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The
suggestibility of children during a faulty interview process has been
identified as an important factor contributing to false allegations of
child sexual abuse. Now, the Child Suggestibility Litigation
Library puts at your fingertips the critical resource documents to
demonstrate how to assert, establish and argue that suggestion has
tainted the memory of the complaining witness and rendered the
testimony unreliable – and thus inadmissible. These critical
documents – pleadings, exhibits, briefs and opinions – detail how two
landmark cases were successfully argued to their respective state’s
highest court. Additionally, there is a comprehensive national review
of the state of the science and law in this area.
Available by instant Adobe PDF download or CD, the searchable,
printable Litigation Library is a must for anyone suspecting
that suggestion may have played a role in the making of false
allegations of child sexual abuse.
Only $59
Electronic
Delivery
Child Suggestibility In
False Sexual Abuse Cases
By Edward Nichols, MSW,
LCSW-R
The problem of the
suggestibility of young children in sexual abuse allegations has become
one of great concern to those defending false allegations of child
sexual abuse. Clearly, when such allegations are false,
it is incumbent upon the accused to provide an explanation to the court
regard why a child would make such a false allegation and how
such an allegation could evolve from a so called “disclosure” to a
court proceeding. We are happy to provide, in the context of the Child
Suggestibility Litigation Library, the basic source documents
that provide the information, insight, and practice wisdom that allows
for the efficient and effective defense of false allegations of child
sexual abuse wherein the issues of suggestibility, and thus the
tainting of a child’s reports, are an issue.
The Litigation Library provides a comprehensive exposition
of the detailed resource documents in two landmark cases: State
of New Jersey v. Margaret Kelly Michaels and Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania v. Gerald John Delbridge. These two cases,
appealed victoriously, provide all of the essential psychosocial
concepts, and legal precedents, required to defend cases of false
allegations of child sexual abuse, where child suggestibility is an
issue. A brief summary of these cases makes this clear:
Michaels involved the conviction of day care
teacher on 115 counts involving various charges of sexual assault
committed on twenty children in her charge at the Wee Day Care Nursery
in Maplewood, New Jersey. On appeal, the court found evidence
that the children’s accusations were founded on unreliable perceptions
or memories caused by improper investigative procedures and that
admission of testimony premised upon those accusations could lead to an
unfair trial. In reaching this conclusion, the court acknowledged
the problem of relying on scientific and psychological theories in the
context of considering the susceptibility of children to manipulative
interrogations. The court discussed the tension between the
accepted legal standard that children as a class are not suspect
witnesses, and the commonly held belief that children are peculiarly
susceptible to undue influence. The court reviewed the various
treatises written and relied upon the scientific and law enforcement
communities regarding the susceptibility of children to coercive
interview techniques, and reached its conclusion as to the concept of
“taint” by judicial recognition:
“We therefore determine that a sufficient consensus exists within the
academic, profession, [sic] and law enforcement communities, confirmed
in varying degrees by courts, to warrant the conclusion that the use of
coercive or highly suggestive interrogation techniques can create a
significant risk that the interrogation itself will distort the child’s
recollection of events, thereby undermining the reliability of the
statements and subsequent testimony concerning such events.” [State
of New Jersey v. Margaret Kelly Michaels, 642 A.2d 1372 (N.J.
1994) at 1379]
In analyzing the concept of taint as it affects the admissibility of
proffered testimony, the New Jersey Court looked at its existing
caselaw on the issues of suggestive pre-trial identification
techniques, and the admissibility of testimony based on hypnotically
induced recollections. As those cases illustrate, evidence may be
deemed inadmissible because it was corrupted by the manner in which it
was collected. The New Jersey court therefore concluded that
taint was equally capable of corrupting the memory of a child
witness during the investigation of an allegation of sexual
abuse. The court identified various factors for assessing
accusation of sexual abuse made by children, however, it cautioned that
the list was not exhaustive and that the matter must be analyzied in
the totality of the circumstances involve. The factors identified
in Michaels are: [1] the age of the alleged victim: [2] the
circumstances of the questioning; [3] the alleged victim’s relationship
with the interrogator; and [4] the type of questions asked.
To assist in the appeal of this case, a Committee of Concerned Social
Scientists submitted an Amicus Brief which explicated the
state of the science regarding the proper interview of children and how
the interviewers in the Michaels case introduced suggestion
and tainted the testimony of children. This document, included in
the Litigation Library, has become singularly important to
establish a basic understanding of how to defend false allegations of
child sexual abuse when improper interview techniques have been
employed.
Ultimately, the defendant in Michaels prevailed and the New
Jersey Supreme Court
wrote:
“This Court has a responsibility to ensure that evidence admitted at
trial is sufficiently reliable so that it may be of use to the finder
of fact who will draw the ultimate conclusions of guilt or
innocence. This concern implicates principles of constitutional
due process. Reliability is the linchpin in determining
admissibility of evidence under a standard of fairness that is required
by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Competent
and reliable evidence remains at the foundation of a fair trial, which
seeks ultimately to determine the truth about criminal
culpability. If crucial inculpatory evidence is alleged to be
derived from unreliable sources, due process interests are at risk.”[State
v. Michaels, 642 A.2d at 1380 (internal citations omitted).]
The Child Suggestibility Litigation Library contains the
following resource documents from Michaels: The Amicus
Brief by the Committee of Concerned Social
Scientists, the Opinion of the New Jersey Superior Court [1993]; and
the Opinion of the New Jersey Supreme Court [Decided June 23, 1993].
Next we turn to Delbridge,
a case that changed the law in the state of Pennsylvania, and a case in
which I consulted regarding the salient psychosocial issues. This
case involved two young children wherein it appeared that false
allegations of child sexual abuse were made based upon taint as a
result of suggestive interviewing. The problem was that this was
a case of first impression with no precedent under Pennsylvania law to
conduct a so-called “taint hearing” where the court probes into the
interview process to determine if suggestive interviews may have
tainted the testimony of the complaining witnesses. Ultimately,
the Pennsylvania Supreme Court changed the law in Delbridge and
ordered a taint hearing.
The most interesting
part of the study of Delbridge is that originally, when the
case was appealed to Superior Court, the court agreed with the trial
court. When the case was further appealed to Supreme Court, the
defendant’s position prevailed. This case provides an opportunity
to see how the principles first identified in Michaels can be
misapplied or successfully applied. In asserting that a child has been
subjected to a suggestive interview process that has tainted a child
memory – thus rendering inadmissible – the litigator must be mindful of
the finer nuances of both the legal and psychosocial points that must
be asserted, established and successfully argued. The Child
Suggestibility Litigation Library contains the following resource
documents from Delbridge: The Brief Of Appellant
before the PA Superior Court [filed April 10, 2000]; The Opinion of the
PA Superior Court [March 2001]; The Brief Of Appellant to the PA
Supreme Court [Includes Exhibits], The Opinion of the PA Supreme Court.
In a professional career
spanning over 25 years, it has been a rare occasion to be as pleased
about a project as I am with my participation in bringing the Child
Suggestibility Litigation Library to those who advocating for
those falsely accused. I believe that these materials will not
only assist those who may have been falsely convicted, but perhaps more
importantly, prevent false conviction where child suggestibility is a
crucial issue.
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