State v. Schwartz ( 2014 )


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  •        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    Opinion Number: _______________
    Filing Date: March 17, 2014
    Docket No. 32,451
    STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    BRUCE SCHWARTZ,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY
    Robert S. “Bob” Schwartz, District Judge
    Gary K. King, Attorney General
    James W. Grayson, Assistant Attorney General
    Santa Fe, NM
    for Appellee
    Law Office of Adrianne R. Turner
    Adrianne R. Turner
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Appellant
    OPINION
    BUSTAMANTE, Judge.
    {1}     Bruce Schwartz (Defendant) asserts that his rights under the confrontation clauses
    of the United States and New Mexico Constitutions were violated when the district court
    permitted four witnesses to testify by two-way video over the Internet without the necessary
    findings that use of video was necessary. We agree and, because there is no reasonable
    possibility that the video testimony did not affect the verdict, conclude that the testimony
    was not harmless. Consequently, we reverse Defendant’s convictions. Concluding there is
    sufficient evidence to support Defendant’s convictions, we also remand for retrial.
    1
    BACKGROUND
    {2}     In March 2008 Martha McEachin left her home in Los Angeles on a train bound for
    Albuquerque, intending to begin writing a long-planned novel in Mexico. After arriving in
    Albuquerque, McEachin lived with Defendant for approximately one and a half months
    before she disappeared. In May, a badly decomposed body was discovered wrapped in a
    blue air mattress and sheets and covered with a mattress in an alley approximately 500 feet
    from Defendant’s apartment.
    {3}    After a two-year investigation, Defendant was charged with McEachin’s murder and
    tampering with evidence. He was convicted by a jury of second degree murder and
    tampering with evidence and sentenced to fifteen years in the Department of Corrections.
    Additional facts are included in our discussion of Defendant’s points on appeal.
    DISCUSSION
    {4}    Defendant makes a number of arguments based on allegations of error in the
    admission or exclusion of evidence. Because we conclude that Defendant’s confrontation
    rights were violated and that the violation was not harmless, we reverse Defendant’s
    convictions. We also conclude that there is sufficient evidence of Defendant’s guilt to
    permit retrial on remand. Given the disposition of these issues, we do not address
    Defendant’s other arguments.
    A.     Confrontation Clause
    {5}     At trial, four of the State’s witnesses testified using Skype, an “Internet software
    application[] that . . . allow[s] users to engage in real time video and audio communications
    between two or more locations.” 131 Am. Jur. Trials 475 § 1 (2014). Defendant argues that
    admission of their testimony via Skype violated his rights under the Sixth Amendment to the
    United States Constitution and Article II, Section 14 of the New Mexico Constitution. Both
    the Federal and New Mexico constitutions provide that “[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the
    accused shall enjoy the right . . . to be confronted with the witnesses against him[.]” See
    U.S. Const. amend. VI; N.M. Const. art. II, § 14. We will refer to the clause in both
    constitutions as “the confrontation clause.”
    {6}     “[T]he [c]onfrontation [c]lause guarantees the defendant a face-to-face meeting with
    witnesses appearing before the trier of fact.” Coy v. Iowa, 
    487 U.S. 1012
    , 1016 (1988). But
    a defendant’s rights under the confrontation clause are not absolute. See State v. Almanza,
    2007-NMCA-073, ¶ 8, 
    141 N.M. 751
    , 
    160 P.3d 932
    . Rather, they “may give way to other
    important interests” when those interests are “narrowly tailored to include only those
    situations where the exception is necessary to further an important public policy.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks and citations omitted). Thus, there must be “a particularized
    showing of necessity in the service of an important public policy before a court may approve
    an exception to physical presence.” State v. Smith, 2013-NMCA-081, ¶ 8, 
    308 P.3d 135
    ,
    2
    cert. denied, 2013-NMCERT-006, 
    304 P.3d 425
    . “The necessity must be supported by
    specific findings by the trial court.” 
    Id. ¶ 5.
    {7}     “[M]ere inconvenience to the witness is not sufficient to dispense with face-to-face
    confrontation.” State v. Chung, 2012-NMCA-049, ¶ 11, 
    290 P.3d 269
    (internal quotation
    marks and citation omitted), cert. quashed, 2013-NMCERT-003, 
    300 P.3d 1182
    . Thus, this
    Court has reversed convictions where a witness testified via video or telephone conference
    when (1) the witness was located in Santa Fe and the hearing was held in Aztec, New
    Mexico, see id.¶ 3; (2) the witness would have had to travel seven hours and be absent from
    the State Laboratory Division when it was shorthanded, see Smith, 2013-NMCA-081, ¶¶ 2,
    11; and (3) when a chemist with the state crime lab was called on short notice and had a
    “busy schedule,” Almanza, 2007-NMCA-073, ¶ 12. Our review of confrontation issues is
    de novo. See Smith, 2013-NMCA-081, ¶ 3.
    The District Court Erred in Permitting Video Testimony
    {8}      An FBI agent, two forensic scientists, and Defendant’s mother testified via video.
    The State concedes that it “did not list any reason for the video testimony” of FBI Agent Bas
    or forensic scientist Gross “other than their residing outside of New Mexico.” Additionally,
    it acknowledges that “the district court failed to make individualized factual findings [as]
    required to excuse [forensic scientist Pearn’s] in-person appearance.” Thus, it concedes that
    “[t]hese witnesses’ testimony violated Defendant’s confrontation rights.” Although we are
    not bound by this concession, we agree with this conclusion because the district court failed
    to make specific findings supporting its conclusion that video testimony by these witnesses
    was necessary. See 
    id. ¶ 5
    (“The necessity must be supported by specific findings by the
    [district] court.”).1
    {9}     Whether it was error to permit Defendant’s mother, Patricia Labance, to testify via
    video presents a more complex question. As justification for permitting Labance to appear
    by video, the State argued that “Labance was born in 1938 and resides in Florida. . . .
    Labance currently suffers from severe stress, anxiety[,] and depression.” It attached a letter
    from Labance’s doctor, which stated that “this patient is suffering from severe stress,
    anxiety[,] and depression and is physically and psychologically unable to travel out of the
    state for the for[e]seeable future.” At the hearing on the motion, the district court inquired
    into the substance of Labance’s testimony and discussed with the parties how Skype works.
    Although the State said that Labance was available to speak to the district court, no evidence
    was taken at the hearing. The State also said that “[Labance was] not happy to be coming
    out here. She hasn’t seen her son in a number of years. But she will come if necessary, but
    because of her failing health, . . . we’d like to do her [testimony via] live video.” The State
    1
    The State requests that this Court reconsider its holding in Smith that two-way
    “video testimony does not itself ‘satisfy’ the requirements of the [confrontation clause].”
    
    Id. ¶ 7.
    We decline to do so.
    3
    also distinguished Chung, in which this Court held that a defendant’s confrontation rights
    were violated when the district court permitted video testimony based on a witness’s seven-
    hour travel time, by arguing that “in our case, the travel is so much further and costly.” See
    Chung, 2012-NMCA-049, ¶ 12. After argument, the district court stated that, “given the
    letter from [Labance’s doctor] describing [Labance], I’m going to allow her to testify via .
    . . Skype[.]” The district court did not make written findings.
    {10} The State arranged for Labance to testify via Skype from a courthouse in Naples,
    Florida. During cross-examination, Defendant questioned Labance about her health.
    Labance testified that she was nervous and that the trial was “upsetting.” In addition,
    counsel for Defendant and Labance had the following exchange.
    Q:      . . . What type of health issues are you dealing with right now,
    ma’am?
    A:      Well, physically I have arthritis really bad. Mentally, I’ve been very
    stressed, anxious. I’ve been very depressed over this whole situation.
    Q:      And arthritis would be the main medical diagnosis you’re suffering
    from?
    A:      Yes.
    Q:      Do you have trouble breathing?
    A:      Not necessarily, no.
    {11} After cross-examination was completed, Defendant moved for Labance’s testimony
    to be stricken from the record. A bench conference was held. Defendant argued that, based
    on Labance’s testimony, there was “no decent reason” that Labance could not have traveled
    to New Mexico to testify and that, therefore, his confrontation rights had been violated. The
    district court expressed some confusion about the contents of the doctor’s letter, asking, “Is
    the doctor specific as to diagnoses, or is it general issues regarding health[?]” It is not clear
    from the record whether the letter was produced for the district court’s review during the
    bench conference. Ultimately, the district court denied Defendant’s motion stating, “None
    of us are doctors, and we don’t have the medical records. I’m going to accept, again on the
    basis of good faith, that there’s a legitimate basis for [Labance to appear] by the Skype.”
    {12} We interpret the district court’s statements to be a finding that it was medically
    necessary for Labance to testify via video. See Smith, 2013-NMCA-081, ¶ 9 (citing
    Commonwealth v. Atkinson, 
    2009 Pa. Super. 239
    , ¶ 12, in which that court held that adult
    witnesses may testify by video only “when a witness is too ill to travel and when a witness
    is located outside of the United States”) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). In
    doing so, we note that the district court’s oral comments are perilously close to being
    4
    inadequate for appellate review and note again that “[t]he necessity [for video testimony]
    must be supported by specific findings by the trial court.” 
    Id. ¶ 5;
    see State v. Benny E.,
    1990-NMCA-052, ¶ 11, 
    110 N.M. 237
    , 
    794 P.2d 380
    (“Absent findings indicating the
    [district] court was persuaded and why, the decision to deny a defendant his or her right of
    confrontation cannot be adequately reviewed on appeal.”). The State argues that, because
    the district court’s finding was supported by the “medical judgment” in the doctor’s letter,
    we must affirm. We disagree that the letter alone is sufficient to demonstrate a compelling
    need to protect the witness as required to outweigh Defendant’s rights under the
    confrontation clause.
    {13} “[A]ny exceptions to the general rule providing for face-to-face confrontation [must
    be] narrowly tailored.” Chung, 2012-NMCA-049, ¶ 11 (internal quotation marks and
    citation omitted); see Smith, 2013-NMCA-081, ¶ 9 (stating that “[c]ourts define [policy
    concerns that outweigh the defendant’s confrontation rights] narrowly”). Given the
    importance of the confrontation right and the narrowness of the exceptions to it, we conclude
    that the doctor’s letter was inadequate as a matter of law to support a conclusion that
    Labance could not testify in person. See 
    id. ¶ 15
    (stating that “the reasons articulated by the
    district court for finding it necessary to allow the use of video testimony were insufficient
    as a matter of law to support its use”); see, e.g., Bush v. State, 
    2008 WY 108
    , ¶ 52, 
    193 P.3d 203
    (Wyo. 2008) (medical necessity supported where the district court considered medical
    records); State v. Sewell, 
    595 N.W.2d 207
    , 211 (Minn. Ct. App. 1999) (medical necessity
    supported where the witness’s doctor indicated by affidavit and through telephone contact
    with the court that the witness was too ill to travel); cf. State v. Tafoya, 1988-NMCA-082,
    ¶ 16, 
    108 N.M. 1
    , 
    765 P.2d 1183
    (finding of necessity for use of video depositions of child
    witnesses at trial supported by substantial evidence where there was a “full day of
    testimony” by experts and the witnesses’ parents); State v. Vigil, 1985-NMCA-103, ¶¶ 6-7,
    
    103 N.M. 583
    , 
    711 P.2d 28
    (finding of necessity for video deposition of a child witness
    supported by substantial evidence where the state presented expert testimony on the possible
    impact on the witness of in-person testimony). The fact that the State conceded that Labance
    could travel to New Mexico to testify if necessary simply highlights the inadequacy of the
    evidence behind the district court’s conclusion.
    {14} Based on the foregoing, we conclude that it was error to permit video testimony by
    Bas, Gross, Pearn, and Labance because the necessity for video testimony was not supported
    by sufficient findings.
    With One Exception, Admission of Video Testimony Was Not Harmless
    {15} A violation alone, however, does not require a new trial. Rather, only when a
    violation of the confrontation clause is harmful to the defendant does the violation require
    a new trial. See State v. Tollardo, 2012-NMSC-008, ¶ 25, 
    275 P.3d 110
    (“Improperly
    admitted evidence is not grounds for a new trial unless the error is determined to be
    harmful.”). The State bears the burden of demonstrating that the error was harmless. See
    State v. Gutierrez, 2007-NMSC-033, ¶ 18, 
    142 N.M. 1
    , 
    162 P.3d 156
    .
    5
    {16} To determine whether an error in admission of evidence is harmless, this Court
    reviews “the error itself, including the source of the error and the emphasis placed on the
    error at trial. To put the error in context, we often look at the other, non-objectionable
    evidence of guilt, not for a sufficiency-of-the-evidence analysis, but to evaluate what role
    the error played at trial.” State v. Leyba, 2012-NMSC-037, ¶ 24, 
    289 P.3d 1215
    . In
    addition, “courts may, depending upon the circumstances of the cases before them, examine
    the importance of the erroneously admitted evidence in the prosecution’s case, as well as
    whether the error was cumulative or instead introduced new facts.” Tollardo, 2012-NMSC-
    008, ¶ 43 (alterations, internal quotation marks, and citations omitted). Whether certain
    evidence is harmless depends on a variety of factors unique to each case. See 
    id. ¶ 44
    (“Reviewing courts must keep in mind that harmless error review necessarily requires a case-
    by-case analysis.”).
    {17} We begin by addressing the testimony presented by video related to DNA analyses,
    then turn to Labance’s testimony. The State presented four forensic scientists, of which
    two—Pearn and Gross—testified by video. Pearn developed a DNA profile of McEachin
    based on DNA found on McEachin’s shoes. She also tested DNA found on the waistband
    of a pair of jeans found near the body. She concluded that “neither [the victim] or
    [Defendant] could be excluded as contributors to [the DNA on the waistband].” Thus,
    Pearn’s work (1) resulted in a DNA profile of the victim, and (2) provided a possible link
    between the body and Defendant.
    {18} Gross tested a femur taken from the body, created a DNA profile for the femur, and
    then compared that profile to the DNA profile of McEachin’s daughter. The daughter’s
    DNA profile had been completed by an analyst at the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
    and provided to Gross. Gross identified the DNA types in common between the two samples
    and testified that it was “42,000 times more likely to observe th[e common] genetic
    information if [the daughter] was the true biological daughter [of the victim] as compared
    to an untested random woman from the population.” The bulk of Ms. Gross’s testimony thus
    went to identification of the body as McEachin’s.
    {19} Bas testified that he obtained a blood sample from McEachin’s daughter that was
    then forwarded to the FBI for analysis. Bas’s testimony went to a portion of the chain of
    events that led to the daughter’s sample being analyzed by the FBI and then compared to the
    profile of the body by Gross, thus leading to identification of the body as McEachin’s.
    {20} There is no reasonable possibility that Bas’s testimony had the evidentiary
    importance to impact Defendant’s conviction. Bas testified only about how he collected
    blood from McEachin’s daughter and sent it to the Albuquerque field office of the FBI. At
    the hearing on the State’s motion to permit video testimony, Defendant stipulated that Bas’s
    testimony only established a chain of custody of the daughter’s sample and, on appeal,
    Defendant does not address how he was prejudiced by Bas’s testimony at all. In the context
    of this case and in light of the totality of the circumstances surrounding the testimony, we
    conclude that Bas’s testimony by video was harmless.
    6
    {21} The same is not true of the testimony by forensic scientists Pearn and Gross. The
    State argues that their testimony was harmless for two reasons. It first argues that because
    Defendant had an opportunity to cross-examine the witnesses, the use of video had “only a
    marginal impact on his right of confrontation.” It contends secondly that the video testimony
    was “relative[ly] insignifican[t] . . . in comparison to the overall evidence of guilt.” Despite
    these efforts to minimize the role of the video testimony in the State’s case, we conclude that
    the video testimony was critical to identification of the body and association of Defendant
    with the body, both of which were essential to the State’s case. Hence, there is no
    reasonable possibility that this evidence did not contribute to Defendant’s conviction. See
    
    id. ¶ 45.
    {22} In its first contention, the State argues that “Defendant had the ability to cross-
    examine all of the witnesses appearing by video conference in full view of the jury such that
    there was only a marginal impact on his right of confrontation.” Cf. State v. Lopez, 1996-
    NMCA-101, ¶ 14, 
    122 N.M. 459
    , 
    926 P.2d 784
    (“The right to cross-examination is viewed
    as the most important element of the right of confrontation.”). The State argues that
    Defendant’s limited cross-examination of the witnesses “show[s] that the video testimony
    had no impact on the trial or the jury’s verdict.” Although a defendant’s cross-examination
    of witnesses may be considered in assessing the role of evidence at trial, whether and how
    Defendant cross-examined the witnesses is not dispositive of the ultimate question of
    harmlessness because that analysis focuses on whether the evidence affected the verdict, not
    how Defendant responded to it. See State v. Serna, 2013-NMSC-033, ¶ 25, 
    305 P.3d 936
    (discussing the defendant’s cross-examination as part of the assessment of the amount of
    emphasis placed on erroneously admitted evidence); Tollardo, 2012-NMSC-008, ¶ 42
    (“[T]he central inquiry of [the harmless error analysis is] whether an error was likely to have
    affected the jury’s verdict.”). Because the State’s argument shifts the focus away from this
    central inquiry, we are unpersuaded. Thus, we turn to the State’s contentions as to the role
    of Pearn’s and Gross’s testimony at the trial and its impact on the jury.
    {23} The State’s second argument is that Gross’s and Pearn’s testimony was insignificant
    in comparison to the overall evidence of guilt. Specifically, it argues that (1) the video
    testimony as to identity was duplicative of other evidence and therefore insignificant, and
    (2) the video testimony tying Defendant to the body was of “minor significance” compared
    to evidence of “the victim’s blood on the carpet in Defendant’s bedroom,” which was
    established through in-person testimony. We address these arguments in turn.
    {24} We disagree that the video testimony as to identity was duplicative and therefore
    harmless for two reasons. First, the video testimony was not merely cumulative of other
    evidence. Although in-person testimony by McEachin’s friends described her physical
    features, and the jury could infer from other in-person testimony that those features matched
    the body, the State nevertheless devoted a substantial amount of time presenting DNA
    evidence to establish identity. Three different analyses were conducted to do so: Pearn
    developed a profile using DNA from shoes belonging to McEachin, Gross developed a
    profile from a femur of the body and compared it to McEachin’s daughter’s profile, and a
    7
    third witness, testifying in person, compared the Pearn and Gross profiles and found that
    they matched. The State’s attempt to minimize the importance of the DNA evidence is
    belied by the amount of time and effort the State took to present the DNA evidence and the
    emphasis placed on it. Indeed, the State itself described the body’s characteristics as less
    probative than the DNA evidence in its opening argument. We cannot conclude that the
    video testimony did not have an impact on the verdict simply because there was also in-
    person testimony on the identity of the body. Second, even if the video testimony was
    cumulative, “improperly admitted evidence that is cumulative is not ipso facto harmless
    beyond a reasonable doubt.” Tollardo, 2012-NMSC-008, ¶ 43 (footnote, internal quotation
    marks, and citation omitted). Rather, even cumulative evidence may be harmful if it had an
    impact on the jury’s verdict.
    {25} To the extent the State also argues that Defendant did not contest that the body was
    McEachin’s and therefore any improperly admitted testimony on that issue was harmless,
    we disagree. We note first that at trial, the State acknowledged that Defendant “disput[ed]
    that it’s even . . . McEachin’s body[.]” In any case, whether Defendant disputed this fact is
    not conclusive of whether the testimony is harmless. In State v. Sisneros, our Supreme Court
    addressed a similar argument and held that erroneous admission of a forensic pathologist’s
    testimony as to the cause of death was harmless because “the cause and manner of death
    were never in dispute, only the identity of the shooter.” 2013-NMSC-049, ¶ 33, 
    314 P.3d 665
    . The premise underlying that holding is that there was nothing about the cause and
    manner of death that pointed to the defendant as the shooter. That premise does not apply
    here. In this case, Defendant did not contest that he knew McEachin and that she had lived
    with him briefly. Rather, he maintained in his statement to officers that she left his
    apartment and never returned. Thus, the identification of the body as McEachin’s, coupled
    with the fact that McEachin had lived with Defendant until shortly before the body was
    found, implicated Defendant. This argument is unavailing.
    {26} In its final argument, the State maintains that Pearn’s testimony about the DNA
    found on the jeans “held only minor significance in tying Defendant to the scene where the
    body had been hidden” and that because the material—presumed to be blood—found in
    Defendant’s apartment was “the most damning physical evidence[,]” the testimony about the
    jeans paled in comparison. As discussed, however, Defendant never denied that McEachin
    had lived with him and argued at trial that McEachin’s DNA could have gotten on the carpet
    any number of ways during that time. In this context, the DNA on the carpet merely showed
    that McEachin had been in the apartment. Because Defendant did not dispute this fact,
    evidence tying Defendant to the body in the alley was critical to the State’s case. We are
    unpersuaded by the State’s characterization of the video testimony about the jeans in
    comparison to the DNA found on the carpet.
    {27} Finally, the centrality of DNA evidence, including the video testimony, to the State’s
    case is also evident in the State’s opening and closing arguments. In its opening, the State
    referred to the jeans as “[Defendant’s] jeans” and stated they were “[o]ne of the most
    important pieces of the evidence . . . at th[e] scene[.]” It described the DNA testing as
    8
    determinative that the jeans were Defendant’s. It stated that Defendant “put his jeans,
    evidence of the murder” near the body. The State discussed the DNA testing of the femur
    from the body and McEachin’s daughter, stating that the physical characteristics of the body
    did not allow the police to be “absolutely certain” of the identity of the body. In closing
    argument, the State referred to DNA evidence at least four times and devoted a substantial
    portion of its rebuttal argument to the jeans and DNA evidence related to them, referring to
    the jeans as “the one piece of evidence that could tie [Defendant] to th[e] body[.]” Based
    on the role Gross’s and Pearn’s testimony played in the State’s case, we conclude that there
    is no reasonable possibility that the DNA evidence they presented did not contribute to
    Defendant’s conviction. See Leyba, 2012-NMSC-037, ¶ 30 (stating that the use of the
    victim’s diary at trial was not harmless where “[b]oth its placement and the repetitive
    manner in which the [s]tate referred to the diary during closing argument[] strongly suggest
    how useful it was to the [s]tate. As any good trial lawyer knows, a jury is most likely to
    remember the first and last things heard before retiring”).
    {28} We turn next to the question of whether Labance’s testimony was harmless. Labance
    testified as to the nature of Defendant’s relationship with McEachin, as well as how and
    when they met. She testified that she had sent Defendant a blue air mattress in early 2008,
    as well as a set of sheets, a blanket, and other household goods. She authenticated a receipt
    for those items that she had sent to a detective, which was admitted into evidence. The
    detective used the authenticated receipt to purchase an air mattress of the same model, a
    photo of which was also admitted into evidence. During trial, a photo of the air mattress
    found with the body was compared to the photo of the purchased air mattress. Labance also
    authenticated letters Defendant had sent her, which were then admitted into evidence. A
    detective later read the letters during his testimony. In one letter, Defendant acknowledged
    receipt of the air mattress and stated that he loved McEachin. In another, dated a little more
    than a week before the body was found, Defendant wrote that McEachin was “headed to El
    Paso a few weeks ago” and that she was going on to Juarez. Finally, Labance testified that
    Defendant told her he had given the air mattress away.
    {29} The State concedes on appeal that it was “significant that Defendant’s . . . air
    mattress and sheets [] were not only at the scene but wrapped around the victim.” In its
    motion for video testimony, the State acknowledged that Labance’s testimony was important
    not only to authenticate the receipt for the air mattress, sheets, and letters from him
    acknowledging receipt of those items, but also to establish Defendant’s relationship with
    McEachin. Labance’s testimony provided evidence that Defendant had owned a blue air
    mattress, as well as details about the air mattress that matched the one found with the body.
    In addition, her authentication of Defendant’s letters allowed the State to use Defendant’s
    own statements against him. Labance’s testimony thus established a link between
    Defendant, the air mattress, and the body. Although the State argues that the documents
    could have been authenticated another way, the State chose to rely on Labance to get the
    documents admitted. Having made that choice, the State cannot now argue, simply because
    there was another method for admission of the documents, that the jury did not rely on
    Labance’s testimony to convict Defendant. We conclude that Labance’s testimony played
    9
    a key role in the State’s case and that the State has failed to demonstrate that Labance’s
    testimony was harmless.
    II.    SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE
    {30} We next examine whether the evidence was sufficient to convict Defendant for
    second degree murder and tampering with evidence both because Defendant asserts the
    evidence was insufficient and because this Court must address sufficiency in order to
    determine whether retrial would offend principles of double jeopardy. See State v.
    Cabezuela, 2011-NMSC-041, ¶ 47, 
    150 N.M. 654
    , 
    265 P.3d 705
    (“Because we find that
    there was sufficient evidence to convict [the d]efendant, . . . retrial is not barred by double
    jeopardy implications.”).
    {31} In a review of the sufficiency of the evidence, “we [first] view the evidence in the
    light most favorable to the verdict, indulging all reasonable inferences and resolving all
    conflicts in the evidence in favor of the verdict.” State v. Armendariz-Nunez, 2012-NMCA-
    041, ¶ 16, 
    276 P.3d 963
    , cert. denied, 2012-NMCERT-003, 
    293 P.3d 183
    . We “then . . .
    make a legal determination of whether the evidence viewed in this manner could justify a
    finding by any rational trier of fact that each element of the crime charged has been
    established beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks and citation omitted).
    “The reviewing court does not weigh the evidence or substitute its judgment for that of the
    fact finder as long as there is sufficient evidence to support the verdict.” State v. Mora,
    1997-NMSC-060, ¶ 27, 
    124 N.M. 346
    , 
    950 P.2d 789
    , abrogated on other grounds as
    recognized by Kersey v. Hatch, 2010-NMSC-020, ¶ 17, 
    148 N.M. 381
    , 
    237 P.3d 683
    .
    Defendant bears the burden of “identif[ying] with particularity the fact or facts that are not
    supported by substantial evidence” on appeal. Rule 12-213(A)(4) NMRA.
    {32} In an apparent attempt to reframe the standard of review, Defendant’s only argument
    on appeal relies on State v. Malouff, a 1970 case in which this Court held that “when
    circumstances alone are relied upon, they must point unerringly to [the] defendants and be
    incompatible with and exclude every reasonable hypothesis other than guilt.” 1970-NMCA-
    069, ¶ 3, 
    81 N.M. 619
    , 
    471 P.2d 189
    . Defendant’s argument rests entirely on the premise
    that the State’s case, being based on circumstantial evidence, failed to “exclude every
    reasonable hypothesis other than guilt.” 
    Id. But the
    standard stated in Malouff was
    expressly repudiated by our Supreme Court in State v. Brown. See 1984-NMSC-014, ¶ 7,
    
    100 N.M. 726
    , 
    676 P.2d 253
    (stating that “the traditional distinctions between direct and
    circumstantial evidence have been abolished” and that “[t]he only test recognized by [our
    Supreme] Court to test the sufficiency of evidence is whether substantial evidence of either
    a direct or circumstantial nature exists to support a verdict of guilt beyond a reasonable
    doubt with respect to every element essential to a conviction”); see also State v. Garcia,
    2005-NMSC-017, ¶¶ 18, 19, 
    138 N.M. 1
    , 
    116 P.3d 72
    (stating that “After Brown, . . . the
    proposition that substantial evidence in support of a conviction must be inconsistent with any
    reasonable hypothesis of innocence” is no longer the standard in New Mexico). Defendant’s
    reliance on Malouff is, therefore, unavailing.
    10
    {33}   Here, the State was required to prove that
    1.      [D]efendant killed . . . McEachin;
    2.      [D]efendant knew that his acts created a strong probability of death
    or great bodily harm to . . . McEachin or any other human being;
    3.      [D]efendant did not act as a result of sufficient provocation;
    4.      This happened in New Mexico on or between the 23rd day of April
    and the 14th day of May, 2008.
    See UJI 14-210 NMRA. Other than asserting that circumstantial evidence is insufficient to
    support the verdict, Defendant makes no argument identifying which facts lack sufficient
    evidence. Although we generally do not address undeveloped arguments, we do so here in
    order to ascertain whether Defendant may be retried on remand. See Cabezuela, 2011-
    NMSC-041, ¶ 40.
    {34} Here, the jury heard testimony that McEachin and Defendant lived together until a
    few weeks before the body was discovered and that they shared an intimate relationship.
    Testimony by detectives established that the body was found in an alley 500 feet from
    Defendant’s apartment, wrapped in a blue air mattress and sheets, covered with another
    mattress. Defendant’s mother testified that she had sent him a blue air mattress and sheet
    set as a gift. The jury saw photographs and heard testimony that grid marks on the air
    mattress looked like the grid of a shopping cart and that there was a shopping cart at the
    scene. They also heard testimony that Defendant had shopping carts in his apartment. They
    heard testimony that a pair of jeans with DNA on it—for which Defendant could not be ruled
    out as the source—was found near the body. A forensic scientist testified that McEachin’s
    blood was found on the carpet in Defendant’s apartment. There was also testimony that the
    cause of death was “multiple blunt force injuries . . . [to t]he head and chest area” and that
    Defendant gave two different explanations for why he no longer had the air mattress his
    mother sent him. Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict and indulging all
    reasonable inferences in favor of conviction, this evidence was sufficient to permit the jury
    to find Defendant guilty of second degree murder.
    {35} We turn to the charge of tampering with evidence. “Tampering with evidence is a
    specific intent crime, requiring sufficient evidence from which the jury can infer that the
    defendant acted with an intent to prevent apprehension, prosecution or conviction of any
    person or to throw suspicion of the commission of a crime upon another.” State v. Silva,
    2008-NMSC-051, ¶ 18, 
    144 N.M. 815
    , 
    192 P.3d 1192
    holding modified by State v. Guerra,
    2012-NMSC-027, ¶¶ 12-14, 
    284 P.3d 1076
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted);
    see NMSA 1978, § 30-22-5(A) (2003). The State was required to prove that
    1.      [D]efendant destroyed and/or changed and/or hid and/or fabricated
    11
    and/or placed clothing belonging to himself and[/]or . . . Mc[E]achin
    and/or the body of . . . Mc[E]achin and/or her suitcases, her laptop,
    her printer, her purse[;]
    2.      [By doing so, D]efendant intended to prevent the apprehension,
    prosecution[,] or conviction of himself;
    3.      This happened in New Mexico on or between the 23rd day of April
    and the 14th day of May, 2008.
    See UJI 14-2241 NMRA. The State concedes that it did not present direct evidence or
    evidence of “an overt act with respect to” McEachin’s suitcase, purse, laptop, or printer.
    Nevertheless, any lack of evidence regarding McEachin’s belongings does not require
    reversal here because there was sufficient evidence to support one or more of the other
    alternative bases for conviction. See State v. Olguin, 1995-NMSC-077, ¶ 2, 
    120 N.M. 740
    ,
    
    906 P.2d 731
    (“[D]ue process does not require a guilty verdict to be set aside if an alternative
    basis of conviction is only factually inadequate to support a conviction.”).
    {36} In addition to tampering with McEachin’s laptop, printer, purse, or suitcase, the jury
    instruction permitted conviction on the basis of tampering with Defendant’s own clothing,
    the victim’s clothing, or the victim’s body. The jury could infer that Defendant placed the
    victim’s body in the alley from the testimony that Defendant owned a blue air mattress and
    sheets, that the body was found wrapped in a blue air mattress and sheets, that clothes
    bearing his DNA were found with the body, and that the alley was approximately 500 feet
    from his apartment. In addition, there was testimony that a mattress was placed over the
    body in the alley. Although Defendant argues that this evidence is “only” circumstantial,
    New Mexico does not recognize a distinction between direct or circumstantial evidence, as
    previously discussed. We conclude that the evidence presented, viewed in the light most
    favorable to the verdict, was sufficient to permit the jury to infer that Defendant intended to
    “prevent [his] apprehension, prosecution, or conviction” by covering and placing the body
    in the alley. UJI 14-2241.
    {37} In conclusion, there was sufficient evidence to support Defendant’s convictions for
    second degree murder and tampering with evidence.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    {38} Having concluded that video testimony by Pearn, Gross, and Labance was admitted
    in error and that this error was not harmless, we reverse Defendant’s convictions. In
    addition, since the evidence was sufficient for conviction of both second degree murder and
    tampering, we remand for a new trial. We need not address Defendant’s other allegations
    of error in the admission of evidence.
    {39}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    12
    _____________________________________
    MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Judge
    ____________________________________
    TIMOTHY L. GARCIA, Judge
    13