The complainant and the criminal defendant dated periodically for a period of time encompassing the past 13 years. The instant charge stems from August 25, 2003, when the defendant is alleged to have picked up the complainant, thrown her over a couch, pushed her to the ground, and stomped on her groin, thereby causing her to allegedly suffer bruised ribs and a fractured coccyx.
In support of their application the complainant’s allegations of physical and psychological abuse by the defendant over a prolonged period of time was detailed. Included are litanies of alleged violent acts directed at her by the defendant, from 1991 to 2003. The alleged violence included threatening to kill the complainant on numerous occasions, repeatedly beating her, urinating on her, various acts of forcible sex, and constant berating of her. Although these acts occurred over a period of 13 years, except for brief sporadic periods of separateness, the complainant did not leave the defendant nor immediately seek protection from the police. Drug possession was not an issue.
The complainant’s counsel are prepared to proceed to trial, and in so doing, argue that expert testimony would aid the jury in the understanding of the complainant’s delay in reporting the August 25th incident. Further, they specifically emphasized that their expert would be called to give an opinion in support of their contention that the complainant suffers from battered woman syndrome. The complainant’s claim that the expert’s testimony will explain why the defendant abused the complainant woman in front of another prior victim of his sex abuse and that the expert’s testimony is necessary to explain why the complainant waited nearly three months to report the incident. They contend that the expert’s testimony is relevant to explain the psychological effects of the defendant’s abuse toward the complainant and her perplexing behavior patterns, in essence, her continuous contact with the defendant.