January 10
From Cyberlaw
Contents |
Vinny: Preliminary Hearings
- question is whether there is sufficient evidence to go to trial
- Ds are in prison. An indictment is merely an accusation.
- At the PH, P must offer a prima facie case (sufficient to withstand a directed verdict)
- Why doesnât Vinny ask questions?
- Pretty much everything you see Vinny do here turns out to be pretty good lawyering.
- He doesnât want to tip his hand. Cross-examining the investigator isnât going to lead the judge not to admit the rim.
- If Vinny has impeachment strategy, he shouldnât reveal it at the preliminary hearing, except:
- If youâre going to plead or settle
- Appealing to the power of the judge in a way that transcends the legal technicality
- Client who got arrested for A+B against a policeman. At the preliminary hearing, N brought out evidence that the cops had beaten him, and it was credible enough that even though it had nothing to do with the sufficiency of the claim, the judge understood the story and called a recess.
- When you fear that the witness is not going to be present at the trial
- We canât exclude this testimony at trial, so we need to test it now. (Mattox) 804(b)
- Although you can impeach the transcript at trial under Rule 806, itâs hard
- PH is like a discovery hearing.
- The basic rule with any opposition witness: as time goes on their testimony becomes more difficult to deal with. â
- PH becomes like a deposition
What is Testimonial after Crawford?
- We are looking for a deeper understanding of what itâs going to mean that something is or isnât testimony. And therein weâre looking for a deeper understanding of the confrontation clause.
- 911 calls
- SC will be deciding in Davis v. Washington, where the lower court said that 911 calls must be analyzed under a case by case basis
- Arnold
- The cases seem to be looking at whether the 911 call is directed by the person calling, safety
- Anonymous tips
- US v. Harris. Court upheld the use of it, but in a limited fashion. P didnât go into details of what the tip said, because that might be prejudicial. They said that they used it to progress to other things
- So the AT can play two different roles: (1) investigator tells the story of the investigation. (2) it could be admitted as evidence of what the tipster said.
- (1) = res gesta; evidence is admitted to permit stories to be coherent. No hearsay or CC problem here.
- Diaries
- two cases saying that diary entries arenât testimonial, b/c not written for use in investigation. If you could measure the subjective intent with, for example, a cover page saying that the diary wanted to express to the world, then it might count
- the question of whether theyâre testimonial has come up in the past under the 5th Am. (compulsion)
- Another case where the diary came in because it wasnât compelled
- Compelling the production of a diary is a form of compelling testimony. responses
- Once you put out the words, itâs no longer your testimony, no so problem
- If we did it by search, there was no direct compulsion (vs. subpoena)
- There is long overruled venerable law that doesnât respect that distinction between the 4th and 5th. Scalia wants to reconsider.
- A client comes with a piece of incriminating evidence. What to do ?
- could advise to destroy?
- Must advise to turn over?
- May advise to hide it?
- Could advise of the law? Can resist a subpoena, but not a search warrant
Identification
- 801(d): statements not hearsay = ones of identification of a person made after⦠as long as W testifies at the trial or hearing and is subject to CE.
- Although because lineups are done in a controlled lineup, thatâs allowed
- under this it seems that when you have the declarant on the stand, any prior statement from the declarant is not hearsay. But, read 801(c): hearsay is a statement other than one made by the declarant while testifying at the trial or hearing.
- Hearsay has to do with untested testimonial capacity. But the rule doesnât stop there. It says that if the statement is out of court being offered for its truth, even if offered by the person on the stand, itâs treated as hearsay. The rule is saying that it doesnât want the pattern of testimony in court to be W on the stand telling the jury what they have said to others; we want the story direct.
- But statements of identification have a different rule. Why? because the ID at the time, under those circumstances is seen to be a more powerful statement than the in court statement.
- Tension: statements made at the time of the event are often more reliable. How to resolve? Thereâs a preference for the vitality of the present statement. if and only if that statement is impeached on CE with a suggestion that there has been a change in testimony or impeachment, does it then become admissible to have a W testify to a statement they previously made. Thatâs not hearsay at common law, because itâs not being offered for truth, but rather to show that the W is telling a consistent story.
- Instructions to deal with this are never understood by juries
More on Testimonial Issues
- Translation
- refers back to issues about the underlying declarant
- the actual translator can testify, but someone else canât
- Blood Alchohol
- real physical evidence is not testimonial for 5th Am or confrontation clause
- also, hair samples, telling D to stand up and show his profile, etc.
- Sketch Artists
- no post Crawfod cases saying whther itâs testimonial.
- The last case on this was 1978, where cert was denied and it was said to be not testimonial
- It seems that under the logic of Crawford, they would be admitted.
- Blog Entries
- no case law on it
- they are so clearly hearsay, unless you introduce them either not for their truth, or some other way that would end up voiding the problem anyways
- they are like statements
- Journalist Interviews
- This has often come up when journalists refuse to testify under the privilege
- One 11th Cir. case where D objected to a newspaper article as hearsay. Was a little different because the article detailed a conversation between D and an W for P. the court separated the hearsay analysis from the confrontation clause analysis. Burden was on D to show how they were testimonial, and court said he failed.
- Voice Mail
- looking at intent of the declarant
- is generally admitted. Just like a general statement, without expectation that itâs going to be used later.
- Home Videos
- there's one post Crawford case that didnât do a Crawford analysis
- also looked at surveillance videos: not hearsay because not a statement, no attempt at communication
- are often used for foundation.
- Two forms of foundation: (1) photographer who is called to the witness stand, with the objective of putting the photo in front of the jury. One form of foundation is to ask the photographer represents the scene as he saw it; he responds whether it is a fair and accurate representation of the scene as he saw it. the photograph is conceptually similar to the witness drawing a map on the blackboard. The source of authority is thought to be the witness, not the photograph. (2) authenticate the process by which the photograph is taken. With the 7-11 surveillance camera, the foundation wonât be the witness saying, this is what I saw, but rather, this is how the camera works. (chain of custody)
- Unrelated Prior Trial testimony
- someone has testified at the previous trial, but there wasnât an opportunity for CE, because that wasnât the main issue
- Entering the crime scene and interviewing witnesses
- some courts have analogized to interrogation
- most courts focused on the fact that it was fairly informal, and the witnesses didnât plan for their statements to be used to prosecute
- Warrants of Deportation
- three circuits have found to be non testimonial
- are being used to show that D left the country.
- Are like business records, and not produced in anticipation of litigation
- Email
- we see it in military cases
- sometimes come in as business documents, but at least one court said theyâre not routine
- Other cases of interest
- Purvis v. State, 829 N.E.2d 572: hearsay exception for out of court statements by a child
- United States v. Bacanovic, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 271. Stewart contends that Bacanovic's statements in interviews conducted by representatives of the SEC, U.S. Attorney's Office, and FBI, as well as his taped sworn testimony before the SEC, are the type of statements that Crawford bars in the absence of an opportunity for cross-examination. Bacanovic asserts the same argument with respect to statements made by Stewart during the course [*35] of the February 4th and April 10th interviews. Defendants further contend that there is no ground on which to except the challenged statements from this requirement because they are "testimonial" under Crawford and because the statements of each of them were offered for the truth of the matter asserted as probative of the other's guilt.
Hearsay, Cross Examining, generally
- is articulated in specifics, and then has a catchall.
- The art of CE: when you ask a question, you have to respect your art. Focus the witness on it. make the witness answer that question.
- Donât let the witness see where youâre going
- After Crawford, is it germane to the question of hearsay whether the W is available or not?
- Some of the exceptions to the hearsay rule depend on the availability of the witness
- If you can find a non-hearsay use for a statement, that non-hearsay use is going to carry the thing into evidence except in extreme circumstances, and the instruction will paper over the problem
Problems
- Arsenic
- no problem if salesman testifies that he sold the rat poison
- definitely problem if Sâs sister testifies that he told her he did that
- Murder at the Bistro
- a written statement is undeniably testimonial; so it seems that a statement to a police officer is also testimonial
- therefore, itâs a confrontation problem
- If it was dying declaration, not clear how would be treated post-Crawford. Scalia prob would recognize b/c this was exception at time of founders
- a written statement is undeniably testimonial; so it seems that a statement to a police officer is also testimonial
- Murder in Ajax. How to cross-examine.
- isnât it possible that the body fell from the roof?
- You turned around when you heard a scream? Did you see anyone get pushed?
- The problem with this witness is about the amount of time that happens between seeing the body and seeing the face in the window. You want as much time to go by as possible. Thinking in human nature terms, realize that people donât easily look away from the body.
- Was the body face down or face up? Was the skirt fluttering? Did you see it hit the ground? All of these Qâs put the eyes on the body and not on the window
- Letter from Claire to David
- Pretty far stretch to see this as testimonial
- Is it being offered for the truth of the matter asserted?
- The factual assertion is that heâs the father of the child, but P has already shown no child, so itâs more likely to show a motive.
- A suicide note written to David? An attempt to implicate David? Motive for David?
- Pretty far stretch to see this as testimonial
- Speaking Out
- âI can speak.â A statement that on itâs face looks like an out of court statement offered for its truth, but the evidentiary value of the statement isnât coming from the truth assertion, but rather the fact of itâs existence.
Looking at problematic aspect of 801(c)
- doctor and wife come home to find house being robbed. He calls out to her, saying that heâs been stabbed and needs to get to the emergency room. He drives to the hospital. On the way, he sees a guy running by the road and runs him down. Then he dies. P wants to offer evidence from Marge that they ran the man down. Admissible?
- Relevance
- We must assume some perception and action on the doctorâs part that relates the guy heâs running over to the guy who robbed him.
- Hearsay
- Dying declaration? (this is the guy who killed me and i want to run him down). but he doesnât know that heâs going to die.
- Unclear whether he intended to point out the guy by running him down
- If he intended to hit the guy, was that an assertion?
- This is like the umbrella problem; he wasnât trying to communicate anything
- The action can be intentional, but not intended to send a message
- He wasnât making a mark on him for later identification
- Non-verbal conduct intended to send a message vs. non-verbal conduct from which we can draw inferences
- Who decides the doctorâs intent when running over the guy?
- The judge. This depends on a factual assessment of the circumstances under which the statement was made.
- What if the doctor says to his wife, thatâs the robber! And then runs him over
- In classic terms, thatâs a hearsay statement, so itâs excluded for the purpose of asserting its truth
- But we have an ambiguity, having admitted the fact that he turned the wheel was relevant, then we donât know whether he turned the wheel to send a message or accidentally; this statement will be admitted for the non-hearsay purpose of showing whether his tu8rning of the wheel was intentional
- The D atty can get an instruction, which no-one will understand
- Turning the wheel isnât another assertion; he already sent his message with words, he doesnât need to communicate any more
- What if the doctor said some super prejudicial things before turning the wheel?
- Rule 403 would give the judge license to exclude relevant evidence if itâs too prejudicial
- Can also deal with it through redaction
- Potential for tail wagging the dog
