United States v. Powers
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
59 F.3d 1460 (1995)
- Written by Sean Carroll, JD
Facts
Grady Powers (defendant) was charged with aggravated sexual abuse of a minor in connection with raping his daughter. At trial, Powers sought to introduce the expert testimony of Dr. Anthony Sciara. Sciara had created a profile of incest abusers, which indicated that 40 percent of incest abusers had characteristics of a fixated pedophile. Sciara planned to testify that Powers did not exhibit the psychological profile of a fixated pedophile. According to Powers, this was relevant and would assist the jury. The district court excluded Sciara’s testimony under the admissibility standard set forth in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, 509 U.S. 579 (1993). Specifically, the district court found that Sciara’s testimony was not relevant to the fact at issue, which was whether Powers had abused his daughter. Powers was convicted, and he appealed.
Rule of Law
Issue
Holding and Reasoning (Williams, J.)
What to do next…
Here's why 779,000 law students have relied on our case briefs:
- Written by law professors and practitioners, not other law students. 46,200 briefs, keyed to 988 casebooks. Top-notch customer support.
- The right amount of information, includes the facts, issues, rule of law, holding and reasoning, and any concurrences and dissents.
- Access in your classes, works on your mobile and tablet. Massive library of related video lessons and high quality multiple-choice questions.
- Easy to use, uniform format for every case brief. Written in plain English, not in legalese. Our briefs summarize and simplify; they don’t just repeat the court’s language.