Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Child sexual abuse accommodat­ion syndrome

- A DOSE OF LAW DEAN NILO DIVINA For more of Dean Nilo Divina’s legal tidbits, please visit www.divinalaw.com. For comments and questions, please send an email to cabdo@divinalaw.com.

One of the novel theories in Philippine jurisprude­nce and foreign jurisdicti­ons is the Battered Woman Syndrome as a form of self-defense of a battered woman “who is repeatedly subjected to any forceful physical or psychologi­cal behavior by a man in order to coerce her to do something he wants her to do without concern for her rights” (People v. Genosa, G.R. 135981, 15 January 2004).

Another theory or syndrome that the Supreme Court recently recognized is the Child Sexual Abuse Accommodat­ion Syndrome (CSAAS) — a syndrome proposed by Roland C. Summit in 1983 to describe how sexually abused children respond to ongoing sexual abuse.

In a recent Supreme Court decision (People v. XXX, G.R. 263227)

promulgate­d on 2 August 2023, the Court ruled that the CSAAS theory can help in determinin­g the credibilit­y of child rape victims.

The court records showed that in 2015, XXX was charged with the rape of his daughters, AAA, then 14 years old, and BBB, then 11 years old. The RTC found the straightfo­rward testimonie­s of AAA and BBB against their father as the perpetrato­r, backed by medical findings of hymenal laceration­s, as credible as opposed to the bare denial of XXX. The trial court thus found XXX guilty beyond reasonable doubt of three counts of incestuous rape. During the appeal, the CA affirmed the RTC.

XXX elevated the case to the SC and raised the arguments he had raised before the CA in assailing his conviction. He claimed that AAA and BBB lacked credibilit­y as they made inconsiste­nt statements.

In its decision, penned by Justice Ramon Paul L. Hernando, the SC sustained the rulings of the lower courts and found that all elements of Qualified Rape were present in the case.

The Court dismissed XXX’s argument — that AAA should have shouted or made some noise when she was being raped since her siblings were sleeping in the same room — for being illogical and unpersuasi­ve.

The Court also did not sustain XXX’s contention that AAA should have avoided being left alone with him instead of following him inside the house where she was allegedly raped again.

The High Court explained that individual difference­s dictate that there is no singular response when a person encounters a certain situation, especially when involving an extremely traumatic experience such as rape committed by one’s own father.

Thus, the Court held that XXX could not fault AAA for keeping her silence while she was being defiled, especially so when it was brought about by fear or an otherwise overwhelmi­ng emotion of helplessne­ss.

The Court held that rape victims’ actions are often influenced by fear rather than by reason, with the perpetrato­r hoping to build a climate of extreme psychologi­cal terror that numbs the victim into silence and submissive­ness.

The Court then applied the theory on CSAAS as a model for understand­ing why the behavior of children who have been sexually abused may seem strange to adults.

The Court cited expert witnesses in the United States who described the theory on CSAAS to have the following stages:

(1) First stage: “Secrecy,” which is explained in terms of both what an abuser does and why the child keeps the matter secret because of embarrassm­ent or shame, “sometimes enforced” by the adult telling the child to keep it secret or suggesting negative consequenc­es if it is revealed.

(2) Second stage: “Helplessne­ss,” or the lack of power of a child in a relationsh­ip with a parental figure or trusted adult.

(3) Third stage: “Entrapment” and “accommodat­ion,” which happen when the child fails to seek protection.

(4) Fourth stage: “Delayed disclosure,” which was opined to have the tendency to be delayed because of the child’s fear, shame, or emotional confusion.

(5) Final stage: “Retraction,’ which was said to involve the child’s denial that the abuse had occurred.

The Court noted that selected US courts admit expert testimony on CSAAS for the limited purpose of “disabusing the mind of common misconcept­ions it might have about how child victims react to sexual abuse. It is often used to rehabilita­te the credibilit­y of the witness when the abuser suggests that the child’s conduct is inconsiste­nt with the testimony about molestatio­n.”

The High Court recognized that there is a need to adjust one’s perspectiv­e and try to see things through the eyes of child victims. The Court also held that countless incestuous rape cases come before the courts, and the defense often attacks the credibilit­y of the victims based on their “inconsiste­nt” responses to what is “normal.”

According to the SC, this is not only diabolical but absurd. Thus, there is a need to correct one’s mind that these are not actually strange nor inconsiste­nt but the normal course of action on the part of children who are victims of sexual abuse.

“The High Court recognized that there is a need to adjust one’s perspectiv­e and try to see things through the eyes of child victims.

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