State v. Gaspar ( 2014 )


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  • An unpublished opinion of the North Carolina Court of Appeals does not constitute
    controlling legal authority. Citation is disfavo red, but may be permitted in
    accordance with the provisions of Rule 30(e)(3) of the North Carolina Rules of
    A   p   p    e   l   l   a    t   e       P   r    o   c   e   d   u    r   e   .
    NO. COA13-970
    NORTH CAROLINA COURT OF APPEALS
    Filed:    20 May 2014
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.                                 Wayne County
    Nos. 11 CRS 055331–32
    GUSTAVO GASPAR,
    Defendant.
    Appeal by defendant from judgments entered 2 November 2012
    by Judge Arnold O. Jones, II in Wayne County Superior Court.
    Heard in the Court of Appeals 17 February 2014.
    Roy Cooper, Attorney General, by Kathleen                    N.    Bolton,
    Assistant Attorney General, for the State.
    Mark Montgomery, for defendant–appellant.
    MARTIN, Chief Judge.
    Defendant    Gustavo    Gaspar    was   charged    in   true      bills   of
    indictment with two counts of statutory rape of a thirteen-year-
    old child, one count of statutory sexual offense of a thirteen-
    year-old child, one count of felonious rape of a child by an
    adult offender, and one count of taking indecent liberties with
    a child.     He appeals from judgments entered upon jury verdicts
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    finding       him    guilty      of     the    charged      offenses.     We    find    no
    prejudicial error.
    The evidence presented at trial tended to show that, from
    the time that defendant’s biological daughter, M.G., was eleven
    years old until she was thirteen years old, defendant sexually
    abused    her.            M.G.    testified          that    defendant    had    vaginal
    intercourse with her “more than five times,” and also made her
    perform oral sex on him.                      M.G. said that defendant made her
    perform these acts in the family residence that she shared with
    defendant, her stepmother, and her younger sister and brother,
    as well as in the fenced-in shelter on the property where a
    horse was kept (“the horse barn”), in and around the garage
    located about twenty feet from the residence where defendant did
    general mechanic work, and at a motel.
    M.G.     testified        that    the     first      time   defendant    sexually
    abused    her       was   at   nighttime        in   the    family’s    residence,     the
    evening before the family was planning to go to the beach.                             M.G.
    testified that she was asleep in her bed when she awoke to
    defendant touching her “[i]n [her] private parts.”                             M.G. said
    that defendant was drunk at the time and that her sister was
    asleep in the next bed in the same room while defendant fondled
    her.
    On another occasion, defendant told M.G. to go with him so
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    that they could clean up trees and debris that had fallen around
    the   horse   barn   during   a   recent   storm.   After   they   finished
    picking up the debris, the two went inside the horse barn and
    defendant “asked [M.G.] if [she] wanted to have sex with him.”
    M.G. testified that she told defendant “no, because [she] was on
    [her] period.”       She testified that, in response, defendant “told
    [her] to give him oral sex.”         She further testified that, “when
    he was done he told [her] to get out of the little barn,” which
    she did, and said that defendant stayed there.              M.G. testified
    that while she had been in the horse barn with defendant, her
    stepmother was inside the residence and her brother and sister
    were playing outside.
    M.G. also testified about a time when defendant was working
    outside and told M.G. to go behind a pick-up truck that was
    parked outside the garage; when she did so, defendant told her
    he wanted to have sex with her.             M.G. told him “no, because
    [her] [step]mom was inside and [she] didn’t want to do it like
    in front of like——outside.          [She] just didn’t want to do it.”
    Defendant told her “not to be scared,” and told her that if she
    had sex with him, that “he’ll give [her] something that [she]
    needed.”      Defendant then pulled down his pants, unbuttoned her
    pants, put on a condom, and had vaginal intercourse with her.
    When he was finished, defendant told M.G. to go inside the house
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    and he stayed by the pick-up truck.       When she went back in the
    house, M.G. did not tell her stepmother, because she said she
    was afraid and “didn’t want to get out of [her] family” and she
    “wanted [the family] to be together.”       The next day, defendant
    gave M.G. twenty dollars, which M.G. testified she received in
    exchange for having sex with defendant behind the truck the day
    before.
    On another occasion, after school, while M.G. was working
    for defendant as a mechanic in his garage, and while her younger
    sister and brother were still at school, defendant told M.G.
    that he wanted to have sex with her.        M.G. testified that when
    she refused, defendant said he would give her something if she
    had sex with him.     Then defendant put on a condom and          had
    vaginal intercourse with M.G. in the corner of the garage.       M.G.
    said that when it was over, defendant told her to go outside and
    defendant stayed in the garage.        M.G. testified that defendant
    kept a toolbox that contained condoms and pornographic videos in
    the garage.   M.G. testified that she did not watch the videos,
    but that defendant had told her that “if [she] wanted to watch
    [the videos] to see how to do it because [she] told him [she]
    don’t know how to do that stuff.        And he told [her] to watch
    that movie then.”
    M.G. also   testified that    defendant    took her to   a   motel
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    twice to have sex; once after she finished school for the day,
    and once during school hours.        On the occasion that defendant
    took M.G. to the motel during school hours, defendant picked her
    up from school at around 2:00 p.m. and told her that they were
    going to the auto parts store.           Instead, defendant drove to a
    gas station, bought a soda for M.G. and a box of condoms for
    himself, and then drove to a motel.           M.G. did not remember the
    name of the motel, but reported that it was a one-level motel on
    William Street.       Before they got out of defendant’s vehicle,
    defendant told her to put on his hoodie so that no one would see
    her face as she entered the motel.         Once they were in the motel
    room, defendant told M.G. to go to the bathroom to “wash up,”
    and when she was finished in the bathroom, defendant went into
    the bathroom and took a shower.       Defendant then emerged from the
    bathroom without any clothes on and told M.G., who was also
    undressed, to get on the bed.      He asked her if she wanted to put
    the condom on for him; when she refused, he put the condom on
    himself   and   had   vaginal   intercourse    with   M.G.   Afterwards,
    defendant told M.G. to go to the bathroom again to “wash up” and
    to get dressed, which she did.        Defendant told M.G. to put the
    hoodie back on so that no one would see her face as she left the
    motel and got into his vehicle.
    M.G. testified that defendant often made her perform sexual
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    acts in exchange for giving her permission to go somewhere she
    wanted to go or to get something that she wanted to have.                              On
    one occasion, M.G. testified that she wanted to go to a dance
    that was being held at her school, but that defendant “told
    [her] if [she] wanted to go [she] had to give him something,”
    which she said was “sex.”
    M.G. reiterated throughout her testimony that, for the two
    years    that    defendant      sexually    abused     her,       she    did   not    tell
    anyone because she was afraid and “didn’t want to get away from
    [her] family.”       When questioned by defense counsel as to why she
    did not report the sexual abuse and why she wanted to stay with
    her family when that meant she would also be staying with her
    father——the man who had been sexually abusing her for two years—
    —M.G. simply said, “But he’s my dad.”                  Detective Sergeant Tammy
    Mozingo with the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office testified that
    M.G. told her that “she loved her dad and she just wanted him to
    stop    having    sex    with   her.       That’s    the    only    thing      that    she
    wanted.”        M.G. also told the detective sergeant that “her dad
    had told her in the past that if she told anybody that they
    wouldn’t have anywhere to live, she wouldn’t have anywhere to
    live.”      She    told    Detective       Sergeant    Mozingo          that   she    just
    “wanted a normal life.”
    According    to    her    testimony,     when       M.G.    was    thirteen,      a
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    friend      invited   her   to   go   to    her    house.       M.G.    declined    the
    invitation, telling the friend that she knew “[t]hat if [she]
    went to her house[, M.G.’s] dad would have want[ed] something
    back   from     [her].”      M.G.     then       told    her   friend    about    being
    sexually abused by defendant and, the next day, M.G. visited her
    school’s health center to report the abuse.
    Amanda Whaley Anderson, a nurse who works at the school’s
    health center called the Wish Center, testified at trial that,
    in the early morning hours of 25 October 2011, M.G. visited the
    Wish Center and said that she needed to talk to someone.                            Ms.
    Anderson said that M.G. “said that her dad had been sexually
    abusing her over the past year, couple of years.                        And that she
    just wanted it to stop.            And she didn’t know what else to do.”
    She said:      “[M.G.] had told a friend of hers because she wanted—
    —she told me she wanted——she was asked to go to this friend’s
    house.”      “And she didn’t want to go because she knew what she
    would have to do and the friend was the one that encouraged her
    to come talk to me.”
    Ms. Anderson invited the school guidance counselor to be
    present during her conversation with M.G. to have “a second set
    of ears” to hear M.G.’s statement.                 Ms. Anderson testified that
    M.G. went into detail about the sexual abuse perpetrated against
    her    by    defendant.      She      testified         that   M.G.    reported    that
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    defendant “had been asking her for favors any time she would get
    minutes on her cell phone or the privilege of going to a school
    dance or something like that that she would have to perform
    sexually for him.”             Ms. Anderson testified that, based on the
    account given to her by M.G., the abuse occurred “a lot.”
    Ms. Anderson testified that M.G. told her about an incident
    when defendant “signed her out of school and carried her to a
    motel    in    Goldsboro       and     had   sex   with   her.”        Ms.    Anderson’s
    testimony       mirrored           M.G.’s    account      during       M.G.’s     direct
    testimony, including that M.G. thought she was being taken out
    of school to get auto parts but, instead, defendant drove her to
    a motel, and that this visit to the motel was M.G.’s second with
    defendant.           Ms.    Anderson    also     testified      that   defendant    used
    condoms when he had sex with M.G., and that he kept condoms in
    the garage, along with pornographic videos.                       When asked by the
    prosecutor whether in the two years that she had known M.G. as a
    student       that    she    would     “characterize      her    as    truthful,”   Ms.
    Anderson       responded,          without   objection    from     defense      counsel,
    “Yes.”        Ms. Anderson testified that she documented everything
    that M.G. told her, and reported the information to the Wayne
    County Department of Social Services (“DSS”).
    The        State        also     presented     the    testimony      of     numerous
    witnesses, including:               Luis Antonio Carrasquillo, Jr., a social
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    worker     supervisor       with     the     Wayne        County       DSS;     Latonya     Ann
    Woodard,       an   investigator      with        the    Wayne     County       DSS;    Maria–
    Angelica Taylor, a physician’s assistant employed by the TEDI
    BEAR Children’s        Advocacy Center;             Andora Copeland–Hankerson, a
    forensic       interviewer      at    the     TEDI        BEAR     Children’s          Advocacy
    Center; Donna Anderson, a bookkeeper with M.G.’s middle school;
    Natvarlal Parmar, the owner of the Carolina Motel; and Detective
    Larry Norwood Mitchell, Detective Sergeant Robert D. Chunn, and
    Detective Sergeant Mozingo, each with the Wayne County Sheriff’s
    Office.     With the exception of the school bookkeeper, the motel
    owner,     and      Detective      Sergeant        Chunn,        who    testified         about
    executing the search warrant, each witness recounted how M.G.
    disclosed to them personally or by way of written statement the
    same     incidents     of    sexual        abuse        revealed       in     M.G.’s    direct
    testimony, sometimes in greater detail than fourteen-year-old
    M.G. provided while seated in the courtroom in front of the
    jury.
    For instance, Mr. Carrasquillo testified that, on the day
    that M.G. reported the abuse to Ms. Anderson, he went to the
    school    to     interview    M.G.    and     the       guidance       counselor       present
    during    M.G.’s      meeting      with     Ms.    Anderson.            Mr.     Carrasquillo
    recounted M.G.’s report about the event when defendant picked
    her up from school and took her to the motel and had vaginal
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    intercourse       with    her.         Mr.    Carrasquillo           corroborated        M.G.’s
    account about wearing defendant’s hooded sweatshirt so that she
    would not be recognized,                  about washing in the                  bathroom, and
    about defendant being on the bed “on top of her” and “put[ting]
    his     penis    in     her    for     about      ten    minutes.”              Further,       Mr.
    Carrasquillo and Ms. Taylor also both testified about M.G.’s
    disclosure that, when she lived in Mexico at the age of eight or
    nine, her paternal grandfather also “touched her private parts.”
    In   addition,          the    bookkeeper         from     M.G.’s         middle   school
    authenticated         State’s       Exhibit 3,       which     was        the   school’s     sign
    in/sign out log from 10 October 2011, and established that M.G.
    was signed out from school by defendant at 2:18 p.m. that day.
    Mr. Parmar then authenticated State’s Exhibit 4, which was the
    customer       registration         card     completed         for    a     room    rented     on
    10 October 2011 by defendant at Mr. Parmar’s motel, which is a
    one-level       motel    on    North       William      Street       in    Goldsboro,      North
    Carolina.
    Ms. Taylor further testified that, although her examination
    of M.G. did not reveal physical indications of sexual abuse, the
    absence of such evidence “neither supports nor discounts the
    concerns raised by [M.G.’s] clear and consistent disclosure of
    sexual abuse.           The lack of physical findings is not unexpected
    given    the    time     since      the    last     contact      occurred          and   due   to
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    [M.G.’s] development.”          Ms. Taylor also testified that, during
    her physical examination of M.G., she found “lighter pigmented
    scars, linear scars,” which M.G. “told [her] that she marked
    every time her father did something to her.”
    When executing a search warrant on defendant’s garage, in
    several toolboxes, detectives found three unopened condoms and
    X-rated videos, including one titled “Barely 18 # 32,” and a
    case for another      video titled “Back Shot Queens Gone Wild.”
    They also found a .22 caliber revolver with the serial number
    filed off of it.      After executing the search warrant, Detective
    Mitchell and Detective Sergeant Mozingo brought defendant to the
    sheriff’s office for questioning.               Once in the station, they
    advised   defendant      of     his    Miranda     rights,   and     defendant
    acknowledged his understanding of those rights and demonstrated
    his intent to waive those rights.             Although defendant “initially
    denied having sexual intercourse with his daughter,” after being
    shown a copy of the sign in/sign out log from the school, and a
    copy of the receipt from the motel, Detective Mitchell said that
    defendant described the incident that occurred at the Carolina
    Motel.    Defendant admitted that “they stopped at a store where
    he   bought   some   condoms,    and   then    they   proceeded    out   to   the
    Carolina Motel, where he engaged in sexual intercourse and oral
    sex with his daughter, [M.G.]”                Detective Mitchell said that
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    defendant also described an incident “that occurred inside the
    garage behind his house.”               Defendant told the detective that “he
    was on a roller, which is a device that he uses to roll under
    cars that he’s working on,” and that “he was laying on that and
    he had [M.G.] sit on top of him, and played with her boobies,
    and they had sexual intercourse and he penetrated her there.”
    Defendant also described another incident that occurred “[j]ust
    adjacent to and slightly behind the garage is a——he called it a
    horse barn, and then they——he said there was an incident ah——
    where      they    had     sex    rather     inside         the    horse    barn.”         At   the
    conclusion         of    the      thirty-        to    forty-five-minute             interview,
    defendant         signed    his     name     to       the     statement       transcribed        by
    Detective     Sergeant           Mozingo,    and       told       Detective       Mitchell      that
    “[h]e wanted [the detectives] to understand that it was never
    forced on [M.G.]; that she wanted him to do that.”                                    Detective
    Sergeant      Mozingo        also     testified             that,    according        to     M.G.,
    defendant told M.G. that she looked like her deceased biological
    mother and said that “that’s the reason why he done [sic] these
    things to her.”
    The     defense       offered        testimony          from    defendant’s          younger
    brother,      Emilio        Gaspar,        and        defendant’s          wife     and    M.G.’s
    stepmother, Imelda Juarez, and then called defendant to testify
    on   his    own     behalf.         Emilio    Gaspar          testified       that   he    “would
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    always try to hug [M.G.], but lately she was, like, distracted.
    [He] would try to give her some advice, but she begin [sic] to
    be a little rebellious.”   He also testified that M.G. “changed
    boyfriends frequently,” and that he believed his brother and did
    not believe M.G.   Emilio Gaspar also testified that he did not
    think M.G. showed “symptoms” of someone who had been raped or
    sexually abused, in his opinion, because
    she would have her little short shorts or
    little short shirts and always right around
    there, and like a normal girl would do, not
    like someone who was embarrassed or was kind
    of shy. I mean, if she had been molested by
    my brother, I mean, I think there would have
    been a little bit embarrassment or maybe she
    wouldn’t want to come near there.    She was
    always there. And she was helping with the
    mechanic work, and she did it voluntarily.
    Voluntarily; it wasn’t just because she was
    forced to or something. So I don’t know why
    this accusation is now here.
    Mrs. Juarez testified that M.G. never accepted her as the new
    wife of her father and said M.G. never listened to her.     Mrs.
    Juarez also testified that, although she first believed M.G.
    when she accused defendant of sexually abusing her, she said she
    later changed her mind and testified that she now no longer
    believes M.G.’s allegations.
    Defendant testified on his own behalf.   Defendant testified
    that the X-rated movies and the condoms were just items that he
    “would find in cars and things and [would keep them]——to see if
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    the people were going to come and pick them up.”              Defendant also
    gave testimony that he signed his name in three places on the
    Miranda form without knowing what the form was,1 but said that
    Detective Sergeant Mozingo did explain his rights to him and
    said   that   he   did    understand       them.      Nonetheless,    despite
    defendant’s admission that law enforcement officers explained
    his Miranda rights to him, that he signed a form in three places
    at the sheriff’s station, and that when he was questioned by
    investigators,     he    “didn’t   speak    with     them,”   “[he]   remained
    silent,” defendant appears to have alternatively testified that
    he has never been interviewed or been asked any questions by
    anyone identifying themselves as law enforcement officers about
    M.G.’s allegations prior to trial.                 Defendant also testified
    that the reason he brought M.G. to the motel was that he was
    introduced by the motel owner, Mr. Parmar, to a woman named
    Shantel who lived at the motel and who wanted someone to work on
    1
    Defendant was assigned two interpreters during the course of
    the trial. However, the trial court questioned defendant’s need
    for these interpreters, based on defendant’s animated and
    lengthy discussions with defense counsel in English, as well as
    his ability to respond to questions before the interpreters
    finished interpreting them. Nonetheless, the court continued to
    allow the interpreters to participate in the proceedings.
    Although defendant’s case-in-chief, as well as the State’s and
    defendant’s rebuttal evidence, raised challenges to and concerns
    regarding defendant’s ability to understand both written and
    conversational English, because none of the issues on appeal
    concern this matter, we do not include any further recitation of
    the evidence related to this issue.
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    her vehicle, and said that defendant and M.G. went to the motel
    “to pick up this car,” which is why, defendant explained, that
    M.G. knew about the motel.
    At the close of the State’s evidence, defendant moved to
    dismiss the charges based on his assertion that the State had
    not   met   its     burden   to    establish      the   ages    of   both   M.G.    and
    defendant at the time the offenses were alleged to have been
    committed, which motions were denied.                   At the close of all of
    the evidence, defendant moved to dismiss the charges based on
    his   assertion      that    there    was    insufficient      evidence     that    the
    offenses     were     perpetrated      on    the    dates      identified     in    the
    indictments, which motions were also denied.                         The jury found
    defendant guilty of each of the charged offenses.                           The court
    sentenced     defendant       to     the    following    consecutive        terms       of
    imprisonment:        300 months to 369 months for felonious rape of a
    child by an adult offender; 240 months to 297 months for each of
    the two counts of statutory rape of a thirteen-year-old child;
    240 months    to     297 months       for   statutory     sexual      offense      of   a
    thirteen-year-old child; and 16 months to 20 months for taking
    indecent liberties with a child.              Defendant appeals.
    _________________________
    Defendant first contends the trial court committed plain
    error when it allowed Ms. Woodard, an investigator with the
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    Wayne   County       DSS,    to     testify       that,    after       conducting      her
    investigation        into    the     allegations         that     defendant      sexually
    abused M.G., she agreed that she would have characterized such
    allegations     as     substantiated.             Defendant       argues      that     such
    testimony constituted impermissible opinion vouching for M.G.’s
    credibility,     and     directs     our    attention       to    State    v.      Giddens,
    
    199 N.C. App. 115
    ,    
    681 S.E.2d 504
       (2009),       aff’d    per      curiam,
    
    363 N.C. 826
    , 
    689 S.E.2d 858
     (2010), to support his argument.
    We conclude the admission of the testimony did not constitute
    plain error.
    “For   error       to    constitute      plain       error,    a   defendant      must
    demonstrate that a fundamental error occurred at trial.”                             State
    v. Lawrence, 
    365 N.C. 506
    , 518, 
    723 S.E.2d 326
    , 334 (2012).                            “To
    show that an error was fundamental, a defendant must establish
    prejudice——that,       after       examination      of    the    entire    record,      the
    error ‘had a probable impact on the jury’s finding that the
    defendant was guilty.’”              
    Id.
     (quoting State v. Odom, 
    307 N.C. 655
    , 660, 
    300 S.E.2d 375
    , 378 (1983)).
    In Giddens, this Court considered whether the trial court
    committed plain error by allowing a child protective services
    investigator      with      the    Buncombe       County    Department        of     Social
    Services to testify that her investigation had substantiated the
    defendant as the perpetrator of the sexual abuse alleged by two
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    minor children.        Giddens, 199 N.C. App. at 117, 119, 
    681 S.E.2d at 506, 507
    .        At trial, the defendant failed to object to this
    testimony, but argued that the “testimony was admitted in error
    because it resolved the factual issue of [d]efendant’s guilt for
    the    jury    by   expressing         an    opinion        on     [the       complainants’]
    credibility.”       Id. at 119, 120, 
    681 S.E.2d at 507
    .                         Because “the
    conclusion reached by DSS was not based solely on the children’s
    accounts      of    what   happened,           and    thus,        was       not    merely    a
    corroboration of their testimony,” id. at 120, 
    681 S.E.2d at 507
    ,   and     because     “DSS    conducted          its        own    investigation        to
    determine      whether     any     of       the      children’s             caregivers     were
    participants in the alleged abuse,” 
    id.
     at 120–21, 
    681 S.E.2d at 507
    , this Court determined that “[t]he cumulative effect of [the
    investigator’s] testimony was to tell the jury that based upon a
    thorough      investigation,      DSS       concluded       that       of    the    children’s
    three caregivers, [d]efendant had sexually abused them.”                                 Id. at
    121, 
    681 S.E.2d at 508
    .                Since “[o]ur case law has long held
    that a witness may not vouch for the credibility of a victim,”
    
    id.,
       we     concluded    that        “[the      investigator’s]             testimony      was
    clearly     improper,      as    she    testified       that           DSS    had   concluded
    [d]efendant was guilty of the alleged criminal acts,” 
    id.,
     and
    “it was error to admit [the investigator’s] testimony regarding
    the conclusion reached by DSS.”                   Id. at 122, 
    681 S.E.2d at 508
    .
    -18-
    Consequently,     we   held   that    it    was   plain    error       to    admit    the
    investigator’s testimony and that the defendant was entitled to
    a new trial because, “without [the investigator’s] testimony,
    the jury would have been left with only the children’s testimony
    and the evidence corroborating their testimony”——although such
    was “strong evidence”——and “our prior case law instructs that
    this alone is insufficient to survive plain error review of the
    testimony of a witness vouching for the children’s credibility.”
    Id. at 123, 
    681 S.E.2d at 509
    .
    We agree with defendant that, in the present case, as in
    Giddens,    Ms.   Woodard’s    testimony——which           was    admitted       by    the
    trial     court   without     objection      by    defendant——that            DSS     had
    substantiated the allegations of sexual abuse against defendant
    was not properly admitted.           Nonetheless, unlike Giddens, “absent
    the     challenged     testimony,     the    present      case     involved          more
    evidence    of    guilt     against    the    defendant         than        simply    the
    testimony of the child victim and the corroborating witnesses.”
    See State v. Sprouse, 
    217 N.C. App. 230
    , 242, 
    719 S.E.2d 234
    ,
    243 (2011), disc. review denied, 
    365 N.C. 552
    , 
    722 S.E.2d 787
    (2012).     Here, in addition to M.G.’s detailed testimony and the
    numerous    corroborative     witnesses      presented      by    the       State,    the
    State also presented evidence from two law enforcement officers
    that defendant gave a detailed confession——the voluntariness of
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    which     defendant     does      not    challenge        on    appeal——about         three
    separate       occasions       during      which      defendant             had     vaginal
    intercourse with M.G., fondled her breasts, put his mouth on her
    vagina, and had her put her mouth on his penis.                         The State also
    admitted into evidence the sign in/sign out log dated 10 October
    2011    from    M.G.’s       middle      school,     as        well    as    a    customer
    registration card from the same date for a motel room rented by
    defendant,      which       corroborated     M.G.’s        direct       testimony      and
    defendant’s confession that defendant took M.G. out of school
    and brought her to the motel to have sexual intercourse with
    her.    Thus, we conclude that defendant’s confession, along with
    the     unchallenged         independent         evidence         establishing         that
    defendant took M.G. out of school and then rented a room at Mr.
    Parmar’s     motel     on   the   same    day,     coupled       with    the      extensive
    testimony by M.G. and by the other corroborating witnesses, the
    jury probably would have reached the same verdict even without
    the challenged testimony of Ms. Woodard.                       See Sprouse, 217 N.C.
    App. at 243, 719 S.E.2d at 244.                 Thus, although the trial court
    erroneously admitted the challenged testimony of Ms. Woodard,
    “we    are   not   convinced       the    error    tilted        the    scales     against
    defendant, and therefore does not rise to the level of plain
    error.”      See id.
    Defendant     next    contends     the     trial    court       committed      plain
    -20-
    error    when    it    allowed    Ms.    Anderson,      the    nurse   who   works    at
    M.G.’s school’s health center, to testify without objection as
    to M.G.’s truthfulness.            Defendant asserts that Ms. Anderson was
    “not formally qualified” as an expert, and that her testimony
    constituted inadmissible lay opinion testimony.                     We disagree.
    “The credibility of a witness may be attacked or supported
    by evidence in the form of reputation or opinion as provided in
    Rule 405(a), but [this evidence is] subject to . . . limitations
    . . . .”        N.C.    Gen.     Stat.    § 8C-1,      Rule 608(a)     (2013).       The
    limitations to this Rule are:                  “(1) the evidence may refer only
    to      character       for      truthfulness          or     untruthfulness,        and
    (2) evidence of truthful character is admissible only after the
    character of the witness for truthfulness has been attacked by
    opinion or reputation evidence or otherwise.”                    Id.
    In   the    present      case,     defendant     challenges      the   following
    testimony from Ms. Anderson:
    Q.        In the time that you knew Maria, would
    you characterize her as truthful?
    A.         Yes.
    Our   review     of    the    context     of    this   exchange     shows    that    Ms.
    Anderson was not asked whether it was her opinion that M.G. was
    truthful about her allegations that she was sexually abused by
    defendant.        Rather,      Ms.     Anderson     was     asked   simply    whether,
    during the two years that she had known M.G. and had seen her
    -21-
    once or twice weekly, she knew M.G. to be “a truthful child.”
    Additionally,          Ms.     Anderson’s       now-challenged          testimony         was
    offered only after defense counsel had attacked M.G.’s character
    for   truthfulness           during   his   cross-examination           of    her,     which
    attacks were sufficient to permit the presentation of evidence
    as to her truthfulness in accordance with the second limitation
    of N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 608(a).                     See, e.g.,         State v. Hall,
    
    98 N.C. App. 1
    ,       10,   
    390 S.E.2d 169
    ,   174    (1990)      (determining
    that,     because        “[o]n      cross-examination       of     the       victim,      the
    defendant’s       attorney         repeatedly      attempted     to   impeach     her      by
    asking    her   about         prior   inconsistent        statements      made    to      her
    doctor, her mother, and at the preliminary hearing,” such cross-
    examination       of     a    child   alleging      she   had    been     raped      by   her
    stepfather “constituted an attack on her credibility such that
    the State could then present reputation or opinion evidence as
    to the victim’s reputation for truthfulness”), rev’d on other
    grounds, 
    330 N.C. 808
    , 
    412 S.E.2d 883
     (1992).                           Accordingly, we
    conclude that the trial court neither erred, nor committed plain
    error, when it allowed Ms. Anderson to offer the now-challenged
    testimony.
    Finally, defendant contends the trial court committed plain
    error when it charged the jury by using the term “victim” to
    describe the complaining witness.                  We disagree.
    -22-
    Defendant concedes that the court instructed the jury by
    using the same language as that which is set forth in the North
    Carolina    Pattern       Jury      Instructions       for   the    charged       offenses,
    which use the term “victim” to identify the person against whom
    the     charged    offenses         are   alleged      to    have       been     committed.
    Defendant also concedes that defense counsel did not object to
    the court’s use of this term in its instructions to the jury at
    trial, and that any review of this unpreserved issue must be
    reviewed for plain error on appeal.
    This Court has already concluded that “it is clear from
    case law that the use of the term ‘victim’ in reference to
    prosecuting witnesses does not constitute plain error when used
    in instructions.”            State v. Henderson, 
    155 N.C. App. 719
    , 722,
    
    574 S.E.2d 700
    , 703, appeal dismissed and disc. review denied,
    
    357 N.C. 64
    ,       
    579 S.E.2d 569
        (2003);     see        also     State    v.
    Richardson, 
    112 N.C. App. 58
    , 67, 
    434 S.E.2d 657
    , 663 (1993)
    (“The word ‘victim’ is included in the pattern jury instructions
    promulgated by the North Carolina Conference of Superior Court
    Judges    and     is   used    regularly        to   instruct      on   the    charges   of
    first-degree       rape      and    first-degree        sexual      offense.”),       disc.
    review      denied,          
    335 N.C. 563
    ,      
    441 S.E.2d 132
          (1994).
    Nevertheless, defendant urges this Court to conclude that the
    trial     court’s      use     of     this      term    in   its        instruction      was
    -23-
    prejudicial in accordance with our decision in State v. Walston,
    __ N.C. App. __, __, 
    747 S.E.2d 720
    , 726–28 (2013) (concluding
    the trial court’s use of the term “victim” in its instruction to
    the jury was prejudicial error), disc. review denied, __ N.C.
    __, __ S.E.2d __ (No. 023P14) (filed Mar. 6, 2014).
    Our Court recently considered the same argument on appeal
    in State v. Jones, __ N.C. App. __, __, 
    752 S.E.2d 212
    , 214–15
    (2013), disc. review denied, __ N.C. __, 
    755 S.E.2d 616
     (2014).
    In     Jones,        we     determined         that    Walston          was     distinguishable
    because, unlike in the defendant in Walston, the Jones defendant
    “made no . . . request to modify the language in the instruction
    and did not raise any objection to the use of this term at
    trial,” see Jones, __ N.C. App. at __, 752 S.E.2d at 215, “there
    were    [no]        disputed     issues       of    fact     as    to    whether      the    sexual
    offenses       even        occurred,”         see   id.,     and        the   Jones    defendant
    “ma[de]        no        specific      argument       that        he    ha[d]    suffered       any
    prejudice as a result of the trial court’s uncontested use of
    the term ‘victim’ in its jury instructions.”                              See id.
    In the present case, as in Jones, defendant did not object
    at     trial        to     the   use     of     the    term        “victim”      in    the     jury
    instructions or request to modify the language of the pattern
    jury instructions, and does not make any specific argument that
    he suffered any prejudice, aside from a general assertion that
    -24-
    the    use   of    the    term    was   an    “inadvertent     bolstering   of   the
    complainants’ [sic] credibility.”                We recognize that the defense
    elicited testimony from Ms. Taylor, the physician’s assistant
    with the TEDI BEAR Children’s Advocacy Center who examined M.G.,
    that   her     examination       did    not   reveal    physical   indications    of
    sexual abuse, which is similar to one of the facts in Walston
    that this Court considered when determining that the use of the
    term “victim” was prejudicial error.                   See Walston, __ N.C. App.
    at __, 747 S.E.2d at 727.                Nevertheless, we are not persuaded
    that    this      alone   is     sufficient    to   overcome    the   distinctions
    between the present case and Walston.                  Thus, as we did in Jones,
    we conclude that Walston is distinguishable from the present
    case, see Jones, __ N.C. App. at __, 752 S.E.2d at 215, and hold
    that the trial court did not commit plain error when it used the
    term “victim” in its instruction to the jury.
    No prejudicial error.
    Judges ELMORE and HUNTER, JR. concur.
    Report per Rule 30(e).