has a due process “right to put before a jury evidence that might

influence the determination of guilt,” or, in other words, a right to obtain and present

exculpatory evidence. Ritchie,

480 U.S. at 56

. In addition, the Sixth Amendment to the

United States Constitution provides a criminal defendant with the right to confront

witnesses, which is achieved through cross-examination. Davis v. Alaska,

415 U.S. 308, 315

(1974). The Arkansas Supreme Court has also recognized that Ark. R. Crim. P. 17.1

requires the State to disclose to defense counsel relevant or exculpatory material “which is

or may come within [its] possession, control, or knowledge[.]” Johnson v. State,

342 Ark. 186, 197

,

27 S.W.3d 405

, 412–13 (2000), cert. denied,

532 U.S. 944

(2001).

Here is how the Brady process generally works. When a defendant like Vaughn has

made “some plausible showing” that information that the prosecuting attorney or state agent

8 has would be “both material and favorable to his defense,” and the records are not absolutely

privileged under state law, then the defendant is entitled to an in camera review of the

evidence, at a constitutional minimum. Ritchie,

480 U.S. at 58

n.15 (quoting United States

v. Valenzuela-Bernal,

458 U.S. 858, 867

(1982)).3 Compare Taffner v. State,

2018 Ark. 99

, at

12,

541 S.W.3d 430, 437

(holding that a defendant was entitled to an in camera review of

DHS records involving a victim in a child-rape case when there was a preliminary showing

that the records contained allegedly false accusations by the victim of sexual abuse and

Arkansas statutes involving DHS permitted disclosure in certain circumstances) with Holland,

2015 Ark. 341

, at 13–15, 471 S.W.3d at 187–88 (holding private records of victim’s

disclosure of sexual abuse to a therapist were not discoverable under Brady v. Maryland,

373 U.S. 83

(1963)).

3 In Ritchie, the Pennsylvania legislature only protected the CYS records with a qualified privilege.

Id.

at 57–58. Other types of records may be absolutely privileged in Pennsylvania. See Pa. v. Wilson,

602 A.2d 1290, 1297

(Pa. 1992) (holding that defendant was not entitled to disclosure of victim’s records held by a rape crisis center where those records were protected by an absolute statutory privilege); N.D. v. Spath,

581 N.W.2d 123, 126

(N.D. 1998) (rejecting defendant’s confrontation clause claim and noting that although the evidentiary privilege at issue contained some limited exceptions, it did not contain a general exception for disclosure of records pursuant to court order). But other courts have found that a defendant’s constitutional rights to a fair trial and to confront the witnesses against him may override a medical-patient privilege. See, e.g., N.Y. v. Maynard,

363 N.Y.S.2d 384

(Sup. Ct. 1974). The Supreme Court of the United States has recognized privacy interests and policy justifications for protecting psychotherapist records under the federal rules of evidence. See, e.g., Jaffee v. Redmond,

518 U.S. 1

(1996). So a victim’s interest in privacy, the legislature’s intent to maintain such a privilege, and public-policy reasons for preserving confidential communications between victim and counselor are all considerations when deciding whether a victim’s counseling records must be disclosed to defense counsel assuming the privilege has been properly asserted and established. State courts have reached different conclusions about a criminal defendant’s constitutional right to pierce an absolute sexual-assault counselor privilege. Compare In re Crisis Connection, Inc.,

949 N.E.2d 789, 802

(Ind. 2011) with Mass. v. Dwyer,

859 N.E.2d 400, 419

(Mass. 2006).

9 In Johnson, our supreme court rejected the argument that a criminal defendant has

the right to see a victim’s privileged mental-health records during pretrial discovery—or

examine them during a pretrial witness-competency hearing. Johnson,

342 Ark. at 193

,

27 S.W.3d at 410

. There is no holding, however, on whether a criminal defendant’s

constitutional rights at trial may outweigh the victim’s right to assert a privilege—especially

when the State has previously obtained the disputed records by subpoenas based on its own

initiative or at the court’s behest. In fact, the prosecuting attorney in Johnson did not access

or possess the victim’s mental-health records.

Id. at 197

,

27 S.W.3d at 412

(stating that the

appellant’s argument “presupposes that the State had access to or knowledge of the records

and their contents.”).4 Johnson therefore cannot control this case.

This case is different. Here the prosecutor had in hand K.H.’s records from two

separate private counseling centers. The printed date on court’s exhibit No. 1 from Provider

A is 15 May 2018. The facsimile transmittal date from Provider B is 11 May 2018. Provider

C’s records relate solely to B.W. and are relevant only because they contain a response from

Provider C, on 25 May 2018, to the White County prosecuting attorney’s subpoena. The

pretrial hearing on Vaughn’s discovery motion was held in August 2018.

It does not appear that Vaughn ever tried to compel the production of K.H.’s records

by way of a subpoena like the State did; nor did he seek to compel testimony from her

therapist at trial. But even if K.H.’s records could be kept completely confidential—

4 The dissenting justices would have held that Johnson “was hamstrung in his cross- examination of [the victim] and in his defense in general and, thus, was denied his right to a fair trial.” Johnson,

342 Ark. at 207

,

27 S.W.3d at 418

(Brown, J., dissenting).

10 meaning a defendant would not be entitled to the records under any circumstance—K.H.’s

records were not, in fact, kept confidential because they were disclosed to the prosecutor.

Having determined that the State possessed the disputed therapy records, for Brady

purposes, the next question is whether the evidence was “favorable to [the] accused.” Brady,

373 U.S. at 87

.

B. Was the Withheld Evidence Favorable to Vaughn?

Vaughn made a plausible showing that some of K.H.’s counseling records were

procured and possessed by the prosecutor and that the records contained impeachment or

exculpatory evidence critical to his defense. In our view, the circuit court should have

conducted an in camera review of K.H.’s records for evidence favorable to his defense. We

disagree with the State’s assertion that K.H. asserted a privilege that shielded the records

from review.

The State correctly notes that “[t]he privilege under Ark. R. Evid. 503 does not

belong to the State. It belongs to the patients and their physicians who are presumed to

have the authority to claim the privilege.” Yet, the State does not identify any point in

time in this case when K.H., her parents or guardians, or her healthcare providers asserted

any privilege or otherwise resisted the State’s subpoenas. Of course, the subpoenas beg this

question: if the State recognizes that K.H. holds the privilege then why did it send the

subpoenas? Where is an on-the-record discussion with the court, initiated by the

prosecutor, on why it should not be ordered to procure the records if that is, in fact, what

happened? As we have said a few times now, we cannot be certain what happened and

when because there is no record on this critical facet of the proceedings.

11 The State argues that Vaughn did not ask the court to make an in camera review.

But he did ask, and the circuit court did exactly that, although the depth to which it went

is murky. It is clear, however, that the court’s “no disclosure” decision was not based on a

Brady analysis. “I am going to stand by my ruling, that the patient/client/therapist privilege

is paramount and irrespective of exculpatory evidence.”

What to do? This court has in the past remanded a case to the circuit court and

directed it to conduct an in camera review of what an appellant claims to be Brady material.

But that has been done when it was known that the circuit court never looked at the

material. E.g., Harper v. State,

2019 Ark. App. 163

,

573 S.W.3d 596

. Our supreme court,

on the other hand, has held that a remand is unnecessary when the circuit court had already

reviewed the information. See, e.g., Holland,

2015 Ark. 341, at 18

,

471 S.W.3d 179, 190

.

This case falls into the latter category. Consequently, we will review the Brady issue rather

than remand the case to the circuit court.

So, is the disputed information favorable to Vaughn? Yes. K.H. was, without

question, a critical witness for the prosecution during the trial; and court’s exhibit No. 1

contains potentially exculpatory and impeachment evidence relevant to her testimony. The

second prong of Brady has therefore been met. See Strickler v. Greene,

527 U.S. 263

, 282

n.21 (1999) (“Our cases make clear that Brady’s disclosure requirements extend to materials

that, whatever their other characteristics, may be used to impeach a witness.”); see also

Williams v. Taylor,

529 U.S. 420, 438

(2000) (main witness’s mental-health record was

potential Brady material when there were “repeated references to a ‘psychiatric’ or ‘mental

health’ report in a transcript”). We move to the third Brady element.

12 C. Was the Evidence in K.H.’s Records Material?

Vaughn argues that he was prejudiced by the nondisclosure because the records show

that K.H.’s version of events changed during counseling, that she asserted facts at trial that

she had previously denied, and that Provider A’s records generally cast doubt on her

testimony. Vaughn believes he could have effectively impeached K.H.’s testimony by

showing that the course of counseling or therapy caused her story to change, that the therapy

used “recover[ed] memories” and “dreams,” and that K.H. had expressly denied the sexual

abuse many times to her counselor. He also says that he could have retained an expert

witness to help him critique what happened during K.H.’s therapy if he had access to the

records sooner. Specifically, Vaughn contends that K.H.’s therapist helped coach the

“trauma narrative” that was ultimately reported to law enforcement, years after the alleged

events occurred.

To prevail under Brady’s “materiality” prong, Vaughn must show that the disputed

records create a “reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense,

the result of the proceeding would have been different.” Isom v. State,

2018 Ark. 368, at 4

,

563 S.W.3d 533, 538

, cert. denied,

140 S. Ct. 342

(2019) (applying United States v. Bagley,

473 U.S. 667, 682

(1985)). And a “reasonable probability” is a probability sufficient to

undermine confidence in the outcome. Bagley,

473 U.S. at 682

. But compare Jimenez v.

State,

918 P.2d 687

(Nev. 1996) (adopting a more protective “possibility” standard under

Nevada’s state constitution); N.Y. v. Fuentes,

907 N.E.2d 286, 289

(N.Y. 2009) (Under

New York law, if the defendant has “ma[de] a specific request for a document” that is

withheld, then the appropriate standard to measure materiality is whether there is “a

13 reasonable possibility” that the failure to disclose the exculpatory evidence contributed to

the verdict.).

We acknowledge the force of Vaughn’s argument and the surrounding

circumstances, but we nonetheless hold that there is no reasonable probability that the results

of the trial would have been different had the exculpatory/impeachment evidence contained

in K.H.’s disputed records been disclosed to Vaughn.

The jury convicted Vaughn of second-degree sexual assault. A person commits

sexual assault in the second degree under

Ark. Code Ann. § 5-14-125

(a)(3) (Repl. 2013) if

he is eighteen years of age or older and engages in sexual contact with another person who

is not his spouse and is less than fourteen years of age. “Sexual contact” means any act of

sexual gratification involving the touching, directly or through clothing, of the sex organs,

buttocks, or anus of a person or the breast of a female.

Ark. Code Ann. § 5-14-101

(11).

With these statutory elements in mind, we will explain why it was not reasonably probable

(as opposed to merely possible) for the undisclosed records to have changed the trial result.

The State’s brief catalogs some sexual instances that, when viewed in a light favorable

to the State, support the verdict. We need not get into those details here because a primary

problem for Vaughn, under our Brady analysis, is his interview by police detectives on 13

June 2016. We will concentrate on it for brevity’s sake. By doing so we do not minimize

K.H.’s testimony, which the jury was free to accept or reject. A focus on Vaughn’s

statement, however, amply supports our Brady decision.

As we have said, the full interview of Vaughn by the police was received as evidence

at trial, as State’s exhibit no. 15 by way of a video recording. During that four hours-plus

14 interview, which often meandered and was at times unclear, Vaughn admitted touching

K.H.’s vagina while she was in the bathtub. He admitted going into the bathroom, sitting

on the toilet, and using his phone while K.H. was bathing. Here is an excerpt of Vaughn’s

recorded police statement that was played to the jury during his trial:

DETECTIVE: Did you ever touch the bare—bare vagina?

VAUGHN: Yes, I mean, I’ve said in the bath tub it was just a—kind of, like I said, just washed, you know, because she’d want me to wash her and I washed her. I, you know,

DETECTIVE: How many times have you touched her bare vagina?

VAUGHN: Once.

DETECTIVE: Was that in the bedroom or the bathroom?

VAUGHN: The bathroom.

DETECTIVE: How did you do that? How did you touch her?

VAUGHN: She was—I had washed her back, washed her butt, and she was kind of on her hands and knees in the bath tub and I washed.

DETECTIVE: And you accidentally touched her or did you—

VAUGHN: No, I mean, I just kind of, just washed her. Not really, just— it wasn’t like a –like—it wasn’t nothing like that.

DETECTIVE: Now, I’m not saying you put a finger in or anything like that. Hand against skin—

VAUGHN: Uh-huh.

DETECTIVE: —is it only one time in the bathroom?

VAUGHN: Yes.

DETECTIVE: Okay. Did you just rub around and that feeling came back and you’re like, oh shit, I got to quit and—

15 VAUGHN: No. It wasn’t like rub around, it was just wash.

We acknowledge that during the police interview, Vaughn consistently denied being

aroused or gratified by touching K.H.’s vagina. And we note that he was not criminally

charged until more than two years after the police interview.

K.H. testified about the bathing incident at trial. She said that during the summer of

2016 she turned nine years old, and at that time she and her mother lived in Vaughn’s home.

K.H. testified that Vaughn would sit on the toilet “on his phone, drinking.” She told the

jury about a time that Vaughn entered the bathroom while she was taking a bath, put his

hands into the water, and touched her vagina:

And he leans over and since I was in the water in the bathtub, he swishes his hand around the water and each time I move, he’d get closer to me and then about four or five times, he would touch my vagina [with his hands].

On cross-examination, K.H. said that she told “Ms. Felicia” (at Child Safety Center)

twice that no one had touched her vagina. During the trial she said the opposite: Vaughn

had touched her. Defense counsel asked, “[B]ut all these times before you said no, didn’t

you?” K.H. replied, “Because I think I was just scared to admit that he did it.” So the jury

heard that K.H. had denied to investigators, at least twice, that Vaughn had touched her; in

fact, she had told them nothing happened. K.H. testified that she was “pretty sure [she] told

[the sexual abuse] to Ms. Sara [counselor at Provider A] after we stopped going to the Child

Safety Center.” The jury also heard that K.H. made the allegations against Vaughn

approximately two years after the touching had occurred and after she had been counseled.

There was no disagreement that Vaughn touched K.H.’s vagina; his version and her

version did not contradict one another on the essential point that there was a “touching,

16 directly or through clothing, of the sex organs” of K.H. Nor was there any dispute that

K.H. first denied the abuse multiple times only to disclose it two years later after she had

been in counseling. Vaughn may have been able to impeach K.H. in some manner with

the undisclosed records. That, of course, can be a critical moment during a trial. But he

was able to elicit testimony that K.H. had changed her story during the course of counseling

and cross-examined her at trial.

Cases interpreting the “sexual contact” definition focus on whether the act was done

for the purpose of sexual gratification. E.g., Chawangkul v. State,

2016 Ark. App. 599

,

509 S.W.3d 10

; see also Farmer v. State,

341 Ark. 220, 223

,

15 S.W.3d 674, 676

(2000) (The

State must prove that the desire for sexual gratification is a “plausible reason for the act.”).

Granting the undeniable importance of impeachment evidence, the point remains that

Vaughn admitted touching K.H.’s vagina, and in the end, the jury was tasked with deciding

whether Vaughn’s touching K.H. in the bathtub—among other interactions the State

adduced at trial—was done for sexual gratification. He said it was not in the interview.

Only Vaughn will ever know whether he acted with the purpose of sexually gratifying

himself. Therefore, we cannot say that the undisclosed records would have made enough

of a difference on a key element of the sexual-assault charge: whether it was plausible that

the admitted vaginal touching occurred for sexual gratification. “[A] showing of materiality

does not require demonstration by a preponderance that disclosure of the suppressed

evidence would have resulted ultimately in the defendant’s acquittal[.]” Kyles v. Whitley,

514 U.S. 419, 434

(1995). But it must be shown that the favorable evidence, in the context

17 of the entire case, could “put the whole case in such a different light as to undermine

confidence in the verdict.”

Id. at 435

.

K.H.’s counseling records shed no light on Vaughn’s purpose when he touched her.

Whatever the content of K.H.’s records, the jury would still have had to determine, based

on all that it heard at trial, whether a forty-six-year-old man who touched a nine-year-old

girl’s vagina in the bathtub did so with the purpose of sexually gratifying himself. In our

view, the absence of the undisclosed records does not undermine our confidence in the

jury’s verdict; therefore, the records were not “material” under Brady. This means that

Vaughn suffered no prejudice under Brady’s standard.

II. Conclusion

Vaughn’s conviction for second-degree sexual assault is affirmed.

Affirmed.

SWITZER and VAUGHT, JJ., agree.

Jeff Rosenzweig, for appellant.

Leslie Rutledge, Att’y Gen., by: Pamela Rumpz, Senior Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee.

18

Reference

Cited By
2 cases
Status
Published