Nicoles injuries consistent with rape, court told
July 12, 2006 | 12:00am
The injuries sustained by a 22-year-old Filipina who has accused four US Marines of rape indicated that she might have been forced to have sex, a prosecution witness said yesterday.
Prosecutors contend that Lance Corporal Daniel Smith raped "Nicole," while his three co-accused, Lance Corporals Dominic Duplantis and Keith Silkwood and S/Sgt. Chad Carpentier cheered him on.
Forensic pathologist Racquel Fortun, the prosecutions expert witness, told the Makati City regional trial court yesterday that the injuries of Nicole were consistent with rape.
Smith has said that Nicole had consensual sex with him.
During yesterdays continuation of the Subic rape trial, Fortun said the contusions and lacerations found in Nicoles private parts based on medico-legal findings show evidence that a blunt object like a mans sex organ was forced in.
Taking the witness stand with at least 18 books, journals and other reference materials, Fortun cited medical facts and principles one after the other.
Fortun said Nicoles wounds as found by Dr. Rolando Ortiz, James L. Gordon Hospital medico-legal officer, are unusual in normal or consensual sex.
She said a woman is likely to sustain injury during sex if she is not relaxed or if she was resisting intercourse.
On the other hand, if a woman is relaxed and enjoying sex, there would be normal lubrication in her sex organ, which will prevent injury, she added.
Quoting medical books, Fortun said human sexual response prepares a woman for non-traumatic sex and that in sexual assault, victims may not recall the specific actions of the other.
Based on Ortizs findings, Nicoles contusions on both sides of her vagina indicate injury because of blunt force by forcible penetration, "most commonly by an erect penis," she added.
The defense objected several times to Fortuns answers to private prosecutor Evalyn Ursuas questions whenever she issued an opinion based on someone elses or referred to the facts of the rape case.
In her testimony, Fortun said the Philippine National Police Crime Laboratorys practice of using the Florence Test in determining or detecting semen as "obsolete" and "unreliable."
The test was conducted on Nicoles underwear and the condom allegedly used by Smith on the night of the alleged rape.
The findings showed that no semen or seminal fluid was found on the underwear and the condom.
Fortun said the Florence Test was first used in an investigation more than a century ago in 1896, or two years before the declaration of Philippine independence.
"Its a very, very old test introduced in 1896 and is not used in modern laboratory work," she said. "It is believed to be unreliable."
Fortun told the court that modern day publications do not even mention the Florence Test while showing the court a 1935 4th edition book, "Modern Criminal Investigation."
The book cites the limitations of the test as "non-specific," she added.
Fortun said the Florence Test only shows probability that there is no semen in a particular specimen as none is detected and at the same time does not justify if semen is detected.
She also provided the court with a copy of an article by an Italian doctor in detection of seminal fluids, which she found on the Internet.
It notes that the Florence Test is "non-specific and false negative results are common," she added.
On the other hand, Jose Justiniano, Silkwoods lawyer, objected to how Fortun has been allegedly impeaching documentary evidence, triggering a legal argument.
In response, Ursua said they are not impeaching the PNP Crime Laboratory report, which they did not even mark as their evidence since it was the defense which did so during a previous hearing.
She said they are only trying to show that the Florence Test is an "antiquated method of science," while accusing the defense of "suppressing the truth about science."
Justiniano countered that "it is unfair for these police officers (of the PNP Crime Laboratory) to be labeled as ignoramuses."
Antonio Rebosa, Duplantiss lawyer, a forensic doctor who chairs the Department of Legal Medicine of the St. Lukes Medical Center in Quezon City, said it is not fair to call the Florence Test unreliable because a lot of cases have been solved based on it. Michael Punongbayan, AFP
Prosecutors contend that Lance Corporal Daniel Smith raped "Nicole," while his three co-accused, Lance Corporals Dominic Duplantis and Keith Silkwood and S/Sgt. Chad Carpentier cheered him on.
Forensic pathologist Racquel Fortun, the prosecutions expert witness, told the Makati City regional trial court yesterday that the injuries of Nicole were consistent with rape.
Smith has said that Nicole had consensual sex with him.
During yesterdays continuation of the Subic rape trial, Fortun said the contusions and lacerations found in Nicoles private parts based on medico-legal findings show evidence that a blunt object like a mans sex organ was forced in.
Taking the witness stand with at least 18 books, journals and other reference materials, Fortun cited medical facts and principles one after the other.
Fortun said Nicoles wounds as found by Dr. Rolando Ortiz, James L. Gordon Hospital medico-legal officer, are unusual in normal or consensual sex.
She said a woman is likely to sustain injury during sex if she is not relaxed or if she was resisting intercourse.
On the other hand, if a woman is relaxed and enjoying sex, there would be normal lubrication in her sex organ, which will prevent injury, she added.
Quoting medical books, Fortun said human sexual response prepares a woman for non-traumatic sex and that in sexual assault, victims may not recall the specific actions of the other.
Based on Ortizs findings, Nicoles contusions on both sides of her vagina indicate injury because of blunt force by forcible penetration, "most commonly by an erect penis," she added.
The defense objected several times to Fortuns answers to private prosecutor Evalyn Ursuas questions whenever she issued an opinion based on someone elses or referred to the facts of the rape case.
In her testimony, Fortun said the Philippine National Police Crime Laboratorys practice of using the Florence Test in determining or detecting semen as "obsolete" and "unreliable."
The test was conducted on Nicoles underwear and the condom allegedly used by Smith on the night of the alleged rape.
The findings showed that no semen or seminal fluid was found on the underwear and the condom.
Fortun said the Florence Test was first used in an investigation more than a century ago in 1896, or two years before the declaration of Philippine independence.
"Its a very, very old test introduced in 1896 and is not used in modern laboratory work," she said. "It is believed to be unreliable."
Fortun told the court that modern day publications do not even mention the Florence Test while showing the court a 1935 4th edition book, "Modern Criminal Investigation."
The book cites the limitations of the test as "non-specific," she added.
Fortun said the Florence Test only shows probability that there is no semen in a particular specimen as none is detected and at the same time does not justify if semen is detected.
She also provided the court with a copy of an article by an Italian doctor in detection of seminal fluids, which she found on the Internet.
It notes that the Florence Test is "non-specific and false negative results are common," she added.
On the other hand, Jose Justiniano, Silkwoods lawyer, objected to how Fortun has been allegedly impeaching documentary evidence, triggering a legal argument.
In response, Ursua said they are not impeaching the PNP Crime Laboratory report, which they did not even mark as their evidence since it was the defense which did so during a previous hearing.
She said they are only trying to show that the Florence Test is an "antiquated method of science," while accusing the defense of "suppressing the truth about science."
Justiniano countered that "it is unfair for these police officers (of the PNP Crime Laboratory) to be labeled as ignoramuses."
Antonio Rebosa, Duplantiss lawyer, a forensic doctor who chairs the Department of Legal Medicine of the St. Lukes Medical Center in Quezon City, said it is not fair to call the Florence Test unreliable because a lot of cases have been solved based on it. Michael Punongbayan, AFP
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