Child rapist loses appeal

Jamaica’s judicial system has reinforced its stance on child sexual assault cases as the Court of Appeal decisively rejected a convicted rapist’s attempt to overturn his guilty verdict. The offender, currently serving a 15-year sentence for raping a five-year-old girl, had challenged his conviction based on claims of insufficient evidence regarding penetration and unreliable testimony.

The case originated in December 2022 when the Clarendon Circuit Court jury found the man guilty after he was discovered in the act by the victim’s grandmother. The shocking incident occurred in the family’s living room where the grandmother encountered the assailant positioned atop the child with both their lower garments removed. The court imposed the statutory minimum sentence of 15 years imprisonment in January 2023, mandating that he serve at least 10 years before parole eligibility.

In his appeal, the convicted man argued that the trial judge improperly rejected a no-case submission and provided inadequate jury instructions, claiming these errors resulted in an unfair trial. However, a three-judge appellate panel thoroughly examined the trial transcripts and legal arguments during hearings on March 2-3 before delivering their unanimous decision.

The appellate court emphasized the clarity and competence of the victim’s testimony, noting that the eight-year-old child at the time of trial demonstrated sufficient intelligence and understanding of truth-telling obligations. Her explicit description of the assault—stating the man put his ‘private part’ into her ‘vagina’—provided unambiguous evidence of penetration, which the court noted requires only the slightest degree to constitute rape under Jamaican law.

While medical evidence showed no bruising, bleeding, or swelling, and revealed the child’s hymen was not intact, physicians testified that such findings are variable in child sexual assault cases. The court highlighted that the grandmother witnessed both the assault in progress and subsequent distress, including the child crying during bathing and the presence of fluid on her underwear.

The judiciary affirmed that the jury had reasonable grounds to convict based on the totality of evidence, including the eyewitness account and victim testimony. The appeals court determined no miscarriage of justice occurred and ordered that the conviction and sentence stand unchanged, with the incarceration period calculated from the original sentencing date of January 25, 2023.