Opinion of the Court by Justice SCOTT.
A Jefferson Circuit Court jury found Appellant, Derrick K. McAtee, guilty of murder and tampering with physical evidence. For these crimes, Appellant was sentenced to twenty-five years in prison. He now appeals as a matter of right, Ky. Const. § 110(2)(b), arguing that (1) he was entitled to a directed verdict of acquittal on the tampering charge, (2) the trial court erroneously permitted the introduction of out-of-court testimony, (3) the trial court erroneously permitted the jury to review a videotaped witness statement in the deliberation room, (4) the trial court erroneously prohibited him from introducing his entire statement to police, (5) the prosecutor's closing argument was misleading and denied him his right to a fair trial, and (6) the trial court improperly coerced a verdict from a hung jury.
For the reasons that follow, we reverse Appellant's conviction for tampering with physical evidence and vacate his sentence for that conviction, but affirm his murder conviction and corresponding sentence.
On July 9, 2009, Rodney Haskins was murdered in front of Pamela Beals's Louisville home. Four days later, Detective Kevin Trees interviewed Beals over the telephone. Beals told Detective Trees that she "saw the whole thing." Beals was on her front porch with her daughter and their neighbor, Gregory Kilgore, when they witnessed an altercation between Haskins and another man. The altercation ended when the other man shot Haskins multiple times. Beals identified the shooter as "YG," a young man she knew from the neighborhood.
Detective Trees interviewed Kilgore in September 2009. Kilgore confirmed that he was standing on the porch with Beals and her daughter when the argument between "YG" and the victim began. Kilgore told the detective that when the argument escalated he left Beals's porch to return home (two houses away). As he was walking home he heard shots. Later in the interview, when asked if he could identify "YG" from a photopack identification lineup, Kilgore identified Appellant's photograph. Detective Trees then asked: "Is that the guy who shot Rodney Haskins that evening?" Kilgore admitted it was.
Likewise, Kilgore testified at trial that he did not remember the night of the murder. Moreover, although he remembered meeting with Detective Trees in September 2009, he did not recall anything that they talked about during the interview. Nor did he remember identifying Appellant in the photopack lineup as the individual who murdered Haskins.
The trial court, however, permitted the Commonwealth to impeach Beals and Kilgore with their prior statements to Detective Trees: Beals with notes contained in Detective Trees's investigative letter and Kilgore with the transcript of his videotaped interview. Additionally, the trial court permitted the Commonwealth to introduce the videotaped recording of Kilgore's interview with Detective Trees, which was played for the jury in open court. During deliberations, the jury requested and was again permitted to review Kilgore's recorded interview in the deliberation room.
Ultimately, the jury found Appellant guilty of murder and tampering with physical evidence. However, while deliberating Appellant's sentence the jury sent the trial court a note asking: "What degree of agreement is required of the jury?" The trial court informed the parties of the inquiry and prepared a one-word memo in response: "Unanimous."
Less than an hour later, the jury sent the following note to the trial court: "We are not going to be able to come to a unanimous decision on the sentence." The court then brought the jury back to the courtroom, determined that further deliberations might be useful, and, pursuant to RCr 9.57, sent the jury back for further deliberations. Two hours later, the jury returned with a unanimous recommendation of twenty-five years' imprisonment for the murder charge and five years' imprisonment for the tampering charge, to be served concurrently. The trial court adopted the recommended sentence and this appeal followed.
Additional facts will be developed where required for our analysis.
Appellant argues that he was entitled to a directed verdict of acquittal on the tampering with physical evidence charge, citing insufficient evidence to support a conviction thereon.
"A person is guilty of tampering with physical evidence when, believing that an official proceeding is pending or may be instituted, he ... [d]estroys, mutilates, conceals, removes or alters physical evidence which he believes is about to be produced or used in the official proceeding with intent to impair its verity or availability in the official proceeding...." KRS 524.100(1)(a). The Commonwealth contends that when drawing all fair and reasonable inferences in its favor, Benham, 816 S.W.2d at 187, it would not clearly be unreasonable for a jury to find guilt under this statute. Specifically, the Commonwealth argues that the evidence reflected that: (1) Appellant shot Haskins; (2) he either walked away or ran away from the scene; and (3) the gun was not found at the scene. It further argues that Appellant should have known that a murder would trigger an official proceeding, and alleges that the jury could therefore have reasonably inferred that Appellant removed the gun "with intent to impair its verity or availability in the official proceeding." KRS 524.100(1)(a).
In Mullins v. Commonwealth, this Court held that "walking away from the scene with the gun is not enough to support a tampering charge without evidence of some additional act demonstrating an intent to conceal." 350 S.W.3d 434, 442 (Ky.2011). In Mullins, the evidence reflected that (1) the appellant shot the victim, (2) he immediately entered a vehicle which left the scene, (3) he brought the murder weapon with him into the vehicle, and (4) no shell casings or gun were found at the murder scene. Id. We rejected the Commonwealth's argument that this was sufficient evidence from which a reasonable juror could have found the appellant guilty of tampering. Id. at 444. Instead, we noted that when it is a murder suspect who is fleeing the murder scene with the murder weapon, "it is reasonable to infer that the primary intent ... is to get himself away from the scene and that carrying away evidence that is on his person is not necessarily an additional step, or an active attempt to impair the availability of evidence." Id. at 443. Thus, although it was reasonable to infer that the appellant in Mullins was holding the gun when he shot the victim, and that the appellant was "[c]learly ... attempting to flee the scene[,]" id., "[t]he fact he carried the gun away from the scene with him was merely tangential to the continuation of that crime." Id.
Having determined that merely leaving the scene of a crime with evidence used to commit the crime was insufficient by itself to support a tampering charge, we turned our attention to whether the tampering charge was supported "where the gun was ultimately found or based on evidence of an additional act." Id. We first noted that "there was no evidence of an intentional act of concealment, or even of flight from the police." Id. at 444. Additionally, the fact that the gun was never found did not "mean it was placed in an unconventional location." Id. Rather, we noted that the gun could have been placed in a conventional location (e.g., the vehicle in which he was seen leaving the murder scene, his home), but that the record did not indicate that the police searched either of these places. Id. The police had inexplicably only searched for the murder weapon at the scene of the crime five months after the murder took place. Id. The gun's absence from that location at that late date was insufficient evidence to support a tampering charge. Id.
The facts of the case before us are remarkably analogous to those in Mullins. The Commonwealth argues that Mullins
Id. at 443. Thus, we conclude that merely leaving the scene with the murder weapon was insufficient evidence from which a reasonable jury could fairly find Appellant guilty of tampering with physical evidence.
The second part of the analysis is whether the gun was ultimately found in a location which would support a guilty verdict or whether there is evidence of an "additional act" that would support intent to conceal (or otherwise "tamper"). We are unable to deduce any such evidence, and the Commonwealth points us to none.
There was testimony that (1) Appellant was at his girlfriend's home the night of the murder, (2) he was arrested at his girlfriend's home on September 3, 2009, and (3) the police knew Appellant's home address. However, there was no testimony that police searched for the gun at his home or his girlfriend's home (or anywhere else), or that the police discovered that the gun had been disposed of, concealed, destroyed or altered in any way. Without such evidence, it was unreasonable for the jury to find Appellant guilty of tampering with physical evidence. See id. A directed verdict of acquittal should therefore have been entered on the tampering charge. See Benham, 816 S.W.2d at 187. Accordingly, we reverse Appellant's conviction for tampering with physical evidence, and vacate his sentence for that conviction.
Appellant next argues that the trial court erroneously permitted the Commonwealth to introduce the statements Pamela Beals and Gregory Kilgore gave to Detective Trees in 2009. Specifically, he contends that admitting unsworn, out-of-court testimonial statements as substantive evidence violates his Sixth Amendment right "to be confronted with the witnesses against him,"
In Crawford, the Supreme Court held that testimonial statements of a witness who does not appear at trial are inadmissible, regardless of hearsay rules, unless he is (1) unavailable to testify and (2) his statements were previously subject to cross-examination. 541 U.S. at 53-54, 68, 124 S.Ct. 1354. Both Beals's and Kilgore's statements to Detective Trees qualify as "testimonial" statements. See Davis v. Washington, 547 U.S. 813, 822, 126 S.Ct. 2266, 165 L.Ed.2d 224 (2006) ("Statements are nontestimonial when made in the course of police interrogation under circumstances objectively indicating that the primary purpose of the interrogation is to enable police assistance to meet an ongoing emergency. They are testimonial when the circumstances objectively indicate that there is no such ongoing emergency, and that the primary purpose of the interrogation is to establish or prove past events potentially relevant to later criminal prosecution."). Thus, the question becomes whether, despite his memory loss, an amnesic witness "appears at trial" to the satisfaction of the Confrontation Clause. See McIntosh v. Commonwealth, No. 2006-SC-000421-MR, 2008 WL 2167894, at *3-4 (Ky. May 22, 2008). We once again hold that a testifying witness alleging memory loss "appears at trial" for purposes of cross-examination, and does not implicate a Sixth Amendment violation. Id. at *4.
In McIntosh, a testifying witness, who had previously pleaded guilty to being involved in a bank robbery with the appellant, "denied having any recollection of the bank robbery whatsoever." Id. at *2. Pursuant to KRE 801A(a)(1), the Commonwealth, having laid the proper foundation, was permitted to admit the video recordings of the prior police interrogations where the witness had implicated the appellant. On appeal, the appellant argued that "although [the witness] was present at trial he did not truly `appear for cross-examination' because his evasiveness rendered meaningful cross-examination impossible." Id. We disagreed, first noting that Crawford itself explains that the Confrontation Clause is not implicated when a witness appears on the witness stand and is subject to cross-examination. See id. To wit:
Crawford, 541 U.S. at 59 n. 9, 124 S.Ct. 1354 (citation omitted).
Next, we noted that, in United States v. Owens, the U.S. Supreme Court held that a witness's memory loss does not deprive the defendant of a constitutionally
Finally, while we noted in McIntosh that Crawford does "not discuss what it means for a witness to `appear for cross-examination,'" 2008 WL 2167894, at *4, we acknowledged that "Crawford did not overrule Owens,
Consistent with McIntosh, we hold that the Confrontation Clause is not implicated by a witness claiming memory loss if he or she takes the stand at trial and is subject to cross-examination. See McIntosh, 2008 WL 2167894, at *4; Crawford, 541 U.S. at 59 n. 9, 124 S.Ct. 1354; Owens, 484 U.S. at 559, 108 S.Ct. 838. Thus, when a hearsay declarant appears on the witness stand at trial, he may be impeached with a prior inconsistent statement. Additionally, we reaffirm, as consistent with Crawford, the rule in Jett that "an out-of-court statement made by any person who appears as a witness, which statement is material and relevant to the issues of the case, may be received as substantive evidence through the testimony of another witness, and need not be limited to impeachment purposes," 436 S.W.2d at 792. See Brown v. Commonwealth, 313 S.W.3d 577, 623 (Ky.2010) (reaffirming Jett post-Crawford).
As such, we conclude that the trial court committed no error in permitting the Commonwealth to introduce the statements Beals and Kilgore gave to Detective Trees.
During its deliberations, the jury wished to review Gregory Kilgore's videotaped statement to Detective Trees and sent the trial court
Appellant argues that the trial court improperly communicated information to the jury in violation of RCr 9.74 when it permitted the jury to review Kilgore's videotaped statement to Detective Trees in the deliberation room. He further alleges that permitting the jury to review the videotaped statement privately violated RCr 8.28 and his Constitutional right to a public trial. In response, the Commonwealth contends that no error occurred because RCr 9.72 permitted the jury to review the recorded statement in the jury room. We hold that this was error, yet such error was harmless.
RCr 9.72 addresses evidence in the jury room and provides, in pertinent part: "Upon retiring for deliberation the jury may take all papers and other things received as evidence in the case." Although RCr 9.72 uses permissive language and invests the trial court with the discretion to send (or not send) certain items of evidence to the jury room,
In Berrier, for example, this Court reversed an opinion of the Court of Appeals that upheld a verdict for the defendant because defense counsel had been permitted to introduce written summaries of witness interviews as exhibits. 57 S.W.3d at 276. Although our reversal in Berrier rested, in large part, on circumstances not present in the case at bar,
Berrier, 57 S.W.3d at 277. Thus, although RCr 9.72, on its face, invests the trial court with discretion, it is error to permit the jury to take certain testimonial exhibits to the jury room. See id.; see also Tanner, 2013 WL 658123, at *9-10.
More analogous to the case before us, we recently held that a trial court erred by permitting the jury to take a sixty-second clip of a recorded interview between the appellant and a detective back to the jury room. Tanner, 2013 WL 658123, at *9. Although we ultimately concluded the error was harmless, we recognized "that the jury may not take `testimonial' evidence with them to deliberations." Id. (citing Burkhart v. Commonwealth, 125 S.W.3d 848, 850 (Ky.2003) ("`undue emphasis' claims involve juror review of exhibits which are `testimonial' in nature, such as a witness statement or depositions."); Berrier, 57 S.W.3d at 277; Wright v. Premier Elkhorn Coal Co., 16 S.W.3d 570, 572 (Ky. Ct.App.1999)). We stated:
Like Tanner, the case before us presents a situation in which the trial court permitted the jury to take a recorded testimonial witness statement to the jury room. We once again hold that the trial court erred in doing so. To be clear: although RCr 9.72, by its terms, permits the trial court to exercise discretion over the evidence the jury may take with it to deliberations, see Johnson, 134 S.W.3d at 567, the court abuses that discretion when it permits the jury to take testimonial witness statements to the jury room, see Tanner, 2013 WL 658123, at *9; Burkhart, 125 S.W.3d at 850; Berrier, 57 S.W.3d at 277; Wright, 16 S.W.3d at 572. We now turn to whether this error may be deemed harmless.
The cases involving prejudicial RCr 9.72 error include "additional factors and errors, beyond the mere error in allowing the jury to take the evidence into deliberations...." Tanner, 2013 WL 658123, at *9. For example, in Berrier, this Court held that "the trial court erred because admitting the witness interview summaries was akin to allowing counsel to testify on behalf of the witnesses, and the summaries were also inadmissible hearsay evidence." Id. (citing Berrier, 57 S.W.3d at 276); see also footnote 8 supra. Those errors were "compounded" by permitting the jury to take the summaries to the jury room during deliberations. Berrier, 57 S.W.3d at 277. Additionally, the Berrier Court noted that it could not deem the error harmless because of "the prejudicial content of [counsel]'s `witness interview' summary and the fact that similar summaries were introduced during [the appellee]'s direct examination of eight witnesses." Id.
Unlike Berrier, we noted that the at-issue statement in Tanner "was not an inaccurate summary prepared by counsel..., [but] a recording that the jury properly heard during the trial. It was that additional factor, the inaccuracy, that led to prejudice in Berrier." 2013 WL 658123, at *10. Here, too, Berrier is distinguishable because Kilgore's statement was properly admitted as a trial exhibit and cannot be characterized as "inaccurate." Rather, as in Tanner, "the trial court obeyed the letter of RCr 9.72, but the `testimonial' nature of the evidence itself injected the error." Id. We are satisfied that the RCr 9.72 error committed in this case was harmless. That is, we can say with fair assurance that the judgment was not substantially swayed by the error. Winstead v. Commonwealth, 283 S.W.3d 678, 689 (Ky.2009) (establishing the "substantially swayed" standard of reviewing for harmless error when federal constitution is not implicated) (citing Kotteakos v. United States, 328 U.S. 750, 66 S.Ct. 1239, 90 L.Ed. 1557 (1946)). Thus, in this instance, we find the error harmless.
We pause here to address Justice Cunningham's separate opinion concurring in result. He misreads our opinion as "turn[ing] Jett v. Commonwealth on its head and, by implication, even creat[ing] confusion as to the proper use of written or videotaped confessions." This opinion does nothing of the sort; it merely holds that videotaped testimonial witness statements that are properly admitted into evidence as trial exhibits may not be reviewed in the privacy of the jury room; this must occur in the courtroom pursuant to RCr 9.74. Our opinion says nothing about the admissibility of a defendant's confession and it explicitly reaffirms the holding in Jett. See Section II.B, supra.
As previously discussed, Jett holds that a witness' prior inconsistent statement is admissible (1) to impeach the witness and (2) as substantive evidence. See id.
To lend guidance to the trial courts, we offer the following examples of recorded testimonial evidence that have been held impermissible to send to the jury room: depositions, Kansas v. Wilson, 188 Kan. 67, 360 P.2d 1092, 1098 (1961), Missouri v. Brooks, 675 S.W.2d 53, 57 (Mo.Ct.App. 1984); expert witness reports, Davolt v. Highland, 119 S.W.3d 118, 135 (Mo.Ct. App.2003); eyewitness' videotaped statement to law enforcement officers, Lewis v. Delaware, 21 A.3d 8, 14 (Del.2011); eye-witness' written statement to law enforcement officers, Montana v. Herman, 350 Mont. 109, 204 P.3d 1254, 1260-61 (2009), impliedly overruled on other grounds by Montana v. Ariegwe, 338 Mont. 442, 167 P.3d 815 (2007), Schwenke v. Wyoming, 768 P.2d 1031, 1037 (Wyo.1989); transcript of defendant's prior trial testimony, Barnes v. Florida, 970 So.2d 332, 339 (Fla. 2007); transcript of expert witness' trial testimony, New Hampshire v. Littlefield, 152 N.H. 331, 876 A.2d 712, 724 (2005);
Today, contemporaneous with this case, we rendered Springfield v. Commonwealth, No. 2012-SC-000370 (Ky. Aug. 29, 2013), in which we held that an audio and video recording of an actual drug transaction is not deemed to be testimonial in nature, and, thus, properly allowed into the jury room during deliberations. To lend further guidance, we offer the following as examples of recorded evidence that has been held not to be testimonial in nature and therefore properly sent to the jury room: store surveillance video, New Hampshire v. Dugas, 147 N.H. 62, 782 A.2d 888, 896 (2001), Mathews v. Georgia, 258 Ga.App. 29, 572 S.E.2d 719, 721 (2002);
Finally, we turn to Justice Cunningham's assertion that: "The admission of written or videotaped confessions into evidence, and their review in the jury room, is a long standing practice in this Commonwealth. We do violence to, and seriously undermine, that practice here today." The Kentucky Rules of Evidence treat prior statements of witnesses differently than prior statements of parties. KRE 801A provides:
Accordingly, a defendant's confession is always admissible and is never hearsay under KRE 801A(b), whereas other witnesses' prior statements are only admissible under the three circumstances defined in KRE 801A(a). Justice Cunningham's suggestion that our opinion today could "undermine" "[t]he admission of written or videotaped confessions into evidence" is simply incorrect.
What is still unclear, perhaps, is whether a party's recorded confession—which is obviously testimonial in nature—may be taken to the jury room upon deliberation. Although this Court has not addressed that specific issue, the majority of jurisdictions allow a recorded confession—written or electronic—to go to the jury room during deliberations.
RCr 9.74 addresses communications between the court and the jury after it has retired for deliberation, and provides:
As a threshold matter, we consider the jury's request for video equipment to rewatch Kilgore's statement to Detective Trees to be "information requested by the jury" under RCr 9.74. See Malone v. Commonwealth, 364 S.W.3d 121, 132 (Ky. 2012). In Malone, we treated a jury's request to rehear a witness's audiotaped statement to police as "information requested by the jury" and analyzed the court's response under RCr 9.74 and 8.28. Id. at 132-34; see also McGuire v. Commonwealth, 368 S.W.3d 100, 115 (Ky.2012). Although we recognize that in Malone the jury directly requested to rehear taped evidence, the jury's request for video equipment in this case is functionally identical to that in Malone, as it was indirectly asking to rehear evidence under the presumption that it was so entitled.
RCr 9.74 requires that information requested by the jury be given in open court in the presence of the defendant, and in the presence of (or after reasonable notice to) counsel. In Malone, we interpreted this rule as requiring the defendant's presence "both as the response is being formulated and when it is delivered." Id. at 133. We further concluded that "if the deliberating jury receives additional instruction or is allowed to rehear testimony, the instruction or the rehearing should take place in open court before the entire jury, and the defendant should be present, unless he chooses not to be." Id. at 134. See also McGuire, 368 S.W.3d at 115 ("Pursuant to RCr 9.74, the replaying of witness testimony is to be on the record in open court in the presence of the defendant.") (citations omitted).
With this in mind, we hold that the trial court committed two RCr 9.74 violations. First, it violated RCr 9.74 when, after receiving a request for information from the jury, it formulated and delivered a response outside Appellant's presence and outside the presence of (and without reasonable notice to) defense counsel. Both Appellant and defense counsel were entitled to be present when the court was formulating a response and when it delivered its response. See Malone, 364 S.W.3d at 133. Second, the trial court
With respect to the first RCr 9.74 violation—formulating and delivering a response to a jury inquiry outside of Appellant's and defense counsel's presence—there is no authority from this Court directly on point. However, in Welch v. Commonwealth, we deemed a communication similar to the one in the case before us to be harmful error. 235 S.W.3d 555, 558-59 (Ky.2007). In that case,
Id. at 557. As in the present case, the jury requested information that had already been introduced as evidence and neither the appellant nor defense counsel were present or provided reasonable notice of the jury's request. See id. After concluding in Welch that the trial court's exchange with the jury violated RCr 9.74, we reviewed for harmless error, id., which, in the context of ex parte communications between judge and jury, we defined as "contact [that] does not impugn the fundamental fairness of an otherwise constitutionally acceptable trial." Id. at 558.
We first noted that opportunities for ex parte communication between judge and jurors are "[e]xpected in the course of a jury trial," id., but that most of these contacts "are innocuous because they do not concern issues central to the case," id. We then held that the communication at issue in that case was not of the "innocuous" type because the jury's question—whether the defendant was in the car when a co-accused allegedly hid guns—"went to the heart of the tampering with physical evidence charge against Welch." Welch, 235 S.W.3d at 558. Although the court's answer to the jury's question was supported by evidence, we held that the RCr 9.74 violation could not be deemed harmless "because the contact involved the jury's deliberation concerning a central issue in the case." Id.
Here, the trial court's communications are clearly less serious than the trial court's response in Welch. While the court should have secured the presence of Appellant and defense counsel while formulating and delivering a response to the jury's inquiry, its erroneous ex parte communication—sending a DVD player to the
The second RCr 9.74 violation—permitting the jury to review Kilgore's videotaped statement in the privacy of the jury room—presents a more difficult question. We acknowledged in Malone that this violation could, in certain circumstances, be deemed harmless error; Malone, however, did not present an opportunity for this Court to articulate the proper standard with which to review this factual scenario for harmless error. Although this type of RCr 9.74 violation will sometimes implicate constitutional rights, see, e.g., Mills, 44 S.W.3d at 372 (implicating federal constitutional right to be confronted with the witnesses against oneself),
As discussed in Section II.C.I, supra, the primary concern with permitting a jury to review testimony in the privacy of the jury room is that it will accord that testimony "undue emphasis." See Burkhart, 125 S.W.3d at 850.
Although this Court takes concerns of undue emphasis seriously, we cannot conclude that the error that occurred was harmful. Had proper procedure been followed, the jury would have been permitted to re-watch the videotape in its entirety, in open court. We do not believe that the error that occurred—that is, permitting the jury to re-watch the video privately— substantially swayed their verdict. Indeed, we can say with fair assurance that it would have come to the same verdict had it re-watched the video in open court. We therefore hold that the second RCr 9.74 error was harmless.
RCr 8.28(1) provides, in pertinent part, that "[t]he defendant shall be present at the arraignment, at every critical stage of the trial including the empaneling of the jury and the return of the verdict, and at the imposition of the sentence." Appellant argues that the trial court violated his right to be present when it permitted the jury to review the video in private. In Watkins v. Commonwealth, this Court noted:
105 S.W.3d 449, 452-53 (Ky.2003) (emphasis added) (citations omitted) (quoting Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U.S. 97, 107-08, 54 S.Ct. 330, 78 L.Ed. 674 (1934), overruled on other grounds by Malloy v. Hogan, 378 U.S. 1, 84 S.Ct. 1489, 12 L.Ed.2d 653 (1964)).
Assuming, without deciding, that re-watching a witness's videotaped statement during deliberations is a "critical stage of the trial," we conclude that failing to secure Appellant's presence constitutes harmless error at worst.
During its case-in-chief, the Commonwealth called Detectives Kyle Willet and John Lesher to testify. Detectives Willett and Lesher interrogated Appellant the afternoon of his arrest in September 2009. The Commonwealth elicited statements Appellant made to the detectives which were duly admitted through the hearsay exception concerning admissions of a party opponent, KRE 801A(b)(1). In a pretrial motion in limine, Appellant argued that if the Commonwealth planned to question the detectives about statements he made during his interrogation, the "rule of completeness," KRE 106, required the Commonwealth to play Appellant's recorded statement in full (with certain redactions). At trial, the court did not require the Commonwealth (or permit Appellant) to play the entire recorded statement (approximately three hours in duration), but granted defense counsel substantial leeway in her cross-examination of the Detectives. Appellant assigns error to the trial court's decision not to require his entire statement to be played for the jury.
Appellant's statements, although hearsay, were properly admitted under the admissions of a party opponent exception codified in KRE 801A(b)(1).
We addressed this very issue in Schrimsher and thoroughly analyzed and interpreted the interplay between hearsay statements and KRE 106. Because of its relevance to the case before us, and because we cannot improve upon its analysis, we reproduce a significant portion of Schrimsher below:
Schrimsher, 190 S.W.3d at 330-31.
Here, Appellant is attempting to thwart hearsay rules and admit his entire statement
Thus, we hold that the trial court properly denied Appellant's request to introduce his entire statement, and properly exercised its discretion by permitting defense counsel ample latitude on cross-examination to contextualize the statements elicited by the Commonwealth. See id. at 330 ("A trial court's ruling under KRE 106 (i.e., the `rule of completeness') is discretionary." (citing KRE 106 Drafters' Commentary 1989; United States v. Mussaleen, 35 F.3d 692, 696 (2d Cir.1994); United States v. Maccini, 721 F.2d 840, 844-45 (1st Cir.1983); Lawson, supra, § 1.20[3][b], at 68-69 (4th ed.2003))).
During closing arguments, the Commonwealth made the following statement:
Defense counsel objected arguing that the prosecutor's statement was improper. She reminded the court that her questioning was limited by hearsay rules and argued that the prosecutor was making it sound like she chose not bring out any other part of Appellant's three-hour interrogation. She then requested that the court admonish the jury that she did not, in fact, get to bring out everything that she wanted about Appellant's statement. She also requested that the prosecutor's statement be stricken from the record.
The prosecutor continued his closing argument:
Appellant argues that the Commonwealth's closing argument deprived him of a fair trial. Specifically, he contends that the prosecutor's statement that defense counsel was able to "bring out anything that she wanted in [Appellant's] statement to police" and that "[i]f there was something important, it would have come out" misled the jury into believing that the statement contained only a few parts favorable to the defense, consisted of inculpatory admissions, and the defense had the ability to admit any part of the statement that was favorable.
"Any consideration on appeal of alleged prosecutorial misconduct must center on the overall fairness of the trial. In order to justify reversal, the misconduct of the prosecutor must be so serious as to render the entire trial fundamentally unfair." Stopher v. Commonwealth, 57 S.W.3d 787, 805 (Ky.2001) (citations omitted). "While the prosecutor has a duty to confine his or her argument to the facts in evidence, Caretenders, Inc. v. Commonwealth, 821 S.W.2d 83, 89 (Ky.1991), the prosecutor is entitled to draw reasonable inferences from the evidence, make reasonable comment upon the evidence and make a reasonable argument in response to matters brought up by the defendant, Hunt v. Commonwealth, 466 S.W.2d 957, 959 (Ky.1971)." Childers v. Commonwealth, 332 S.W.3d 64, 73 (Ky.2010).
We have identified two grounds for which reversal is required for prosecutorial misconduct:
Hannah v. Commonwealth, 306 S.W.3d 509, 518 (Ky.2010) (quoting Matheney v. Commonwealth, 191 S.W.3d 599, 606 (Ky.2006) (citing Barnes v. Commonwealth, 91 S.W.3d 564, 568 (Ky.2002))). Under either scenario, we must first determine as a threshold matter whether the prosecutor "engaged in misconduct in closing argument." Id. We conclude that he did not.
To begin with, although defense counsel was precluded by the hearsay rules from playing Appellant's entire videotaped statement for the jury, the trial court did not preclude her from introducing any part of the statement that she attempted to introduce through cross-examination of Detectives Lesher and Willett.
Second, Appellant's assertion that the prosecutor's closing argument misled the jury into believing Appellant's statement consisted of inculpatory admissions is unsupported and unfounded. In fact, we believe this argument is belied by what the prosecutor actually said: "[i]f there was something important [in Appellant's statement], it would have come out, either from us or the defense." One would expect that if Appellant had confessed or otherwise inculpated himself in the murder, it would have been "important" enough for the Commonwealth to introduce. However, as defense counsel repeatedly noted, Appellant did nothing but deny any involvement in Rodney Haskin's murder. Thus, Appellant's contention that "the jury was free to infer that [Appellant] had confessed or made admissions" is baseless.
Finally, Appellant argues that the prosecutor's statement "was prejudicial because the jury was free to infer that the statement did not help the defense," and that "[t]he jury was left with the false impression that the lengthy, recorded statement contained only a few parts favorable to the defense." He fails, though, to point to any part of the statement that was favorable to him that he was prevented from introducing to the jury. Rather, the argument seems to be, as it was in Section II.D. supra, that his repeated denial of any involvement in the murder, despite over three hours of interrogation practices designed to elicit a confession, was generally "favorable" to him. However, as previously mentioned, the trial court extended defense counsel wide latitude in questioning the detectives about their interrogation tactics and defense counsel successfully exposed those techniques for their confession-inducing qualities.
In sum, Appellant has failed to convince this Court that the Commonwealth's closing argument was incorrect; or that even if we were to assume it was incorrect, that it prejudiced him and compromised the fundamental fairness of his trial. See Stopher, 57 S.W.3d at 805. Defense counsel was given an opportunity to ask the detectives
Finally, Appellant argues that the trial court's decision to order further deliberation after the jury indicated that it could not agree on sentencing resulted in a coerced verdict. Specifically, he argues that KRS 532.055(4) required the trial court to impose the sentence once the jury reported it could not come to an agreement. In response, the Commonwealth argues that the court correctly sent the jury back for further deliberations pursuant to RCr 9.57.
Shortly after sentencing-phase deliberations began, the jury sent a note to the trial court asking "[w]hat degree of agreement is required of the jury?" After consulting with counsel in open court, the judge sent the jury the reply: "Unanimous." Less than an hour later, the jury sent a second note to the judge: "We are not going to be able to come to a unanimous decision on the sentence." After again conferring with counsel in open court, the Commonwealth requested the jury be given an Allen-type charge.
After bringing the jury back to the courtroom, the judge asked the jury by a show of hands: "Do you think it's possible that with further deliberation—maybe a lunch break—that further deliberation might be helpful." The judge indicated that "most" of the jury thought progress might be made with more time and a lunch break. After deciding to send the jury back for further deliberations, the judge read the text of RCr 9.57(1)(a)-(e) verbatim
RCr 9.57 provides, in pertinent part:
KRS 532.055(4) provides: "In the event that the jury is unable to agree as to the sentence or any portion thereof and so reports to the judge, the judge shall impose the sentence within the range provided elsewhere by law."
We conclude that RCr 9.57 and KRS 532.055(4) can, and should, be read together. When a jury indicates to a trial court that it is unable to come to a unanimous verdict on the sentence, it is not improper for the court to probe the jury to determine whether further deliberation may be useful. If, however, the probing reveals that further deliberation will likely not be useful, KRS 532.055(4) requires the court to impose the sentence "within the range provided elsewhere by law." Whether further deliberations may be useful is a determination best left within the sound discretion of the trial court. We believe, however, that where, as here, a majority of the jurors indicate that further deliberation may be useful, the judge properly exercises his discretion to order further deliberation.
Thus, we reject Appellant's contention that the court was required to impose the sentence once the jury reported it was not going to be able to come to a unanimous decision. Rather, we believe Judge Willett properly probed the jury to determine whether further deliberations would be useful pursuant to RCr 9.57. Moreover, once determining that they would, we believe he properly read RCr 9.57 to the jury. See Williams v. Commonwealth, 147 S.W.3d 1, 9 (Ky.2004); Commonwealth v. Mitchell, 943 S.W.2d 625 (Ky.1997).
In conclusion, we hold that Appellant was entitled to a directed verdict of acquittal on his tampering with physical evidence charge. We therefore reverse his conviction and vacate his sentence for that charge. However, we affirm his murder conviction and its corresponding sentence.
MINTON, C.J., ABRAMSON, NOBLE, and VENTERS, JJ., concur. KELLER, J., concurs in result only without separate opinion. CUNNINGHAM, J., concurs in result only by separate opinion.
CUNNINGHAM, J., Concurring in Result:
I concur in result only. I respectfully submit that the majority goes to great length in its expansive dicta to turn Jett v. Commonwealth on its head and, by implication, even creates confusion as to the proper use of written or videotaped confessions.
On July 9, 2009, Rodney Haskins was murdered in front of Pamela Beals and Gregory Kilgore. Both gave incriminating statements against Appellant. Beals gave her statement by telephone. Kilgore gave his statement during a videotaped interview. Both changed their stories at trial and said they could not remember. The trial court properly allowed the Commonwealth to impeach both witnesses by their prior statements. As the majority correctly notes in citing KRE 801(a)(1), a statement is inconsistent if the witness simply "claims to be unable to remember it." The trial court allowed into evidence the notes of Detective Trees' telephone interview with Beals and the videotaped interview with Kilgore.
Perhaps what most disturbs me about the majority opinion is its totally misplaced reliance on Berrier v. Bizer. That case is in no way germane to the discussion at hand. It was a wrongful discharge from employment case. The employer went through the store getting statements from employees and reduced them to written summaries. Before trial, the employer asked the employees to review the statements for correctness and initial them. At trial, the employees were called to testify. The defendant employer then asked that the summaries be introduced into evidence to bolster and supplement their testimony. Objections were made, but they were admitted anyway. This Court ruled it was error to admit the summaries because no foundation had been established for their admission. There were also matters in the summaries which the witnesses did not testify to at trial, making their content hearsay.
The Berrier court went to great lengths to explore different ways the reports might have been admissible. One option where they would have been admissible was if they had been inconsistent statements from the witnesses' testimony at trial, as allowed by KRE 801. The Court said that the witnesses "did not testify inconsistently with the contents of the `witness interview' summaries." Of course, that is exactly what we have here. So, the Berrier decision does not contravene the trial court's ruling here, but actually supports it.
I am especially concerned with our Court's direction here today in regard to the videotaped interview with Kilgore and the transcript. Unlike the detective's notes, this was the actual verbatim statement of the witness without any opportunity for an error in reporting of its content.
The majority makes it clear that evidence of the contents of inconsistent
For almost 45 years, the landmark case of Jett v. Commonwealth has stood in good stead to assist litigants in capturing the truth out of witnesses who, for various reasons, try to lie in court. The progeny of that historic decision includes a myriad of cases where the recordings—either written, oral or videotaped—have been deemed admissible. See, e.g., Alexander v. Commonwealth, 862 S.W.2d 856, 860-61 (Ky.1993) (overruled on other grounds by Stringer v. Commonwealth, 956 S.W.2d 883 (Ky.1997) (stating that a written record was appropriately introduced as an inconsistent statement)); Porter v. Commonwealth, 892 S.W.2d 594, 597 (Ky.1995) (determining that the introduction of a videotaped guilty plea was properly allowed as an inconsistent statement); Shepherd v. Commonwealth, 251 S.W.3d 309, 322 (Ky.2008) (allowing the introduction of a recorded police interview as an inconsistent statement).
The jury will now be left to strive to remember what the recorded out-of-court statement said. This impedes truth and justice because it forces the jury to simply rely upon its fallible recollection.
I digress just a bit to express a most realistic concern about how our opinion here today will affect the prosecution of domestic violence. In a large number of cases, the victim will recant. Several prosecutors in this state have established special investigative units to record the truthful and spontaneous complaint freshly made by the victim. When weeks later the victim recants, the playing and introduction of the audio tape at trial becomes critical. Just as critical is the introduction of the taped interview for the jury to review in the jury room. Otherwise, the perjured and misleading in-court testimony overwhelms the truth. Our opinion here today severely impedes that important process.
Most troublesome to me is the majority's opinion that, even after the admission of the videotape into evidence, it was error to allow the jury to watch it in the privacy of the jury room.
RCr 9.74 states as follows:
No information was requested by the jury after it had retired in this case. The jury only requested a means to re-view the information that had already been admitted into evidence and taken to the jury room. What is the point of introducing an exhibit into evidence and allowing the jury to take the exhibit to the jury room unless it can be examined by the jury in the jury room? Such logic would dictate that any evidence examined in the courtroom must be left in the courtroom.
For some reason, the majority has anchored its reasoning on the theory that the videotaped statement in question was testimonial. Confessions are certainly testimonial. In many instances, a confession may be of such powerful import as to send a person to prison. It is sometimes fully written, but many times is tape recorded or videotaped. Of the thousands of cases which have been tried in this Commonwealth dealing with confessions, I challenge this Court to cite one case where a challenge was made to a transcribed confession going to the jury room. Yet, today,
Writes Justice Scott for the majority: "What is still unclear, perhaps, is whether a party's recorded confession—which is obviously testimonial in nature—may be taken to the jury room upon deliberation. . . . We reserve judgment on this issue until it is properly before us."
The admission of written or videotaped confessions into evidence, and their review in the jury room, is a long standing practice in this Commonwealth. We do violence to, and seriously undermine, that practice here today.
Furthermore, most of the case law cited by the majority is not germane.
McGuire and Malone have no relevance as they deal with the issue of the in-court testimony of a trial witness being replayed in open court without the defendant being present.
Mills has no relevance because it deals with the erroneous admission of taped interviews with witnesses that had not been played at trial nor had a proper foundation been laid.
Welch has no relevance because it deals with the judge's ex parte answering of questions sent out by the jury during deliberations.
Berrier we have already discussed. It supports the trial court, not the majority's view.
The majority goes to great length to respond to this dissent. I find no solace in that effort. I would simply ask the Court to pause and consider the practical effect of our decision here today; There is no testimonial distinction between videotaped statements of witnesses, as in this case, and written statements and transcripts. So, in the future, when a written inconsistent statement is introduced into evidence, that exhibit will remain in the courtroom. If the jury wishes to review it, they will be required to do so in open court. There, in the muted presence of the judge at the bench, with the lawyers seated at tables and the defendant returned from the jail, the jurors will silently read and pass the exhibit among themselves. Eleven jurors will be staring into space the entire time. I find this a cumbersome and unnecessary waste of time. And, yes, it "turns Jett on its head."
For all the foregoing reasons, I ask to be exonerated from these portions of the majority opinion. Otherwise, I concur.
Id. at 276-77. We concluded that these witness interview summaries were inadmissible for multiple reasons including that: (1) they contained several prejudicial statements, written in the attorney's words, and not elicited from the witnesses at trial; and (2) even if the witnesses had written the summaries they would have been inadmissible hearsay. See id.
Id. Accordingly, we reversed and remanded for a new trial.
136 S.W.2d 1066, 1068 (Ky.1940). We are not convinced that Meadors is inconsistent with KRE 106: Meadors permits the defendant to elicit that part of the statement that is "relevant and material" to the part of the statement elicited by the prosecution, while KRE 106 permits the introduction of that part of the statement that "ought in fairness to be considered contemporaneously with" the part introduced by the adverse party. Stated differently, the "relevant and material" parts of the statement are arguably those parts of the statement that "ought in fairness to be considered contemporaneously with" the statements already elicited. In fact, this seems to be precisely how Meadors has been interpreted. See Commonwealth v. Collins, 933 S.W.2d 811, 814 (Ky.1996).
Insofar as they could be read as inconsistent, Schrimsher's interpretation of KRE 106 would supersede the rule in Meadors. See Burchett v. Commonwealth, 98 S.W.3d 492, 511 (Ky.2003) ("[W]hen there is an adopted Rule of Evidence that speaks to the contested issue, the adopted Rule occupies the field and supersedes the former common law interpretation.'") (quoting Garrett v. Commonwealth, 48 S.W.3d 6, 14 (Ky.2001) (citing Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharm., Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 587-89, 113 S.Ct. 2786, 125 L.Ed.2d 469 (1993))).
Thereafter, the judge never prevented defense counsel from eliciting any of Appellant's denials.