State v. Treven Leonard ( 2023 )


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  •                                            Supreme Court
    No. 2021-71-C.A.
    (K2/15-594A)
    State                  :
    v.                   :
    Treven Leonard.             :
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision
    before publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers
    are requested to notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme
    Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence,
    Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone (401) 222-3258 or
    Email opinionanalyst@courts.ri.gov, of any typographical
    or other formal errors in order that corrections may be
    made before the opinion is published.
    Supreme Court
    No. 2021-71-C.A.
    (K2/15-594A)
    State                      :
    v.                        :
    Treven Leonard.                  :
    Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, Lynch Prata, and Long, JJ.
    OPINION
    Chief Justice Suttell, for the Court.       The defendant, Treven Leonard,
    appeals from a Superior Court judgment of conviction on two counts of
    second-degree sexual assault. On appeal, the defendant contends that the trial justice
    erred in denying his motion to pass the case and his motion for a new trial. For the
    reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court in all
    respects.
    I
    Facts and Travel
    The complaining witness (complainant) began working as a waitress at
    defendant’s restaurant on March 17, 2015.1 During her brief stint working at the
    1
    For purposes of this opinion, a precise recitation of the sordid details of the acts
    allegedly committed by defendant would be gratuitous. Although the testimony was
    extensive, we recount only the facts necessary to follow the legal issues and
    arguments presented on appeal.
    -1-
    restaurant, she alleges that defendant made several unwanted sexual advances
    towards her. She did not report these instances at the time.
    The complainant further alleges that, on April 8, 2015, defendant sexually
    assaulted her in a particularly egregious and violent manner. After the alleged
    assault, she finished her shift as though nothing had happened. She worked one last
    shift on April 15, 2015, but then two days later she reported defendant to the police.
    On April 23, 2015, defendant was arrested. Charges against defendant were filed on
    September 18, 2015, for two counts of second-degree sexual assault and one count
    of assault with a dangerous weapon.2
    Pretrial motions were heard before the trial justice on February 7, 2020. Most
    pertinent to this appeal, the trial justice heard arguments on the state’s motion in
    limine to introduce evidence that the complainant had been molested as a child. The
    state sought to admit evidence of her childhood trauma for the purpose of explaining
    her reaction to defendant’s assault—specifically, that “she didn’t run to the police
    immediately after being assaulted * * *.” The trial justice agreed that the childhood
    incident “could be a significant reason for her perhaps acting the way she did in the
    case * * *.”
    2
    The complainant testified at trial that defendant threatened her with a knife on
    multiple occasions.
    -2-
    But the trial justice also felt that the jury would “be hard-pressed to not feel
    some sympathy towards [the complainant], which obviously wouldn’t be fair to the
    defendant to try to give the defendant a fair trial.” Endeavoring to strike a “fair
    balance[,]” the trial justice allowed the state to introduce the evidence, but he
    proscribed the state from including the complainant’s age at the time she was
    molested and the fact that the perpetrator had been convicted.
    A trial was then held in the Superior Court from February 17 to February 21,
    2020. At trial, the prosecutor questioned the complainant about her immediate
    reaction to the alleged assault:
    “[PROSECUTOR]: [Y]ou said you acted like nothing
    happened. Can you tell the jury why you acted like
    nothing happened?
    “[COMPLAINANT]: I don’t have a good answer for that
    besides some traumatic stuff that had happened to me.
    “[PROSECUTOR]: When you say some traumatic stuff
    that happened to you, when did the traumatic stuff happen
    to you?”
    The defense counsel objected. The trial justice permitted the prosecutor to proceed.
    The complainant answered the question, “When I was a child.” The examination
    continued. The prosecutor asked her what happened, and she testified that “[she]
    was molested by a man.” Then the prosecutor asked: “[H]ow did that [experience]
    affect the way that you reacted on April 8th, 2015?” The defense counsel objected
    again. The trial justice overruled the objection. The complainant answered:
    -3-
    “The only way that I can describe it is when that
    experience was going on, when he was grabbing me
    aggressively, it was surreal, like, an out-of-body
    experience. You leave your body. You look at what’s
    happening to your body. You’re detached. You don’t feel
    it emotionally. And whatever is happening to your body,
    when you get back to your body, you’re just emotionally
    detached from it, so it doesn’t matter. And that’s how I
    dealt with that incident that night.”
    The defendant also testified at trial. On cross-examination, the prosecutor
    engaged in a colloquy with defendant as to why the complainant might have lied
    about the alleged events. The prosecutor asked, “And she had no reason to make
    this up?” The defendant responded, “I have no idea.”
    During closing arguments, the prosecutor referenced the complainant’s
    testimony about her experience of being molested as a child. The prosecutor stated
    that her delay in reporting the incident may not have been “a reaction that everybody
    would have, but with her, because of her experience, that’s exactly what you would
    expect.” The prosecutor submitted to the jury that the complainant’s childhood
    molestation “carried over * * * into her adult life, and it impacted the way she dealt
    with the things that the defendant had done.”
    The prosecutor also mused: “What would [the complainant] possibly have to
    gain by coming in here and lying to you?” The prosecutor went on to say, “This
    isn’t something she would do just for kicks. And even the defendant can’t come up
    with any reason that she would lie--.” To this comment, defense counsel instantly
    -4-
    objected.   The trial justice preserved the objection and issued the following
    cautionary instruction to the jury:
    “I’m going to tell the jury, I’m going to ask you to move
    on from that last comment. The defendant has no burden
    of proof and no obligation to present any evidence to you.
    It is the State’s burden entirely. Continue.”
    After closing arguments, the prosecutor, defense counsel, and the trial justice
    discussed defense counsel’s objection at sidebar. At sidebar, defendant moved to
    pass the case on “[t]he basis * * * that * * * the prosecution in her closing shifted
    the burden, and throughout the closing some inflammatory stuff that was not in
    evidence was elicited from her.” The trial justice agreed that the prosecutor was
    “implying that the defendant had some burden of proof in this case or failed to
    present some evidence to this jury, and that’s just plain wrong.” Nevertheless, he
    denied defendant’s motion to pass the case, reasoning that there was not “strong
    enough evidence” and that “[his] clear and immediate statement to the jury should
    be sufficient to * * * cure them or get their minds back to understanding that
    [defendant] had no burden of proof in this case.”
    At the conclusion of the sidebar, the trial justice turned to the jury and gave a
    second cautionary instruction:
    “I want to just one more time gently remind you that if
    there was anything that you heard in the closing argument
    of the State that in your mind suggested to you that there
    is any obligation on the defendant to produce some
    evidence, or to have given up some information, or to
    -5-
    [have] presented some witnesses to you, that would be an
    incorrect assumption on your part. As you know, I
    probably said it more times, so you’re asking yourself,
    why does this Judge keep saying the same thing to us, but
    the State has the burden of proof. The defendant has no
    burden of proof, no obligation, no requirement. That’s the
    way our judicial system is set up in criminal cases. When
    the government brings a charge, it’s their responsibility to
    prove it. So if you came away feeling like that during the
    argument, I would ask you please ignore that, and to
    understand that the burden as I just stated falls upon the
    State.”
    On February 21, 2020, the jury returned a guilty verdict on both counts of
    second-degree sexual assault and a verdict of not guilty for the count of assault with
    a dangerous weapon. Thereafter, defendant moved for a new trial on the basis of
    multiple alleged errors of law, newly discovered evidence, and the weight of the
    evidence. The state objected to the motion.
    On October 26, 2020, the trial justice heard arguments on defendant’s motion
    for a new trial. At the hearing, defendant reasserted an argument that he had made
    at the pretrial hearing—namely, that evidence of the complainant’s childhood
    trauma “had nothing to do with the facts of this case” and was “unfairly prejudicial
    to [defendant.]”    The defendant also challenged several of the prosecutor’s
    comments that she made during closing, which in his mind amounted to “an expert
    assessment in how childhood trauma results in adulthood * * *.” To that end,
    defendant insisted that it was the state’s burden to introduce expert testimony to
    support its argument regarding the childhood molestation evidence.
    -6-
    The defendant also objected to the prosecutor’s comments that referenced his
    failure to identify a reason why the complainant might have lied about the alleged
    assault. He maintained that the prosecutor’s remarks shifted the burden of proof,
    despite the fact that the trial justice furnished two cautionary instructions in response
    to the allegedly improper statements.
    The trial justice rejected all of defendant’s arguments. First, the trial justice
    recounted that the scope of the complainant’s testimony about her childhood had
    been “discussed and argued pretrial and again at the time it was offered at the time
    of trial.” The trial justice found that her testimony adhered to the parameters he had
    established at the pretrial hearing and that her testimony was “short, to the point,
    relevant, and not so prejudicial as to require exclusion.” The trial justice also
    dismissed defendant’s contention that expert testimony was needed to elucidate the
    connection between her childhood and adulthood experiences of sexual trauma. To
    the contrary, he found that she spoke “in a lay person’s terms in simple language
    with no attempt to introduce medical terms or diagnoses into her short testimony on
    this issue.” The trial justice found it additionally “noteworthy” that defendant’s only
    objection during closing arguments was to the alleged burden shifting, not to the
    prosecutor’s supposed “expert assessment[.]”
    Next, the trial justice enunciated this Court’s capacious standard regarding
    prosecutors’ statements during closing arguments, citing State v. Bozzo, 223 A.3d
    -7-
    755 (R.I. 2020). The trial justice noted that, “while there is no formula in law which
    precisely delineates the proper bounds of a [p]rosecutor’s arguments, prejudice
    obviously inheres if the remarks are totally extraneous to the issues in the case and
    tend to inflame and aro[u]se the passions of the jury * * *.” (Quoting Bozzo, 223
    A.3d at 761-62.) Accordingly, the trial justice found that the prosecutor’s comments
    “pertain[ed] to the evidence that was in the record and was based upon reasonable
    inferences that could be drawn from that evidence.”
    Finally, the trial justice addressed defendant’s argument that the state
    improperly shifted the burden during closing arguments by commenting on
    defendant’s failure to supply a reason why the complainant would have fabricated
    the events alleged. The trial justice agreed that it was improper for the prosecution
    to suggest defendant had any burden of proof, but then he reaffirmed that his
    cautionary instructions were adequate to cure any prejudice.
    The trial justice denied defendant’s motion for a new trial and sentenced him
    to eight years for each count, with one year to serve and the remaining time
    suspended, with probation.
    The defendant filed a premature but valid notice of appeal on October 26,
    2020. The judgment of conviction then entered on November 30, 2020.
    -8-
    II
    Discussion
    The defendant presents two issues on appeal. First, whether the trial justice
    committed reversible error by denying defendant’s motion to pass the case. Second,
    whether the trial justice likewise erred in denying defendant’s motion for a new trial.
    We address the arguments on each motion in turn.
    A
    Motion to Pass the Case3
    The first inquiry before this Court is whether the trial justice abused his
    discretion in denying defendant’s motion to pass the case due to the prosecutor’s
    comments during closing arguments, which allegedly shifted the burden of proof
    onto defendant. We perceive that the trial justice did not abuse his discretion;
    therefore, his decision to deny the motion is affirmed.
    Standard of Review
    “It is well settled that a trial justice’s decision on a motion to pass the case is
    addressed to the sound discretion of the trial justice, and this Court will not disturb
    the ruling on such a motion absent an abuse of discretion.” State v. Alexis, 
    185 A.3d 526
    , 531 (R.I. 2018) (quoting State v. Rosado, 
    139 A.3d 419
    , 423 (R.I. 2016)). Such
    3
    “In Rhode Island, the terms ‘motion to pass the case’ and ‘motion for a mistrial’
    are synonymous.” State v. Robat, 
    49 A.3d 58
    , 83 n.28 (R.I. 2012) (quoting State v.
    Rosario, 
    14 A.3d 206
    , 212 n.4 (R.I. 2011)).
    -9-
    deference to the trial justice is appropriate because the trial justice “has a front-row
    seat at the trial and is in the best position to determine whether a defendant has been
    unfairly prejudiced.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Rosado, 
    139 A.3d at 423
    ). “When ruling on a
    motion to pass, the trial justice must determine whether the evidence in question was
    of such a nature as to cause the jurors to become so inflamed that their attention was
    distracted from the issues submitted to them.” State v. Alston, 
    47 A.3d 234
    , 250 (R.I.
    2012) (quoting State v. Brown, 
    9 A.3d 1232
    , 1239 (R.I. 2010)). “We previously
    have held that even prejudicial remarks do not necessarily require the granting of a
    motion to pass.” Id. at 250-51 (quoting Brown, 
    9 A.3d at 1239
    ).
    Additionally, during closing arguments, “a prosecutor is given considerable
    latitude * * *, as long as the statements pertain only to the evidence presented and
    represent reasonable inferences from the record.” State v. Farley, 
    962 A.2d 748
    , 757
    (R.I. 2009) (brackets omitted) (quoting State v. Barkmeyer, 
    949 A.2d 984
    , 1007 (R.I.
    2008)).
    Analysis
    The defendant avers that the state improperly shifted the burden of proof
    during its closing argument. At closing, the prosecutor ventured to the jury that,
    “[e]ven the defendant can’t come up with any reason that [the complainant] would
    lie” about the alleged assault. The defendant asserts that this remark implied to the
    jury that it was defendant’s burden to prove why she may have fabricated the events
    - 10 -
    alleged in this case. This conduct, defendant claims, impeded his right to receive a
    fair trial.
    Initially, defendant argues that the prosecutor’s remark was too prejudicial to
    be cured with a cautionary instruction. The defendant contends that the comment
    made here was “even more egregious” than those in State v. Corleto, 
    161 A.3d 504
    (R.I. 2017), wherein the prosecutor had made comments during closing arguments
    that alluded to the defendant’s decision not to testify, which prompted the trial justice
    to grant the defendant’s motion to pass the case. See Corleto, 
    161 A.3d at 508
    (recounting the trial justice’s observation that, although the prosecutor’s comment
    “was not directed specifically to the defendant’s failure to take the stand[,]” it
    “indirectly addressed the defendant’s failure to take the witness stand” (brackets
    omitted)).
    Alternatively, if we conclude that the prejudice was able to be cured with a
    cautionary instruction, defendant argues that the cautionary instructions given here
    were inadequate under the standard dictated by this Court in State v. Taylor, 
    425 A.2d 1231
     (R.I. 1981). See Taylor, 
    425 A.2d at 1235
    . In Taylor, we held that a
    “cautionary instruction must (1) identify the prosecutor’s
    conduct as improper, (2) unequivocally indicate that the
    jury must disregard it, and (3) unequivocally indicate that
    * * * the defendant has no duty to present witnesses or any
    other evidence * * *.” 
    Id.
    - 11 -
    The defendant contends that the trial justice’s cautionary instructions failed to
    identify the prosecutor’s comment as improper and failed to unequivocally instruct
    the jury to disregard it. See 
    id.
     The defendant also argues that the second cautionary
    instruction was not given immediately, as Taylor requires. See 
    id. at 1236
    . Lastly,
    defendant asserts that the trial justice’s “gentl[e] reinforce[ment]” that the state bears
    the burden of proof at trial did not sufficiently cure the prosecutor’s prejudicial
    comment.
    The state responds by distinguishing Corleto and Taylor, on the basis that both
    cases fall under the empty-chair doctrine.4 Rather, the state contends that this case
    aligns more appropriately with State v. Cavanaugh, 
    158 A.3d 268
     (R.I. 2017). See
    Cavanaugh, 
    158 A.3d at 278
    . Similarly, in Cavanaugh, the state confined its
    comments to the defendant’s “performance on the witness stand[,]” as opposed to
    the defendant’s failure to produce witnesses or evidence. See 
    id.
     The state maintains
    that because its commentary was limited to defendant’s testimony on the witness
    stand, the trial justice’s cautionary instructions were sufficient to cure any potential
    prejudice.
    4
    “The empty-chair doctrine permits a trial justice to charge a jury that it may draw
    an inference from a litigant’s unexplained failure to produce an available witness
    who would be expected to give material testimony on the litigant’s behalf.” State v.
    D’Agostino, 
    691 A.2d 561
    , 563-64 (R.I. 1997) (quoting State v. Taylor, 
    581 A.2d 1037
    , 1038-39 (R.I. 1990)). However, the doctrine provides that a prosecutor may
    not comment on a defendant’s failure to call witnesses. Id. at 564.
    - 12 -
    This Court has held that there is “no precise formula to determine whether any
    prejudicial taint may have been cured by a cautionary instruction.” Alexis, 
    185 A.3d at 533
     (quoting State v. Hie, 
    93 A.3d 963
    , 973 (R.I. 2014)). “Where ‘the trial justice
    decides to utilize a cautionary instruction, the question before us is whether the trial
    justice’s instruction can be fairly said to have removed from the jurors’ minds, when
    weighing the evidence properly before them, the taint represented.’” 
    Id.
     (brackets
    and deletions omitted) (quoting Hie, 
    93 A.3d at 973
    ).
    It is our opinion that the trial justice’s cautionary instructions were effective
    to allay any possible prejudice in the minds of the jury caused by the prosecutor’s
    closing remarks. See Bozzo, 223 A.3d at 762 (“The probable effect of the
    prosecutorial statements on the outcome of the case must be evaluated by examining
    the remarks in the context in which they were made.”) (quoting State v. Lastarza,
    
    203 A.3d 1159
    , 1166 (R.I. 2019)). The Cavanaugh holding clearly states that
    Taylor’s three-part standard for cautionary instructions applies only when a
    prosecutor makes an inappropriate reference to the “empty chair”—or rather, a
    defendant’s failure to present witnesses or evidence. See Cavanaugh, 
    158 A.3d at 277
     (“Although the cautionary instruction given in this case did not meet the Taylor
    standard, we are satisfied that, in the context of this case, that precise instruction was
    unnecessary, because the prosecutor’s comments during closing argument did not
    rise to the level of an improper reference to an ‘empty chair.’”); see also State v.
    - 13 -
    Girouard, 
    561 A.2d 882
    , 890 (R.I. 1989) (narrowing the Taylor holding to
    “empty-chair reference[s]”). It is apparent that Taylor and its related caselaw are
    inapposite because there was no empty chair in this case; in fact, defendant took the
    stand. See Taylor, 
    425 A.2d at 1235
    ; Cavanaugh, 
    158 A.3d at 277
    .
    According to defendant, the alleged burden-shifting comment was the
    prosecutor’s reference to defendant’s response, “I have no idea[,]” to her question
    about why the complainant might “make * * * up” the sexual assault. However,
    defendant failed to object to this exchange contemporaneously. His testimony,
    therefore, was fair game for the prosecutor to remark upon during her closing
    argument as part of the evidence educed at trial. See, e.g., Lastarza, 
    203 A.3d at 1166
    (holding that the prosecutor’s remarks during closing arguments did not “cross th[e]
    line” because the comments “specifically addressed [the] defendant’s performance
    on the witness stand”). In general, a prosecutor enjoys “considerable latitude” to
    make a final appeal to the jury during closing arguments. Farley, 
    962 A.2d at 757
    .
    After a review of the record, we do not observe anything to suggest that the
    prosecutor in this case ran afoul of that standard.
    Further, even if the tenor of the prosecutor’s statement risked shifting the
    burden of proof away from the state, the trial justice’s swift admonition and
    - 14 -
    additional curative instruction were adequate to expiate any prejudice to defendant.5
    See Alexis, 
    185 A.3d at 533
    . Therefore, we are satisfied that the trial justice was not
    clearly wrong in denying defendant’s motion to pass the case in relation to the
    prosecutor’s closing remarks.
    B
    Motion for a New Trial
    The second inquiry on appeal is whether the trial justice erroneously admitted
    evidence that was unduly prejudicial to defendant, thus entitling defendant to receive
    a new trial. Here too, we affirm the trial justice.
    Standard of Review
    “According to our well settled raise or waive rule, a litigant must make a
    timely and appropriate objection during the lower court proceedings before this
    Court will indulge the issue on appeal.” State v. Davis, 
    131 A.3d 679
    , 701 (R.I. 2016)
    (quoting State v. Grant, 
    840 A.2d 541
    , 546 (R.I. 2004)).
    Further, it is well settled that “[i]ssues concerning the admission or exclusion
    of testimonial evidence reside within the bailiwick of the trial justice, and we shall
    5
    Moreover, we observe that the passions of the jury could not have been so inflamed
    as to interfere with their ability to dispassionately evaluate the evidence because the
    jury acquitted defendant of the charge of assault with a dangerous weapon. See State
    v. Barboza, 
    262 A.3d 684
    , 690 (R.I. 2021) (noting that “the jury was capable of
    evaluating the evidence dispassionately and without undue prejudice” because the
    jury found the defendant not guilty of the more serious offense with which he was
    charged).
    - 15 -
    not ascribe error thereto absent an abuse of discretion.” State v. Dalton, 
    195 A.3d 1093
    , 1096 (R.I. 2018).
    Analysis
    On appeal, defendant avers that the trial justice committed an error of law
    when he permitted the state to introduce evidence that the complainant was molested
    as a child. He argues before this Court that his motion for a new trial should have
    been granted as a result of that error.
    Overall, defendant posits that the state sought to admit evidence of the
    complainant’s childhood molestation merely to stoke the sympathies of the jury. He
    argues that her testimony was irrelevant because she failed to attribute the incident
    of child molestation to the assault alleged in this case. According to defendant,
    “[a]bsent some testimony that her bizarre reaction to the later alleged assault * * *
    was provoked by the earlier molestation, evidence of the latter only served to inflame
    the emotions of the jury and did not make it any more probable that [the complainant]
    had been assaulted by [defendant].” Additionally, defendant faults the state for
    failing to introduce expert testimony, medical records, or some other evidence to
    explain the connection between the two incidents. The defendant also suggests that
    the prosecutor made comments during closing that were tantamount to an “expert
    assessment” of how childhood trauma impacts “adult compartmentalization of
    emotions.”
    - 16 -
    In response, the state asserts that defendant has waived his arguments both
    that the childhood trauma evidence was inadmissible absent expert testimony and
    that the prosecutor’s closing argument made improper references to the
    complainant’s prior experience of abuse. Procedurally, the state points out that
    defendant raised these arguments for the first time in his motion for a new trial,
    which constitutes improper “bootstrap[ping]” and cannot preserve the issues for
    appeal.
    As to the substance of defendant’s argument, the state recalls that the trial
    justice thoroughly addressed the relevance and prejudicial nature of the molestation
    evidence when he denied defendant’s motion for a new trial. On appeal, the state
    maintains that the trial justice did not abuse his discretion in admitting the evidence
    because he thoughtfully considered its potential to prejudice the jury against
    defendant and limited the scope of its admission accordingly.
    At the outset, we agree that defendant has waived his arguments (1) that the
    state failed to introduce expert testimony to assess the significance of the
    complainant’s child experience and (2) that the state “act[ed] as [its] own expert in
    this case” when it referenced the evidence during closing arguments.
    This Court is “exacting about applying the raise or waive rule.” State v.
    Mendez, 
    116 A.3d 228
    , 243 (R.I. 2015) (quoting Ferris Avenue Realty, LLC v.
    Huhtamaki, Inc., 
    110 A.3d 267
    , 285 (R.I. 2015)).              Applying the rule to
    - 17 -
    contemporaneous objections, we have stated that it is “essential to the trial process
    * * * that objections be made at the time when an event occurs that counsel deems
    objectionable.” Id. at 245; see State v. Gadson, 
    87 A.3d 1044
    , 1053-54 (R.I. 2014)
    (brackets omitted) (“[A] failure to object ‘in the vital context of the trial itself * * *
    constitutes a waiver of the evidentiary objection and is therefore an issue that may
    not be raised on appeal.’”) (quoting State v. Andujar, 
    899 A.2d 1209
    , 1222 (R.I.
    2006)).
    In accord with our raise-or-waive rule, the aforementioned arguments are
    waived.     Most critically, defendant failed to object contemporaneously to the
    prosecutor’s comments about the connection between the complainant’s childhood
    and adulthood experiences of sexual trauma.                By waiting to raise the
    expert-testimony issue in his motion for a new trial, defendant missed the boat. See
    State v. Albanese, 
    970 A.2d 1215
    , 1222 (R.I. 2009) (“Because such an argument was
    not made during trial, it cannot belatedly be asserted during the motion for a new
    trial.”).
    The defendant has, however, preserved his challenge concerning the relevance
    and unfairly prejudicial nature of the evidence. His objections to these aspects of
    the evidence were timely asserted during trial and previously raised at the pretrial
    hearing on the state’s motion in limine. When reviewing a trial justice’s decision to
    admit evidence, this Court defers to the sound discretion of the trial justice and will
    - 18 -
    not disturb the trial justice’s decision absent an abuse thereof. See State v.
    McDonald, 
    157 A.3d 1080
    , 1091 (R.I. 2017); State v. Clay, 
    79 A.3d 832
    , 838 (R.I.
    2013). Accordingly, we discern no grounds for reversing the trial justice’s decision.
    First, we are convinced that the evidence of the complainant’s child
    molestation was relevant. The defendant’s contention that her testimony about her
    childhood was irrelevant because it failed to connect the earlier incident to the
    later-alleged assault has no merit. When the prosecutor asked the complainant why
    she pretended “nothing happened” after defendant had allegedly assaulted her, she
    attributed her purportedly “bizarre” reaction to the “traumatic stuff” that happened
    to her as a child. The prosecutor also asked her explicitly how her childhood
    experience affected her reaction to the events of April 8, 2015, and she explained
    that her response to trauma was to detach emotionally, which allowed her to pretend
    as though what happened “d[id]n’t matter.”
    Rule 401 of the Rhode Island Rules of Evidence defines “[r]elevant evidence”
    as “evidence having any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of
    consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than
    it would be without the evidence.” (Emphasis added.) Thus, the bar for relevance is
    set rather low. The trial justice allowed the evidence because he determined that the
    complainant’s traumatic childhood experience could have been a “significant
    - 19 -
    reason” for her delay in reporting defendant to the police. We hold that this was not
    an abuse of discretion under Rule 401.
    Second, we consider whether the trial justice erred by allowing the evidence
    under Rule 403. R.I. R. Evid. 403. Rule 403 provides that “evidence may be
    excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair
    prejudice * * *.” It is clear that the trial justice engaged in a thorough Rule 403
    balancing before he decided to permit the state to bring in evidence of the
    complainant’s childhood trauma. See State v. Perry, 
    182 A.3d 558
    , 571-72 (R.I.
    2018). In so doing, he acknowledged the particularly sensitive nature of the evidence
    and, in response to defendant’s concerns, he excluded certain aspects of it, including
    the complainant’s age, to mitigate the danger of unfair prejudice. According due
    deference to the trial justice’s careful treatment of the evidence, we decline to disturb
    his decision on appeal.
    Having determined that the trial justice did not abuse his discretion or commit
    any errors of law, we affirm the denial of the defendant’s motion for a new trial.
    III
    Conclusion
    The judgment of conviction entered by the Superior Court is affirmed. The
    papers in this case may be remanded to that tribunal.
    - 20 -
    STATE OF RHODE ISLAND
    SUPREME COURT – CLERK’S OFFICE
    Licht Judicial Complex
    250 Benefit Street
    Providence, RI 02903
    OPINION COVER SHEET
    Title of Case                            State v. Treven Leonard.
    No. 2021-71-C.A.
    Case Number
    (K2/15-594A)
    Date Opinion Filed                       June 26, 2023
    Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, Lynch Prata, and
    Justices
    Long, JJ.
    Written By                               Chief Justice Paul A. Suttell
    Source of Appeal                         Kent County Superior Court
    Judicial Officer from Lower Court        Associate Justice Daniel A. Procaccini
    For State:
    Virginia M. McGinn
    Department of Attorney General
    Attorney(s) on Appeal
    For Defendant:
    Megan F. Jackson
    Rhode Island Public Defender
    SU-CMS-02A (revised November 2022)