If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.
STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED
January 28, 2021
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v No. 349955
Muskegon Circuit Court
ELDRED LEE BROOKS, also known as ELDRED LC No. 18-003925-FH
LEE BROOKS III,
Defendant-Appellant.
Before: SHAPIRO, P.J., and SAWYER and BECKERING, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
Defendant, Eldred Lee Brooks, appeals as of right his jury trial convictions of first-degree
criminal sexual conduct (CSC-I), MCL 750.520b(2)(b) (sexual penetration of a person less than
13 years of age by a person 17 years of age or older), and second-degree criminal sexual conduct
(CSC-II), MCL 750.520c(2)(b) (sexual contact with a person less than 13 years of age by a person
17 years of age or older). The trial court sentenced defendant as a fourth-offense habitual offender,
MCL 769.12, to 31 to 55 years’ imprisonment for the CSC-I conviction and 15 to 35 years’
imprisonment for the CSC-II conviction. On appeal, defendant contends the trial court erred by
allowing several expert witnesses to provide prejudicial testimony that vouched for the credibility
of the complainant, JF. For the reasons set forth below, we agree. Accordingly, we reverse
defendant’s convictions and remand for a new trial.
I. RELEVANT FACTS
This case arises out of allegations that defendant sexually abused JF, a cousin of
defendant’s girlfriend at the time, Latoya. JF testified that the first incident occurred in summer
or fall 2017 when she was nine years old. She was at Latoya’s apartment watching a movie in a
bedroom with defendant when defendant vaginally penetrated her with his tongue and penis. The
second incident occurred at Latoya’s home in February 2018. JF was lying on a couch in the living
room when defendant again vaginally penetrated her with his penis. The next day, JF revealed the
sexual abuse to her godmother, who informed JF’s mother. JF’s mother called a meeting with JF,
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Latoya, and defendant. During the meeting, both JF and defendant denied that defendant had
sexually abused JF. Afterwards, JF informed her mother that defendant did in fact abuse her.
In March 2018, JF’s mother took her to Hackley Hospital, where she was examined by a
sexual assault nurse examiner (SANE), who reported that the “examination showed that everything
was normal and there were no abnormal findings.” At the hospital, a Muskegon Police Department
officer interviewed both JF and her mother. Muskegon Police Detective Logan Anderson then
started an investigation into JF’s allegations. In April 2018, Dianne Adams, director at the time
of the Children’s Advocacy Center,1 conducted a forensic interview of JF, subsequent to which
she referred JF for counseling and a medical examination. The medical examination was
performed at the Children’s Advocacy Center by the center’s medical director, Dr. Yvonne
Mallon, M.D., a general pediatrician specializing in child abuse pediatrics. In June 2018, Detective
Anderson interviewed defendant regarding JF’s allegations, and defendant denied that he had ever
sexually abused JF. Detective Anderson and defendant scheduled a second interview, but
defendant failed to attend. Over the next several months, Detective Anderson repeatedly tried to
schedule another interview with defendant, but defendant either canceled before the interview or
failed to attend.
In July 2018, Detective Anderson learned that one of Latoya’s biological children, LD,
accused defendant of touching her inappropriately on four separate incidents. One incident
involved defendant sitting in a children’s pool wearing boxer shorts with LD sitting on his lap,
facing him, while defendant rubbed her thighs. Latoya’s neighbors, Eddie Bradford and Lynn
Easter, witnessed the incident through a window and were sufficiently alarmed to record it using
a cell phone. Detective Anderson subsequently secured an arrest warrant for defendant. Defendant
was arrested near a bus station, with a one-way bus ticket to Louisiana in his possession.
Defendant was initially charged with one count of CSC-I as a fourth-offense habitual
offender and tried before a jury. After defendant’s first trial ended in a mistrial, the prosecution
amended the charge to one count of CSC-I and one count of CSC-II, with a fourth-offense habitual
offender enhancement, and proceeded with a second trial. At defendant’s second trial, the
prosecution presented testimony from JF, LD, Bradford, Easter, and Detective Anderson. JF
provided direct evidence of the charged crimes; LD, Bradford, and Easter testified to other-acts
evidence pursuant to MCL 768.27a(1); and Detective Anderson’s testimony suggested that
defendant was attempting to flee, thus showing consciousness of guilt. In addition, the prosecution
presented expert witness testimony from Adams, Dr. Mallon, and Thomas Cottrell, LMSW, chief
programming officer of the YMCA West Central Michigan. Defendant was the only witness for
the defense; he denied all of the allegations against him. The jury found defendant guilty as
charged and the trial court sentenced him as indicated above. This appeal followed.
1
When Adams interviewed JF, she was employed by the Child Abuse Council in Muskegon, where
she served as director of the Children’s Advocacy Center, which is a part of the Child Abuse
Council. Adams no longer worked there at the time of defendant’s second trial. Defendant’s first
trial resulted in a mistrial.
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II. DISCUSSION
Defendant contends that the trial court erred by allowing expert witnesses to provide
testimony that improperly vouched for the credibility of JF. Because this case was tried in a way
that now reads much like a “what not to do” playlist from the Supreme Court’s subsequent ruling
in People v Thorpe, 504 Mich 230; 934 NW2d 693 (2019), we agree.2
This Court reviews unpreserved3 claims of error for plain error “affecting a defendant’s
substantial rights.” People v Jackson, 292 Mich App 583, 592; 808 NW2d 541 (2011). To prevail
under plain-error review, a defendant must establish that an error occurred, that it was plain or
obvious, and that it affected his substantial rights. People v Carines, 460 Mich 750, 763; 597
NW2d 130 (1999). An error affects a defendant’s substantial rights if it “affected the outcome of
the proceedings.” Id. Even if a defendant establishes these requirements, “[r]eversal is warranted
only when the plain, forfeited error resulted in the conviction of an actually innocent defendant or
when an error seriously affect[ed] the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial
proceedings . . . .” Id. at 763-764 (quotation marks and citation omitted; second alteration in
original).
B. EXPERT TESTIMONY
“The trial court has an obligation under MRE 702 to ensure that any expert testimony
admitted at trial is reliable.” People v Dobek, 274 Mich App 58, 94; 732 NW2d 546 (2007)
(quotation marks and citation omitted). When admitting expert testimony, trial courts must
determine whether “the testimony (1) will assist the trier of fact to understand a fact in issue, (2)
is provided by an expert qualified in the relevant field of knowledge, and (3) is based on reliable
data, principles, and methodologies that are applied reliably to the facts of the case.” People v
Kowalski, 492 Mich 106, 120; 821 NW2d 14 (2012); see also MCR 702. In addition, the Michigan
Supreme Court has specifically addressed the limitations on the testimony of expert witnesses in
cases involving allegations of child sexual abuse. In People v Peterson, 450 Mich 349, 352; 537
NW2d 857 (1995), amended 450 Mich 121 (1995), our Supreme Court reaffirmed its plurality
holding in People v Beckley, 434 Mich 691; 456 NW2d 391(1990), which limited the testimony
of expert witnesses as follows: “(1) an expert may not testify that the sexual abuse occurred, (2)
2
The Supreme Court issued Thorpe one day after defendant was sentenced, but Thorpe also
reiterates prior relevant precedent.
3
We disagree with defendant’s assertion that this issue is preserved with respect to the testimony
of each expert witness. Defense counsel did not object to Cottrell’s testimony on the ground that
it improperly vouched for JF’s credibility, but on the ground of relevance. “An objection based
on one ground is usually considered insufficient to preserve an appellate attack based on a different
ground.” People v Kimble, 470 Mich 305, 309; 684 NW2d 669 (2004). Defense counsel did not
object to admission of Dr. Mallon’s testimony regarding a 1994 study upon which she relied, but
questioned her about the study on cross-examination and, on redirect examination, objected to her
testimony only because he believed she was mischaracterizing the study. Finally, defense counsel
made no objections to Adams’s testimony on the ground that it constituted impermissible
vouching. See id.
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an expert may not vouch for the veracity of a victim, and (3) an expert may not testify whether the
defendant is guilty.” The Beckley Court explained its rationale for these limitations:
The use of expert testimony in the prosecution of criminal sexual conduct
cases is not an ordinary situation. Given the nature of the offense and the terrible
consequences of a miscalculation—the consequences when an individual, on many
occasions a family member, is falsely accused of one of society’s most heinous
offenses, or, conversely, when one who commits such a crime would go unpunished
and a possible reoccurrence of the act would go unprevented—appropriate
safeguards are necessary. To a jury recognizing the awesome dilemma of whom to
believe, an expert will often represent the only seemingly objective source, offering
it a much sought-after hook on which to hang its hat. [Beckley, 434 Mich at 721-
722; quoted in Peterson, 450 Mich at 374.]
Further, the Peterson Court held that an expert witness in child sexual abuse cases may
testify as follows:
(1) an expert may testify in the prosecution’s case in chief regarding typical and
relevant symptoms of child sexual abuse for the sole purpose of explaining a
victim’s specific behavior that might be incorrectly construed by the jury as
inconsistent with that of an actual abuse victim, and (2) an expert may testify with
regard to the consistencies between the behavior of the particular victim and other
victims of child sexual abuse to rebut an attack on the victim’s credibility. [Id. at
352-353.]
With these principles in mind, we turn to our analysis of the challenged testimony.
1. THOMAS COTTRELL
The first expert witness to testify at defendant’s second trial was Cottrell, whom the trial
court qualified without objection as an expert in child sexual abuse dynamics, particularly in abuse
disclosure and offender behavior. On direct examination, Cottrell discussed several
misconceptions people tended to have regarding children who are victims of sexual abuse and of
the perpetrators of such abuse. He explained, for example, how and to whom victims disclose
sexual abuse, why victims may delay reporting sexual abuse, the relationship between victims and
offenders, and behaviors of sex offenders.
Cottrell’s testimony regarding common misconceptions of sexual abuse, the victims of
child sexual abuse, and the relationship between victims and sexual offenders was proper. See
Peterson, 450 Mich at 379-380. The Peterson Court specifically held that, when “there are
common misperceptions regarding the behavior of the victim on which a jury may draw an
incorrect inference, such as the delayed reporting, the prosecutor may present limited expert
testimony dealing solely with the misperception.” Id. at 379. In this case, Cottrell’s testimony
regarding delayed reporting was utilized for the proper purpose of explaining such things as why
the victim did not report the abuse after the first incident and why she denied being sexually abused
in the park while defendant was present. Without Cottrell’s testimony, those facts might have led
the jury to draw “an incorrect inference” about the victim’s behavior. See id.
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However, Cottrell also provided testimony that essentially vouched for JF’s credibility. In
response to the prosecutor asking whether Cottrell had experience with children falsely alleging
sexual abuse to attract attention, Cottrell stated that he had not seen any such cases. He contended
that the cost of fabricating a sexual abuse allegation was high for a child, and that children were
unable to maintain false allegations of sexual abuse long term because they did not have “that level
of sophistication.” On redirect, Cottrell stated that out of the “thousands and thousands of
children” that the YWCA had treated, the YWCA had concluded that only a handful of them were
lying. He also confirmed on redirect that children reported falsely approximately 2% of the time,4
and that such false reports typically involved coaching or custody cases.
Cottrell’s testimony that children lacked the sophistication to sustain false allegations of
sexual abuse long term vouched for JF’s credibility by strongly inferring that, since JF continued
to maintain her allegations of sexual abuse against defendant more than two years after the alleged
abuse occurred, her accusations must be true. In addition, Cottrell’s testimony that instances in
which children falsely alleged sexual abuse typically involved coaching or custody battles, neither
of which applied here, suggested that there was 0% chance that JF was falsely accusing defendant
of sexual abuse. See Thorpe, 504 Mich at 259.5 Further, Cottrell’s testimony about the high cost
of fabricating allegations of sex abuse and that, in his experience, only a handful of the “thousands
and thousands of children” treated at the YMCA falsely reported sexual abuse also served
indirectly to vouch for the credibility of JF.
Defendant’s case was a credibility contest. There was no physical evidence, there were no
other witnesses of the alleged assaults besides JF, and defendant made no inculpatory statements.
As already indicated, the prosecution’s case consisted of JF’s allegations, other-acts evidence
provided by the testimony of LD, Bradford, and Easter, evidence that defendant may have been
fleeing provided by Detective Anderson, and the testimony of the three expert witnesses.
Defendant testified in his own defense and denied the allegations. Although Cottrell did not
directly state that JF was credible and truthful in any of the statements he made at trial, in
credibility contests such as this one, the jury “is looking to hang its hat on the testimony of
witnesses it views as impartial.” Peterson, 450 Mich at 374 (quotation marks and citation omitted).
We conclude that defendant has established error with regard to testimony of Cottrell that vouched
for JF’s credibility. The error was plain, given that the Michigan Supreme Court has repeatedly
held that testimony similar to what Cottrell provided in this case was improper. See Thorpe, 504
Mich at 259-260. And while the other-acts evidence and defendant’s apparent plan to flee—
indicating possible consciousness of guilt—makes this case stronger, because there were no other
witnesses or physical evidence with respect to the specific incidents in question, rendering this a
4
Defendant challenged Cottrell’s statement that 2% of children lie about sexual abuse. However,
defense counsel elicited this testimony by asking Cottrell, “What percentage of child reporters
falsely report?” Therefore, defendant’s challenge to that statement was waived. See People v
Riley, 465 Mich 442, 448-450; 636 NW2d 514 (2001) (finding no error where counsel called a
witness to give the specific testimony he objected to on appeal).
5
We note that Cottrell’s testimony along these same lines was the subject of review in Thorpe as
well. Id. at 259.
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pure credibility contest, we conclude that the error likely affected the jury’s ultimate decision. See
id. at 260.
2. DR. YVONNE MALLON
Defendant takes issue with Dr. Mallon’s testimony due to her conclusion that JF suffered
“suspected pediatric sexual abuse” despite no physical corroborating evidence.
MRE 704 provides that “[t]estimony in the form of an opinion or inference otherwise
admissible is not objectionable because it embraces an ultimate issue to be decided by the trier of
fact.” However, the Michigan Supreme Court has repeatedly held that “an examining physician
cannot give an opinion on whether a complainant had been sexually assaulted if the conclusion
[is] nothing more than the doctor’s opinion that the victim had told the truth.” Thorpe, 504 Mich
at 255 (quotation marks and citation omitted; alteration in original). When an examining
physician’s testimony is based “solely on what the victim had told him,” absent evidence
qualifying her as an expert in assessing credibility the physician’s testimony is objectionable
because it lacks a “reliable foundation,” since jurors are just as qualified to evaluate the victim’s
credibility. People v Smith, 425 Mich 98, 109; 387 NW2d 814 (1986). However, “an examining
physician, if qualified by experience and training relative to treatment of sexual assault
complainants, can opine with respect to whether a complainant had been sexually assaulted when
the opinion is based on physical findings and the complainant’s medical history.” Thorpe, 504
Mich at 255.
Dr. Mallon testified on direct examination that when children were referred to the
Children’s Advocacy Center, they underwent a forensic interview, and if the forensic interviewer
determined that the child needed a physical examination, she would examine the child. She
testified that the majority of examinations she performed on children who alleged sexual abuse
produced normal results, which meant that the examinations revealed no injuries. She frequently
used the phrase “it’s normal to be normal,” which meant that even if a child alleged vaginal
penetration, the results of a physical examination were usually normal. She explained that the
phrase is based primarily on a 1994 study that analyzed 236 children who alleged sexual abuse
and concluded that the physical examinations of 77% of the children were normal. 6 Dr. Mallon
confirmed that, after taking JF’s medical history, she performed “a head to toe” examination of JF,
including a vaginal and anal examination, and found no injuries. Dr. Mallon reiterated that out of
6
Although the name of the study was not provided in the lower court record, it appears that Dr.
Mallon was relying on Examination Findings in Legally Confirmed Child Sexual Abuse: It’s
Normal to be Normal, 94 Pediatrics 310 (1994). See Thorpe, 504 Mich at 265 n 65; People v Del
Cid, ___ Mich App __, ___; __ NW2d __ (2020) (Docket No. 342402); slip op at 3-5, 8-10.
However, the Michigan Supreme Court and this Court have both held that reliance on that study
to diagnose a child with “pediatric sexual abuse” is “seriously misplaced” and improper because
the authors of that article “did not intend for pediatricians to rely on the article to make a diagnosis
of ‘probable pediatric sexual abuse’ at trial.” Thorpe, 504 Mich at 265, 265 n 65; People v Del
Cid, ___ Mich App at __, __; __ NW2d __, slip op at 8-10 (Docket No. 342402, issued February
27, 2020).
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the hundreds of examinations that she had performed, she had seen “[v]ery few” with physical
evidence of injuries.
On cross-examination, Dr. Mallon confirmed that the physical examination alone did not
prove or disprove that JF was sexually abused, but that, based on JF’s medical history and the fact
that she found what she expected to find when she examined JF, she had, in fact, reached a
conclusion. Pressed by defense counsel on re-cross to concede that she could not confirm whether
or not JF had been sexually abused, given that the results of JF’s examination were normal, Dr.
Mallon pushed back, insisting “I did confirm it. . . . I confirmed suspected, suspected pediatric
sexual abuse based on [her] history and physical exam.”
Defendant has established plain error affecting his substantial rights with regard to Dr.
Mallon’s testimony. Her testimony that JF suffered from “suspected pediatric sexual abuse”
“clearly falls within Smith’s holding that an examining physician cannot give an opinion on
whether a complainant had been sexually assaulted if the ‘conclusion [is] nothing more than the
doctor’s opinion that the victim had told the truth.’ ” Thorpe, 504 Mich at 262, quoting Smith, 425
Mich at 109. Dr. Mallon’s opinion is objectionable, and constitutes improper vouching, because
it is based solely on what JF told her. “Such testimony is not permissible because a ‘jury [is] in
just as good a position to evaluate the victim’s testimony as’ the doctor.” Id., quoting Smith, 425
Mich at 109. After our Supreme Court vacated part of our judgment and remanded the case to us
for reconsideration in light of People v Harbison, the companion case in Thorpe, this Court held
in People v Del Cid that “an examining physician’s testimony diagnosing a child-complainant with
‘possible sexual abuse’ is inadmissible without corroborating physical evidence . . .” and that
testimony to that effect was plainly erroneous and called for reversal because we could not say it
was harmless. People v Del Cid, __ Mich App __, ___; __ NW2d __; slip op at 6 (Docket No.
342402, issued February 27, 2020. As we explained in Del Cid:
[W]here there are no physical findings a physician may not testify that the
complainant suffered “possible pediatric sexual abuse” or other phrases indicating
a conclusion as to the likelihood that such abuse actually occurred. At the same
time, however, a medical expert may offer the opinion that a lack of physical
findings does not affirmatively establish that no abuse occurred [Id. at slip op 9 n
6.]
Here, Dr. Mallon’s testimony that she confirmed that JF suffered “suspected pediatric child
abuse” falls under this prohibition. Although Dr. Mallon testified that she confirmed “suspected
pediatric sexual abuse” instead of “probable” or “possible” pediatric sexual abuse, “suspected
pediatric sexual abuse” is not significantly different from “possible pediatric sexual abuse” or
“probable pediatric sexual abuse” “in terms of the physician’s endorsement of the accusation.” Del
Cid, ___ Mich App at ___; slip op at 9. In each instance, “the examining physician speaks to the
likelihood of abuse in the absence of any physical evidence and couches it in terms of a medical
diagnosis,” which “necessarily leads the jury to believe that the expert witness finds the
complainant’s account credible.” Id. Even a slight or subtle credibility endorsement by an expert
can provide the hook that sways a jury. The error in admitting Dr. Mallon’s opinion testimony
was plain, or obvious, Thorpe, 504 Mich at 262, and likely “affected defendant’s substantial rights”
because Dr. Mallon “clearly vouched” for the credibility of JF, id. at 263.
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3. DIANNE ADAMS
The last expert witness to testify for the prosecution was Adams, whom the trial court
qualified as an expert in forensic interviews and child sexual abuse dynamics. Defendant contends
that Adams’s testimony that she interviewed JF using protocols that were “truth seeking” and
designed to obtain the most reliable responses from the interviewee, coupled with her testimony
that she referred JF for counseling and a medical examination after her interview, clearly vouched
for the credibility of JF’s accusations of sexual abuse.
Adams testified at some length to the methods and goals of forensic interviewing. She
stated that the goal of forensic interviewers is “to facilitate an interview for a child that is
developmentally appropriate, unbiased, and truth seeking” and “to give the child an opportunity to
tell their story in a free narrative format as much as possible.” Adams explained, among other
things, the setting for a forensic interview, the participants, the types of questions asked, and the
demeanor and responses of the interviewer. Adams testified that one of the goals of forensic
interviewing was “hypothesis testing.” Hypothesis testing refers to considering alternative
theories for the alleged behavior and being attuned during the interview to information that might
suggest that one of the alternatives explains the complained-of conduct. Adams explained:
[I]f we have an allegation—the child’s allegation is the babysitter touched my butt.
Before the interview we’ll come up with some other hypothesis. And one might
be, could that have possibly happened during the routine caregiving, when the
babysitter was helping say to potty train or changing a diaper or just helping a child
clean themselves.
Adams referred to these hypotheses as “red flags,” evidence of which the interviewers look for
during an interview. Adams said that, depending on what a child disclosed during the interview,
she may refer the child for a medical examination, or counseling, or both. She stated that she
“definitely” referred a child to counseling if the child disclosed sexual abuse during the interview.
Adams testified that she conducted a forensic interview with JF, that JF spoke freely during the
interview, and that, as a result of the interview, she referred JF for counseling and a medical
examination. Adams testified similarly as to LD.
Defendant has established plain error affecting his substantial rights with regard to the
testimony of Adams. The statements Adams made regarding how JF spoke to her were proper
because she was simply describing her own personal observations for the jury. Additionally,
Adams was permitted to discuss the general goals of forensic interviewing. However, Adams also
testified that forensic interviews were “truth-seeking” interviews that were designed to weed out
children who were not telling the truth about the alleged abuse. She stated that depending on what
was disclosed during the interview, she would refer children for counseling and a medical
examination, and that she “definitely” referred children to counseling who disclosed sexual abuse.
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She then stated that she referred JF for medical treatment and counseling on the basis of her
statements during the interview. This testimony strongly implied that she found JF credible.7
The prosecution contends that Adams’s testimony that she referred JF and LD for
counseling and medical examinations does not imply that she believed their allegations, just that
they disclosed sexual abuse during their forensic interviews. We agree with the prosecution that
there is a difference between making disclosures and finding those disclosures credible. However,
Adams’s testimony about the truth-seeking goal of forensic interviewing, the techniques and
settings employed to achieve that goal, and the preparations undertaken by the interviewers to
identify and probe the possibility of alternative explanations for allegations of abuse give rise to
the reasonable inference that an interviewer who refers an interviewee for further services did so
because he or she found no alternative explanations for the interviewee’s allegations and found the
interviewee’s disclosures to some extent credible. Thus, we conclude that defendant established
that the trial court erred in permitting Adams to provide testimony that vouched for the credibility
of JF and LD, that the error was plain, see Thorpe, 504 Mich at 259-269, and that it likely “affected
defendant’s substantial rights,” id. at 263.
Having concluded that defendant established plain error affecting his substantial rights with
regard to testimony offered by Cottrell, Dr. Mallon, and Adams, the next question is whether
reversal is required. See Carines, 460 Mich at 763-764. We believe it is. As already mentioned,
we recently held that, without corroborating physical evidence, an examining physician’s opinion
that the child-complainant suffered “possible sexual abuse” was plainly erroneous and called for
reversal because it seriously affected the integrity of the defendant’s trial. Del Cid, op at 11. Dr.
Mallon’s testimony confirming that JF suffered “suspected pediatric child abuse” falls under this
prohibition. In Thorpe, 504 Mich at 235, our Supreme Court held “that expert witnesses may not
testify that children overwhelmingly do not lie when reporting sexual abuse because such
testimony improperly vouches for the complainant's veracity.” Cottrell’s testimony falls under
this prohibition. Finally, while Adams did not testify directly to JF’s credibility, the thrust of her
testimony strong implied that JF’s spoke freely and truthfully during her interview and that her
disclosures of alleged sexual abuse were credible. In a credibility contest such as this one, Adams’s
testimony helped provide a hook on which the jury could “hang its hat” when it came to assessing
the credibility of JF and of defendant. Because there was error in the testimony of all three
prosecution experts, we conclude that these errors seriously affected the integrity of defendant’s
trial. Thus, we reverse defendant’s convictions and remand for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded. We do not retain jurisdiction.
/s/ Douglas B. Shapiro
/s/ David H. Sawyer
/s/ Jane M. Beckering
7
Adams also vouched for the veracity of LD’s allegations when she testified that she referred LD
for a medical examination after forensically interviewing her. Adams’s testimony implied that she
found LD’s allegations credible because she referred her for further help.
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