Arthur J. Augustine v. State of Alaska ( 2020 )


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    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
    ARTHUR J. AUGUSTINE,
    Court of Appeals No. A-12659
    Appellant,              Trial Court No. 4FA-12-00482 CR
    v.
    O P I N I O N
    STATE OF ALASKA,
    Appellee.                   No. 2668 — June 26, 2020
    Appeal from the Superior Court, Fourth Judicial District,
    Fairbanks, Michael P. McConahy, Judge.
    Appearances: Josie W. Garton (opening brief) and Laurence
    Blakely (reply brief), Assistant Public Defenders, and Quinlan
    Steiner, Public Defender, Anchorage, for the Appellant. Diane
    L. Wendlandt, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Criminal
    Appeals, Anchorage, and Jahna Lindemuth, Attorney General,
    Juneau, for the Appellee.
    Before: Allard, Chief Judge, Harbison, Judge, and Mannheimer,
    Senior Judge. *
    Judge MANNHEIMER.
    *
    Sitting by assignment made pursuant to Article IV, Section 11 of the Alaska
    Constitution and Administrative Rule 23(a).
    Arthur J. Augustine was convicted of sexually abusing his two grand­
    daughters. The State’s evidence against Augustine was based almost completely on the
    out-of-court statements of the two children. These out-of-court statements were
    conveyed to the jury through video-recorded interviews of the children, as well as the
    hearsay testimony of adults.
    The trial judge admitted the children’s recorded interviews under the
    provisions of Alaska Evidence Rule 801(d)(3). This evidence rule declares that the
    recorded pre-trial statement of a crime victim is exempted from the hearsay rule if the
    victim is under 16 years old, if the child is available for cross-examination at trial, and
    if the out-of-court statement was taken under circumstances that satisfy the other criteria
    listed in subsections (A) through (H) of the evidence rule.
    Most of the criteria listed in Rule 801(d)(3) concern factual issues, such as
    whether the interview with the victim was conducted before the proceeding, and whether
    the victim’s statement was recorded in a format that preserves both the audio and video
    components of the statement. But two of the criteria — (d)(3)(F) and (d)(3)(H) —
    require the trial judge to exercise judgement after evaluating the entirety of the
    circumstances surrounding the victim’s statement.
    Under subsection (d)(3)(F), the State must prove that “the taking of the
    statement as a whole was conducted in a manner that would avoid undue influence [on]
    the victim”. And under subsection (d)(3)(H), the judge must additionally “determine that
    [the out-of-court statement] is sufficiently reliable and trustworthy”, and that “the
    interests of justice are best served by admitting the recording [of the statement] into
    evidence.”
    In our first decision in this case, Augustine v. State, 
    355 P.3d 573
     (Alaska
    App. 2015), we concluded that the trial judge failed to hold the State to its burden of
    proof under subsection (d)(3)(F), and that the trial judge failed to fulfill his role as
    –2–                                        2668
    evidentiary gatekeeper under subsection (d)(3)(H). We therefore remanded Augustine’s
    case to the superior court for reconsideration of whether the children’s out-of-court
    statements should have been admitted. 1
    The superior court has now reconsidered the matter and has issued its
    decision on remand, again ruling that the children’s out-of-court statements were
    properly admitted at Augustine’s trial. But the superior court’s explanation of its
    decision is so conclusory that we cannot meaningfully review the court’s ruling. We
    must therefore remand this case to the superior court once more.
    To fully explain why we conclude that the superior court’s decision is
    inadequate, we must describe the procedural history of this litigation in some detail, and
    the various reasons why one might potentially doubt the credibility or reliability of the
    children’s out-of-court statements. Only then can readers understand why the superior
    court failed to offer a sufficient explanation of its ruling to allow meaningful appellate
    review.
    The original litigation regarding the admissibility of the children’s
    recorded interviews, and this Court’s decision on direct appeal
    State Trooper Investigator Yvonne Howell was assigned to investigate
    Augustine’s potential sexual abuse of his two granddaughters, M.Y. and T.Y. During
    her investigation, Howell conducted four video-recorded interviews of the girls. (Howell
    interviewed each girl twice, on succeeding days.)
    About three weeks before Augustine’s trial was scheduled to begin, the
    State filed a motion seeking the trial court’s permission to introduce Investigator
    Howell’s four recorded interviews of the children pursuant to Evidence Rule 801(d)(3).
    1
    Augustine, 355 P.3d at 585-86.
    –3–                                        2668
    Augustine’s attorney opposed the State’s motion. In his opposition, the defense attorney
    relied primarily on the information and assertions contained in a nine-page report
    prepared by Dr. John C. Yuille, a forensic psychologist. Dr. Yuille’s report addressed
    several potential problems with the way in which Investigator Howell interviewed M.Y.
    and T.Y., and the resulting potential unreliability of the children’s statements during
    those interviews.
    In our initial opinion in this case, we described Dr. Yuille’s report in some
    detail — not as an endorsement of Dr. Yuille’s analytical approach, or his conclusions,
    but rather to demonstrate that Augustine’s attorney offered substantive reasons to doubt
    the reliability of M.Y.’s and T.Y.’s statements to Investigator Howell.
    In his report, Dr. Yuille offered his views on the general principles that an
    investigator must be aware of, and adhere to, when conducting an investigative interview
    of a child, so as to “maximize the information obtained from the child while minimizing
    the contamination of the child’s memory”. Under these principles, an interviewer should
    (1) avoid leading questions, (2) allow children to take their time and describe things in
    their own words, (3) obtain as much independent information as possible, to give the
    interviewer an objective basis for assessing the credibility of the child’s account, and
    (4) avoid going into the interview with only one working hypothesis, an approach that
    can “blind” the interviewer to other relevant information that the child may have.
    Dr. Yuille’s report explained that he and his colleagues (from Europe and
    the United States) had developed a set of two dozen criteria for evaluating a child’s
    statement about alleged abuse — more specifically, for evaluating whether it is likely
    that the child’s assertions and descriptions are based on memories of real experiences,
    rather than things the child has “only imagined or heard about”.
    According to Dr. Yuille, any investigative interview of a child should be
    evaluated according to the presence or absence of these twenty-four criteria. But among
    –4–                                        2668
    the twenty-four, five criteria are critical, in the sense that all five usually should be
    present if the child is indeed describing real experiences. According to Dr. Yuille, the
    five primary criteria are: (1) the allegation should be of a coherent event, (2) the child
    should describe this event in a spontaneous fashion, (3) the child’s description should
    have the quantity and quality of detail one would expect from this particular child, and,
    if the child has reached school age, (4) the child’s allegation should include an age-
    appropriate sense of time and space, and (5) it should include age-appropriate
    descriptions of the child’s interactions with the perpetrator.
    In addition to describing this general approach to conducting investigative
    interviews of children, Dr. Yuille also offered an evaluation of Investigator Howell’s
    interviews with M.Y. and T.Y. In his introduction to this critique, Dr. Yuille explained
    that he did not intend his remarks to be “viewed as a criticism of the officer”, but rather
    a criticism “of the organization that did not provide [her with] the appropriate training
    to perform this type of interview.”
    According to Dr. Yuille, the four interviews in question (the two interviews
    of M.Y. and the two interviews of T.Y.) were “uniformly of poor quality”. Dr. Yuille
    noted that the interviews were “characterized by the use of leading questions [and]
    multiple choice questions.” Based on the content of Howell’s questions, Dr. Yuille
    characterized the interviews as “attempts to prove what the interviewer [already]
    believed had happened”, rather than open-ended investigative efforts.
    Dr. Yuille then criticized several of the interviewing techniques that Howell
    used when she interviewed the children:
    • Howell allowed the children to draw throughout the interviews. According to
    Dr. Yuille, “[d]rawing is a distracting activity and it interferes with effective
    interviewing.”
    –5–                                        2668
    • Many of Howell’s questions were “multiple-choice” questions — questions
    that offered the children a selection of answers. According to Dr. Yuille, a
    person who conducts an investigative interview of a child must avoid multiple-
    choice questions because “children ... will typically guess one of the
    alternatives even if they have no memory.” This means that a child’s answers
    to such questions are “often unreliable”.
    • Howell repeatedly used leading questions during all four interviews, making
    it “impossible to tell” whether the children’s answers were reliable or were,
    instead, “a result of the leading nature of the question.”
    (Dr. Yuille listed these examples of leading questions that Howell asked
    the children: “Did he tell you not to tell?”; “Are there any spots on his
    penis?”; “Is there a mole or mark on his penis?”)
    • Dr. Yuille also pointed out that, in response to Howell’s leading questions
    during her interview with T.Y. on February 15th, the girl gave inconsistent
    descriptions of the same event: When Howell asked T.Y., “Did you go?”,
    T.Y. replied, “Yes.” But a little later, when Howell phrased the question as,
    “Did he make you stay?”, T.Y. replied that Augustine made her stay.
    • Based on the tenor of Howell’s questions as a whole, Dr. Yuille concluded that
    the four interviews “were driven by a single hypothesis” — the theory that
    Augustine had committed an offense. According to Dr. Yuille, “[t]he biggest
    single impediment to effective investigation is interviewer bias” — not bias in
    the sense of personal enmity or prejudice, but rather in the sense that the
    interviewer is attempting “to prove a particular hypothesis rather than
    [conduct] an investigation to determine what may or may not have happened.”
    In his concluding paragraph, Dr. Yuille summed up his evaluation of the
    interviews with the following observations:
    –6–                                       2668
    Four poor quality interviews were conducted with
    these two children. No attempt was made to determine what
    may or may not have happened in this case: the interviews
    were intended to prove that the suspect had offended against
    these children. The biased interviews were characterized by
    leading questions and multiple choice questions. Little infor­
    mation was obtained from the children[,] and what was
    obtained was of questionable reliability. Proper, effective,
    non-leading interviews of these children are needed to
    determine what, if anything, may have happened in this case.
    At present, an assessment of the credibility of the allegations
    is impossible.
    When the State formally sought admission of Investigator Howell’s four
    interviews with the children, the defense attorney’s opposition to this evidence rested
    heavily on the conclusions that Dr. Yuille reached in his report. The defense attorney
    echoed four of Dr. Yuille’s primary criticisms of the way that Investigator Howell
    handled the interviews — that Howell had undermined the reliability of the interviews
    by: (1) asking leading questions; (2) asking multiple-choice questions and compound
    questions; (3) asking questions which suggested that Howell already believed the
    accusations against Augustine, and that she was looking for answers that would support
    those accusations; and (4) allowing the girls to distract themselves by drawing pictures
    throughout the interviews.
    In addition, the defense attorney argued that the girls’ statements had been
    influenced by their mother’s pre-interview interactions and conversations with them —
    interactions and conversations which the attorney characterized as both “inflammatory”
    and “suggestive”.
    Over the defense attorney’s objections, the trial judge ruled that the
    recorded statements of the two children met the requirements of Evidence Rule
    801(d)(3), and that those out-of-court statements were therefore admissible.
    –7–                                        2668
    During Augustine’s trial, Dr. Yuille was called as a defense witness. In his
    testimony, Dr. Yuille described the basic principles that criminal investigators should
    adhere to when they interview children, and he reiterated (and expanded upon) many of
    his concerns about the way in which Investigator Howell conducted the interviews in this
    case.
    When the defense attorney asked Dr. Yuille to evaluate those interviews in
    light of the principles and concerns he described in his report and in his testimony,
    Dr. Yuille responded that all four interviews “were poorly conducted”, that they were
    “driven by ... a single hypothesis” (i.e., that Augustine was guilty), and that the
    interviews were “characterized by leading and multiple-choice questions” — types of
    questions which, according to Dr. Yuille, tend to yield unreliable answers. Dr. Yuille
    concluded that, because of the poor quality of these interviews, it was impossible to say
    whether the children gave reliable answers to Investigator Howell’s questions.
    Our remand to the superior court
    As we explained in our previous decision in this case, even though the
    superior court ruled that the children’s statements to Investigator Howell met the
    foundational requirements for admission under Evidence Rule 801(d)(3), the record of
    the superior court proceedings failed to show that the judge meaningfully evaluated
    whether the State had satisfied the requirements of criteria (F) and (H) of that rule. In
    other words, the trial judge failed to meaningfully evaluate whether “the taking of the
    statement[s] as a whole was conducted in a manner that would avoid undue influence
    [on] the victim[s]”, and whether those statements were “sufficiently reliable and
    trustworthy”.
    –8–                                       2668
    We therefore remanded Augustine’s case to the superior court, so that the
    judge could re-assess whether the State established a proper foundation for the
    admissibility of the children’s out-of-court statements under Evidence Rule 801(d)(3).
    Augustine, 355 P.3d at 585–86.
    In addition to the concerns raised by Dr. Yuille’s analysis, we directed the
    superior court to consider one additional circumstance that potentially affected the
    reliability of the children’s out-of-court statements: the fact that the children were
    interviewed by the lead investigator assigned to the case. Id. at 586–87.
    Subsection (F) of Evidence Rule 801(d)(3) requires the State to prove that
    “the taking of the statement as a whole was conducted in a manner that would avoid
    undue influence of the victim”. When Senator Hollis French, the sponsor of proposed
    Evidence Rule 801(d)(3), explained this requirement to the Senate Judiciary Committee,
    he told the Committee that it was important for the interviewer to be specially trained
    because “[k]ids are obviously easily led, and it’s real important that you not put words
    in their mouths, [that] you let them tell their own story”, so that “we’re not convicting
    people based on ... fairy tales.” Senator French warned the Committee members about
    “the early days of child sex abuse prosecutions, when you had folks really taking kids
    by the nose and getting [them to make] some astonishingly awf[ul], untruthful
    statements.” 2
    This insistence that the interview be neutral and non-suggestive is written
    into a separate clause of Evidence Rule 801(d)(3). Under subsection (C) of the rule, the
    prosecutor and the defense attorney are forbidden from participating in the interview;
    indeed, they are prohibited from being present at all. But if the attorneys representing
    the State and the defendant are barred from participating, so as to preserve the neutrality
    2
    Augustine, 355 P.3d at 583, quoting the proceedings of the Senate Judiciary
    Committee on March 31, 2005 pertaining to Senate Bill 117 (24th Legislature).
    –9–                                        2668
    and non-suggestiveness of the interview, the participation of agents of those attorneys
    — their paralegals and their investigators — would seemingly raise the same concerns.
    Here, Investigator Howell already knew about the children’s prior
    accusations of abuse when she interviewed the children, so there was at least a potential
    danger that the children’s responses during the interviews could have been influenced
    by Howell’s knowledge and her expectations — even though, outwardly, there was
    nothing suggestive about the interview procedure. Compare Tegoseak v. State, 
    221 P.3d 345
    , 351–362 (Alaska App. 2009), where we discussed the potential ways in which a
    police interviewer could unconsciously influence the result of a photographic lineup.
    The superior court’s decision on remand, and why we conclude that the
    court’s decision is not adequate to allow meaningful appellate review
    On remand, after allowing the parties to file supplemental briefs,
    Augustine’s trial judge issued a written decision in which he again concluded that the
    State had satisfied the requirements of Evidence Rule 801(d)(3) — in particular, the
    requirements of subsections (F) and (H).
    However, the bulk of the judge’s decision was a summary of the procedural
    history of this litigation (including this Court’s earlier decision on appeal). The judge
    offered only a conclusory explanation for his ruling that the children’s out-of-court
    statements were admissible under Rule 801(d)(3). The judge acknowledged that
    Dr. Yuille had offered substantive reasons to doubt the reliability of the children’s
    statements from the police interviews, but the judge declared that he did not find
    Dr. Yuille’s concerns to be “persuasive”.
    The basic problem now faced by this Court is that the trial judge did not
    explain why he concluded that Dr. Yuille’s concerns were not “persuasive”. The judge
    simply stated that he had examined the record in light of the concerns raised by
    – 10 –                                     2668
    Dr. Yuille, and that he had again concluded that the foundational requirements of
    Evidence Rule 801(d)(3) were satisfied. This conclusory ruling is not sufficient to
    enable this Court to meaningfully review the judge’s decision.
    As our supreme court stated in Hanlon v. Hanlon, 
    871 P.2d 229
    , 233
    (Alaska 1994), “To permit meaningful appellate review, the trial court must provide [the
    appeals] court [with] a clear understanding of the basis of the trial court’s decision” —
    an explanation that enables the appeals court “to determine the ground on which the trial
    court reached its decision.” At a minimum, a trial court’s ruling must show that the court
    considered each significant issue, and the ruling must also reveal the basis of the court’s
    decision. 3
    When a trial court’s decision is not sufficiently detailed or sufficiently
    explicit to allow meaningful review, an appeals court must remand the case to the trial
    court, directing the court to provide a fuller explanation of its ruling. 4 That is what we
    must do in Augustine’s case.
    The trial court’s task on remand
    We now will describe, in some detail, the kind of explanation we expect the
    superior court to provide on remand.
    When the State offers evidence of a child’s out-of-court statement under
    Evidence Rule 801(d)(3), it is the State’s burden to establish the foundational
    requirements of that rule — in particular, to establish that the statement was taken in a
    3
    McKitrick v. Public Employees Retirement System, 
    284 P.3d 832
    , 839 (Alaska 2012).
    4
    Samuel H. v. Office of Children’s Services, 
    175 P.3d 1269
    , 1274–75 (Alaska 2008);
    S.L. v. J.H., 
    883 P.2d 984
    , 986 (Alaska 1994); Murray v. Murray, 
    856 P.2d 463
    , 466 (Alaska
    1993).
    – 11 –                                      2668
    manner that avoided undue influence on the child, and that the child’s statement was
    sufficiently reliable and trustworthy. See Evidence Rule 801(d)(3)(F) & (H).
    (a) The manner in which the children were interviewed
    In our original decision in this case, we described Dr. Yuille’s report in
    some detail. Our purpose was not to endorse his approach or his conclusions, but rather
    to demonstrate that Dr. Yuille offered substantive reasons to doubt the reliability of the
    four video-recorded statements in this case. 5
    If Augustine’s trial judge has concluded that, despite these potential
    grounds for doubting the reliability of the children’s statements, the State successfully
    demonstrated that the statements met the foundational requirements of Rule 801(d)(3),
    then the judge must provide a substantive explanation of why he reached this conclusion.
    For example, Dr. Yuille stated that allowing children to draw during
    forensic interviews is a distracting influence, and that it interferes with effective
    interviewing. The trial judge apparently found this assertion unpersuasive, but the judge
    never explained why.
    Did the trial judge conclude, as a general matter, that allowing children to
    draw during an interview is not distracting, and that it does not interfere with effective
    forensic interviewing? Or did the judge conclude that allowing the children to draw
    during the interviews could potentially have been distracting, but that it was not
    distracting in this case? (And if so, why was it not distracting in this case?) Or did the
    judge conclude that the children may have been distracted by their drawing, but that the
    State nevertheless showed that the children’s statements were reliable? On remand, the
    5
    Augustine, 355 P.3d at 578.
    – 12 –                                      2668
    judge must explain what conclusion he reached on these matters, and the judge must
    explain his reasons for reaching that conclusion.
    Similarly, Dr. Yuille stated that Investigator Howell’s use of multiple-
    choice questions, as well as the investigator’s use of leading questions, were two other
    aspects of the interviews that undermined the reliability of the children’s statements. Did
    the trial judge conclude, as a general matter, that Dr. Yuille was wrong when he asserted
    that multiple-choice and leading questions can undermine the reliability of children’s
    statements during a forensic interview? Or did the judge accept Dr. Yuille’s premise that
    multiple-choice and leading questions can undermine the reliability of children’s
    statements, but the judge nevertheless found that the State had showed that Investigator
    Howell’s use of these types of questions did not undermine the reliability of the
    children’s statements in this case? (And if so, how did the State make this showing?)
    Or did the judge conclude that Howell’s use of multiple-choice and leading questions
    partially undermined the reliability of the children’s statements, but that other aspects of
    the interviews demonstrated that the children’s statements were nonetheless reliable?
    Again, on remand, the judge must explain which of these conclusions (or some other
    conclusion) he reached, and why.
    We note that Augustine has pointed to a number of multiple choice
    questions and leading questions that, according to Augustine, undermined the reliability
    of the children’s statements. Although the trial judge need not address every example
    cited by Augustine, the judge should at least address the most striking examples and
    explain why he concluded that, despite Howell’s method of questioning, the State
    showed that the children’s statements were reliable.
    We further note that, in our earlier opinion, we expressly directed the trial
    judge to consider the potential problem created by the fact that the person who
    interviewed the children — Investigator Howell — was the lead investigator in this case.
    – 13 –                                      2668
    We noted the possibility that, because of Howell’s pre-knowledge of the investigation,
    she might have unwittingly influenced the children’s answers to her questions. This
    concern was accentuated by Dr. Yuille’s analysis that Howell’s questioning of the
    children appeared to be “driven by ... a single hypothesis”: that Augustine was guilty.
    The trial judge apparently rejected the notion that Investigator Howell,
    because of her pre-knowledge of the investigation, and because of her method of
    questioning, might have undermined the reliability of the children’s answers during the
    forensic interviews. But again, the judge must explain why he concluded that the State
    demonstrated the reliability of the children’s statements despite this potential problem.
    (b) The testimony of Lori Markkanen
    At Augustine’s trial, the State endeavored to rebut the testimony presented
    by Dr. Yuille by presenting the testimony of Lori Markkanen, the program manager and
    forensic interviewer at Stevie’s Place child advocacy center. Because there is a
    possibility that the trial judge will rely on Markkanen’s testimony on remand, we wish
    to explain our concerns about that testimony — concerns that the judge should address
    if he chooses to rely on Markkanen’s testimony on remand.
    In her testimony, Markkanen often agreed with Dr. Yuille’s analysis of the
    problematic aspects of the interviews, although she disagreed with his ultimate
    conclusion. However, some of Markkanen’s reasons for disagreeing with Dr. Yuille
    appear to be questionable.      For example, Dr. Yuille testified that children are
    considerably more suggestible than adults. In response, Markkanen asserted that “there’s
    a lot of research that has been conducted with children ... , and what the data shows is
    that school-age children are not coming out statistically more suggestible than adults
    are.”
    – 14 –                                     2668
    But when Markkanen was asked to support this assertion, she only cited a
    single study from 1995. This study supports the conclusion that all children between the
    ages of 3 and 6 are suggestible (i.e., they will, under certain circumstances, attest to facts
    that are not true). 6 The study also supports the conclusion that, within this group of
    children, the ones who are 3 or 4 years old are considerably more suggestible than the
    ones who are 5 or 6 years old. 7 More importantly, the study does not support
    Markkanen’s assertion that 5- to 6-year-old children are no more suggestible than adults
    — because there was no adult control group in the study.
    Furthermore, even assuming that adults are just as suggestible as 5- or
    6-year-old children, this fact, standing alone, would not be a legitimate basis for
    concluding that the interviews in this case were reliable. As the Alaska Supreme Court
    discussed in Young v. State, unnecessarily suggestive police identification procedures can
    undermine the reliability even of adult eye-witness testimony, to the point where that
    testimony must be excluded from evidence. 8
    We also note that Markkanen had considerably less experience and
    expertise than Dr. Yuille. Dr. Yuille received his doctorate in forensic psychology more
    than 50 years ago. In the 1980s, he began focusing on forensic interviews of child
    witnesses, and he developed the first protocol for interviewing children in criminal child
    protection investigations. Dr. Yuille testified that a significant portion of his current
    work involves training law enforcement officers on how to properly interview child
    witnesses. He also testified that he has published over 120 scholarly works, including
    6
    Michelle D. Leichtman & Stephen J. Ceci, The Effects of Stereotypes and Suggestions
    on Preschoolers’ Reports, Developmental Psychology, Vol. 31, No. 4, pp. 568–578 (1995).
    7
    Id.
    8
    Young v. State, 
    374 P.3d 395
    , 417–426 (Alaska 2016).
    – 15 –                                       2668
    works on interviewing children, and that his most recent publication discussed the latest
    developments in this field.
    Markkanen, in contrast, holds bachelor’s degrees in language arts education
    and special education. Although the emphasis of her special education degree was on
    mental health and behavioral issues (including developmental psychology), she does not
    hold a degree in psychology, and she has never published research in this area.
    Markkanen has experience working in and managing programs for children (especially
    children with disabilities), but she had no particular experience in forensic psychology
    or forensic interviewing before she came to work for Stevie’s Place in 2008. Her
    training in the methods of conducting forensic interviews of children consisted of her
    attending several forty- to sixty-hour seminars — the type of forensic training seminars
    that are taught by Dr. Yuille.
    We do not mean to suggest that the trial judge was required to credit
    Dr. Yuille’s testimony over Markkanen’s testimony simply because Dr. Yuille was more
    qualified or had more experience. Highly qualified experts can still be incorrect, and the
    weight or credibility of competing testimony obviously should not be reduced to a battle
    of resumes. Rather, we mean to emphasize the importance of the judge’s duty to provide
    an explanation for his rulings.
    Here, Markkanen had less expertise and experience, and she was often
    unable to provide support for her claims. If the trial judge was relying on Markkanen’s
    testimony when he concluded that Dr. Yuille’s report and testimony were not persuasive,
    the judge should explain why he relied on Markkanen’s testimony despite these
    deficiencies.
    – 16 –                                     2668
    Conclusion
    It is important to recognize what is at stake when the State offers a child’s
    out-of-court statements under Evidence Rule 801(d)(3). In many instances, the child’s
    recorded interview(s) — statements that would otherwise be inadmissible hearsay — will
    be the linchpin of the State’s case. And in some cases (as was true in this case), these
    out-of-court statements will essentially be the State’s only evidence. Thus, a trial judge’s
    decision to admit or exclude these statements will often have a decisive impact on the
    outcome of the trial.
    For this reason, when the State asserts that a child’s out-of-court statements
    are sufficiently reliable to justify their admission under Evidence Rule 801(d)(3), trial
    judges bear a great responsibility to approach this matter carefully and seriously, to make
    sure that the State is put to its proof regarding the foundational requirements of Rule
    801(d)(3).
    Under subsection (F) of Evidence Rule 801(d)(3), the State must prove that
    “the taking of the [child’s] statement as a whole was conducted in a manner that would
    avoid undue influence [on] the victim”. And under subsection (H) of this rule, the State
    must additionally prove that the child’s statement is “sufficiently reliable and
    trustworthy”, and that “the interests of justice are best served by admitting the recording
    [of the statement] into evidence.”
    As we explained in our first opinion in this case, a trial judge is not allowed
    to pass this responsibility on to the jurors. A judge cannot simply decide that the child’s
    out-of-court statements might be reliable and trustworthy, and then admit the evidence
    and trust the jury to sort it out. Rather, Evidence Rule 801(d)(3) requires the judge to
    decide whether the State has affirmatively proved the foundational elements that
    authorize the admission of the child’s out-of-court statements. And as this Court clarifies
    – 17 –                                      2668
    today, this means that a trial judge must explain their decision with sufficient detail to
    allow this Court to fulfill its duty of meaningful appellate review.
    We therefore again direct the superior court to re-assess the admissibility
    of the children’s four out-of-court interviews under Evidence Rule 801(d)(3). Within
    90 days, the superior court shall provide this Court with a supplemental ruling which
    (1) identifies the particular issues that the court considered and (2) explains why the
    court concluded that, despite the various concerns raised by Dr. Yuille and by this Court
    in our prior decision, the State nevertheless proved all of the foundational elements
    required by Evidence Rule 801(d)(3).
    Upon our receipt of the superior court’s supplemental ruling, we shall
    resume our consideration of this case.
    – 18 –                                      2668
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A12659

Filed Date: 6/26/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/31/2021