State v. Jason Wilbur
State v. Jason Wilbur
Opinion
The defendant, Jason Wilbur, appeals a decision of the Superior Court ( Ruoff , J.) denying his motion for a new trial based on ineffective assistance of counsel. We reverse and remand.
I. Background
We briefly summarize the evidence that was presented to the jury, reserving for later a more detailed discussion of the specific evidence and arguments that form the bases of the issues raised in the defendant's appeal. The defendant is the former stepfather of the alleged victim (child) in the case. The child was born in 1997, and was five or six years old when the events discussed herein allegedly occurred. The child's mother met the defendant in 2002 and the couple married in 2003. The mother and the defendant had a "love/hate relationship." As a result of their tumultuous relationship, at times the couple resided together, while at other times the mother lived with the child's father. Throughout this time, the father had primary custody of the child, and the mother had visitation privileges every other weekend.
In 2007, the child disclosed that she had been sexually assaulted by the defendant. The defendant was subsequently indicted on charges of aggravated felonious sexual assault (AFSA), but the State nol prossed the charges in April 2009. In 2010, the defendant was re-indicted on: (1) one count of AFSA alleging a single act of digital penetration; (2) one count of AFSA alleging a pattern of digital penetration; (3) one count of AFSA alleging a single act of penile penetration; and (4) one count of AFSA alleging a pattern of penile penetration. See RSA 632-A:2, I( l ) (2016); RSA 632-A:2, III (2016).
At trial, the child testified that the defendant began sexually assaulting her while she was alone with him at his apartment in Jaffrey. She explained that the first incident occurred after the defendant followed her into the bathroom and asked if she wanted to play a game. When the child replied "yes," the defendant rubbed his finger "around [her] private area" (which she later clarified to mean her vagina). The assault ended when the mother returned to the apartment.
The child stated that the defendant subsequently assaulted her in the same manner "multiple times," explaining that the assaults occurred "practically ... every time [she] came over." According to the child, the assaults escalated to digital penetration of her vagina and then to penile penetration of her vagina. As to the penile penetration, the child indicated that she did not see the defendant insert his penis *1128 into her vagina because the defendant covered her eyes. She noted, however, that "it was different" from the instances where the defendant inserted his finger because it felt "weird and warm." The child further explained that the assaults continued after the defendant and the mother moved to Swanzey. She testified that the defendant would sometimes wake her at night, ask her if she wanted to "play a game," and then sexually assault her.
In May 2011, a jury found the defendant guilty on the two counts of AFSA alleging digital penetration, and acquitted the defendant on the two counts of penile penetration. We affirmed the defendant's convictions on direct appeal.
See
State v. Wilbur
, No. 2011-0627,
II. Analysis
The defendant claims that his trial counsel (who is not counsel on appeal) provided constitutionally deficient representation under Part I, Article 15 of the New Hampshire Constitution and the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution. "The State and Federal Constitutions guarantee a criminal defendant reasonably competent assistance of counsel."
State v. Eschenbrenner
,
"To prevail upon a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, the defendant must demonstrate, first, that counsel's representation was constitutionally deficient and, second, that counsel's deficient performance actually prejudiced the outcome of the case."
State v. Collins
,
To satisfy the first prong of the test, the performance prong, the defendant must show that counsel's representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.
To satisfy the second prong, the defendant must demonstrate actual prejudice by showing that there is a reasonable probability that the result of the proceeding would have been different had competent legal representation been provided.
Eschenbrenner
,
A. Counsel's Performance
On appeal, the defendant argues that his trial counsel's performance was constitutionally deficient in four respects: (1) failure to rebut the State's characterization of the defendant's statement to the police; (2) lack of preparation of the mother for her testimony; (3) introduction of evidence of a prior sexual assault committed against the child by another person without a reasonable strategy; and (4) failure to object to opinion testimony given by a child protective services (CPS) worker. Because we agree with the defendant with respect to claims (1) and (4), we find it unnecessary to examine claims (2) and (3).
(1) Defendant's Statement to the Police
In its opening statement, the State asserted that when the investigating officer, Detective Stevens, interviewed the defendant concerning the allegations, the defendant commented that his father had faced similar allegations in the past. Specifically, the prosecutor described the conversation between the defendant and Stevens as follows:
And the Defendant comes down to the police station, spends a total of four or five minutes before he ends the conversation and moves on. [Stevens is] going to tell you how the Defendant told him, "Yeah, my father was accused of this but he was found - he was - got away with it, so I'm going to fight it." That's the end of the conversation.
Stevens was the State's first witness. After describing briefly how he became involved in the case, Stevens began to explain the content of his interview with the defendant. With respect to the interview, Stevens testified that the defendant denied the allegations. However, the court sustained defense counsel's objection when Stevens attempted to read directly from the transcript of the interview. The State then elicited the following testimony after refreshing Stevens's memory with the transcript:
Q: Okay. Now do you remember - what do you recall the Defendant stating about his father?
A: He told me that his dad had been accused of sexual assault about ten years ago and he beat that.
Q: Okay. And as a result of that what did he say he was going to do?
A: That he was going to fight it in court.
Q: Altogether, you said it's a relatively short interview, how long did it last?
A: I could estimate five minutes.
Q: And did you end the interview or did he end the interview?
A: My recollection is that he did.
During cross-examination, defense counsel and Stevens had the following exchange:
*1130 Q: And he denies ever touching her, not once, not twice, but probably four or five times in the course of that interview-
A: Again-
Q: -has never touched her?
A: Again, I would say that - I testified that he denied it. I'm not going to sit here and tell you how many times because I don't remember.
Q: And in fact, he denies the allegations before ever mentioning anything about his dad?
A: Correct.
Q: And it didn't take you too long to realize during the course of this interview that Mr. Wilbur was going to stand on his denial and you weren't going to get any further information? Do you recall-
A: I-
Q: -putting that in your-
A: I would-
Q: -report?
A: I would agree with that.
At no point during the cross-examination of Stevens did defense counsel utilize the transcript of the interview, which she had access to during the trial.
During closing argument, defense counsel reminded the jury that the defendant denied the child's allegations during his interview with Stevens, explaining to the jurors that they "have at least that denial on the record so that you know that has happened." In its closing, the State responded as follows:
Defendant, Defense attorney points out to you, he denied it. Yeah, he denied it for about four minutes, ended the interview, and said, "You know what, my father got away with this so I'm going to fight it in court." So here we are. That's not a real denial.
And consider that, if you're accused of this, you're going to do this for three minutes and then leave, or are you going to explain your story? Defense attorney wanted to point out how he denied it. You consider if that's a real denial or that's a go down and, "I'm not saying anything," and going away.
Defense counsel did not object to this portion of the State's closing argument even though the State's characterization of the interview varied substantially from the actual contents of the interview.
The defendant advances two arguments in support of his position that his counsel's handling of the description of his interview with Stevens was constitutionally deficient. First, he complains that counsel did not utilize the transcript during cross-examination to establish, in response to Stevens's testimony, that Stevens did not remember how many times the defendant denied assaulting the child, and that the defendant denied the allegations at least a dozen times. Second, the defendant faults counsel for not challenging Stevens's testimony, or the State's opening and closing statements, in which the defendant was characterized as having said that his father "beat" or "got away with" a sexual assault and that he intended to do the same - assertions that the prosecutor argued did not amount to a "real denial" of guilt.
As the trial court recognized, "[t]he difference between what was actually said in the transcript of the interview by the defendant and how the same comments by the defendant were relayed to the jury by [Stevens] is stark." During the interview, in response to questioning, the defendant stated:
Long, long time ago my dad had a case that was happening but it weren't true. He proved it. It weren't true. I went into the courts with him and doing the same thing I am now. I sat down and told him *1131 everything ... but it got proved ... [t]hat it didn't happen.
The defendant then went on to assert his innocence about a dozen times throughout the rest of the interrogation, and only stated that he would "fight it" in court in response to Stevens's statement that he "would likely end up being charged with a crime." Moreover, the defendant never indicated to Stevens that he was unwilling to answer further questions that the officer desired to ask. 1
The defendant contends that "[n]o reasonably competent trial attorney would have permitted the State to assert that her client intended to 'beat' the charge, or 'get away' with it, when what he said is that he would prove his innocence." He argues that by failing to directly challenge these mischaracterizations, his counsel enabled the State to convey to the jury the misleading impression that the statements were implied admissions rather than fervent denials. While the trial court was troubled by the "undoubtedly misleading" impression left by the State's characterization of the defendant's statements, it ultimately ruled that defense counsel was not ineffective because she "at least succeed[ed] in eliciting on cross-examination that the Defendant professed his innocence ...." We do not agree with the trial court's assessment that counsel's performance was minimally adequate.
Stevens's testimony, and the prosecutor's argument, that the defendant told the detective that he, like his father, would "get away with" or "beat" the charges in court, effectively conveyed to the jury that the defendant was implying his guilt.
See
State v. Gomez
,
The mischaracterization of the substance of the defendant's statements to Stevens was compounded during the prosecutor's opening and closing arguments. As the trial court recognized, "[t]he State's choice of words," was "a calculated effort to mislead the jury." The State highlighted the potential use of this tactic during its opening, but defense counsel did virtually nothing to counteract or otherwise correct this misimpression during the course of trial. Instead, by failing to take any corrective course of action, counsel permitted the State to fabricate a misleading narrative to suggest that the defendant implicitly admitted guilt.
Cf
.
State v. Vandebogart
,
The State is correct that defense counsel did present evidence that the defendant denied the charges. However, the evidence presented in this regard was far too little, given that counsel did not fully elicit the manner of the defendant's denial or the number of times that the defendant denied the charges, and, more importantly, permitted the State to effectively paint these denials as disingenuous. In practical effect, defense counsel permitted the State to convey to the jury that the defendant implicitly admitted to being guilty of committing the crimes charged.
See
Gomez
,
(2) Failure to Object to Improper Expert Testimony
Next, the defendant argues that his counsel was deficient by failing to object to certain testimony of the CPS worker who interviewed the child. The CPS worker was the State's final witness. On direct examination, the CPS worker testified that:
[The child] was sexually reactive, and she acted out on other children when she had an opportunity. She had a really hard time mentally just dealing with this. It had been going on for so long that she started to identify with the perpetrators, with the people who she alleged abused her. And those are typical of children that have been abused.
The trial court ruled, and the State does not dispute on appeal, that the CPS worker's testimony "appears to have crossed into the realm of expert testimony." Rather, the State advances the trial court's ultimate conclusion that "trial counsel could have made a reasonable tactical decision to not object so as to avoid bringing further attention to" the comment. "We recognize that experienced trial counsel learn that objections to each potentially objectionable event could actually act to their party's detriment," and, therefore, "[l]earned counsel use objections in a tactical manner."
Thompson
,
Here, the CPS worker explained that the child's behavior resulted from conduct that "had been going on for so long." This statement directly associates the defendant with the child's behavior because the child had stated that the sexual assaults committed by the defendant occurred over a period of time. In contrast, the jury had already heard testimony that while the child had been sexually assaulted by a man other than the defendant, that assault only occurred once, years earlier. The CPS
*1133
worker also explained that the child's behaviors were "typical of children that have been abused." This improperly implies that, in her opinion, the child was sexually abused.
See
State v. Cressey
,
We reject the State's contention that the fact that the prosecutor did not follow up on the CPS worker's statement establishes that trial counsel "could have made a tactical decision to not object so as to avoid bringing further attention to the brief comment." During closing argument, the prosecutor explained to the jury that the CPS worker was "[s]pecially trained to do this." The prosecutor's comment attached the "aura of importance" typically associated with expert testimony.
State v. Campbell
,
B. Prejudice
Having concluded that defense counsel's performance was constitutionally deficient, we must next decide whether the defendant was prejudiced as a result of these errors. The trial court explained that "even if the first prong [of
Strickland
] had been satisfied," the defendant failed to establish prejudice because the child's "testimony was powerful in that it was both detailed and graphic" and "there were only fleeting instances of inadmissible testimony and the evidence mischaracterized by the State regarding the interrogation had minimal inculpatory impact." The trial judge who decided the defendant's motion for new trial did not preside over the defendant's trial. The trial court did not, therefore, observe the child on the witness stand, and instead drew its conclusion from the trial transcript. Thus, we are in the same position as the trial court to assess the trial record.
See
Masse v. Commercial Union Ins. Co.
,
The State argues that the defendant cannot establish prejudice because he was acquitted on some of the charges. Other courts recognize that acquittal on certain charges may weigh against a finding of prejudice.
E.g.
,
Walker v. Martel
,
The State further asserts that the defendant cannot be prejudiced by defense counsel's failure to object to the prosecutor's closing because the jury was instructed that the opening and closing arguments are not evidence. The State is correct in its assertion that the jury is presumed to have followed the court's instructions.
See
State v. Cooper
,
In sum, the cumulative impact of defense counsel's errors is such that the defendant was prejudiced in this instance.
See
Dugas v. Coplan
,
*1135
United States v. Munoz
,
Reversed and remanded .
HICKS, BASSETT, HANTZ MARCONI, and DONOVAN, JJ., concurred.
When Stevens proposed that the defendant take a lie detector test, the defendant responded that he would not do so until he talked to his lawyer. We do not suggest that defense counsel should have elicited this information at trial.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The STATE of New Hampshire v. Jason WILBUR
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published