After being convicted by a jury of first-degree murder,
conspiracy to commit murder, kidnapping and torture, Alison Lane Martin
appealed. People v. Martin, 2012 WL 1758 (Michigan Court of Appeals
2012). (She was sentenced to life in
prison for the murder and conspiracy
convictions, 180 months to 30 years for the kidnapping conviction and 225
months to 50 years for the torture conviction.
People v. Martin, supra.)
The prosecution
involved the murder of Brandon Sliverlight, which took place around
12:00
a.m. on November 14, 2009. [Martin] and Silverlight exchanged text messages
before Silverlight's murder; they arranged to meet at a South Haven restaurant
and arranged for Silverlight to follow [Martin] back to her parents' trailer,
where they would engage in a sexual liaison with a third person. When [Martin]
and Silverlight arrived at the trailer on November 13, 2009, Justin Terpstra
ambushed Silverlight.
Then,
according to statements [Martin] made to Shawn West, a friend, and to April
Golombieski, a fellow inmate at the Allegan County Jail, [she] and Terpstra
proceeded to torture Silverlight. They hit him on the head with a post, stabbed
him multiple times, and set his body on fire. At trial, [Martin] claimed there
was no plan to kill, or to even hurt, Silverlight and that Terpstra acted alone
and on his own accord in murdering Silverlight.
People v. Martin, supra. (If
you’d like to read more about the case and/or see a photo of Martin, check out
the news story you can find here. And for a video report on the case that
includes a photo of Silverlight, check out this story.
Martin raised several issues on appeal, but we’re only
concerned with one of them. She claimed “the trial court erred in admitting text messages that were sent from her
cellular telephone.” People
v. Martin, supra. The Court of Appeals noted that it reviews a
“trial court's evidentiary decisions for an abuse of discretion” and that an abuse
of discretion “occurs when the trial court's decision falls outside the range
of reasonable and principled outcomes.” People v. Martin, supra.
Martin argued,
first, that the judge erred in finding that the text messages “sent from her
cellular telephone were admissible under MRE 801(d)(2)(A) as
admissions of a party opponent because the messages were not authenticated as
being sent by her.” People
v. Martin, supra. She claimed “Terpstra
could have used her telephone” and noted that a “statement cannot be used as a
party admission unless the party made the statement.” People v. Martin, supra.
Martin’s argument
implicates two of the rules that govern the admission of evidence in trials in
U.S. courts: hearsay and exceptions to
its use and the need to authenticate evidence. The Court of Appeals began is
analysis with the authentication issue.
As I’ve noted in
earlier posts, in order to introduce evidence at trial, the proponent of the
evidence must “authenticate” it, i.e., prove it is what it is claimed to be.
Here, the Court of Appeals noted that the issue of authentication in Michigan
trials is governed by Michigan Rule of Evidence 901(a), which state that the “requirement
of authentication . . . as a condition precedent to admissibility is satisfied
by evidence sufficient to support a finding that the matter in question is what
its proponent claims.” People v. Martin, supra.
The Court of
Appeals then rather quickly dismissed Martin’s authentication argument:
[Shawn]
West testified that [Martin] told him she exchanged text messages with
Silverlight in which she promised a sexual liaison if he agreed to meet her.
Moreover, [Martin] testified that she sent text messages to Silverlight about
meeting him the night of the murder and that in the text messages she discussed
a sexual liaison.
The
evidence also showed that text messages were sent from [Martin’s] telephone to
Silverlight while Terpstra was at work on November 13, 2009, and that soon after
certain messages were sent, there were telephone calls between [Martin] and
Terpstra.
This
evidence was sufficient to support a finding that the text messages sent from [Martin’s]
telephone were sent by [her]. Accordingly, we reject [Martin’s] argument that
the text messages were not properly authenticated as being sent by her.
People v. Martin, supra.
Martin, as noted
above, argued that the text messages were not properly admitted as “admissions
of a party opponent” because they were not authenticated. People
v. Martin, supra. She did not, at
least on appeal, “contest that if the text messages sent from her telephone
were properly authenticated as being sent by her,” they “qualified as
admissions of a party opponent under MRE 801(d)(2)(A).” People
v. Martin, supra.
To understand why
she conceded this issue, it’s necessary to understand hearsay and the
exceptions to the general rule barring its use. As I’ve explained in
earlier posts, the rules of evidence applicable in every state and in the
federal judicial system bar the use of hearsay. Like other rules of evidence, Rule
801(c) of the Michigan Rules of Evidence defines hearsay as “a statement, other
than the one made by the declarant while testifying at the trial or hearing,
offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted.”
Why is hearsay excluded (except if it comes within certain exceptions)? It’s a matter of common sense and fairness. If hearsay weren’t excluded, John Doe could take the stand and say Jane Doe told him the defendant – Richard Roe – who’s on trial for murder confessed to the whole thing. That puts Roe in a bad place: If the jury believes what John says – that Jane heard Roe confess to the murder for which he is on trial – they’re almost certainly going to convict him (unless he’s arguing self-defense, say). Roe can use cross-examination to try to show John is a liar or is mistaken or is insane or otherwise can’t be believed, but neither he nor his lawyers can do much with Jane because she isn’t there . . . she’s a declarant who isn’t testifying at the trial.
So the theory of
the hearsay rule is that – subject to certain exceptions – you can’t admit the
statements of a declarant who isn’t testifying at trial because the other party
(Roe) can’t cross-examine them. In the U.S., anyway, cross-examination is,
considered to be the best device for truth-testing. Jane takes the stand and
tells her story about Roe’s allegedly confessing to her, and Roe’s lawyer can
cross-examine her in an effort to show she can’t be believed because she’s a
pathological liar, wants Roe convicted out of spite is insane and therefore
doesn’t know what the truth is, etc.
The admission of a party-opponent
exception is codified in Michigan Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2)(A), which says
that a statement “is not hearsay” if it is “offered against a party” and is “the
party's own statement”. As Wikipedia
notes, the rationale for excepting such statements from the definition of
hearsay derives from the rationale for the hearsay rule:
[It]
. . . exclude[s] extrajudicial assertions . . . because they cannot be tested
by cross-examination. When an assertion is offered into evidence against the
defendant and [she] objects, . . . the defendant is in essence saying `I object
to this statement as untrustworthy because I am not afforded an opportunity to
cross-examine the person who made it. . . .’
But what if the defendant is the person who
made the statement that is now being offered against him? To object, `hearsay’
in this circumstance would be as absurd as to argue, `This statement is
unreliable because I cannot cross-examine myself; therefore, how
can I trust what I said?’
Here, if the
messages were authenticated as having been sent by Martin, they do not
constitute hearsay under Michigan Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2)(A) and were,
therefore, properly admitted as admissions of a party-opponent. So, Martin conceded the issue once they court
found they were authenticated.
But she did not
give up: Martin argued that the text
messages were “[n]onetheless” inadmissible because they “were contained in a
second level of hearsay, the telephone records of the text messages, which the
trial court held were not admissible under MRE 803(6).” People
v. Martin, supra. The Court of
Appeals began its analysis of this argument by noting that under Michigan Rule
of Evidence 805 “`[h]earsay included within hearsay is not excluded under the
hearsay rule if each part of the combined statements conforms with an exception
to the hearsay rule” included in the Michigan Rules of Evidence. People
v. Martin, supra.
It then explained
that
[a]ccordingly,
the text messages were admissible if the messages and the telephone records in
which the messages were contained fell within a hearsay exception. The trial
court held that the telephone records of the text messages did not qualify as
business records under MRE 803(6).
People v. Martin, supra.
Rule 803(6)
codified what is known as the business records exception to the default rule
barring the use of hearsay. As Wikipedia
notes, the rationale for the exception is that employees of a business “are
under a duty to be accurate in observing, reporting, and recording business
facts” and that, therefore, “special reliability is provided by the regularity
with which the records are made and kept, as well as the incentive of employees
to keep accurate records”. Since Rule
803(6) is lengthy, I’m not including it in this post but you can find it here,
if you’d like to read it.
The Court of
Appeals disagreed with the trial court, which held that the exception did not
apply here because Sprint, which was apparently Martin’s cell phone company, ”is
not `personally invested’ in the accuracy or the truthfulness of text messages
sent and received by its customers”, which would mean that the telephone
records of the text messages lacked trustworthiness.” People
v. Martin, supra. It explained that
Donna
Hernandez, a custodian of records for Sprint, testified that Sprint retains the
content of text messages sent and received by its customers for 7 to 14 days
and do so as a service for its customers. Her testimony indicated that when
Sprint receives a request for a customer's text messages, a Sprint employee
enters the relevant criteria into a computer and the content of the text
messages is printed from the database.
Given Hernandez's testimony, there is
nothing in the record to suggest a lack of trustworthiness in the source of
information . . . in the telephone records or in the method or circumstances of
preparation of the records. . . .
There
was no evidence Sprint had any motivation to misrepresent the information in
the telephone records. . . . [W]hile there was no evidence to suggest Sprint
was concerned with whether text messages sent and received by its customers
contained accurate and truthful information, this fact does not affect the
trustworthiness of the telephone records themselves.
The purpose of the
telephone records of text messages is to provide Sprint customers with the
content of the text messages, i.e., the actual message that was
sent or received by the customer, regardless whether the message itself was
accurate and truthful. The purpose of the telephone records of text messages is
not to convey the text messages for the truth of the matters asserted in the
messages.
People v. Martin, supra.
The court therefore
found that the telephone records were admissible under Michigan Rule of
Evidence 803(6). People v. Martin, supra. Since they were admissible, Martin’s
hearsay-within-hearsay argument failed because the text messages and the
telephone records were properly admitted.
People v. Martin, supra.
It also noted that
even if admitting the text messages had been error, Martin would not be
entitled to have her convictions reversed unless she could show the error was
“`outcome determinative’”, i.e., caused the convictions. People
v. Martin, supra (quoting People v.
Lukity, 596 N.W.2d 607 (Michigan Supreme Court 1999)). She claimed the messages “provided a critical
link to her direct involvement in the murder of Silverlight” and their
admission “eviscerated the defense theory of minimizing her involvement in the
murder and pointing fault at Terpstra.” People
v. Martin, supra.
The Court of
Appeals pointed out, among other things, that the text messages did not
establish that she was
directly
involved in the murder of Silverlight. That [she] was directly involved in the
murder of Silverlight was established by the testimony of West and Golombieski
regarding what [Martin] told them about the period after she and Silverlight
arrived at her parents' trailer. Accordingly, [she] has failed to establish
that any theoretical error in the admission of the text messages more probably
than not affected the outcome of her trial.
People v. Martin, supra.
It therefore
affirmed her conviction, and sentences. People v. Martin, supra
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