Rule 801(d) Flashcards
Rule 801(d)(1) A declarant-witness’s prior statement
(A) Prior inconsistent statements
(B) Prior consistent statements
(C) Statements of identification
Rule 801(d)(2): Opposing parties’ statements
(A) A party’s own statements
(B) Adopted statements
(C) Statements by spokespersons
(D) Statements by agents
(E) Coconspirators’ statements
Opposing parties’ statements: The party’s own words
- Is it her own statement?
- Statements against interest?
The party can’t introduce their own statements; the opposing party has to introduce it.
Opposing parties’ statements:
Adopted admissions
- Did they hear? Understand?
- At liberty to respond?
- Do circumstances call for a response?
- Fail to respond or responds and fails to rebut
Silence after Miranda rights are read cannot be used as adopted admission.
Can use silence to impeach if Miranda rights have not been read
Opposing parties’ statements: Statements of agents
Want to know the relationship; is he an employee of the management company? When he made those statements? And does the statement concern a matter in scope?
The judge determines this by a preponderance of the evidence.
801(d) overarching requirements:
- Declarant must be a witness
- Witness must testify
- Witness must be subject to cross examination
Rule 801(d)(1)(A)
Must be an inconsistent statement
Must be given under penalty of perjury
If court believes witness is lying then it treats as inconsistent.
If no memory then is witness subject to cross-examination? Yes, can cross but not very effective
The standard for the Judge is by a preponderance of the evidence
Rule 801(d)(1)(B)
Must be consistent with declarant’s testimony
And then must be to rebut an express or implied charge that the declarant recently fabricated it, OR to rehabilitate the declarant’s credibility as a witness when attacked on another ground
Then Tome adds a requirement that is not in the rule: Prior consistent must be made before the motive to lie arose → i.e. before the DA offers defendant a deal
Rule 801(d)(1)(C)
Past statement identifies a person and was made after Declarant perceived the person
Memory of faces fade quicker than memory of what happened
Despite the fact that a witness may not remember anything, he is subject to cross examination if he is there and willing to undergo cross examination under rule 801
- Although under 804 no memory makes declarant unavailable
- How is this possible? Justice Scalia says different rules