Confrontation Clause Flashcards
6th Amendment
In criminal cases, a defendant shall have the right to confront the witnesses against him.
Crawford v. Washington
- Brought 6th amendment to the forefront
- Idea of confrontation clause
- Victim allegedly tried to rape man’s wife who stabbed him
- Played tape of wife’s statements to the police
- Supreme Court said it wasn’t okay – put the wife on the witness stand
- Under 6th amendment, right to cross-examine witness
Confrontation Clause
General Rule: Prefer a live witness on the witness stand to testify. Do not want any hearsay exceptions (even though some will of course remain)
Requirements for application:
- The statement is offered against the accused in a criminal case, and its at trial;
• Don’t care about grand jury, preliminary hearing, etc.
• Does not affect civil cases - The declarant is unavailable;
- The statement is “testimonial” in nature; and
- The accused had no opportunity to cross-examine the declarant’s testimonial statement prior to trial (former testimony is okay)
Testimonial Statements
- When the primary purpose of the statement is to establish or prove past events potentially relevant to later criminal prosecution
- Statements developed/memorialized/recorded in order to use down the road in future criminal prosecution
- Most obvious form: Statement that you give to the police
- Statements made to other civilians are NOT testimonial
Samples of Testimonial Statements
- Statements made at preliminary hearing
- Statements made to grand jury
- Statements made at former trial
- Statements made during course of police interrogation, where the interrogation has a backward looking what happened nature
- Lab reports – Melendez Diaz case (going to have to have chemist testify as to results)
Former testimony: If a statement is testimonial it must have been subject to cross-examination either before or at trial.
Non-Testimonial Statements
- Statements where the primary purpose of the statement is to enable police assistance to meet an ongoing emergency.
- Emergency Doctrine – (Davis v. Washington):
911 call must usually refer to:
- Events that were actually happening (not past events)
- Victim facing an ongoing emergency and seeking help against a bona fide physical threat
- You need help right now
- Objective whether there is an ongoing emergency
- Borderline: If someone left, but afraid the person will come back – need more information
- If after the fact, then testimonial (If fact gathering after emergency has ended).
- Operator asking questions which were necessary to be able to resolve the present emergency, rather than simply to learn what had happened in the past
- Level of formality lower
Note: Excited utterances have so far survived Crawford
Samples of Non-Testimonial Statements
- Excited utterances made in informal circumstances and not made to the authorities
- Statements by crime victim to a physician or nurse if made principally for the purpose of obtaining medical treatment or diagnosis (whereas rape kit is used for criminal prosecution)
- 911 calls describing a pending emergency, while it is happening
- Dying declarations (firmly rooted in exception)
Davis v. Washington
- Boyfriend beat her up and then left. Ongoing emergency? Court said yes. (Prof. does not agree).
- Test: Hearsay is non-testimonial if its primary purpose is to enable police assistance to meet an ongoing emergency. Definition of on-going emergency comes from judge.
- Key: Understand what is the confrontation clause. If judge deems as ongoing emergency…let that evidence in. If not, no. Lab reports/coroner’s reports do not come in anymore.
Subject to Cross-Examination
A declarant may be subject to cross-examination at 2 different times: (1) Time of declaration, (2) Time of the accused’s trial
Problem - Child victim of sexual assault. Statements to doctors? Child could not remember incident.
Not testimonial in nature b/c medical diagnosis. Experiencing on-going pain, brought to doctor to determine what the pain is from.
Courts have held: If person honestly doesn’t remember, then that is not an opportunity to cross-examine.
- Here: Child is honestly unavailable. Cannot testify to what happened, but unavailability does not matter b/c not testimonial to begin with. Rather, try to get in as a medical statement.