United States v. Craig Sutton , 916 F.3d 1134 ( 2019 )


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  •                   United States Court of Appeals
    For the Eighth Circuit
    ___________________________
    No. 17-3195
    ___________________________
    United States of America
    lllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiff - Appellee
    v.
    Craig A. Sutton
    lllllllllllllllllllllDefendant - Appellant
    ____________
    Appeal from United States District Court
    for the Western District of Missouri - Kansas City
    ____________
    Submitted: November 15, 2018
    Filed: March 5, 2019
    ____________
    Before GRUENDER, KELLY, and GRASZ, Circuit Judges.
    ____________
    KELLY, Circuit Judge.
    Craig Sutton appeals the revocation of his supervised release based on the
    allegation that he committed assault in June 2016. At the final revocation hearing,
    the government introduced videos and transcripts of police interrogations of three
    witnesses who had a connection to the assault. None of the three witnesses appeared
    at the hearing to provide live testimony, and Sutton objected that introduction of their
    interrogations deprived him of his right to confrontation. The district court overruled
    his objection. Relying almost exclusively on the interrogations, the district court
    concluded that Sutton more likely than not committed the assault and revoked his
    supervised release. We conclude that admission of the interrogations was erroneous
    and accordingly reverse.
    I
    In 2013, Sutton pleaded guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm and
    was sentenced to 46 months of imprisonment and three years of supervised release.
    Sutton was released on supervision on May 13, 2016. On June 20, 2016, police
    discovered Thomas Eisenbarth lying in a pool of blood inside his own Buick LeSabre,
    which was parked near the Truman Medical Center. Eisenbarth was unconscious and
    had been severely beaten. Although Eisenbarth survived the attack, he had no
    memory of who had attacked him. A surveillance tape showed Eisenbarth’s vehicle
    being parked at the location around 11:00 p.m. on Sunday, June 19, approximately
    eleven hours before police discovered Eisenbarth. The video shows a man in black
    clothing exiting the vehicle and getting into the passenger side of a gold Chevy
    Blazer, which then departs the scene.
    Police learned that Eisenbarth was in a romantic relationship with Cliniesha
    Douglas. When police went to Cliniesha’s home, they discovered her gold Chevy
    Blazer parked outside. Blood was smeared on the dashboard. Police knocked on the
    door of the house, and Cliniesha’s brother, Ezekiel Douglas, answered the door
    dressed in all black. Police found blood in various rooms of Cliniesha’s house, on the
    front porch, and on cleaning supplies. They arrested Cliniesha and Ezekiel.
    After advising them of their Miranda rights, Detectives Terrence Owens and
    Michael Buckley separately interviewed Cliniesha and Ezekiel, off-and-on, for more
    than six hours. During the interrogations, Cliniesha and Ezekiel provided accounts
    -2-
    that were internally inconsistent, in conflict with one another, and contradicted by the
    physical evidence. The detectives repeatedly accused both individuals of lying, and
    both Cliniesha and Ezekiel confessed to making false statements during the
    interviews. Because the specifics of their statements are important for our analysis,
    we summarize them in some detail.
    Cliniesha initially denied knowing anything about the assault. She acknowl-
    edged that she was in a relationship with Eisenbarth and that she had previously been
    in a relationship with Sutton, who is the father of two of her children. At first, she
    told the detectives that only four people had been at her house that Sunday: herself,
    her brother Ezekiel, her minor daughter, and Eisenbarth. She stated that she had been
    drinking heavily and that she periodically blacked out or fell asleep. She said she had
    fallen asleep on the couch next to Eisenbarth, and when she awoke around 11:00
    p.m., he was gone. She repeatedly stated that Sutton had not visited her house that
    day.
    Cliniesha then told the detectives that Sutton had indeed come to her home that
    day but that she had not let him inside. Later, she changed her story again, and said
    that Sutton had come inside, pushing past her and confronting Eisenbarth. But she
    did not describe any type of physical altercation, and indicated that Eisenbarth left in
    his own car around 7:00 or 8:00 p.m. Cliniesha later said that Sutton called her and
    told her that he had confronted Eisenbarth at a gas station. She claimed that Sutton
    told her he had hit Eisenbarth, that he and his cousin “Ferman” had “fucked him up,”
    and that Sutton had taken Eisenbarth to the hospital. Later in the interrogation,
    Cliniesha admitted that she had fabricated the gas station detail.
    Cliniesha eventually changed her story again, and said that she had witnessed
    Sutton, along with his cousin Jermaine Oliver, attack Eisenbarth inside her house.
    But Cliniesha stated that the injuries they inflicted were minor relative to the life-
    threatening wounds that Eisenbarth ultimately suffered. She described Eisenbarth as
    -3-
    “fine,” and certainly not unconscious. According to Cliniesha, Sutton and Oliver then
    left, and Eisenbarth and Ezekiel remained at the house. Cliniesha said she fell asleep,
    and when she awoke later that evening, Eisenbarth and Ezekiel were gone, as was her
    Chevy Blazer. She said she called Ezekiel, who said he had gone to their mother’s
    house but was coming back. She said that Sutton then came back and asked Ezekiel
    for a ride. Cliniesha said her brother later told her that he had gone and picked up
    Sutton from near the hospital in her Blazer. She attested that she had not seen Sutton
    since, and that only Ezekiel and her daughter were in the house the next morning
    when she woke up.
    Throughout her interrogation, Cliniesha claimed not to have witnessed the
    assault that nearly killed Eisenbarth. Yet later, at the revocation hearing, Detective
    Buckley agreed that Cliniesha appeared to have blood under her fingernails. During
    her interrogation, Cliniesha provided no explanation as to how she acquired blood
    under her fingernails, why there was blood in various rooms of her house, or why she
    did not contact the police upon learning that Eisenbarth had been severely injured.
    Although Cliniesha at times expressed fear that Sutton or one of his associates would
    harm her, she also stated at least once that she was “not scared of him.”
    Ezekiel’s initial story to police was that he similarly knew nothing about an
    assault on Eisenbarth. He told the detectives that many people were hanging around
    Cliniesha’s house on Sunday, including Sutton and his friends. Although Ezekiel
    admitted he had been drunk that day, he claimed to remember the day’s events. He
    confirmed that Cliniesha was drinking and lost consciousness repeatedly throughout
    the day, perhaps as many as a dozen times.
    Ezekiel said that he left Cliniesha’s house around 7:00 p.m. with his cousin to
    walk to the liquor store, and when he returned, Eisenbarth and his car were gone.
    Ezekiel claimed he had not seen Eisenbarth since. Upon his return to the house,
    Ezekiel noticed that his sister’s Blazer was missing, but that Sutton’s Cadillac was
    -4-
    still parked outside. He claimed that when he went inside the house, his sister told
    him that Sutton had borrowed her car but would be back soon.
    Crucial details of Ezekiel’s story changed during his interrogation. Later, he
    told the detectives that he drove his sister’s Blazer to the liquor store shortly before
    midnight with his cousin. He claimed that, after finding the liquor store closed, they
    made it to a second store just before closing, which he estimated was around
    11:55 p.m. He then drove back to his sister’s house, where Sutton and his friends
    were still partying. He then claimed he walked down the street with his cousin to get
    away from the party and when he returned, his sister’s Blazer was gone.
    The detectives then confronted Ezekiel with the details of the surveillance
    video, which showed Eisenbarth’s vehicle and Cliniesha’s Blazer at the parking lot
    by the Truman Medical Center at 11:06 p.m. After learning this information, Ezekiel
    changed his story again and said that Sutton had borrowed Cliniesha’s Blazer just
    before his trip to the liquor store, implying that Sutton had returned the car around
    11:30 p.m. Ezekiel also stated that Sutton was acting strange, and began looking for
    cleaning supplies in the kitchen and went to the bathroom to wash his clothes.
    Ezekiel denied having driven Sutton anywhere.
    After a break in the interrogation and significant prodding by the detectives,
    the final version of Ezekiel’s story emerged. Detective Owens began by telling
    Ezekiel, “I don’t need another suspect, I need a witness.” Detective Owens told
    Ezekiel that he knew Ezekiel had driven his sister’s Blazer to the hospital, where
    Sutton jumped in after abandoning Eisenbarth’s car. In response, Ezekiel stated that
    he did give Sutton a ride after his midnight run to the liquor store, and that Sutton got
    out of the Blazer and into another vehicle. This account is inconsistent with
    surveillance video showing a man getting out of Eisenbarth’s vehicle and into the
    passenger side of the Blazer at 11:06 p.m. Moments later, Ezekiel changed his story
    again and said that Sutton actually got out of another car and into the Blazer, but he
    -5-
    had no idea that this occurred near a hospital. Although Ezekiel ultimately denied
    witnessing the assault on Eisenbarth or knowing that Eisenbarth was left bleeding in
    his own vehicle, the police found what appeared to be blood on his fingers.
    Much of what Ezekiel told detectives—even basic facts unrelated to the
    assault—differed from his sister’s account. For instance, Ezekiel described at length
    the food he prepared at the Sunday barbeque the day of the assault; Cliniesha stated
    unequivocally that no barbeque occurred. Ezekiel said that Sutton slept at Cliniesha’s
    house the night of the assault, which she denied. Ezekiel even described Cliniesha
    as his “twin,” and said they were born only a few minutes apart, while Cliniesha said
    that Ezekiel was a year younger than she was.
    Ezekiel expressed fear of retribution from Sutton, and mentioned that several
    of Sutton’s friends were carrying firearms the night of the assault. Ezekiel admitted
    that he disliked Sutton because, years earlier, Sutton had assaulted Cliniesha, putting
    her in a coma. Ezekiel stated that he wanted to hurt Sutton for this, and that he had
    threatened to kill Sutton in the past. Ezekiel also admitted that, on the day that
    Eisenbarth was assaulted, Cliniesha told Ezekiel that Eisenbarth had raped her. In her
    interrogation, Cliniesha denied having any conflict with Eisenbarth and did not
    mention the rape allegation.
    The police also interviewed Sutton’s cousin Oliver. The detectives observed
    that Oliver’s right hand appeared to be swollen. After repeatedly denying that he had
    been involved in the assault, Oliver eventually admitted to having hit Eisenbarth once
    in the shoulder. Oliver denied that this caused Eisenbarth any serious injury; when
    Oliver left Cliniesha’s home, he claimed Eisenbarth was fully conscious. Oliver said
    he went to work from 8:00 p.m. until 4:00 a.m. the following morning. Sutton later
    told him that “it went bad,” and that Cliniesha had one of “her episodes,” during
    which she kicked Eisenbarth.
    -6-
    In his own interrogation, Sutton denied knowing anything about the assault.
    Sutton was physically examined but had no abrasions or bruises. No evidence of
    blood was found under his fingernails or in his car.
    II
    Sutton was initially charged in state court with assaulting Eisenbarth, but the
    charges were dismissed. The government petitioned to revoke Sutton’s supervised
    release based on the assault allegation, and Sutton was taken into custody. At the
    final revocation hearing, held more than a year after the assault, only Detective
    Buckley testified. He summarized the interrogations that he and Detective Owens
    conducted of Cliniesha, Ezekiel, Oliver, and Sutton, and the court admitted the
    interrogation tapes and transcripts into evidence. Detective Buckley testified that he
    had attempted to serve subpoenas on Cliniesha and Ezekiel at the house where the
    assault occurred but that neither of them currently lived there. He located another
    address for Cliniesha but no one came to the door when he visited the residence. He
    did not testify that he ever attempted to subpoena Oliver or ever attempted to locate
    an alternative address for Ezekiel.
    Both at the hearing and in post-hearing briefing, Sutton objected to the
    admission of the interrogations of Cliniesha, Ezekiel, and Oliver as hearsay,
    violations of his constitutional rights, and violations of Federal Rule of Criminal
    Procedure 32.1. The district court overruled those objections and revoked Sutton’s
    supervised release. It sentenced Sutton to 24 months’ imprisonment—the statutory
    maximum—and one year of supervised release.
    On appeal, Sutton renews his challenges to the admission of the interrogations
    of Cliniesha, Ezekiel, and Oliver. We ordinarily review a claim under Rule 32.1 for
    an abuse of discretion, but because Sutton argues that admission of the hearsay
    -7-
    evidence violated his right to due process, we review de novo. United States v.
    Johnson, 
    710 F.3d 784
    , 787 (8th Cir. 2013).
    III
    A revocation hearing is not a criminal trial, and a defendant on supervised
    release is not entitled to the full panoply of protections afforded by the rules of
    evidence. Morrissey v. Brewer, 
    408 U.S. 471
    , 480 (1972); United States v. Black
    Bear, 
    542 F.3d 249
    , 253, 255 (8th Cir. 2008). Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure
    32.1(b)(2)(C) nonetheless gives a defendant the opportunity to “question any adverse
    witness unless the court determines that the interest of justice does not require the
    witness to appear.” See Morrissey, 
    408 U.S. at
    488–89 (“[T]he minimum require-
    ments of due process . . . include . . . the right to confront and cross-examine adverse
    witnesses (unless the hearing officer specifically finds good cause for not allowing
    confrontation).”). This rule requires the court to balance the defendant’s due process
    right to confront and cross-examine witnesses during such proceedings “against the
    grounds asserted by the government for not requiring confrontation.” United States
    v. Bell, 
    785 F.2d 640
    , 642 (8th Cir. 1986).1
    Under Bell, the court must evaluate two factors to determine if good cause
    justifies limiting the defendant’s confrontation rights in a particular case. First, “the
    court should assess the explanation the government offers of why confrontation is
    undesirable or impractical,” such as when “live testimony would pose a danger of
    1
    In Bell, we described Morrissey as holding that the right to confrontation at
    a parole revocation hearing derives from the Sixth Amendment. 
    785 F.2d at 642
    .
    However, Morrissey grounded its reasoning in due process, not the Sixth
    Amendment, 
    408 U.S. at 489
    , and we have since clarified that because “a revocation
    of supervised release is not part of a criminal prosecution,” the right to confrontation
    afforded at such hearings comes from due process. United States v. Ray, 
    530 F.3d 666
    , 668 (8th Cir. 2008).
    -8-
    physical harm to a government informant.” Id. at 643. Second, the government must
    establish “the reliability of the evidence which the government offers in place of live
    testimony.” Id. To demonstrate good cause, the government must prove both factors;
    only if it shows “that the burden of producing live testimony would be inordinate and
    offers in its place hearsay evidence that is demonstrably reliable” will good cause
    exist. United States v. Zentgraf, 
    20 F.3d 906
    , 910 (8th Cir. 1994) (quoting Bell, 
    785 F.2d at 643
    ).
    Applying the Bell factors to the testimony of the three witnesses at issue in this
    case, we conclude that the government failed to meet its burden on either factor and
    that Sutton was entitled to confrontation.
    A
    Under the first Bell factor, the government must prove that confrontation would
    be either impractical or undesirable. Live testimony may be impractical when
    transporting the witness to the judicial forum from another state would be “unreason-
    ably burdensome.” See, e.g., United States v. Harrison, 
    809 F.3d 420
    , 423 (8th Cir.
    2015) (finding it “would have been unreasonably burdensome, impractical, and
    costly” to procure live testimony of Virginia officers in Missouri “given the
    considerable distance they would have been required to travel”); United States v.
    Martin, 
    371 F.3d 446
    , 449 (8th Cir. 2004) (finding first factor satisfied because
    witness needed in Missouri “was in Texas and could not be found”). Where the
    witness is located within the same state as the revocation hearing, however, procuring
    live testimony generally does not impose an inordinate burden on the government.
    See Bell, 
    785 F.2d at
    644–45 (concluding that “[t]here was no showing whatever that
    producing the live testimony of the police officers involved would have presented any
    significant difficulty” because “[a]ll of them were within the State of Arkansas”).
    -9-
    Here, there is no evidence that Cliniesha, Ezekiel, or Oliver had moved outside
    the Kansas City area, so the government cannot establish that it would have been
    unreasonably burdensome to transport them to the revocation hearing. The
    government nonetheless argues that confrontation was impractical because it
    attempted to subpoena the witnesses’ live testimony but was unsuccessful. That
    argument is unpersuasive. It appears Detective Buckley made no attempt to subpoena
    Oliver. Detective Buckley apparently did not try to contact Ezekiel at the address he
    provided during his interrogation, via the phone number he provided, or through his
    parole officer. Instead, Detective Buckley testified that he attempted to serve
    subpoenas on Cliniesha and Ezekiel at the house where Eisenbarth was assaulted.
    When he learned that neither individual currently lived there, he made one further
    attempt to subpoena Cliniesha at another address but then abandoned his efforts
    entirely.
    The government urges us to infer that, if called to testify, each of the witnesses
    would have refused out of fear of Sutton. We have in the past found that a witness’s
    refusal to testify can satisfy the government’s burden under the first Bell factor. See
    United States v. Martin, 
    382 F.3d 840
    , 846 (8th Cir. 2004). In Martin, the witness
    repeatedly stated that she would not testify at the revocation hearing. Indeed, when
    subpoenaed in a related state court proceeding, she appeared but refused to testify.
    
    Id.
     Requiring the government to again subpoena the witness to appear at the
    revocation hearing, we concluded, would have been a futile exercise. 
    Id.
    Here, none of the three witnesses ever refused to comply with a subpoena or
    stated that they would do so. Detective Buckley indicated that he believed Sutton’s
    state assault charge was dropped because the witnesses were “uncooperative,” but did
    not state that they had refused to appear when subpoenaed. Both Cliniesha and
    Ezekiel expressed fear of retribution from Sutton during their interrogations, but this
    fear was apparently not so great so as to prevent them from making voluntary
    recorded statements to the police. See Zentgraf, 
    20 F.3d at 910
     (“A prisoner-witness’
    -10-
    ‘preference’ not to testify, even though motivated by a concern about being labeled
    a snitch, does not make his live testimony undesirable or impractical, at least absent
    a satisfactory showing that testifying would place the prisoner-witness in danger of
    great bodily harm . . . .”). During his interrogation, Oliver never indicated that he
    feared Sutton. The government has presented no evidence indicating that subpoena-
    ing these witnesses’ live testimony would present any greater danger of reprisal than
    using their recorded interviews. Accordingly, the government failed to demonstrate
    that attempting to procure these witnesses’ live testimony through subpoenas would
    have been futile.
    B
    The statements of Cliniesha, Ezekiel, and Oliver were not reliable enough to
    overcome Sutton’s right to confrontation. Each witness’s account was oral and
    unsworn, the “least reliable type of hearsay.” United States v. Comito, 
    177 F.3d 1166
    , 1171 (9th Cir. 1999); accord United States v. Redd, 
    318 F.3d 778
    , 784 (8th Cir.
    2003). All three witnesses were at times admittedly untruthful, had accounts that
    were internally inconsistent and inconsistent with one another, and demonstrated
    motives to minimize their own involvement in the assault.
    Starting with Cliniesha, several factors weigh against the reliability of her
    statement. She conceded to police that she was drinking heavily the day of the assault
    and periodically lost consciousness throughout the day. The internal inconsistencies
    in her account are myriad, especially on key details about whether and when Sutton
    was present at her house and whether she witnessed him hit Eisenbarth. Cliniesha’s
    story differed markedly from Ezekiel’s and conflicted with Oliver’s statement
    implicating her as a main participant in the assault. It does not explain some of the
    physical evidence, such as how she acquired blood under her fingernails. The
    evidence also reveals possible motives for Cliniesha to mislead law enforcement.
    Ezekiel told police that, on the day of the assault, Cliniesha had accused Eisenbarth
    -11-
    of raping her. And although Ezekiel said Cliniesha was trying to rekindle her
    romantic relationship with Sutton, she had also accused Sutton of harming her in the
    past.
    Cliniesha’s allegation of rape could have given Ezekiel, whose story is equally
    inconsistent, a motive to harm Eisenbarth as well. Although Ezekiel denied driving
    Eisenbarth’s car or knowing anything about the assault, his clothing matched the
    description of the individual seen parking Eisenbarth’s car near the hospital where
    Eisenbarth was later found. He also admitted to driving Cliniesha’s Blazer around
    the time the vehicle is visible on the surveillance video near the hospital. Blood was
    found on the dashboard of the Blazer and Ezekiel’s fingers appeared to have blood
    on them. And Ezekiel readily admitted his animus toward Sutton, whom he had
    previously threatened to kill.
    Oliver’s account was perhaps the most credible, but he too was untruthful. He
    initially denied knowing anything about the assault. Only later did he concede that
    he had hit Eisenbarth once before leaving Cliniesha’s residence. His description of
    his subsequent conversation with Sutton strongly implicates Cliniesha in the attack,
    which she denies. And even if we were to find Oliver’s statements reliable, he was
    not unavailable and thus Sutton retained the right to confront him. Zentgraf, 
    20 F.3d at 910
    .
    It is possible that some version of these various accounts approximates what
    really happened the night Eisenbarth was brutally assaulted, but none of these
    witnesses was sufficiently reliable so as to make cross-examination unnecessary.
    Collectively, their stories reveal numerous indicia of unreliability: intoxication,
    potential culpability in the crime, lapses in memory, repeated falsehoods, and motive
    to implicate the defendant. Because the government failed to satisfy its burden under
    Bell, the unsworn statements of Cliniesha, Ezekiel, and Oliver should not have been
    admitted at Sutton’s revocation hearing.
    -12-
    IV
    Accordingly, the order of the district court is reversed and the case is remanded
    for further proceedings as the district court deems necessary.
    ______________________________
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