SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-003671-95T4
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
THOMAS G. ZEIDELL,
Defendant-Appellant.
_______________________________________
Submitted: January 28, l997 Decided: April 14, 1997
Before Judges Dreier, Newman and Villanueva.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Monmouth County.
Susan L. Reisner, Public Defender, attorney for
appellant (Steven M. Gilson, Designated Counsel, of
counsel and on the brief).
John Kaye, Monmouth County Prosecutor, attorney
for respondent (Peter E. Warshaw, Jr., Assistant
Prosecutor, of counsel and on the brief).
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
NEWMAN, J.A.D.
Tried to a jury, defendant, Thomas G. Zeidell, was convicted of two counts of sexual assault, of K.B. and E.B. (counts l and 4 respectively), N.J.S.A. 2C:l4-2b; two counts of endangering the welfare of a child (K.B., count 2, and E.B., count 5), N.J.S.A. 2C:24-4a; and fourth-degree lewdness pertaining to K.B. and E.B. (counts 3 and 6 respectively), N.J.S.A. 2C:l4-4(b)(l). The court sentenced defendant on the sexual assault counts to concurrent
ten-year terms with five-year parole disqualifiers in the Adult
Diagnostic and Treatment Center in Avenel. The other counts were
merged. The usual penalties were imposed. Defendant appeals.
We reverse and vacate the convictions on counts l and 4 and
remand for further proceedings on the remaining counts which are
now unmerged.
Defendant committed an act of public masturbation on June
l8, l994 on the boardwalk in Asbury Park near the border of Ocean
Grove. Carol S. observed defendant from the beach. She was the
adult babysitter in charge of K.B., a boy of ten, his sister,
E.B., age eight, and their two female cousins, J.F. and C.F. She
pointed defendant out to K.B. and E.B. J.F. and C.F. never
observed defendant. Carol sent E.B. to summon the police who
were patrolling nearby. Both K.B. and E. B. testified that
defendant faced the ocean and looked in the direction of their
two cousins who were swimming in the ocean. K.B. and E.B. both
said that defendant never spoke to them, did not look in their
direction and never made any gesture toward them. Carol S. could
not be located by police and did not testify at trial.See footnote 1
At the end of the State's case, defendant moved for a
judgment of acquittal on all counts, but his argument focused on
the sexual assault charges. Defendant asserted that there was no
evidence that defendant knew that K.B. and E.B. were present or
that the two youngsters in the water were the object of
defendant's view. The motion was denied.
Next, defendant's counsel argued that defendant would
testify at trial if his prior bad acts were not used on cross-examination. Defendant had a past lewdness charge based on
exposure of his genitals to a nine-year-old girl in l99l and a
public masturbation charge, at an unspecified time in l99l, in
front of a rest home in West Long Branch, which resulted in a
guilty plea to lewdness. Before trial and on the State's
application, the trial judge denied admissibility of these same
prior bad acts as part of the State's direct case. The trial
judge ruled that these prior bad acts could be used for rebuttal
purposes only.
Defendant did not testify. Had he testified, defendant
proffered that he would have said that he pulled his cut-off
jeans down to scratch a rash. He had corroborating medical
evidence of a rash which was treated when he was first
incarcerated after the arrest for these crimes. It was noted
that defendant was within l50 feet of a public rest room where he
could have scratched the rash in privacy.
During deliberations, the jury's first request was to see
the charges on counts l, 2, 4 and 5 (the sexual assault and
endangering the welfare of children charges). The trial judge
responded to the jury's request by rereading the initial charges
on those counts. The jury's second request was contained in the
following question: "What does the prosecutor have to prove
beyond a reasonable doubt on count l and count 4?" Again, the
trial judge reread the instruction pertaining to counts l and 4
(sexual assault) and repeated the model reasonable doubt charge.
The third jury request was to reread the second request once
more. The jury was charged again on sexual assault and
reasonable doubt. Guilty verdicts were later returned on all
counts.
On appeal, defendant raises the following points:
POINT I
DEFENDANT'S CONVICTIONS MUST BE REVERSED BECAUSE THE
TRIAL COURT'S ERRONEOUS DECISION ADMITTING PRIOR BAD
ACTS IF HE WERE TO TESTIFY DETERRED DEFENDANT FROM
TESTIFYING.
POINT II
DEFENDANT'S MOTION FOR A JUDGMENT OF ACQUITTAL SHOULD
HAVE BEEN GRANTED AS TO THE SEXUAL ASSAULT CONVICTIONS.
POINT III
DEFENDANT'S MAXIMUM BASE TERMS MUST BE VACATED AND THIS
MATTER MUST BE REMANDED FOR RESENTENCING, BECAUSE THE
TRIAL COURT FAILED TO CONSIDER EXISTING MITIGATING
FACTORS. (PARTIALLY RAISED BELOW)
Defendant argues in Point I that the trial judge erred in
allowing the admission of evidence of prior bad acts if defendant
testified. Defendant was prepared to testify that he did not
masturbate on the boardwalk but, rather, pulled his cut-off jeans
down to scratch a rash. Defendant asserts that the testimony of
a prior lewdness charge and a public masturbation incident should
not have been permitted as rebuttal testimony if defendant
testified as proffered. We disagree.
Under State v. Cofield, l
27 N.J. 328 (l992), other-crime
evidence can be admitted to prove a relevant issue, provided the
four prong test of Cofield is satisfied. See N.J.R.E. 404(b).
In this case, the State met all four requirements found in the
Cofield test. First, the evidence was relevant to defendant's
motive. Defendant's testimony would have consisted of denying
public masturbation, essentially stating that the witnesses
mistook defendant's act of scratching. Thus, the evidence of
defendant's prior acts of lewdness and masturbation would be
admissible as relevant to the material issue showing past
involvement with children for motive. See State v. Cusick, 2l
9 N.J. Super. 452, 464-66 (App. Div.), certif. denied, l
09 N.J. 54
(l987).
Second, the past offenses were similar in kind and
sufficiently close in time to the charged offenses to have
assisted the jury in understanding defendant's motive or intent.
See State v. G. S., 278 N.J. Super. l5l, l6l-62 (App. Div. l994),
certif. denied, l
42 N.J. 5l7 (l995), rev'd on other grounds, l
45 N.J. 460 (l996).
Third, the evidence was clear and convincing. Defendant did
not even argue otherwise before the trial judge.
Fourth, under Cofield, supra, the probative value of the
evidence must not be outweighed by its prejudicial impact. l27
N.J. at 338 (citation omitted). The prejudice is substantial in
a case of this nature. Despite that, defendant's denial of the
public masturbation charge and use of the "rash" defense invited
a rebuttal response. Indeed, the trial judge acted circumspectly
in denying the earlier application by the State to use this same
evidence in its direct case. Allowing its use in rebuttal, along
with a limiting instruction, would have reduced the potential for
prejudice and would not have resulted in a mistaken exercise of
discretion. Any prejudice would be further diluted upon the
introduction of evidence that defendant was in close proximity to
a rest room where he could have scratched the "rash" out of
public view. We find no error in the trial judge's ruling.
Defendant argues in Point II that the motion for judgment of
acquittal on the second degree sexual assault counts should have
been granted. We agree that the second degree sexual assault
counts should have been dismissed because the necessary
relational component for a conviction on these counts was
missing.
N.J.S.A. 2C:l4-2b provides: "An actor is guilty of sexual
assault if he commits an act of sexual contact with a victim who
is less than l3 years old and the actor is at least 4 years older
than the victim." Sexual assault is a crime of the second
degree. N.J.S.A. 2C:l4-2b. N.J.S.A. 2C:l4-1d defines "sexual
contact" as:
an intentional touching by the victim or actor, either
directly or through clothing, of the victim's or
actor's intimate parts for the purpose of degrading or
humiliating the victim or sexually arousing or sexually
gratifying the actor. Sexual contact of the actor with
himself must be in view of the victim whom the actor
knows to be present .... (emphasis added)
Here, the alleged victims, K.B. and E.B., had not been
touched nor were they asked to touch defendant. In fact,
defendant did not look in their direction nor did he make any
gesture toward either one of them, and, so far as the record
discloses, neither K.B. or E.B. were in close proximity to
defendant. Their only connection to defendant's conduct on the
boardwalk was as observers from the beach once defendant's
actions were pointed out to them by their babysitter. Considered
in this undisputed context, we fail to see how the statute was
violated.
State v. Ridgeway,
256 N.J. Super. 202 (App. Div.), certif.
denied, l30 N.J. l8 (l992) is instructive. There, defendant pled
guilty to the crime of sexual assault and appealed on the ground
that he failed to provide an adequate factual basis. Id. at 203.
The plea transcript discloses that defendant pulled over in his
car and asked an eleven-year-old girl over to the car. Id. at
204. At that time, he had his penis in hand and was "playing
with it." Id. at 204-05. He then said to her "Would you like
this?" Id. at 205. Ridgeway intended that the victim see
exactly what he was doing. Ibid. On these facts, our court
found an adequate basis to support the plea to the second degree
crime. Id. at 206.
The major difference between what occurred in Ridgeway and
the case at bar was that specific victimization and aggressive
assaultive conduct was present in Ridgeway, but not here. Those
elements simply do not exist in the testimony presented at this
trial. It is no wonder that the jury requested instructions not
once, not twice, but three times concerning this specific charge
because obviously, on these facts, the jury could not distinguish
between the instruction on the lewdness charges and the sexual
assault charges.
Cannel in his commentary zeroed in on the distinction
between sexual assault and lewdness. In commenting on whether
the definition of "sexual contact" under N.J.S.A. 2C:l4-l
included the actor touching himself, Cannel had this to say:
In the legislative process the source definition was
also reworked to clarify it and to combine the touching
of the victim by the actor and the touching of the
actor by the victim. That gave rise to an ambiguity as
to whether touching of the actor by the actor was
included. The final sentence was added, therefore, as
a clarification and limitation. However, touching
which is "criminal sexual contact" must still be
distinguished from mere lewdness under 2C:l4-4. The
distinction may lie in the relation of the actor to the
victim. Criminal sexual contact is an essentially
assaultive crime. The victim in lewdness, while
subject to affront or alarm, is not really made part of
the act itself, which is only observed by the victim.
Thus, if the victim is forced to touch the actor,
sexual contact exists. In a similar way, when the
actor touches himself for the purpose of either
degrading the victim and or sexually gratifying himself
and either forces the victim to observe or is aware of
observation by a victim under the critical age there is
enough of an actor/victim relationship to amount to
criminal sexual contact.
[Cannel, New Jersey Criminal Code Annotated, comment 4
on N.J.S.A. 2C:l4-l (l996-97).]
We further note that the statutory offense contemplates that
there be a specific victim. While our court rejected the
argument, in Ridgeway, supra, 256 N.J. Super. at 205, that the
phrase "with a victim" in N.J.S.A. 2C:l4-2b required actual
physical contact between the perpetrator of the crime and the
victim, we did not discount in Ridgeway that there had to be a
victim. Indeed, to do otherwise would be to ignore the statutory
language "with a victim" expressly used in N.J.S.A. 2C:l4-2b, and
the fair meaning of that language is clear as written. Our duty
is to apply the language "according to its terms" when the
meaning is plain and unambiguous. State v. Maguire,
84 N.J. 508,
528 (l980) (citations omitted); 2A Sutherland, Statutory
Construction (l992), § 46.0l at 8l-82.
We further reject the notion that the primary distinction
between the conduct required for a sexual assault under N.J.S.A.
2C:l4-2b is more than what is required under N.J.S.A. 2C:l4-4b(l). In defining the crime of lewdness, N.J.S.A. 2C:l4-4b(l)
reads in relevant part:
A person commits a crime of the fourth degree if: (l)
He exposes his intimate parts for the purpose of
arousing or gratifying the sexual desire of the actor
or of any other person under circumstances where the
actor knows or reasonably expects he is likely to be
observed by a child who is less than l3 years of age
where the actor is at least 4 years older than the
child.
However, the distinction between fourth-degree lewdness and
second-degree sexual assault does not lie in the fact that under
lewdness, the actor merely need expose himself for the crime of
lewdness to take place while a sexual assault covers conduct
beyond just the exposure of intimate parts. That is not the
distinction to be made. Again, Cannel makes it clear that the
distinction lies in the relationship of the actor to the victim.
The distinction between lewdness, sexual contact and
sexual assault lies in the relation of the actor to the
victim. Both sexual assault and sexual contact are
essentially assaultive crimes: by force or other unfair
advantage, the victim is made to participate in a
sexual event. The victim of lewdness, while subject to
affront or alarm, is not really made a part of the act
itself, but is merely an observer. Where a young
victim is the observer, however, the more serious crime
of sexual assault may be found. This last result
follows from the scheme of 2C:l4-2 under which the age
of the victim functions as the criminal equivalent of
force. Therefore, any sexual exposure involving
contact of the actor with himself or herself which he
or she causes to be observed by a person l3 or under
will constitute sexual contact with that victim, and
sexual contact with a victim of that age constitutes
sexual assault under 2C:l4-2b.
[Cannel, supra, comment 3 on N.J.S.A. 2C:l4-4b.]
The significant aspect of this comment is that the actor
causes or invites the observation by the underaged person. In a
word, the actor specifically solicits the observation by the
victim. The observation underlying a sexual assault is unwilling
while it may be incidental or casual under lewdness.
The record is clear that there was no entreaty to either
K.B. or E.B. by defendant nor were they specifically singled out
by him. This was a public act which could reasonably be
construed to have been done with an awareness that there were
children under the age of thirteen who could observe defendant's
conduct if they chose to look in his direction. That conduct
satisfies the elements of N.J.S.A. 2C:l4-4b but does not satisfy
the elements of sexual assault under N.J.S.A. 2C:l4-2b. The
convictions under counts l and 4 are therefore vacated and
judgments of acquittals must be entered.
Defendant argues in Point III that the trial judge should
not have imposed maximum ten-year base terms on the second degree
convictions. In view of our disposition of the convictions on
these specific counts, it is unnecessary to discuss the
sentencing issue. Because the other convictions were merged into
the convictions on counts l and 4, they now become unmerged.
The judgments of conviction on counts l and 4 are vacated,
and judgments of acquittal must be entered. The matter is
remanded for further proceedings on the remaining counts which
are unmerged.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-3671-95T4
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
THOMAS G. ZEIDELL,
Defendant-Appellant.
________________________________________
VILLANUEVA, J.A.D. (retired and temporarily assigned on
recall), concurring and dissenting.
I concur with the majority to affirm the convictions on
counts two, three, five and six. However, I part company with my
colleagues in their reversal of the sexual assault convictions
because I believe that the jury could, and did, reasonably infer
that defendant was aware of the two children who were obviously
in his view when they observed him and therefore defendant could
be found guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of violations of
N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2b. Thus, I would affirm the convictions on
counts one and four.
A more detailed recitation of the facts is necessary before
deciding if defendant was entitled to a judgment of acquittal.
On June 18, 1994, defendant was first observed by Patrolman
Frederick Jenkins of the Neptune Police Department who had been
assigned to patrol the Ocean Grove beach area. Shortly after
8:00 p.m., Patrolman Jenkins had exited his vehicle and
undertaken routine foot patrol on the boardwalk, near "the
northeast most building" in Ocean Grove, which contained a
restaurant, an ice cream shop, and various other stores.
Accompanied by Patrolman Phil Seidell, Patrolman Jenkins
observed a small group on the beach consisting of Carol S., and
four young children, K.B., E.B., J.F, and C.F. Carol was
supervising these children. Patrolman Jenkins observed two of
the children swimming and the other two playing with Carol in the
sand. As he patrolled the boardwalk, Jenkins encountered
defendant standing on the boardwalk, next to a bicycle, looking
out at the water. Jenkins subsequently left the area and
returned to his patrol vehicle.
At the time defendant was masturbating, J.F. and C.F. were
playing in the water and apparently did not view any of the
events that transpired. E.B. and K.B., ages eight and ten
respectively, and Carol were playing on the beach. The defendant
was located on the boardwalk some seventy-five feet from E.B.,
K.B. and Carol. Carol exclaimed "look at that man jerking off
over there." Initially, E.B. looked the wrong way after Carol's
remark, but subsequently, E.B. looked towards the boardwalk and
saw defendant with his pants and underwear down, masturbating.
K.B. also made the same observations. E.B., K.B. and Carol all
clearly observed defendant masturbating while on the boardwalk.
While masturbating, defendant appeared to be watching J.F. and
C.F. playing in the water. Both E.B. and K.B. were frightened by
defendant's demonstration. Subsequently, Carol dispatched E.B.
to get a police officer.
While at his patrol vehicle with Patrolman Seidell, Jenkins
observed E.B. running towards them in "kind of a frantic type,
excited manner." This occurred no more than two to three minutes
after Jenkins had left the beach area. Jenkins also
characterized E.B. as "kind of scared" and Jenkins was unable to
understand what E.B. was trying to tell him. Thereafter, Carol
and K.B. joined Jenkins and E.B., and Jenkins observed both of
them to be excited as well. Carol advised Jenkins that defendant
was masturbating on the boardwalk. By the time Jenkins was able
to reach the defendant's location the defendant was standing,
leaning, looking over the water. At trial Jenkins remarked that
from where E.B., K.B. and Carol were located on the beach, they
could have clearly seen a person on the boardwalk where defendant
was standing, what that person was wearing, and what that person
was doing with his hands.
Defendant was subsequently arrested and charged.
In counts one and four defendant was charged with sexual
assault under N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2b, by committing "an act of sexual
contact with a victim who is less than 13 years old and the actor
is at least four years older than the victim." The two victims
were eight and ten years of age. Defendant was forty years old.
Therefore, the issue was solely whether defendant committed
sexual contact as defined in N.J.S.A. 2C:14-1d. He certainly
committed sexual contact by "an intentional touching by [himself]
... of [his own] intimate parts for the purpose of degrading or
humiliating the victim or sexually arousing or sexually
gratifying [himself]." The pertinent part of the definition
which the majority finds lacking is that the act "with himself
must be in the view of the victim whom the actor knows to be
present."
The ultimate issue is:
whether, viewing the State's evidence in its
entirety, be that evidence direct or
circumstantial, and giving the State the
benefit of all its favorable testimony as
well as all of the favorable inferences which
reasonably could be drawn therefrom, a
reasonable jury could find guilt of the
charge beyond a reasonable doubt.
[State v. Reyes,
50 N.J. 454, 459 (1967.]
The majority concludes that the "defendant did not look in
[E.B.'s and K.B.'s] direction nor did he make any gesture toward
either one of them, and, so far as the record discloses, neither
K.B. or E.B. were in close proximity to defendant." See majority
opinion, slip op. at 7. I submit that defendant's location on
the edge of a boardwalk overlooking an almost deserted beach,
seventy-five feet away from the victims and in clear view of the
victims equates to close proximity. That at least would be a
question for the jury to determine.
Furthermore, the majority's reliance upon State v. Ridgeway,
256 N.J. Super. 202 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
130 N.J. 18
(1992), is misplaced. There is no requirement in the aforesaid
statutes that the actor has to make any gesture towards the
victim. There does not have to be "specific victimization and
aggressive assaultive conduct," as the majority holds. See
majority opinion, slip op. at 8. All that is necessary is that
the sexual act be "in the view of the victim whom the actor knows
to be present." N.J.S.A. 2C:14-1d.
Despite defendant's attorney's cross-examination and
summation to the jury arguing that E.B. and K.B. were not in a
position to view the defendant, the jury, and ultimately the
trial judge, rejected this argument.
Police Officer Jenkins observed defendant on the boardwalk
next to a bicycle. There was no proof how long defendant had
been there, nor need there be. The jury could reasonably
conclude that it had been much more than a few seconds. They
could also reasonably conclude that the defendant did not
approach on his bicycle and park it on the boardwalk without
observing what or who was in the immediate vicinity. Rather, the
jury could reasonably conclude that defendant stopped at a
particular spot and, for a period of several minutes or more, he
was aware that the minors, E.B., a girl, and K.B., a boy, and
their female supervisor of unknown age,See footnote 2 were on the beach only
seventy-five feet away. Certainly, it is not necessary for the
State to obtain an admission by the defendant that he was aware
of the victims' presence or their observation of him.
Defendant's awareness may be inferred by the circumstances.
Furthermore, the Legislature has made it a more serious
offense when a victim of an otherwise lesser sexual offense is
below the critical age. One authority has stated:
The distinction between lewdness, sexual contact and
sexual assault lies in the relation of the actor to the
victim. Both sexual assault and sexual contact are
essentially assaultive crimes: by force or other unfair
advantage, the victim is made to participate in a
sexual event. The victim of lewdness, while subject to
affront or alarm, is not really made a part of the act
itself but is merely an observer. Where a young victim
is the observer, however, the more serious crime of
sexual assault may be found. This last result follows
from the scheme of 2C:14-2 under which the age of the
victim functions as the criminal equivalent of force.
Therefore, any sexual exposure involving contact of the
actor with himself or herself which he or she causes to
be observed by a person 13 or under will constitute
sexual contact with that victim, and sexual contact
with a victim of that age constitutes sexual assault
under 2C:14-2b.
[Cannel, New Jersey Criminal Code Annotated, comment 3 on
N.J.S.A. 2C:14-4 (1996-97).]
Defendant's argument that E.B. and K.B. inadvertently
observed his conduct is without legal significance, as is the
argument that they were not his target. The fact that the
children, while on the beach, turned their heads to observe the
defendant does not affect defendant's intent. Defendant's guilt
does not turn on the fortuitous event of when and why the minors
turned their heads to observe him. It would be unreasonable to
assume that when defendant arrived at the place on the boardwalk
where he masturbated, he did not even look at the beach in the
immediate vicinity for at least five or more minutes.
The real question under N.J.S.A. 2C:14-1d is whether
defendant knew E.B. and K.B. were present. The evidence
indicated that he must have known and the jury could reasonably
infer that he did know. The jury knew that E.B., K.B. and their
supervisor were the only people on the beach at the time of the
incident. Therefore, the record is not clear, as the majority
holds, "that there was no entreaty to either K.B. or E.B. by
defendant nor were they specifically singled out by him." See
majority opinion, slip op. at 10. The jury could have so
concluded but they did not. We must keep in mind that when the
motion for judgment of acquittal was made, the State was entitled
to all the favorable inferences that could reasonably be drawn.
This is likewise true regarding the majority's conclusion
that there were no "victims" and that E.B. was really not scared
because of defendant's actions, but rather, his behavior was
attributable to Carol's request to report defendant's criminal
conduct to the police. See majority opinion, slip op. at 2-3
n.1. Notably, E.B. testified that when she observed the
defendant, E.B. "was scared" because she "thought [the defendant]
was crazy." This was before the police were summoned. The
reason that E.B. and K.B. were scared and traumatized was clearly
for the jury to determine, which was not difficult.
In any event, giving the State the benefit of all favorable
inferences, a reasonable jury could, and did, conclude that
defendant did look and knew that very young children were present
and looked at them. Accordingly, the trial court properly denied
the defendant's motion for a judgment of acquittal as to the
sexual assault charges.
Lastly, the sentence of ten years in prison with a five-year
parole ineligibility to be served at the Adult Diagnostic and
Treatment Center in Avenel does not "shock the judicial
conscience." State v. Roth,
95 N.J. 334, 364-65 (1984). The
trial judge specifically considered the Avenel report which
concluded that defendant suffered from a compulsive and
repetitive pattern of exhibitionist behavior, as well as
defendant's "very extensive record of sexual offenses."
Defendant had three indecent exposure complaints sustained
as a juvenile, starting at age fourteen. Since 1975, he has had
eight convictions for lewdness and a sexual assault conviction
for which he was sentenced to an indeterminate term not to exceed
ten years on April 10, 1981. Defendant has established a long
history of exhibitionist behavior which has continued despite two
terms of specialized sex offender treatment.
Therefore, I would affirm the sexual assault convictions.
Footnote: 1 Our dissenting colleague makes much of the fact that Patrolman Jenkins observed E.B. running towards them in "kind of a frantic type, excited manner," further noting that Jenkins characterized E.B. as "kind of scared" and was unable to understand what E.B. was trying to tell him. We did not mention Patrolman Jenkins' observations in our recitation of the facts for two reasons. First, we did not view them as relevant to the issue before us. Second, we were concerned that any excitement or fright displayed by eight-year-old E.B. could be attributed to being asked by Carol to report defendant's criminal conduct to the police instead of Carol, the adult in charge, reporting it herself. You do not ask a child to assume the adult's responsibility. Ultimately, the adult Carol had to tell the
police what happened because E.B. could not make himself understood. We did not view his inability to communicate to the police a consequence of his being "scared" but rather that it was well beyond his range of childhood experience to report criminal activity in general and the nature of this activity in particular to the police. Footnote: 2At the time of trial, the supervisor could not be located and therefore did not testify.