Rael v. People , 395 P.3d 772 ( 2017 )


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    ADVANCE SHEET HEADNOTE
    June 5, 2017
    
    2017 CO 67
    No. 13SC903, Rael v. People—Electronic Exhibits—Crime Scene Videos—Statements
    by the Defendant—Jury Deliberations.
    This case requires the supreme court to decide whether it was reversible error for
    a trial court in a criminal case to provide the deliberating jury with “unfettered and
    unsupervised access” to a crime scene video and a video of a police interview of the
    defendant. A division of the court of appeals concluded that the trial court did not err
    in either regard. In reaching this conclusion, the division relied on this court’s decision
    in DeBella v. People, 
    233 P.3d 664
    , 665–66 (Colo. 2010), in which the court considered
    the propriety of a trial court’s order allowing the jury unfettered access to the
    videotapes of a child sexual assault victim’s out-of-court interviews.
    Although the supreme court agrees that the trial court retains discretion
    regarding juror access to the videos at issue, the court disagrees with the division that
    DeBella provides the appropriate framework for resolving this case.             The court
    nevertheless concludes that the division reached the correct result, namely, that the trial
    court did not abuse its discretion in allowing the jury unfettered access to those videos
    during deliberations. In arriving at this conclusion, the supreme court observes that the
    non-testimonial crime scene video did not present the same risk of undue emphasis as
    do videos documenting witnesses’ out-of-court, testimonial statements (like the
    videotapes at issue in DeBella).       The court likewise observes, consistent with
    well-established precedent, that a defendant’s confession is not subject to the same
    limitations during deliberations as the out-of-court statements of other witnesses.
    Accordingly, the supreme court affirms the judgment of the court of appeals and
    remands this case to that court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado
    2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203
    
    2017 CO 67
    Supreme Court Case No. 13SC903
    Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals
    Court of Appeals Case No. 10CA634
    Petitioner:
    Ignacio Ray Rael,
    v.
    Respondent:
    The People of the State of Colorado.
    Judgment Affirmed
    en banc
    June 5, 2017
    Attorneys for Petitioner:
    Douglas K. Wilson, Public Defender
    Michael C. Mattis, Deputy Public Defender
    Denver, Colorado
    Attorneys for Respondent:
    Cynthia H. Coffman, Attorney General
    John T. Lee, Assistant Attorney General
    Denver, Colorado
    JUSTICE GABRIEL delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    ¶1       This case requires us to decide whether it was reversible error for a trial court in
    a criminal case to provide the deliberating jury with “unfettered and unsupervised
    access” to a crime scene video and a video of a police interview of the defendant,
    Ignacio Ray “Mike” Rael.1 In People v. Rael, No. 10CA634 (Colo. App. Oct. 3, 2013), a
    unanimous division of the court of appeals concluded that the trial court did not err in
    either regard.     In reaching this conclusion, the division relied on our decision in
    DeBella v. People, 
    233 P.3d 664
    , 665–66 (Colo. 2010), in which we considered the
    propriety of a trial court’s order allowing the jury unfettered access to the videotapes of
    a child sexual assault victim’s out-of-court interviews.
    ¶2       Although we disagree that DeBella provides the appropriate framework for
    resolving this case, we agree with the result reached by the division, namely, that the
    trial court did not abuse its discretion in allowing the jury unfettered access to the two
    videos during deliberations.        In our view, the jury was entitled to access the
    non-testimonial crime scene video because that video did not present the same risk of
    undue emphasis as do videos documenting witnesses’ out-of-court, testimonial
    statements (like the videotapes at issue in DeBella). We likewise conclude, based on the
    longstanding rule that a defendant’s confession is not subject to the same limitations
    during deliberations as the out-of-court statements of other witnesses, that the jury was
    entitled to access the interview video.
    1   We granted certiorari to review the following issue:
    Whether the court of appeals erred in affirming the trial court’s decision to
    allow the jury unfettered and unsupervised access to interrogation and
    non-testimonial crime scene videos during deliberations.
    2
    ¶3     Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals and remand this
    case to that court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    I. Facts and Procedural History
    ¶4     In October 2008, a man found his mother dead in the bedroom of her apartment.
    She had been beaten to death. No one had seen or heard the attack, but witness
    statements and physical evidence gathered in the ensuing investigation implicated Rael,
    who had been the victim’s boyfriend.         The People eventually charged him with
    first-degree murder after deliberation. Rael pleaded not guilty to the charge, and the
    case proceeded to trial.
    ¶5     As part of its case-in-chief, the prosecution introduced into evidence two videos:
    one showing the crime scene and the other a police interview of Rael. Over Rael’s
    objections, the court admitted both.
    ¶6     The prosecutor played the crime scene video for the jury on the first day of the
    presentation of evidence, during the direct examination of the detective who had filmed
    that video. From a first-person perspective, the video depicted a soundless trip through
    the victim’s apartment, from outside the building to inside the bedroom where the
    victim’s body lay. After the video ended, the prosecutor resumed the detective’s direct
    examination, asking him to describe what he saw as he had walked through each room
    and the condition of the victim’s body as he had found it. The prosecutor also offered,
    and the court admitted, several photographs of the crime scene.
    3
    ¶7    The detective then recounted an interview that he and a colleague had conducted
    with Rael on the same day that the victim’s body was discovered. This interview had
    been recorded, and the prosecution played a redacted version of the video at trial.
    ¶8    In the interview, Rael denied killing the victim, stating that he had not seen her
    since the previous afternoon. He maintained that later that evening, he and the victim’s
    upstairs neighbor had gone to a party, where he drank a twelve-pack of beer. He said
    that he returned to the neighbor’s apartment after the party and that he and the
    neighbor then drank some more. He conceded that at some point, he and the neighbor
    got into an altercation in which he may have hit the neighbor multiple times. He also
    recalled that while he was in the neighbor’s apartment, the victim yelled up to him,
    “Hey, Mike, there’s someone down here,” referring to a visiting male friend. He denied
    that this made him angry, although he said that he later went downstairs to the victim’s
    apartment, where he heard voices inside, one of which he believed to be a man’s voice.
    He claimed that he banged on the door to be allowed in, but the victim would not let
    him in. He admitted that this made him angry, but he said that he simply left and
    “crashed” in a van near the apartment.
    ¶9    The case went to the jury, and during their deliberations, the jurors asked to view
    the two videos. Rael objected to this request. Regarding the crime scene video, he
    argued that he did not think the jury “should be given unlimited access to highlight and
    repeat various portions.” In so arguing, he cited People v. Montoya, 
    773 P.2d 623
     (Colo.
    App. 1989), and People v. Carter, 
    919 P.2d 862
     (Colo. App. 1996), which he said might
    “shed some light” on the jury’s right to have access to the crime scene video. With
    4
    respect to the interview video, Rael argued that granting the jury “complete control”
    over that video could cause the jurors to “focus on it unnecessarily [and] repeat it in an
    inappropriate manner.”
    ¶10   The court overruled Rael’s objections, finding that the cases that Rael had cited
    were “not [sic] longer good law” and that under People v. McKinney, 
    80 P.3d 823
    , 829
    (Colo. App. 2003), rev’d on other grounds, 
    99 P.3d 1038
     (Colo. 2004), the jurors could
    “do whatever they want with it, just like any other exhibit.”        The court therefore
    provided the jury with a computer and DVDs of the two videos. Notably, with respect
    to the interview video, the court instructed the clerk to act as a “projectionist” for the
    jurors because the DVD that was given to them contained a portion of the interview that
    had not been shown during the trial. The court asked the clerk to skip over that portion
    of the video while the jurors were watching it. In contrast, the jurors appear to have
    had complete control over the crime scene video.
    ¶11   The jury subsequently found Rael guilty of the lesser-included offense of
    second-degree murder, and the court ultimately sentenced him to forty-eight years in
    prison.
    ¶12   Rael appealed his conviction and raised seven claims of error, including, as
    pertinent here, that the trial court had erred in allowing the jury “unlimited and
    unsupervised access” to the crime scene and interview videos during deliberations. He
    contended that in so doing, the trial court had committed the same error that the trial
    court in DeBella had committed, namely, erroneously relying on McKinney and thus
    not exercising appropriate discretion in granting the jury access to the video exhibits.
    5
    Rael asserted that, as in DeBella, the court’s errors adversely affected the fairness of the
    trial.
    ¶13      The division disagreed. Applying the framework of this court’s DeBella opinion,
    it concluded that unlike the trial court in DeBella, the trial court here had neither relied
    on McKinney nor neglected to exercise its discretion in providing the two videos to the
    jury during its deliberations.     See Rael, slip op. at 31–32.        After rejecting Rael’s
    remaining contentions, the division affirmed the judgment of conviction. 
    Id.
    ¶14      Rael then petitioned this court for a writ of certiorari. We granted the writ to
    decide whether the trial court had erred in allowing the jury unfettered and
    unsupervised access to the crime scene and interview videos during its deliberations.
    II. Standard of Review
    ¶15      Control over the use of exhibits during jury deliberations rests firmly within the
    trial court’s discretion, and we may not substitute our own judgment for that of the trial
    court merely because we would have reached a different conclusion.                 People v.
    Jefferson, 
    2017 CO 35
    , ¶ 25, 
    393 P.3d 493
    , 498. Accordingly, we will not disturb the trial
    court’s refusal to exclude or limit the use of an exhibit unless the court’s decision was
    manifestly arbitrary, unreasonable, or unfair. 
    Id.,
     
    393 P.3d at 499
    .
    III. Preservation
    ¶16      As an initial matter, we note that the People contend that Rael did not
    sufficiently preserve his objection to the jury’s access to the videos during deliberations
    and that, as a result, this court should review Rael’s claim only for plain error. See
    Martinez v. People, 
    2017 CO 36
    , ¶ 20, 
    393 P.3d 557
    , 561 (noting that the defendant did
    6
    not object when the trial court allowed the jury unfettered access to the DVDs and
    paper transcripts of the three victims’ forensic interviews and therefore reviewing for
    plain error). We disagree.
    ¶17   We do not require that parties use “talismanic language” to preserve an
    argument for appeal. People v. Melendez, 
    102 P.3d 315
    , 322 (Colo. 2004). The objection
    need only draw the trial court’s attention to the asserted error, thus allowing the court
    “a meaningful chance to prevent or correct the error” and creating a record for appellate
    review. Martinez v. People, 
    2015 CO 16
    , ¶ 14, 
    344 P.3d 862
    , 868.
    ¶18   Here, after the jurors asked to review the two videos during their deliberations,
    Rael immediately objected, stating, “That might be a problem, Judge.” He went on to
    argue that the jurors should not be given “unlimited access to highlight and repeat
    various portions” of the videos and that case law prohibited the jurors from “repeatedly
    play[ing] other witnesses’ statements.” In doing so, Rael prompted the trial court to
    rule on the very issue presented here and to create a record of its reasoning for our
    review.
    ¶19   Accordingly, we conclude that Rael adequately preserved the issue.
    IV. Analysis
    ¶20   Rael contends that the trial court reversibly erred by not exercising any
    discretion in allowing the jury “unlimited and unsupervised access” to the crime scene
    and interview videos during its deliberations. We address the jury’s access to each
    video separately, beginning with the crime scene video and then turning to the
    interview video.
    7
    A. The Crime Scene Video
    ¶21    According to Rael, the trial court here, like the trial court in DeBella, abused its
    discretion when it did not assess whether the video exhibits at issue would “aid the jury
    in its proper consideration of the case, and even if so, whether a party w[ould]
    nevertheless be unfairly prejudiced by the jury’s use” of the videos. In our view,
    however, Rael’s premise is flawed because the assessment described in DeBella does not
    control jury access to non-testimonial exhibits like the crime scene video.
    ¶22    DeBella, 233 P.3d at 665, involved jury access to videotaped interviews of the
    child-victim that had been admitted as exhibits in the defendant’s trial for sexual assault
    on a child and enticement. Although our opinion sometimes referred generally to “trial
    exhibits,” when read in context, it is clear that our analysis hinged on the nature of the
    exhibits at issue, namely, the victim’s videotaped, out-of-court statements detailing the
    charged sexual assaults. See id. at 668–69. Our opinion flowed from a line of precedent
    dealing with jury requests during deliberations to rehear portions of trial testimony, see
    Settle v. People, 
    504 P.2d 680
    , 680–81 (Colo. 1972), and exhibits substituting for trial
    testimony, see, e.g., Frasco v. People, 
    165 P.3d 701
    , 704–06 (Colo. 2007) (involving jury
    access during deliberations to the videotaped, out-of-court interview of a child-victim of
    sexual and physical abuse). We have observed that honoring requests for access in the
    jury room to witnesses’ out-of-court statements effectively puts the witness in that room
    during deliberations and creates a risk that the jury will place undue weight or
    emphasis on the out-of-court statements. See Jefferson, ¶ 45, 393 P.3d at 501; see also
    United States v. Binder, 
    769 F.2d 595
    , 600 (9th Cir. 1985) (noting that videotaped
    8
    testimony is “unique” and “serves as the functional equivalent of a live witness”),
    overruled in part on other grounds by United States v. Morales, 
    108 F.3d 1031
    , 1035 n.1
    (9th Cir. 1997).
    ¶23    The same danger of undue emphasis does not inhere in non-testimonial evidence
    like the crime scene video at issue here. In our view, that video was more like a
    non-testimonial, tangible exhibit (such as a still photograph of the crime scene) than a
    testimonial one (such as a witness’s recorded statement), and courts in Colorado and
    other jurisdictions have consistently upheld juror access to such non-testimonial
    exhibits. See, e.g., People v. Aponte, 
    867 P.2d 183
    , 188–89 (Colo. App. 1993) (perceiving
    no error in the trial court’s decision to allow the jury unsupervised access to a videotape
    and transcript of a drug transaction; these exhibits were “tangible exhibits with verbal
    content which [were] non-testimonial in character because they depict[ed] the actual
    commission of the crime itself,” rather than a testimonial “narrative of events”);
    Burkhart v. Commonwealth, 
    125 S.W.3d 848
    , 850 (Ky. 2003) (noting that juror access to
    testimonial exhibits presents a risk of undue emphasis whereas juror access to
    non-testimonial exhibits, such as the surveillance video at issue, presents no such
    concerns); Chambers v. State, 
    726 P.2d 1269
    , 1275 (Wyo. 1986) (“[T]here is no rule of
    exclusion for tangible exhibits with verbal content. Nontestimonial exhibits with such
    content, such as contract documents or recordings of criminal acts which are verbal in
    nature, are generally allowed to go into the deliberations.”) (quoting 3 David W.
    Louisell & Christopher B. Mueller, Federal Evidence § 390, at 684 (1980)).
    9
    ¶24   We believe that these authorities are well reasoned and persuasive, and we
    follow them here. Accordingly, we discern no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s
    decision to grant the jury unfettered access to the crime scene video during its
    deliberations.
    B. The Interview Video
    ¶25   Rael makes a similar argument regarding the interview video. Specifically, he
    contends that pursuant to DeBella, the trial court erred in granting the jury unfettered
    access to this video without first determining whether the video would have aided the
    jury in its proper consideration of the case and whether such access would have caused
    unfair prejudice. Again, we disagree.
    ¶26   Courts have long treated jury access to transcripts and recordings of a
    defendant’s own out-of-court statements differently from jury access to transcripts and
    recordings of other witnesses’ out-of-court statements. As a division of our court of
    appeals has correctly observed, the former “were categorically allowed into the jury
    room, for whatever consideration the jury would give them.” People v. Gingles, 
    2014 COA 163
    , ¶ 15, 
    350 P.3d 968
    , 971; see also People v. Ferrero, 
    874 P.2d 468
    , 473 (Colo.
    App. 1993) (holding that a videotape of the defendant’s confession that had been
    admitted into evidence could be taken into the jury room during deliberations);
    People v. Miller, 
    829 P.2d 443
    , 446 (Colo. App. 1991) (adopting “the general rule,
    enunciated by a majority of the states in which this issue has been decided,” that a
    transcript of the defendant’s voluntary confession, which had been admitted into
    evidence, could be taken into the jury room during deliberations).
    10
    ¶27   Video recordings of other witnesses’ out-of-court statements, in contrast, have
    had a more complex history.
    ¶28   Until 2007, when Frasco, 165 P.3d at 704, disapproved of the practice, divisions of
    the court of appeals had relied on C.R.C.P. 47(m) for guidance on the question of jury
    access to exhibits in criminal cases (a matter that the Rules of Criminal Procedure did
    not address).   For example, in 1989, the Montoya division applied, by analogy,
    C.R.C.P. 47(m)’s “universal rule that depositions may not be reviewed by a jury on an
    unsupervised basis” and thus concluded that a trial court may allow jurors in a criminal
    case to review a witness’s videotaped statement “only under circumstances that will
    assure [sic] that such statements are not given ‘undue weight or emphasis.’”              See
    Montoya, 
    773 P.2d at
    625–26 (quoting Settle, 504 P.2d at 681).
    ¶29   As C.R.C.P. 47(m) changed, however, so did its judicially created criminal
    analog. For example, in 2003, after a jury reform project “intended to provide more
    information for jurors” had deleted C.R.C.P. 47(m)’s categorical ban on depositions in
    the jury room, the McKinney division noted that the change had cast doubt on
    Montoya’s reasoning and concluded that “under the present rule, all exhibits that have
    been admitted as evidence may be taken into the jury room, unless it is infeasible to do
    so.” McKinney, 
    80 P.3d at 829
    .
    ¶30   Four years later, in Frasco, 165 P.3d at 704, this court clarified the law in this area,
    stating, “Whatever C.R.C.P. 47(m) may now require in civil proceedings, it does not
    govern the use of exhibits in criminal proceedings.” We then concluded that trial courts
    in criminal proceedings retain discretionary control over jury access to exhibits during
    11
    deliberations. Id. We cautioned, however, that those courts must guard against juries’
    unfair or prejudicial use of certain exhibits, including, for example, the videotaped,
    out-of-court statements of child–victims of sexual assault. Id. at 703; accord Jefferson,
    ¶ 41, 393 P.3d at 500; DeBella, 233 P.3d at 666.
    ¶31    In light of this history, we must determine whether trial courts bear the same
    obligation to prevent unfair or prejudicial use of the defendant’s videotaped,
    out-of-court confession during deliberations that we imposed with respect to the
    videotaped, out-of-court statements of the child-victims in Jefferson, DeBella, and
    Frasco.    Stated otherwise, this case requires us to decide whether the long-held
    distinction between a defendant’s own words and those of other witnesses survived
    Frasco’s clarification of the law. We conclude that it did.
    ¶32    Courts have long recognized that an un-coerced confession “is among the
    strongest kinds of physical evidence the prosecution may produce.” Miller, 
    829 P.2d at 446
     (quoting People v. Caldwell, 
    236 N.E.2d 706
    , 714 (Ill. 1968)). As one commentator
    observed, a confession’s “centrality in the case warrants whatever emphasis may
    result.”   2 Kenneth S. Broun, McCormick on Evidence § 220, at 76 (7th ed. 2013).
    Accordingly, appellate courts in Colorado have consistently concluded that when
    considering a jury’s access to a defendant’s own admissible, out-of-court statements, no
    special protections against undue emphasis are required and the jury is entitled to
    unrestricted access to those statements. See Gingles, ¶ 18, 350 P.3d at 971–72; Ferrero,
    
    874 P.2d at 473
    ; Miller, 
    829 P.2d at 446
    .
    12
    ¶33    Neither Frasco nor its progeny cast doubt on this reasoning.                Indeed, in
    permitting greater access to exhibits containing witnesses’ out-of-court statements (i.e.,
    by replacing a rule tethered to C.R.C.P. 47(m) with one of discretionary control), Frasco
    gave no indication that (1) the jury should have less access to a defendant’s confession
    or (2) a defendant’s confession must be treated in the same manner as the testimonial
    statement of a witness. Gingles, ¶ 18, 350 P.3d at 971–72.
    ¶34    Accordingly, and for the reasons set forth in Carter v. People, 
    2017 CO 59
    , ¶¶ 20–
    22, ___ P.3d ___, which we also decide today, we agree with the Gingles division that
    “the historical reason for treating a defendant’s confession differently retains its
    vitality,” 
    id.,
     and we adopt that division’s reasoning and that of the Miller and Ferrero
    divisions before it, see id.; Ferrero, 
    874 P.2d at 473
    ; Miller, 
    829 P.2d at 446
    .
    ¶35    Applying the foregoing principles here, we conclude that the concerns that
    motivated our decision in DeBella (i.e., effectively putting a child-victim in the jury
    room during deliberations and allowing the jury to place undue weight or emphasis on
    his or her out-of-court statements) do not apply to a defendant’s own out-of-court
    statements. As more fully set forth above and in our decision today in Carter, however,
    trial courts nonetheless retain discretionary control over jury access to such exhibits.
    See Carter, ¶ 22; Frasco, 165 P.3d at 704. In this case, we conclude that the trial court
    properly exercised this discretion. Specifically, as discussed more fully above, the court
    allowed the jury access to the interview video only after entertaining argument,
    considering the case law cited by the parties, and addressing the problem posed by the
    fact that the video inadvertently contained a segment that should have been redacted.
    13
    V. Conclusion
    ¶36   For these reasons, we affirm the judgment of the division and remand this case
    for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    14