United States v. Finch ( 2020 )


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  •        This opinion is subject to revision before publication
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE    ARMED FORCES
    _______________
    UNITED STATES
    Appellee
    v.
    David M. FINCH, Specialist
    United States Army, Appellant
    No. 19-0298
    Crim. App. No. 20170501
    Argued December 4, 2019—Decided March 3, 2020
    Military Judges: Jeffery R. Nance and Christopher E. Martin
    For Appellant: William E. Cassara, Esq. (argued); Captain
    Steven J. Dray (on brief).
    For Appellee: Captain Brian Jones (argued); Colonel Steven
    Haight, Lieutenant Colonel Wayne H. Williams, and Major
    Craig Schapira (on brief).
    Judge OHLSON delivered the opinion of the Court, in
    which Chief Judge STUCKY, and Judges RYAN,
    SPARKS, and MAGGS, joined.
    _______________
    Judge OHLSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
    A military judge sitting as a general court-martial
    convicted Appellant, contrary to his pleas, of one specification
    of violating a lawful general regulation for providing alcohol
    to a minor, one specification of sexual abuse of a child, and
    three specifications of rape of a child who had not attained the
    age of twelve years, in violation of Articles 92 and 120b,
    Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), 
    10 U.S.C. §§ 892
    ,
    920b (2012). The convening authority approved the adjudged
    sentence of a dishonorable discharge, confinement for six
    years, and a reduction to the grade of E-1. The United States
    Army Court of Criminal Appeals set aside the finding of guilty
    for the Article 92, UCMJ, offense, but affirmed the remaining
    findings of guilty for the Article 120b, UCMJ, offenses. United
    States v. Finch, 
    78 M.J. 781
    , 792 (A. Ct. Crim. App. 2019).
    We granted review on the following issue:
    United States v. Finch, No. 19-0298/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    Whether the military judge erred in admitting over
    defense objection the video-recorded interview of AH
    by CID because it was not a prior consistent
    statement under Mil. R. Evid. 801(d)(1)(B).
    United States v. Finch, 
    79 M.J. 220
     (C.A.A.F. 2019) (order
    granting review).
    Pursuant to the provisions of Military Rule of Evidence
    (M.R.E.) 801(d)(1)(B), we hold that only those portions of a
    witness’s prior statement that are consistent with the
    witness’s courtroom testimony may be deemed admissible at
    trial. We further hold that the prior consistent statement
    must serve one of the express purposes cited by M.R.E.
    801(d)(1)(B): it must either rebut an express or implied charge
    against the declarant of recent fabrication or improper
    influence or motive, or it must rehabilitate the declarant’s
    credibility “when attacked on another ground.” 
    Id.
    In the instant case, we conclude that the military judge
    erred in admitting the video-recorded interview of AH in its
    entirety. However, this error did not materially prejudice
    Appellant’s substantial rights. Accordingly, we affirm the
    judgment of the lower court.
    I. Facts
    A. Background
    Appellant is accused of sexually assaulting his eleven-
    year-old stepdaughter, AH, on two different occasions during
    the summer and fall of 2015 while Appellant was stationed at
    Fort Bragg, North Carolina. Prior to the sexual assaults, the
    two had a close relationship and often spent time together, to
    include various outdoor activities and frequent camping trips
    to nearby Mott Lake. However, AH later reported that
    Appellant had sexually assaulted and raped her during two
    of these camping trips.
    On September 25, 2015, AH told her mother that
    Appellant had inappropriately touched her. AH’s mother
    asked Appellant about the allegations, but she did not contact
    law enforcement. Approximately two weeks after AH
    disclosed the sexual assaults, AH’s mother gave birth to
    Appellant’s child. On March 11, 2016, AH ran away from
    home to her friend’s house. The friend’s mother asked AH why
    2
    United States v. Finch, No. 19-0298/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    she ran away, and AH disclosed the sexual assaults to her.
    The friend’s mother promptly notified the police. On March
    12, 2016, a special agent with the United States Army
    Criminal Investigation Command (CID) conducted an
    interview with AH about the sexual assaults and videotaped
    the interview. This case went to trial in September of 2017.
    B. Court-Martial Proceedings
    The Government opened its case-in-chief with testimony
    from AH about the sexual assaults. After AH testified and
    was impeached during cross-examination, assistant trial
    counsel moved to admit Prosecution Exhibit 3, the videotaped
    interview of AH conducted by CID. A detailed comparison of
    the content of AH’s testimony on the stand to the content of
    AH’s account of events during the CID interview is essential
    to resolve the issue currently before this Court because in
    order for the videotaped interview to be admissible as a prior
    consistent statement under M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B), it must in
    fact be “consistent” with AH’s in-court testimony.
    1. AH’s In-Court Testimony
    In regard to the first instance of sexual assault, AH
    testified that while lying in her sleeping bag in a tent at Mott
    Lake with Appellant next to her, she remembered waking up,
    still feeling half asleep, and realizing that Appellant was
    rubbing her vagina over her clothing. While at first AH
    thought it was a dream, she testified that she later realized it
    actually happened.
    AH next testified about the second instance of sexual
    assault while she was in her sleeping bag in a tent at Mott
    Lake. In particular, AH recounted the following: Appellant
    draped his arm around her stomach, moved his hands to her
    vagina and rubbed it on top of her clothing, put his hands
    inside her underwear, inserted his finger into her vagina,
    subsequently removed his finger from her vagina and
    inserted it into her mouth, pulled her pants down, and
    inserted his penis into her vagina. AH stated that she was not
    sore from Appellant’s penetration the next morning, and that
    it did not hurt to walk.
    AH also testified that she made several disclosures to
    different peers and adults about the sexual assaults.
    3
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    Opinion of the Court
    Specifically, she described first telling her friend AC, next
    telling her mother, telling some other friends to include BM,
    and then telling the school guidance counselor. Finally, AH
    explained that she ran away from home because she had
    “got[ten] sick” of trying to “block everything out.”
    2. AH’s Account in Videotaped Interview
    A CID special agent interviewed AH about the sexual
    assault allegations she made against Appellant. AH’s in-court
    testimony in some ways closely tracked her account of events
    during the CID interview, but in other ways diverged from it.
    AH began by describing the first instance of sexual
    assault. AH explained that she had just woken up and was
    still half asleep when she noticed Appellant rubbing her
    vagina over her clothing. In the moment, AH thought she was
    dreaming, but she later came to realize that the touching had
    actually happened. This description mirrors AH’s in-court
    testimony.
    Next, AH described the second instance of sexual assault.
    AH detailed the following: she was lying on her side facing
    the tent wall, Appellant was behind her and put his arm
    around her body, Appellant moved his hand down and started
    “petting” her vagina, Appellant pulled her pants down,
    Appellant inserted his finger into her vagina, and Appellant
    inserted his penis into her vagina. This description is also
    similar to AH’s in-court testimony. However, during trial, AH
    described Appellant removing his fingers from her vagina and
    then placing them inside her mouth, and she did not include
    that detail during the CID interview.
    Additionally, AH stated in the CID interview that she felt
    pain during and after the sexual assault, and gave details
    regarding the position of the sleeping bag in the tent and the
    fact that the zipper on the sleeping bag was broken. At trial,
    AH testified that she did not feel pain, and she did not
    mention the sleeping bag details at all.
    Later in the interview, AH told CID that her mother was
    the first person she told about the sexual assaults. AH
    described next disclosing the information to her friend BM,
    and later to a school counselor. At trial, AH named all of these
    4
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    Opinion of the Court
    people when discussing her disclosures, but she recalled
    telling them in a different order. Additionally, in the CID
    interview, AH explained that she had run away from home
    because her mother did nothing about the sexual assaults
    even though she was aware that they had happened.
    Finally, AH told CID that after she disclosed the sexual
    assaults to her mother, her mother started requiring
    Appellant to stay away from their house when AH invited
    girlfriends over to spend the night. AH did not make any
    reference to these limitations during her testimony at trial.
    3. Defense Theory of the Case
    Throughout the court-martial, trial defense counsel
    broadly attacked AH’s credibility as a victim and as a witness.
    The defense theory of the case was that the sexual assaults
    never occurred, AH made up the original story and then
    continued to fabricate new versions of the story to support her
    lie, and she did all of this to get attention from her friends and
    from her pregnant mother. As noted in greater detail below,
    trial defense counsel attacked AH’s credibility by (1)
    impeaching AH during cross-examination, (2) introducing
    witnesses to testify that AH disclosed something different to
    them about the sexual assaults than what she testified to at
    trial, and (3) introducing character witnesses to testify to
    AH’s bad character for truthfulness.
    First, during the cross-examination of AH, trial defense
    counsel impeached AH based on inconsistencies between her
    prior statements and her trial testimony. Specifically, trial
    defense counsel pointed out that AH testified at trial about
    Appellant placing his fingers inside her mouth, but that AH
    failed to mention that in the CID interview. Additionally, trial
    defense counsel attempted to establish that AH had a motive
    to fabricate the sexual assaults based on her dislike of her
    mother and desire to live with someone else. The following
    exchange occurred:
    [Trial Defense Counsel (TDC)]: Did you tell CID that your
    mom only cares about herself?
    [AH]: Yeah.
    5
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    Opinion of the Court
    [TDC]: And she only wants to live in a perfect, little world
    with her perfect, little child?
    [AH]: Yes, ma’am.
    [TDC]: That’s a yes? And you don’t want to live with her
    right now?
    [Affirmative response by the witness.]
    [TDC]: At the time you were talking with CID you didn’t
    want to live with your parents?
    [AH]: I still don’t really want to now.
    (Sixth set of brackets in original.)
    Second, trial defense counsel continued to attack AH’s
    credibility by questioning other witnesses about the version
    of the sexual assaults that AH shared with them, and
    highlighting     aspects    of    those   stories—omissions,
    inconsistencies, and timeline differences—that diverged from
    the version of the assaults AH testified about at trial. Third,
    trial defense counsel introduced AH’s mother and
    grandfather as character witnesses who testified,
    respectively, that AH is “pretty dishonest” and is “a
    fabricating liar.”
    4. Admission of Videotaped Interview
    During the Government’s case-in-chief, assistant trial
    counsel moved to admit the videotaped CID interview of AH.
    Trial defense counsel objected to the admission of the
    videotape on the basis of relevance, hearsay, and
    cumulativeness. In response, assistant trial counsel argued:
    Your Honor, the defense throughout their cross-
    examination of the victim, [AH], has both attacked
    her credibility, the timeline, they’ve talked to other
    witnesses about the timeline itself. So given the fact
    that her credibility has been attacked, her memory
    has been attacked, potential motives to fabricate
    have been raised, the [G]overnment’s position at this
    point is that the DVD interview that [CID]
    conducted with [AH], the victim in this case,
    qualifies as a prior consistent statement and would
    qualify for ground as entered—as an exhibit, Your
    Honor.
    6
    United States v. Finch, No. 19-0298/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    Upon learning that the prosecution’s specific basis for
    admission of the videotape was as a prior consistent
    statement, trial defense counsel responded by arguing that it
    was mere repetition and failed to meet the admissibility
    requirements of a prior consistent statement.
    The military judge conceded on the record, “I haven’t seen
    the video obviously.” However, he nevertheless overruled the
    defense objections, finding the videotape admissible under
    M.R.E. 801. In so doing, he explained why the video—a video
    he had not seen—was not cumulative, but he made no other
    findings of fact or law. He made no specific comments about
    why he concluded the videotape was admissible as non-
    hearsay under M.R.E. 801, nor did he specify under which
    subsection of M.R.E. 801 he believed the videotape to be
    admissible. Further, the military judge never came back on
    the record after watching the videotape to explain which
    aspects of it he would be considering for which evidentiary
    purposes. Later in the trial, the military judge simply noted,
    “And of course I’ll give all evidence the weight it—that it
    deserves.”
    II. Standard of Review
    “This Court reviews a military judge’s decision to admit
    evidence for an abuse of discretion.” United States v. Frost, 
    79 M.J. 104
    , 109 (C.A.A.F. 2019) (internal quotation marks
    omitted) (quoting United States v. Humphreys, 
    57 M.J. 83
    , 90
    (C.A.A.F. 2002)).
    A military judge abuses his discretion when his
    findings of fact are clearly erroneous, the court’s
    decision is influenced by an erroneous view of the
    law, or the military judge’s decision on the issue at
    hand is outside the range of choices reasonably
    arising from the applicable facts and the law.
    
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting United
    States v. Kelly, 
    72 M.J. 237
    , 242 (C.A.A.F. 2013)).
    III. Applicable Law
    In 2016, the President amended M.R.E. 801(d). Exec.
    Order No. 13,730, 
    3 C.F.R. § 492
     (2016). As amended, the
    relevant part of the rule states:
    7
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    Opinion of the Court
    (d) Statements that Are Not Hearsay. A statement
    that meets the following conditions is not hearsay:
    (1) A Declarant-Witness’ Prior Statement. The
    declarant testifies and is subject to cross-
    examination about a prior statement, and the
    statement:
    ....
    (B) is consistent with the declarant’s testimony and
    is offered:
    (i) to rebut an express or implied charge that the
    declarant recently fabricated it or acted from a
    recent improper influence or motive in so testifying;
    or
    (ii) to rehabilitate the declarant’s credibility as a
    witness when attacked on another ground; . . . .
    M.R.E. 801(d) (2016).
    The proponent of evidence has the burden of
    demonstrating that the evidence is admissible. United States
    v. Palmer, 
    55 M.J. 205
    , 208 (C.A.A.F. 2001) (citing United
    States v. Shover, 
    45 M.J. 119
    , 122 (C.A.A.F. 1996)). Because
    the Government argued at trial that the videotaped interview
    was admissible under both subparts of M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B),
    and because the military judge failed to state under which
    subpart he admitted the videotape, this opinion will address
    the amended rule in its entirety.
    A. Threshold Admissibility Requirements for
    M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B)
    Hearsay is an out-of-court statement offered into evidence
    to prove the truth of the matter asserted. M.R.E. 801(c).
    Hearsay generally is not admissible in courts-martial. M.R.E.
    802. However, a prior consistent statement made by a
    declarant-witness is not hearsay if certain criteria are met.
    M.R.E. 801(d)(1). Specifically, the plain language of the rule
    provides these three threshold admissibility requirements:
    (1) the declarant of the out-of-court statement must testify,
    (2) the declarant must be subject to cross-examination about
    the prior statement, and (3) the statement must be consistent
    with the declarant’s testimony. M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B); see also
    Frost, 79 M.J. at 109–10. In the instant case, both parties
    8
    United States v. Finch, No. 19-0298/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    agree that the first two requirements were met. The question
    remains, however, whether AH’s videotaped statement to
    CID was sufficiently “consistent” with the declarant’s in-court
    testimony.
    The language of M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B) is identical to the
    corresponding federal rule, and as such, the interpretation of
    the term “consistent” by other federal courts of appeals is
    instructive. Manual for Courts-Martial, United States,
    Analysis of the Military Rules of Evidence app. 22 at A22-61
    (2016 ed.) [hereinafter Drafters’ Analysis]. The United States
    Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has held that “the rule
    allows the use of earlier statements that are generally
    consistent with the testimony at trial.” United States v.
    Muhammad, 512 F. App’x 154, 166 (3d Cir. 2013) (internal
    quotation marks omitted) (citation omitted). Similarly, the
    United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit has
    explained, “a prior consistent statement need not be identical
    in every detail to the declarant’s . . . testimony at trial.”
    United States v. Vest, 
    842 F.2d 1319
    , 1329 (1st Cir. 1988).
    Rather, the prior statement need only be “for the most part
    consistent” and in particular, be “consistent with respect to .
    . . fact[s] of central importance to the trial.” 
    Id.
    B. M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B)(i)
    For a prior statement to be admissible substantively as
    non-hearsay under M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B)(i), it first must meet
    each of the threshold admissibility requirements outlined
    above, and it also must be offered “to rebut an express or
    implied charge that the declarant recently fabricated [the in-
    court testimony] or acted from a recent improper influence or
    motive in so testifying.” M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B)(i).
    The 2016 amendment to M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B) creates no
    new law with respect to the admissibility of prior consistent
    statements to rebut a charge of recent fabrication or improper
    influence or motive. See Drafters’ Analysis at A22-61. What
    was previously admissible under M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B) (2012)
    is now admissible under M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B)(i) (2016). As
    such, this Court’s long-standing line of precedents
    interpreting the old version of the rule, as recently discussed
    in Frost, 79 M.J. at 110, continue to apply with full force to
    the new version of M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B)(i).
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    Opinion of the Court
    C. M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B)(ii)
    The 2016 amendment to M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B) added a
    second type of prior consistent statement that is now
    substantively admissible as non-hearsay. A determination of
    the proper parameters of this new provision, M.R.E.
    801(d)(1)(B)(ii), presents an issue of first impression before
    this Court. However, an examination of the plain text of the
    rule, our own case law regarding common law admissibility,
    the Drafters’ Analysis regarding the rule change, and
    precedent from other federal circuit courts of appeals
    interpreting the new rule allow us to discern several
    requirements for admissibility.
    The plain text of M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B)(ii) indicates that a
    prior consistent statement is admissible when it serves “to
    rehabilitate the declarant’s credibility as a witness when
    attacked on another ground.” The rule’s mention of “another
    ground” refers to one other than the grounds listed in M.R.E.
    801(d)(1)(B)(i): recent fabrication or an improper influence or
    motive in testifying. The rule itself does not specify what
    types of attacks a prior consistent statement under M.R.E.
    801(d)(1)(B)(ii) is admissible to rebut, but the Drafters’
    Analysis lists “charges of inconsistency or faulty memory” as
    two examples. Drafters’ Analysis at A22-61.
    Preceding the 2016 change to M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B) and the
    2014 change to the sister rule in the Federal Rules of
    Evidence, prior consistent statements had long been
    admissible at common law for the limited purpose of
    rehabilitating a witness’s credibility. See, e.g., United States
    v. Coleman, 
    72 M.J. 184
    , 188 (C.A.A.F. 2013) (“Even if the
    military judge would have refused to admit the prior
    consistent statement for the truth of the matter asserted, it
    still would have been admissible simply to corroborate, or
    rehabilitate, the in-court testimony of a witness.” (internal
    quotation marks omitted) (citation omitted)); United States v.
    Simonelli, 
    237 F.3d 19
     (1st Cir. 2001); United States v. Ellis,
    
    121 F.3d 908
    , 919 (4th Cir. 1997). The effect of the rule change
    is to admit prior consistent statements for their value in
    rehabilitating a witness’s credibility as has always been the
    practice, and now also as substantive evidence for the truth
    of the matter asserted. Drafters’ Analysis at A22-61.
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    The Drafters’ Analysis explains:
    The amendment does not change the traditional
    and well-accepted limits on bringing prior consistent
    statements before the factfinder for credibility
    purposes. It does not allow impermissible bolstering
    of a witness. As before, prior consistent statements
    under the amendment may be brought before the
    factfinder only if they properly rehabilitate a witness
    whose credibility has been attacked. As before, to be
    admissible for rehabilitation, a prior consistent
    statement must satisfy the strictures of Rule 403. As
    before, the trial court has ample discretion to
    exclude prior consistent statements that are
    cumulative accounts of an event. The amendment
    does not make any consistent statement admissible
    that was not admissible previously—the only
    difference is that prior consistent statements
    otherwise admissible for rehabilitation are now
    admissible substantively as well.
    
    Id.
     (emphasis added). Thus, the permissible uses of
    admitted evidence have changed, but the requirements to
    admit that evidence have not. It is not the case that under
    M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B)(ii), all prior consistent statements are
    now automatically admissible following impeachment on any
    ground. Rather, the military judge must make a
    determination that each prior consistent statement is
    relevant to rehabilitate the witness on one of the grounds
    cited in M.R.E. 801(d)(1).
    The federal circuit courts that have applied Fed. R. Evid.
    801(d)(1)(b)(ii) have done so by ascertaining the type of
    impeachment that has been attempted, and then evaluating
    whether the prior consistent statements offered for admission
    would actually rehabilitate the declarant’s credibility as a
    witness. For example, the United States Court of Appeals for
    the Tenth Circuit recently held that because the opposing
    party “did not attempt to ‘attack[] [the witness’s credibility]
    on another ground’—that is, he did not extract inconsistent
    statements or accuse the victims of misremembering the
    alleged abuses—. . . admitting the [prior consistent]
    statements would not rehabilitate the declarant’s credibility.”
    United States v. Magnan, 756 F. App’x 807, 818 (10th Cir.
    2018) (alterations in original). Similarly, the United States
    11
    United States v. Finch, No. 19-0298/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit has held that where the
    prior consistent statements are offered in response to an
    “attack[] on another ground,” and the prior consistent
    statements would function to rehabilitate the witness, the
    statements are admissible under Fed. R. Evid.
    801(d)(1)(B)(ii). United States v. Cox, 
    871 F.3d 479
    , 487 (6th
    Cir. 2017) (internal quotation marks omitted) (upholding the
    district court’s admission of a child’s prior consistent
    statement where the opposing party had attacked the child
    on the basis of a faulty memory); United States v. J.A.S., Jr.,
    
    862 F.3d 543
    , 545 (6th Cir. 2017) (finding a prior consistent
    statement to be admissible where defense counsel sought to
    impeach the victim by prior inconsistent statement).
    Thus, in sum, for a prior consistent statement to be
    admissible under M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B)(ii), it must satisfy the
    following: (1) the declarant of the out-of-court statement must
    testify, (2) the declarant must be subject to cross-examination
    about the prior statement, (3) the statement must be
    consistent with the declarant’s testimony, (4) the declarant’s
    credibility as a witness must have been “attacked on another
    ground” other than the ones listed in M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B)(i),
    and (5) the prior consistent statement must actually be
    relevant to rehabilitate the witness’s credibility on the basis
    on which he or she was attacked. The proponent of the
    evidence bears the burden of articulating the relevancy link
    between the prior consistent statement and how it will
    rehabilitate the witness with respect to the particular type of
    impeachment that has occurred. See Palmer, 55 M.J. at 208.
    IV. Analysis
    A. Erroneous Admission of Videotaped Interview
    As explained in greater detail below, in the instant case
    the military judge abused his discretion in admitting the
    entire videotaped interview of AH as a prior consistent
    statement under M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B). This conclusion is
    predicated on the fact that (1) he failed to put any findings of
    fact or conclusions of law on the record, thereby forfeiting the
    deference his ruling typically would have been given, (2) he
    failed to review the video before admitting it, and (3) he
    admitted the entire video interview rather than limiting the
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    United States v. Finch, No. 19-0298/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    evidence to those portions of the interview that actually
    contained prior consistent statements.
    1. Military Judge’s Mishandling of the Issue
    The military judge mishandled the issues surrounding the
    admissibility of the videotaped interview, and as such, his
    decision merits little deference. First, the military judge did
    not put any findings of fact or particularized conclusions of
    law on the record with respect to the hearsay objection.1 Trial
    defense counsel objected to the videotaped interview on three
    grounds: relevance, hearsay, and cumulativeness. Aside from
    dismissing the cumulativeness objection, the military judge
    did not include in the record any analysis of why he concluded
    the videotape was admissible as non-hearsay under M.R.E.
    801, nor did he specify under which subsection of M.R.E. 801
    he believed the videotape to be admissible. He simply
    stated—without more—“I find it is admissible under M.R.E.
    801.” This Court has emphasized the importance and effect of
    a military judge making a clear record. United States v.
    Flesher, 
    73 M.J. 303
    , 311 (C.A.A.F. 2014). Specifically, “where
    the military judge places on the record his analysis and
    application of the law to the facts, deference is clearly
    warranted.” 
    Id. at 312
    . On the contrary, “[i]f the military
    judge fails to place his findings and analysis on the record,
    less deference will be accorded.” 
    Id.
     This Court has favorably
    quoted the United States Army Court of Criminal Appeals for
    the following proposition:
    1  We are not suggesting, of course, that military judges must
    provide reasons on the record for every ruling on the admissibility
    of evidence. We are mindful that during a court-martial, counsel
    may object during the examination of a witness, and the military
    judge may properly rule on these objections simply by stating “sus-
    tained” or “overruled.” We do not seek to change this practice. How-
    ever, where, as here, an evidentiary issue is complex and/or merits
    a written filing by a party, we deem it appropriate for a military
    judge to place on the record his or her reasoning behind the resolu-
    tion of that issue. As we have noted, “it is difficult to defer to a de-
    cision when the record does not reflect what the basis of the decision
    was.” United States v. Acton, 
    38 M.J. 330
    , 334 (C.M.A. 1993). It is
    all the more difficult when, as here, the record demonstrates that
    the military judge did not even review the evidence before ruling on
    its admissibility.
    13
    United States v. Finch, No. 19-0298/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    When the standard of review is abuse of discretion,
    and we do not have the benefit of the military judge’s
    analysis of the facts before him, we cannot grant the
    great deference we generally accord to a trial judge’s
    factual findings because we have no factual findings
    to review. Nor do we have the benefit of the military
    judge’s legal reasoning in determining whether he
    abused his discretion . . . .
    
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting United
    States v. Benton, 
    54 M.J. 717
    , 725 (A. Ct. Crim. App. 2001)).
    On this basis alone, the military judge’s decision to admit the
    videotaped interview warrants little deference.
    Second, the military judge admitted this evidence without
    viewing it beforehand. Although we recognize this was a
    military judge-alone trial and the videotape was quite
    lengthy, the proper course of action was for the military judge
    to review the proffered evidence before making an
    admissibility determination. The military judge’s failure to do
    so was compounded by the fact that he never came back on
    the record after he belatedly did view the admitted video to
    clarify which parts he was admitting, and for which purposes
    he would consider that evidence.2 Instead, he made the
    perfunctory statement, “I’ll give all evidence the weight it—
    that it deserves.” In light of these circumstances, we decline
    to defer to the military judge’s admissibility determination.
    2. Admission of Entire Videotaped Interview
    When a party moves to introduce a prior consistent
    statement under M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B), the statement must be
    “generally consistent” with the declarant’s testimony at trial
    to be admissible. Muhammad, 512 F. App’x at 166 (internal
    quotation marks omitted) (citation omitted). To the extent a
    prior   statement     contains    substantive     information
    inconsistent with the declarant’s in-court testimony, those
    material inconsistent aspects of the statement are hearsay
    and are not admissible under M.R.E. 801(d)(1)(B). Thus, the
    2  Assistant trial counsel requested in the interest of time that
    the military judge publish and view the videotape during the mili-
    tary judge’s deliberations, rather than publishing the video in open
    court at the time it was admitted. Trial defense counsel had no ob-
    jection to this, and the military judge agreed to do so.
    14
    United States v. Finch, No. 19-0298/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    party moving to introduce a prior statement has a duty to
    identify those portions of the statement that are consistent
    with the witness’s testimony, and then to demonstrate the
    relevancy link between the prior consistent statement and
    how it will rehabilitate the witness’s credibility. See 1
    Weinstein’s Federal Evidence § 103.22 (2019) (“In addition to
    making a sufficient offer of proof, the proponent of evidence
    must convince the trial court that the evidence is actually
    admissible.”). This mandate does not require counsel to
    remove every single inconsistency in a statement, since “a
    prior consistent statement need not be identical in every
    detail to the declarant’s . . . testimony at trial.” Vest, 
    842 F.2d at 1329
    .3 Rather, the moving party must omit the inconsistent
    parts of the statement that pertain to “fact[s] of central
    importance to the trial.” 
    Id.
    In the instant case, many portions of the videotaped
    interview were “generally consistent” with AH’s in-court
    testimony. Muhammad, 512 F. App’x at 166 (internal
    quotation marks omitted) (citation omitted). Most of the
    discrepancies that did occur—such as the order in which AH
    told people about the sexual assaults; the operability of the
    zipper on the sleeping bag); and the position of AH’s sleeping
    bag in the tent—were relatively inconsequential. As such,
    these particular incongruities between AH’s in-court
    testimony and her videotaped interview did not render the
    videotaped interview so inconsistent as to fail the third prong
    of the threshold admissibility requirements of M.R.E.
    801(d)(1)(B). The same cannot be said, however, of every
    portion of AH’s CID interview.
    We take particular note of a certain statement by AH on
    the videotape that, in the words of the defense on appeal,
    “tended to paint Appellant in an exceptionally bad light and
    lend credibility to the [sexual assault] allegation.” Brief for
    Appellant at 25, United States v. Finch, No. 19-0298 (C.A.A.F.
    3 We also note that under the rule of completeness outlined in
    M.R.E. 106, a party may seek to admit additional portions of a prior
    statement on grounds of fairness. See United States v. Rodriguez,
    
    56 M.J. 336
    , 339 (C.A.A.F. 2002) (explaining that the rule of com-
    pleteness serves to prevent a court from being misled by statements
    taken out of context).
    15
    United States v. Finch, No. 19-0298/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    Sept. 9, 2019). Specifically, AH explained to CID that after
    she told her mother that Appellant had sexually assaulted
    her, AH’s mother began to require Appellant to stay away
    from their home when AH invited her female friends to spend
    the night for a sleepover. This statement was not “consistent”
    with anything AH testified to at the court-martial, it tended
    to bolster AH’s credibility, and it pertained to an issue “of
    central importance to the trial”: whether AH’s account of the
    sexual assaults was truthful. Vest, 
    842 F.2d at 1329
    . Thus the
    prior statement was flatly inadmissible under M.R.E.
    801(d)(1)(B). Therefore, the question that remains is whether
    the erroneous admission of this statement was prejudicial to
    Appellant.
    B. Prejudice
    When this Court finds that a military judge erred in
    allowing evidence to be admitted, the government bears the
    burden of demonstrating that the admission of that erroneous
    evidence was harmless. Frost, 79 M.J. at 111 (citing Flesher,
    73 M.J. at 318). For preserved nonconstitutional evidentiary
    errors, the test for prejudice is “whether the error had a
    substantial influence on the findings.” Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted) (quoting United States v. Kohlbek, 
    78 M.J. 326
    , 334 (C.A.A.F. 2019)). As reflected below, in conducting
    its prejudice analysis, this Court weighs: “(1) the strength of
    the Government’s case, (2) the strength of the defense case,
    (3) the materiality of the evidence in question, and (4) the
    quality of the evidence in question.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation
    marks omitted) (quoting Kohlbek, 78 M.J. at 334).
    We first note that the Government’s case was not
    especially strong. The Government was not able to produce
    any forensic evidence, physical evidence, or witnesses who
    had first-hand information about the sexual assaults
    independent of the disclosures which AH made to them. See
    id. at 111–12. Although uncorroborated testimony of a single
    victim may certainly be sufficient to prove an offense beyond
    a reasonable doubt, in the instant case AH’s courtroom
    testimony was undermined by seemingly impartial—or even
    friendly—witnesses. For example, AH testified that she
    disclosed the sexual assaults to a school counselor. However,
    the school counselor testified that this never happened.
    16
    United States v. Finch, No. 19-0298/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    Further, AH’s friends testified at trial about versions of the
    sexual assaults that AH had told them, and these versions
    differed significantly from what AH told the court-martial.
    For example, two witnesses testified that AH told them that
    at least one of the sexual assaults occurred in her bedroom at
    home—not in a tent at Mott Lake.
    Second, the defense made significant inroads in advancing
    their theory of the case that AH fabricated the sexual assault
    story. Not only was defense counsel able to elicit
    inconsistencies in AH’s testimony through cross-examination
    and numerous extrinsic witnesses, she also was able to call
    AH’s credibility into question by introducing testimony about
    AH’s bad character for truthfulness. Moreover, defense
    counsel put forward plausible theories during closing
    argument regarding potential motives for AH to lie about the
    sexual assaults, such as AH’s desire for attention from her
    friends and mother, as well as AH’s desire to have an excuse
    to run away to her boyfriend’s house and live separately from
    her family.
    Third, the materiality and quality of the improperly
    admitted evidence initially raise significant concerns. As
    noted above, AH stated on the videotape that after she told
    her mother that Appellant had sexually assaulted her, AH’s
    mother began to require Appellant to stay away from the
    house when AH invited her female friends for a sleepover. The
    military judge, as the finder of fact in this case, reasonably
    could have drawn an inference from this statement that AH’s
    mother found AH’s allegation of sexual abuse by Appellant to
    be credible. This conclusion not only could have bolstered
    AH’s credibility as the victim-witness, but it also could have
    undermined the sworn testimony of AH’s mother at the court-
    martial that, in her personal assessment, AH had not “been
    truthful at all throughout her life” and was “always . . . pretty
    dishonest with me.” As a consequence, this portion of AH’s
    videotaped statement not only was inconsistent with her
    testimony at the court-martial, but it also pertained to “fact[s]
    of central importance to the trial.” Vest, 
    842 F.2d at 1329
    .
    In light of the relative weight of these factors, the
    improper admission of this portion of AH’s videotaped
    statement presented the Government with a significant
    17
    United States v. Finch, No. 19-0298/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    burden in demonstrating that the military judge’s error did
    not have a substantial influence on the findings in this case.
    However, for the reasons cited below, we conclude that the
    Government has met its burden.
    First, AH’s statement about the sleepovers constituted a
    mere passing reference in a very lengthy video. Second, the
    defense points to no instances in the course of the trial where
    the Government sought to exploit this portion of AH’s
    videotaped statement, and we can find no such instance in the
    joint appendix submitted to this Court by the parties.
    Third, AH’s definitive statement at one point in the
    videotaped interview that Appellant was not permitted to
    stay in the family home whenever she had a sleepover was
    shown to be, at best, imprecise. Specifically, the following
    exchange occurred between the CID agent and AH:
    [CID AGENT]: I want to make sure I understood you
    right. Did you say mom makes [Appellant] go to
    another friend’s house?
    A.H.: Like to another, like someone he knows.
    [CID AGENT]: Did she make him do that when you
    have girlfriends that stay the night?
    A.H.: (Affirmative head nod.)
    [CID AGENT]: Okay. Are there any times when your
    girlfriend[s] stay [the] night at your house and
    [Appellant] stays the [night] too?
    A.H.: No.
    At an earlier point in the interview, however, AH stated
    that “mom usually ma[d]e [Appellant] go to a friend’s house”
    when AH had sleepovers. (Emphasis added.) In fact, later in
    the interview, AH cited a specific instance when she had a
    friend, “B,” at her house for a sleepover—after she had made
    the sexual assault allegations against Appellant—and AH’s
    mother permitted Appellant to stay in the home overnight.
    Moreover, a different one of AH’s friends, “AC,” testified at
    the court-martial that she also had a sleepover at AH’s house
    after AH had disclosed the sexual assault to her mother, and
    AC stated that Appellant remained in the home. As can be
    seen then, AH’s seeming assertion at one point in the
    18
    United States v. Finch, No. 19-0298/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    videotaped interview that her mother had a strict policy of
    forbidding Appellant from staying in the family home once
    the mother learned of the sexual assault allegations was not
    accurate. Consequently, any negative inferences the military
    judge might have drawn from this assertion would, at the
    very least, have been greatly diluted. In fact, instead of
    prejudicing Appellant, this scenario just as easily may have
    caused the military judge, as the finder of fact, to view AH’s
    videotaped statement—and, by extension, her courtroom
    testimony—with an increased degree of skepticism in regard
    to its overall precision and accuracy.
    Fourth, and perhaps most importantly, independent
    evidence in the same vein as AH’s statement about sleepovers
    in the videotaped interview was admitted at the court-martial
    without defense objection. Specifically, a report regarding a
    medical evaluation performed on AH at a “child abuse
    specialty clinic” stated, inter alia, that since the time that AH
    reported the sexual assault allegations to her mother,
    Appellant “has not been left alone with [AH].” The military
    judge could have drawn from this properly admitted report
    the same information and the same inference that he could
    have drawn from the improperly admitted video; namely, that
    after learning of the sexual assault allegations, AH’s mother
    took steps to protect AH from Appellant because AH’s mother
    found AH’s allegations to be credible and she did not want
    Appellant to have another opportunity to sexually assault
    AH. For these reasons, we conclude that the military judge’s
    error in admitting the entire videotape—which included the
    particular statement at issue—did not have “a substantial
    influence on the findings.” Frost, 79 M.J. at 111 (internal
    quotation marks omitted) (quoting Kohlbek, 78 M.J. at 334).
    Therefore, it was not prejudicial.
    V. Conclusion
    The military judge abused his discretion when he
    erroneously admitted into evidence inconsistent portions of
    AH’s videotaped statement to CID. However, the Government
    has met its burden of demonstrating that this error was
    harmless.
    19
    United States v. Finch, No. 19-0298/AR
    Opinion of the Court
    VI. Decision
    The decision of the United States Army Court of Criminal
    Appeals is affirmed.
    20
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 19-0298-AR

Filed Date: 3/3/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/3/2020