Smith v. Arizona, in which I am hoping the Supreme Court will clear up some of the confusion created by its splintered decision in Williams v. Illinois, will be argued on January 10. As a reminder: Smith was convicted of drug-related crimes in large part on the basis of the testimony of a lab analyst, Longoni. But Longoni did not perform the tests on the materials in question, nor write a report on those tests. Instead, Longoni relied on writings by another lab analyst, Rast, who was no longer with the lab (for unexplained reasons) at the time of trial. The state court held that this was OK, and that Rast’s findings were not being used for the truth of what they asserted but only in support of Longoni’s opinion.
Arizona, the respondent, filed its brief on Dec. 13, and the
supporting amicus briefs were filed a week later. You can find all the briefs in the case
through the Supreme Court’s docket sheet, here.
Below, somewhat belatedly, is the first portion of comments on Arizona’s
brief and the one submitted on behalf of the United States by the Solicitor
General’s Office. I hope to offer more within a few days. The SG’s brief argues
for reversal, but on narrow grounds, without upsetting the supposed distinction
between offering a testimonial statement for its truth and offering it in
support of an expert’s opinion, even when, as is almost always the case, the
statement supports the opinion only if true.
Both Arizona and the SG try to make an argument that the
procedure here uses a long-accepted method of proof. I believe the attempt fails. Notably, they come up with at most a single
case (and that one a civil one) from the founding era or anywhere close of an expert being allowed to
testify to an opinion on the basis of facts asserted in a testimonial statement
that was not itself admissible evidence.
They do make clear that experts have to rely on general underlying information,
to be found in treatises and the like.
(Just as, by the way, ordinary percipient
witnesses rely on what they’ve been told about the world by other people.) And they cite a couple of civil cases from
the founding era and a few from well after in which maybe experts were allowed
to offer opinions on the basis of otherwise inadmissible statements of case-specific
information. (This is not clear, because
the cases do not dwell on whether those statements could have been admitted on their
own; and in at least some, e.g., one involving “daily price lists,” they probably
could have been.) But they do nothing to undermine the well-established fact,
which the drafters of Fed. R. Evid. 703 openly acknowledged, that that Rule,
allowing an expert to rely on otherwise inadmissible evidence if it is of the
type ordinarily relied on by experts in the field, went against the great
weight of the common law. Note, for
example, the discussion and citations in my amicus brief in this case at 6-7 and 17.
Arizona and the SG contend that Arizona law and the Federal
Rules take the position that in situations such as that involved here the out-of-court
statement is presented only in support of the expert’s opinion, not for the truth
of what it asserts. But a court,
ultimately the Supreme Court, construing and applying the Confrontation Clause
must make its own assessment on that point.
And the simple fact is that, assuming that only if the out-of-court
statement is true does it support the opinion, then, as five justices
recognized in Williams, there is no real distinction between presenting
the statement in support of the opinion and presenting it for its truth. The logic of the jury, assuming it accepts
the opinion, has to be: “Predicate Fact F is true, and therefore Opinion O is
more likely true.” There are innumerable
other situations in which a predicate fact supports the probative value of
other evidence (“The letter was sent to the intended addressee, and therefore it
gave notice”) and there is no doubt that the predicate facts is being proven for
its truth. This situation is no
different. Neither Arizona nor the SG
suggest any way in which telling the jury in a case like Smith to use the
out-of-court statement only in support of the opinion actually alters what the
jury can or will do with it.
Arizona and some of the other bottom-side amici suggest that the statements by Rast on which Longoni relied were not
testimonial. The Court should reject
this argument as well. I’ll assume for
purposes of argument that Longoni did not rely at all on Rast’s report, but
only on her notes. So let’s understand right
off that if those are not deemed testimonial, then a prosecution has a surefire
way of never having to present for confrontation the lab technician who
performed the test in question and recorded the results: Simply give those notes to some other lab tech,
who can then testify in court to a conclusion based on the facts asserted by
the first tech (and which might, as in this case, follow obviously assuming
the truth of those facts). Then we have
a system in which a lab witness can testify – creating evidence knowing it will
likely be used in prosecution – just by writing lab notes.
But, Arizona argues, the notes are not formal and they are not solemn. Though sometimes the Supreme Court has spoken
of formality as a requirement for a statement to be testimonial, I think that
is potentially misleading. Suppose a statement is given very informally, but in
full knowledge, and even with the purpose, that it will be used as evidence in
prosecution. Then it seems clear that it
ought to be deemed testimonial. Formality,
as I have often said, is not a requirement for a statement to be
testimonial. Rather, certain
formalities, if you want to call them that – the oath, subjection to confrontation,
presence at a formal testimonial event – are necessary for testimony to be acceptable. As for solemnity, I think that gets closer to
the mark, if properly conceived. I think
solemnity in this context means appreciation of the gravity of the consequences
of the statement (which is why we ask witnesses to “solemnly swear.”) And notes can have this solemnity; if they
can be used as prosecutorial evidence, and the writer of them understands that –
which would of course be true if Rast’s notes are deemed admissible – then the
writer understands that her notes may be a critical factor in convicting a
person of crime. That’s enough for the
statement to be considered testimonial.
More later.
1 comment:
I've updated this post slightly. Apart from typographical errors, I've softened one statement -- the SG Brief may have one (one!) old (civil!) case of an out-of-court testimonial statement being used in support of an expert's opinion. And as I read the SG brief, it doesn't ultimately take any position on whether Rast's statements were testimonial.
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