State v. Hutton
State v. Hutton
Opinion
The defendant, Nirone Hutton, appeals from the judgment of conviction, rendered against him after a jury trial, of murder in violation of General Statutes § 53a-54a. The defendant claims on appeal that the trial court violated his rights under the confrontation clause of the sixth amendment to the United States constitution
1
as articulated in
Crawford
v.
Washington
,
The victim's friends chased the defendant and his group up the stairs. Slim and Pills went into Slim's apartment. The defendant tossed his gun into the apartment before he and Williams continued down the hallway, exiting the building via a different stairway. Williams eventually drove the defendant back to his mother's house at 135 Higgins Avenue.
The victim was able to call 911 for medical assistance and, after the police responded, he was transported to Bridgeport Hospital. The next morning, the police arrested Slim, Pills, and a third man, Ricardo Richmond, at Building 5 on wholly unrelated drug charges. At that time, the police searched Slim's apartment and recovered a gun that later was determined to be the gun used in the shooting of the victim.
The police showed photographs of Slim, Pills and Richmond to the victim, who remained hospitalized. The victim was able to identify Slim as the person with whom he was fighting at the time he was shot. The victim could not, however, identify the shooter from the photographs and maintained that the only other persons in the area at the time of the incident were himself, Slim, and Slim's friends. The victim eventually died of complications from his gunshot wounds.
Despite some leads, the police were unable to develop sufficient evidence to obtain an arrest warrant, and the matter eventually was classified as a cold case. On July 4, 2013, however, Williams, who the police had arrested and were booking on unrelated charges, informed the police that he had information about the 2007 shooting. He thereafter gave a videotaped statement to the police in which he identified the defendant as the person who shot the victim. In his statement, Williams also explained that Building 5 was part of the drug dealing territory controlled by the defendant and Slim. According to Williams, the defendant confronted and shot the victim because the victim had been selling fake drugs in Building 5, which adversely affected the defendant's drug business. 3
Williams' statement identifying the defendant as the shooter also corroborated other evidence that the police had collected implicating the defendant in the victim's murder. Specifically, the police had obtained a letter that the defendant had sent to a friend in prison. In the letter, the defendant admitted to having committed a "redrum," which was street slang for murder, and he also indicated that Slim had been caught with the gun he used a few hours later. Additionally, a jailhouse informant, Anestos Moffat, who was incarcerated for a time with the defendant and Pills, told the police that the defendant had confessed to him about shooting a "Spanish kid" who was "getting the best of Slim ...."
On October 4, 2013, the defendant was arrested and charged with the victim's murder. 4 He pleaded not guilty and elected a jury trial. The defendant testified at trial on his own behalf and admitted to shooting the victim. The theory of the defense was that the defendant had shot the victim, not over a dispute about gang turf and drugs, but in defense of his friend, Slim, who was being repeatedly pistol-whipped by the victim. 5 The state's theory was that the confrontation with the victim centered on a dispute over the victim selling "burn bags," i.e., fake drugs, in the defendant's territory and that the evidence established beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant's actions were not justified as a defense of others. 6
The jury found the defendant guilty of murder. On May 2, 2016, the court sentenced him to fifty-five years of incarceration. This appeal followed. Additional facts and procedural history will be set forth as necessary.
The defendant claims on appeal that the trial court improperly violated his constitutional right to confrontation by admitting into evidence Williams' videotaped statement to the police. In particular, the defendant argues that because Williams refused to answer even a single question when he was called to testify before the jury, he was functionally unavailable for purposes of cross-examination and, therefore,
his statement was inadmissible under
State
v.
Whelan
, supra,
The state responds that the court properly admitted Williams' statement as a prior inconsistent statement in accordance with Whelan , and that Williams' refusal to give verbal responses to the questions asked at trial did not implicate the defendant's confrontation clause rights because the jury was able to observe and evaluate Williams' nonverbal reactions to the questions posed to him by the prosecutor and by defense counsel. We agree with the defendant that, despite Williams' physical presence on the witness stand, the defendant was not afforded a meaningful opportunity to cross-examine Williams about his prior statement due to Williams' outright refusal to answer questions, and, therefore, the admission of Williams' statement violated the defendant's right to confrontation. We also agree that the state has failed to demonstrate that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
The following additional facts are relevant to our resolution of this claim. On the afternoon of February 3, 2016, during the state's case-in-chief and outside the presence of the jury, the state informed the court, Kahn , J. , that it intended to call Williams as its next witness. The prosecutor informed the court that Williams likely would be a "difficult witness" and that the court may want to permit the state first to question him outside the presence of the jury "just to see where he stands ...." The court asked the prosecutor if Williams had a "fifth amendment issue ...." The prosecutor indicated that because the case was nine years old, everything but the murder fell outside the statute of limitations and, thus, he did not believe that Williams intended to invoke the fifth amendment. Nevertheless, the prosecutor informed the court that the witness was represented by Attorney Don Cretella, who was present and could address that issue further. Cretella told the court that he had spoken with Williams in the courthouse lockup and that he did not anticipate him invoking his fifth amendment right not to incriminate himself. Cretella, however, informed the court that Williams had indicated that he was going to refuse to answer any questions, despite Cretella's advisement of the possible consequences of pursuing that course of action. After taking a brief recess to speak with all counsel in chambers, the court came back on the record and indicated that it intended to permit the state to question Williams outside the presence of the jury.
After Williams was sworn in, the court addressed him. The court first indicated its understanding that Williams did not intend to invoke his fifth amendment right not to testify. Williams answered that this was correct. The court then explained to Williams that, as a subpoenaed witness, he would be questioned under oath by the state following which defense counsel would have an opportunity to cross-examine him. Williams indicated that he understood the process. When the court asked if he intended to go forward with that process, Williams said: "I'm not complying with nothing you're asking me, ma'am." The court responded: "Well, I don't know what you mean by not complying, but the state is going to ask you some questions ...."
The prosecutor began by asking Williams his name, which did not elicit a verbal response. The following colloquy ensued:
"The Court: Mr. Williams, are you going to answer the questions?
"[Williams]: No. There's no question. I don't know nothing.
"The Court: Well, that's different. If you don't know anything, that's different. The question is whether you're going to answer any of the questions-
"[Williams]: No.
"The Court: -posed to you-
"[Williams]: No.
"The Court: -by the state.
"[Williams]: No.
"The Court: What about questions posed by [defense counsel]?
"[Williams]: No-um, no, um, no.
"The Court: You understand that if you refuse to answer questions the court can hold you in contempt?
"[Williams]: Yeah, do that then.
"The Court: And I can sentence you to six months in jail.
"[Williams]: Okay.
"The Court: That you will not get any credit for any good time, and it will not count toward any of your sentence. So that you're basically doing dead time for six months with no credit whatsoever.
"[Williams]: Everything is understood.
"The Court: I'm sorry?
"[Williams]: I said I understand. I understand everything clearly.
"The Court: Okay.
"[Cretella]: I have advised him of that, Your Honor.
"The Court: You have advised him-
"[Cretella]: That it's my opinion that he does-
"The Court: -that the court could hold him in contempt?
"[Cretella]: And it is my opinion that he does understand what I've explained.
"The Court: The state's position?
"[The Prosecutor]: Your Honor, the state would ask that the witness be held in contempt if he refuses to answer the questions.
"The Court: Do you understand, Mr. Williams, that if-if you believe that the information you gave previously is wrong, this would be your chance to correct that, you understand that, and to answer the questions posed to you by the defense. But it's your position not to answer any questions posed by either side?
"[Williams]: No. As I told you before, I'm not answering no questions. I don't know nothing.
"[The Prosecutor]: You can say that to each one of my questions.
"The Court: Yes.
"[The Prosecutor]: You can say that. If you don't know anything, you don't know anything to any of my questions. Did you meet with Detective [Heitor] Teixeira?
"[Williams]: (No verbal response.)
"[The Prosecutor]: Did you meet with the Bridgeport Police Department detectives on July 4th, 2013?
"[Williams]: (No verbal response.)
"[The Prosecutor]: Do you remember meeting with them?
"[Cretella]: Your Honor, the offer of proof I think we can safely assume this is how each question will be answered.
"The Court: So, Mr. Williams, I'm going to begin contempt proceedings. You can talk to your lawyer."
After making findings that the defendant had appeared pursuant to a valid subpoena, he did not have a valid fifth amendment claim, and he was refusing to answer any questions "not just with I don't know anything but not even answering," the court gave the parties an opportunity to address the court regarding contempt. Both Williams and Cretella declined to make any statement. The prosecutor also made no statement with respect to the contempt proceedings but argued that because Williams had indicated to the court under oath during the state's proffer that he did not know anything about the shooting, which was in direct contradiction to his videotaped statement to the police, the state should be permitted to play the videotaped statement to the jury as a prior inconsistent statement. Defense counsel argued that Williams was not "available" to testify and, therefore, his prior statement was not admissible under Whelan .
The court found Williams in criminal contempt and imposed a sentence of six months of incarceration for his failure to answer questions. The court ordered Williams to return to court the next day, however, and, indicated that, if Williams decided to answer questions at that time, the court would consider vacating the contempt conviction. The court reserved making a decision on whether Williams' videotaped prior statement would be admitted into evidence.
The next day, in the presence of the jury, the state again called Williams to testify. The prosecutor asked Williams if he remembered being in court the day before and telling the judge that he knew "nothing about nothing ...." Williams provided no verbal response. The prosecutor then asked Williams if he remembered being interviewed by the police on July 4, 2013, and signing a statement identifying the person who shot the victim in the present case. Williams refused to respond and initially would not look at the copy of his written statement when it was handed to him by the prosecutor to verify his signature on the document. At the state's request, the court admonished Williams that he was in court under a subpoena and had a legal obligation to answer the questions posed to him. The state briefly resumed questioning Williams, who continued to give no verbal responses to the prosecutor's questions. The court then excused the jury.
Once the jury left, the prosecutor renewed his request that the court allow the jury to hear Williams' videotaped statement. The prosecutor argued that the statement was admissible under Whelan as a prior inconsistent statement on the basis of Williams' testimony to the court the day before that he knew nothing. Defense counsel responded that the availability of a witness is a prerequisite to the admission of any Whelan statement and that Williams' refusal to answer any of the questions posed to him rendered him unavailable. Defense counsel clarified that he was not challenging whether the videotaped statement was inconsistent with the position Williams had staked out the day before, but that the admission of the prior statement without any opportunity for meaningful cross-examination would seriously impede the defendant's right to confrontation.
The court made an oral ruling admitting Williams' statement to the police, concluding that the statement met the
Whelan
criteria. Specifically, the court found that the statement was reliably recorded by audio/videotape, the statement was duly authenticated, and Williams had personal knowledge of the events recounted in the statement. With respect to the defense's objection that the witness was functionally unavailable and never subject to cross-examination
with respect to his statement, the court first read into the record Williams' testimony proffered the day before, concluding: "Clearly, his statements yesterday under oath are inconsistent with the interview he provided to the police back on July 4th, 2013, as well as what he signed on that date. And pursuant to
State
v.
Simpson
, [
"
State
[v.
Eaton
,
denied,
"Both under [
Cameron M
.], [
Rodriguez
], as well as [
Pierre
],
State
[v.
George J
.,
"The court [in
Pierre
] goes on to note that: Additionally, we note that other jurisdictions that have had the opportunity to interpret what it means to [appear] for cross-examination under
Crawford
[v.
Washington
, supra,
The court then addressed Williams, explaining that the court was going to bring the jury back into the courtroom and that the state would resume asking him questions. The court explained: "You can choose to answer them or proceed the way you have, at which point they will read portions of yesterday's transcript, and the state will move to admit [your prior written and videotaped statements], at which point, based on my ruling, I will allow that to come in. It's your choice whether you choose to answer the state's questions, not answer the state's questions, recant your statement, not recant it; take it back, not take it back, answer the defense's questions or not.
"I want you to understand something. Not answering the defendant's questions, you're not helping him any because the case law is clear, just by sitting there that's enough for cross-examination for the jury to assess whether you're truthful-your statement back then was truthful or not. They can assess your demeanor and your conduct."
After the jury returned, the prosecutor asked Williams a series of questions, none of which elicited any verbal response. Williams' prior videotaped statement was admitted into evidence and played for the jury. Williams refused to respond to any of the prosecutor's remaining questions, and he also refused to give verbal responses when defense counsel sought to cross-examine him. After both the prosecutor and defense counsel indicated they had no more questions for Williams, the court excused the jury.
Outside the presence of the jury, the court then elected to vacate Williams' contempt conviction rendered the day before despite the fact that Williams had continued to engage in the same contumacious behavior that had justified the court holding him in contempt the previous day. 7 The court next decided to place on the record the following observations it had made of Williams and the jury while Williams was on the stand: "[T]he jury was looking at the witness while he was being asked questions both by the state as well as on cross-examination by the defense.
"For the record, the defense questioned, based on my timing, this witness for approximately over forty minutes or certainly close to forty minutes. When-there were times when I observed the witness he either raised his eyebrows, looked askance at counsel. He raised his eyebrows at certain critical times, like when he was cross-examined about not knowing the date of the shooting when the police asked him the date. He first didn't look at state's exhibits 9 and 14, then he looked at it, then he looked and looked away. He had gestures.
"When questioned about whether he could see the first step let alone the landing, he looked down. When asked how long he was selling drugs in Building 5, he looked up at the ceiling. Questioned about not telling the police that the name of the project was Greenes or something like that, yet he knew the name well, he closed his eyes. When asked about whether he was a womanizer, he didn't audibly do it but he sort of chuckled in his nonverbal expression. When questioned whether he wanted the jury to believe that he didn't know where this girl lived that he was seeing, he sat straight up.
"Again, he continued to make facial expressions, closing his eyes. He sighed when he was asked questions about Caroline [a woman at Greene Homes with whom, he told the police, he had been having sex] and that being the reason he went to Building 5, and saying that she was nice and straight. When asked about whether he indicated that [the victim] was the villain who went out of his way to raise trouble, he nodded and raised his eyebrows. Asked questions about whether he observed the victim go to the car to grab a gun and then start a conversation with Slim, he raised his eyebrows, sighed, and looked at defense counsel. And there were many instances where he did that.
"When he was questioned about not knowing [the defendant's] name as Nirone Hutchinson, he frowned. When asked about his plea agreement and plea deal to get cooperation for his testimony, he nodded and raised his eyebrows, and then when asked about whether he told the police he was smoking and what he was smoking, which was toward the end of the cross, he sighed again. So, there were many instances. I didn't capture them all, but certainly his body language is something from which the jury can assess his credibility."
We begin our discussion of the defendant's claim by setting forth the legal principles that govern our review. Although we review evidentiary rulings, including whether a statement is properly admitted pursuant to
Whelan
, under a deferential abuse of discretion standard;
State
v.
Simpson
, supra,
Generally, a statement made outside of court and offered at trial to establish the truth of the facts contained in that statement is hearsay and, therefore, presumptively inadmissible. Conn. Code Evid. §§ 8-1 and 8-2. There are, nevertheless, many exceptions to the hearsay rule. One such exception is set forth in § 8-5 of the Connecticut Code of Evidence, which incorporates and codifies a rule established in
State
v.
Whelan
, supra,
In
Whelan
, our Supreme Court rejected traditional, common-law application of the hearsay rule, pursuant to which courts admitted prior inconsistent statements only for impeachment purposes, and "adopted [a] rule allowing the substantive use of a prior inconsistent statement if: (1) the statement is in writing; (2) it is signed by the declarant; (3) the declarant has personal knowledge of the facts set forth in the statement; and
(4) the declarant testifies at trial and is subject to cross-examination." (Footnote omitted.)
State
v.
Hopkins
,
Section 8-5 of the Connecticut Code of Evidence codifies the Whelan rule, including later developments and clarifications of that rule. It provides in relevant part: "The following are not excluded by the hearsay rule, provided the declarant is available for cross-examination at trial : (1) ... A prior inconsistent statement of a witness, provided (A) the statement is in writing or otherwise recorded by audiotape, videotape or some other equally reliable medium, (B) the writing or recording is duly authenticated as that of the witness, and (C) the witness has personal knowledge of the contents of the statement." (Emphasis added.) As explained in the commentary to the rule, "[u]se of the word 'witness' in Section 8-5 (1) assumes that the declarant has testified at the proceeding in question , as required by the Whelan rule." (Emphasis added.) Conn. Code Evid. § 8-5 (1), commentary.
Even if hearsay evidence satisfies an exception to the hearsay rule, however, it may remain inadmissible in a criminal case unless it also comports with the confrontation clauses of the federal and state constitutions.
8
Conn. Code Evid. § 8-2 (b) ;
9
see also
California
v.
Green
,
In
Crawford
v.
Washington
, supra,
The court in
Crawford
reasoned that the cornerstone of a defendant's right to confrontation was
not
the reliability or trustworthiness of a statement, but the defendant's opportunity to question the declarant about the statement through cross-examination. It observed that hearsay statements fell into two broad categories: testimonial and nontestimonial.
10
The court held that, in a criminal trial, the confrontation clause prohibits the admission of testimonial hearsay statements by an unavailable declarant unless the defendant previously had an opportunity to cross-examine the declarant about the statement. The court made clear that if a declarant appears for cross-examination at trial, the confrontation clause "places no constraints at all on
the use of [the declarant's] prior testimonial statements ... so long as the declarant is present at trial to defend or explain it." (Citations omitted.)
Crawford
v.
Washington
, supra,
Turning to the present case, the defendant does not dispute that Williams' testimonial statement to the police was inconsistent with sworn testimony that Williams provided outside the presence of the jury that he "knew nothing," from which it reasonably could be inferred that he was claiming to know nothing about the shooting. There is also no dispute that the state sought to admit Williams' prior statement for the truth of the matters asserted therein, which included both Williams' identification of the defendant as the shooter and his explanation for why the defendant shot the victim, which directly undermined the defense's theory of the case that the defendant was justified in shooting the victim.
The court considered all the relevant factors set forth in Whelan , including Williams' "availability" for cross-examination at trial and concluded that his prior inconsistent statement was made with personal knowledge, properly recorded and authenticated, and, thus, was admissible hearsay under the Whelan rule.
The dispute on appeal is limited to whether the court properly rejected the defendant's argument that, due to Williams' refusal to provide verbal responses to any of the questions asked under oath by the prosecutor and by defense counsel, Williams was functionally unavailable, thus thwarting the defendant from any meaningful opportunity to cross-examine Williams about his prior statement, something that was necessary to satisfy both the Whelan rule and to protect his right to confrontation. Accordingly, we must first consider whether the defendant was denied an opportunity for cross-examination that implicated his right to confrontation, and then, if so, whether that constitutional violation was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
I
The United States Supreme Court has described the right of confrontation as composed of several elements: "physical presence, oath, cross-examination, and observation of demeanor by the trier of fact ...."
Maryland
v.
Craig
,
"The test of cross-examination is the highest and most indispensable test known to the law for the discovery
of truth."
Bishop
v.
Copp
,
Accordingly, the mere fact that a witness is called to the stand and placed under oath does not mean that the witness is necessarily available for cross-examination. In some circumstances, an otherwise available witness might render themselves unavailable by his or
her actions on the witness stand. Although no appellate court in this state has squarely addressed whether a witness is "available for cross-examination" if he or she refuses outright to answer any questions after being sworn in to testify, courts in other jurisdictions that have considered this issue have concluded that such a witness is functionally unavailable and, therefore, the admission of a prior statement of that witness would violate the confrontation clause's guarantee of an opportunity to cross-examine. Although not binding on this court, we find these cases persuasive.
11
The state has not cited, nor has our own research revealed, any post-
Crawford
court decision expressly holding that a witness who takes the stand but then refuses to answer any questions despite having no valid right to refuse to answer the questions is available for cross-examination.
12
In
Barksdale
v.
State
,
In his appeal of the conviction, the defendant in
Barksdale
claimed that the admission of the videotaped prior statement violated his right to confrontation because the witness was not subject to cross-examination regarding the prior statement. The Georgia Supreme Court unanimously agreed and reversed his conviction. In so doing, it distinguished for confrontation purposes the case before it, in which the witness refused to answer questions outright, from cases in which a witness had testified but asserted a lack of memory regarding a prior statement or the events at issue. In the latter line of cases, the court explained, the defendant had "the opportunity to cross-examine a forgetful witness about such matters as his bias, his lack of care and [attentiveness] ... and even ... the very fact that he has a bad memory."
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court reached a similar conclusion in
In re N.C
.,
Later in the proceeding, following the testimony of a forensic interviewer, the juvenile court admitted, over the objections of defense counsel, a DVD containing a previously recorded forensic interview of the witness. Id., at 487-88,
The juvenile claimed on appeal that the admission of the witness' prior testimonial statement to the forensic interviewer was admitted in violation of
Crawford
because the witness had been unavailable for cross-examination at the adjudicatory hearing. Id., at 489-90,
The commonwealth was granted permission to appeal from the Superior Court's decision to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. Id., at 492,
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court unanimously agreed with the juvenile that his right to confrontation was violated and affirmed the decision of the Superior Court. Id., at 504,
"We cannot find the confrontation element of Crawford was met herein, for Crawford and its progeny require an opportunity for effective cross-examination which [the juvenile] simply did not have. Contrary to the juvenile court's analysis, defense counsel's indication he had no questions on cross-examination cannot be deemed to have been a strategic choice, for any attempt on his part to continue to question this young witness whose fear and fragility were evident during direct examination and whose last expression before melding herself into a fetal position on her grandmother's lap was a desire to go home would have been, at best, pro forma. In addition, [the witness] did not act merely with trepidation at the hearing; she provided virtually no verbal responses on direct examination, despite two recesses and as many changes in caregivers to comfort her while she was on the witness stand which effectively left defense counsel with no opportunity to cross-examine her on the charges brought against [the juvenile].
"[The witness'] inability to speak and physical recoiling simply is not of the ilk of the witnesses in the caselaw to which the [c]ommonwealth cites who either could not remember certain details or refused to cooperate with counsel. As such, the Superior Court correctly determined that the juvenile court improperly deemed [the witness] to have been available for cross-examination and that [the juvenile's] right to confront her guaranteed under the [c]onfrontation [c]lause of the [s]ixth [a]mendment to the United States constitution had been violated when it admitted her recorded statements, which were testimonial in nature, into evidence during [the juvenile's] adjudicatory hearing without [his] having had a prior opportunity to cross-examine her." (Citations omitted; emphasis altered.) Id., at 503-504,
Finally, in
State
v.
Irlas
,
On the basis of the preceding case law and our careful consideration of confrontation clause jurisprudence as it exists post- Crawford , with its emphasis on the significance of a defendant's right to cross-examine a declarant about any out-of-court testimonial statement that the state seeks to admit against the defendant for substantive purposes, we conclude that Williams' videotaped statement to the police was admitted in violation of the defendant's constitutional right to confrontation. Although Williams was called to the stand and put under oath before the jury, he outright refused to give any verbal responses to questions asked of him. Although both the prosecutor and the defense counsel were permitted to ask Williams a series of questions, merely posing questions is not the equivalent of cross-examination; the defendant is also entitled to answers, whatever they may be. If a witness does not provide even a single answer while on the witness stand, the defendant is completely deprived of any opportunity he might have to probe and expose infirmities in the witness' prior statement or even the reasons behind the witness' recalcitrance or lack of memory. Williams' outright refusal to respond to any questions rendered him unavailable for cross-examination, and because the defendant never had any other opportunity to cross-examine Williams about his statement to the police prior to trial, admission of that statement violated Crawford .
Our conclusion that Williams was unavailable for purposes of cross-examination is consistent with the Federal Rules of Evidence regarding criteria that render a
witness unavailable under the federal rules for purposes of admitting hearsay statements. Rule 804 (a) of the Federal Rules of Evidence provides in relevant part: "A declarant is considered to be unavailable as a witness if the declarant ... (2) refuses to testify about the subject matter despite a court order to do so ...." As this court has previously noted, prior to the adoption of the Connecticut Code of Evidence, our Supreme Court has cited with approval rule 804 in determining whether a declarant was unavailable as a witness. See
State
v.
Richard P
.,
In reaching its contrary conclusion that the defendant's confrontation rights were not violated on the basis of Williams' outright refusal to respond to questions, the
court relied on a line of cases in which a witness' prior statement was deemed properly admitted despite the witness' claimed lack of memory either about the statement and/or the events in question. See
State
v.
Cameron M
., supra,
The earliest case cited by the trial court was
State
v.
Eaton
, supra,
In 2008, our Supreme Court decided
State
v.
Simpson
, supra,
In
State
v.
Cameron M
., supra,
Id., at 520,
The circumstances of the present case render it distinguishable from Pierre and its progeny. In each of those cases, the witness willingly provided some responses to the questions asked when called to testify. Although the witnesses in the cases cited by the trial court claimed or feigned memory loss regarding the information provided in the statement or of making the statement at all, they nevertheless responded verbally to questioning, providing some relevant information from which the jury, in combination with the witness' demeanor, could evaluate whether to believe the facts of the statement or the witness' trial testimony. In the present case, Williams did not respond in any way to any of the questions asked. He did not assert whether he had or had not made the statement at issue, whether he remembered the contents of the statement or the events contained therein. He simply failed to provide any testimony. Contrary to the position that the state now takes on appeal, at trial, the prosecutor seemed to understand that it was essential that Williams provide verbal responses to questions. When Williams stated, outside the presence of the jury, that he was not "answering no questions," the prosecutor told him that he could say that in response to each question he was asked.
The utter lack of a verbal response to any questions renders the present case wholly unlike the cases that the trial court relied on in admitting Williams' prior statement. The trial court, in rendering its ruling, indicated that the availability required under both Crawford and Whelan was satisfied simply from the witness' physical presence and the jury's ability to assess his demeanor and body language " in responding to questions ." (Emphasis added.) Williams, however, never responded to a single question asked of him before the jury, remaining silent throughout. In its analysis of whether Williams' refusal to answer questions rendered him functionally unavailable to testify, the trial court also appeared to conflate that question with whether a prior statement could be considered inconsistent if a witness failed to respond to questions.
It certainly is within the province of the jury in its role as fact finder to assess the credibility of a witness' answers to questions by assessing the witness' demeanor on the stand, which would include how a witness looks and acts while testifying. In the present case, the trial court stated on the record its own observations of Williams while he was on the stand, including, inter alia, that Williams had looked up at the ceiling, looked down, raised his eyebrows, closed his eyes, and "sort of chuckled in his nonverbal expression." The court did not make any finding, however, that Williams intended any of his gestures or body language to convey a specific nonverbal response to a question that would amount to a yes or no. We agree with the defendant that the meaning of the court's observations of Williams, which were completely unconnected to verbal responses to questions , is ambiguous and far too speculative to be considered as the equivalent of testimony. In other words, body language and demeanor are only instructive in assessing the credibility of testimony actually given, and are not a substitute for verbal responses or nonverbal responses intended to convey a substantive response to a question. 16
Our reasoning is consistent with observations made by the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in upholding a District Court's ruling that it did not implicate confrontation rights for a witness to testify while wearing dark sunglasses. The Second Circuit noted: "Even if we accept the idea,
grounded perhaps more on tradition than on empirical data
, that demeanor is a useful basis for assessing credibility, the jurors had an entirely unimpaired opportunity to assess the delivery of [the witness'] testimony, notice any evident nervousness, and observe her body language.
Most important
, they had a full opportunity to combine these fully observable aspects of demeanor
with their consideration of the substance of her testimony
, assessing her opportunity to observe, the consistency of her account, any hostile motive, and all the other traditional bases for evaluating testimony." (Emphasis added; footnotes omitted.)
Morales
v.
Artuz
,
In sum, because of Williams' refusal to provide any verbal responses to questions he was asked by both the prosecutor and defense counsel, and absent anything more than speculation as to the nonverbal mannerisms observed by the trial court, we conclude that the defendant was deprived of an opportunity to cross-examine Williams regarding his prior videotaped statement to the police. Because he admittedly had no prior opportunity to cross-examine Williams, the statement was inadmissible under Crawford . 17
II
Our conclusion that the court violated the defendant's rights under the
confrontation clause by admitting Williams' prior videotaped statement into evidence without an opportunity for cross-examination does not end our inquiry. We must also consider whether the defendant was harmed by this error. See
Delaware
v.
Van Arsdall
,
In Williams' videotaped statement, he identified the defendant as the shooter. If the identification had been the only inculpatory information conveyed by Williams in his statement, its subsequent admission at trial likely would have been harmless in light of the defendant's decision to admit that he shot the victim, but that he did so in defense of his friend, Slim. In his prior statement, however, Williams also provided information that, if credited, significantly undercut the defendant's claim that he shot the victim in defense of Slim.
" [General Statutes] § 53a-19 provides for two separate, but related, defenses-self-defense and defense of others ...."
State
v.
Bryan
,
Thus, conduct that is found to be justified is, under the circumstances, not criminal." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., at 832-33,
The defendant testified before the jury that, at the time he shot the victim, the victim was physically assaulting his friend, Slim, that the victim was much taller and significantly heavier than Slim, and that the victim was armed with a handgun and was pistol-whipping Slim. Significantly, aspects of the defendant's account were corroborated by other evidence. The state's medical examiner testified that the victim was six feet, eight inches tall and weighed about 400 pounds. Detective Michael Fiumidinisi, who initially investigated the shooting, testified that Slim was six feet, two inches tall, from which the jury could infer that he was smaller than the victim. More importantly, Fiumidinisi testified, without objection, about statements that the victim made to him at the hospital, many of which corroborated the defendant's narrative of the events just prior to the shooting. For example, the victim stated to the detective that he had followed Slim when Slim tried to leave the lobby, that he was trying to intimidate Slim, and that he pulled him down the stairs and was engaged in a fistfight with Slim when he was shot from behind.
Williams' videotaped statement to the police was the only other evidence presented from an eyewitness of the shooting. The significance of his statement cannot be downplayed given that prior to that statement, there was insufficient evidence to establish probable cause for the defendant's arrest. Williams told the police that the defendant was part of the group that controlled drug sales in Building 5. Williams indicated that the defendant knew that the victim was selling fake drugs, which adversely affected the defendant's drug business. It can be reasonably inferred from Williams' statement that this knowledge motivated the defendant to confront and ultimately shoot the victim. If the jury believed Williams, this would have cast serious doubt on the veracity of the defendant's version of events, namely, that he and Williams were initially attacked by the victim and his friends, and that he had shot the victim only to prevent him from seriously injuring Slim, who had come to their aid. Without Williams' alternate version of events, which put the defendant's encounter with the victim into a different context, the only evidence before the jury would have been the account given by the defendant, which, as we have set forth, was corroborated by other evidence.
The state argues that the defendant's testimony was "inconsistent and patently incredible." Moreover, the state contends that the defendant's claimed justification for using deadly force was "internally inconsistent, contrary to common sense and arguably legally insufficient, even viewed in a light most favorable to him." According to the state, even if the jury credited the defendant's version of events, the jury was "unlikely to have found that the scenario he posited, whereby neither he nor any of his friends made any effort to assist Slim in stopping the victim by using nonlethal force, justified his actions." In short, the state takes the position that the defendant's defense of others claim was so "fraught with problems that the jury could not have overlooked" that any improper admission of Williams' statement was rendered harmless.
Although we acknowledge that, as the state suggests, there were potential problems with the defendant's theory of defense and there is no guarantee that the jury would have found the defendant not guilty on that basis in the absence of the erroneous admission of Williams' statement, the state's arguments are insufficient to satisfy its demanding burden of demonstrating harmlessness beyond a reasonable doubt. First, however technically weak the defendant's claim of defense of others might have been, it was sufficiently supported by both law and fact that the court agreed to give the jury an instruction on the defense of others. The state does not argue that the defendant was not entitled to the instruction. Second, and more importantly, the introduction of Williams' statement provided the jury with evidence of a clear and alternative motive on the part of the defendant to shoot the victim that, if credited, effectively obliterated any need for the jury to consider the defendant's justification defense.
Contrary to the position taken by the state, we conclude that it was reasonably likely that Williams' statement played a significant role in the jury's decision to disregard the defendant's justification defense, and, therefore, the improper admission of Williams' statement and its effect on the jury cannot be viewed as harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded for a new trial.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
The sixth amendment to the United States constitution provides in relevant part: "In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to be confronted with the witnesses against him ...." U.S. Const., amend. VI. "[T]he sixth amendment rights to confrontation and to compulsory process are made applicable to state prosecutions through the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment." (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
State
v.
Holley
,
The defendant also claims on appeal that the court improperly admitted evidence of his gang affiliation and prior gun trafficking activities, which the defendant characterizes as inadmissible evidence of uncharged misconduct. See Conn. Code Evid. § 4-5 (a). Because we conclude that the defendant is entitled to a new trial on his other claim of error, and it is speculative whether the uncharged misconduct issue will arise again on retrial, we decline to review this additional claim of error.
At trial, the state presented testimony from a police sergeant familiar with gang activities at the Greene Homes housing complex. He explained that the five Greene Homes buildings were controlled by several different groups, and that violence often broke out if one group tried to sell drugs to another group's customers. He also explained that if someone sold fake drugs in a building, it would result in both a loss of revenue and reputation for the group that controlled the building, and that the group would seek retribution against such an offender.
In addition to the murder, the state initially charged the defendant with one count of criminal possession of a firearm in violation of General Statutes § 53a-217 and carrying a pistol without a permit in violation of General Statutes § 29-35 (a). The state later chose not to pursue those additional charges, filing a substitute information limited to the murder charge.
We note that this defense strategy was in place prior to trial and prior to the admission of Williams' statement identifying the defendant as the person who shot the victim. The defendant submitted pretrial written requests to charge that included an instruction on self-defense and the defense of others.
General Statutes § 53a-19 (a) codifies defense of others and provides in relevant part: "[A] person is justified in using reasonable physical force upon another person to defend ... a third person from what he reasonably believes to be the use or imminent use of physical force, and he may use such degree of force which he reasonably believes to be necessary for such purpose; except that deadly physical force may not be used unless the actor reasonably believes that such other person is (1) using or about to use deadly physical force, or (2) inflicting or about to inflict great bodily harm."
The court stated: "Yesterday, I held Mr. Williams in contempt for his entire conduct yesterday. I told him I'd be bringing him back today. I advised him that, under Whelan , given the responses he had given yesterday, that-and the inconsistencies, that, in all likelihood I would take a look at the case law, but his statement to the police back on July 4th would likely be shown to the jury, and he had a choice to answer questions or not answer questions; and by not answering questions and his gestures and facial expressions, that is a part of testimony for which the jury could assess whether his position today, which is inconsistent from that of July 4, 2013, is the truthful one or the statement he gave back on July 4th. They can assess all of it; the questions he was posed both by the state and on cross-examination, his expressions-and I'll make a record of some of those in a moment.
"But given that, Mr. Williams, I understand the predicament that you're in.
"But what I'm going to do is, in light of his conduct today, which was respectful, I'll vacate the contempt, and he'll resume whatever time he has and then he's on his own, obviously, as far as recommendation. But I'll vacate the contempt."
The defendant in the present case has not raised a claim under the state constitution. Nevertheless, we note that "our Supreme Court has interpreted Connecticut's confrontation clause to provide the same protections as its federal counterpart.... [W]ith respect to the right to confrontation within article first, § 8, of our state constitution, its language is nearly identical to the confrontation clause in the United States constitution. The provisions have a shared genesis in the common law.... [T]he principles of interpretation for applying these clauses are identical." (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
State
v.
Jones
,
Section 8-2 (b) of the Connecticut Code of Evidence provides: "In criminal cases, hearsay statements that might otherwise be admissible under one of the exceptions in this Article may be inadmissible if the admission of such statements is in violation of the constitutional right of confrontation."
Hearsay statements that are nontestimonial in nature do not implicate the confrontation clause; rather, their admissibility is governed solely by the rules of evidence. See
State
v.
Slater
,
"[T]he contours of the post-
Crawford
jurisprudence regarding unavailability for Confrontation Clause purposes-especially as unavailability relates to refusal to testify-are emerging."
State
v.
Kitt
,
We note that in
Fowler
v.
Indiana
,
See
Gibbons
v.
State
,
We note that because
Barksdale
was decided prior to the United States Supreme Court's decision in
Crawford
, the court, in analyzing whether the defendant's right to confrontation was violated, applied the former trustworthiness standard set forth in
Ohio
v.
Roberts
, supra,
As the Pennsylvania Supreme Court noted in its decision, the juvenile court took two recesses and made changes in the caregivers who sat with the witness on the stand in an effort to make the witness more comfortable, to no avail.
In re N.C
., supra,
The cases the state relies on to support its assertion that nonverbal conduct by a witness properly could be viewed as testimony are limited to instances of nodding and shaking of the head in lieu of a verbal response of yes and no.
Our decision today is to be read as limited to the unique set of circumstances present in this case. We are cognizant of the reality that the state has limited control over recalcitrant and noncooperating witnesses. Nevertheless, this concern is overborne by our duty to adhere to existing confrontation jurisprudence, which seeks to ensure that only testimonial hearsay evidence that has been subjected to a reasonable opportunity for cross-examination is admitted against a defendant.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE of Connecticut v. Nirone HUTTON
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published