The State of Minnesota charged Bruce Philip Larson with criminal sexual contact with his three-year-old daughter. Larson’s daughter was available at his trial and the trial court found the child, then age five, competent to testify, but neither the State nor Larson called her as a witness. Overruling Larson’s hearsay and Confrontation Clause objections, the trial court admitted evidence of the child’s out-of-court statements to a physician’s assistant, to a child protection specialist, to a therapist, and to a police officer and a social worker. A jury found Larson guilty and the Minnesota Supreme Court affirmed his conviction.
State v. Larson,
Larson appeals, contending the Confrontation Clause does not allow admission of his daughter’s out-of-court statements because she was available but did not testify. According to Larson, an available, nontestifying witness’s out-of-court statements may be admitted only when the out-of-court state *648 ments fit a firmly rooted exception to the hearsay rule and his daughter’s statements do not fit any firmly rooted hearsay exception.
We disagree with Larson’s premise. “[W]hether [Larson’s daughter] was unavailable is irrelevant for purposes of the [Confrontation] Clause.”
Ring v. Erickson,
In affirming Larson’s conviction, the Minnesota Supreme Court considered whether the challenged statements had particular guarantees of trustworthiness.
Larson,
Larson’s habeas petition did not challenge the Minnesota court’s conclusion that three of the out-of-court statements had particular guarantees of trustworthiness. In any event, Larson’s skeletal assertion that “there were no circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness surrounding the making of the statements,” buried in a brief point discussing the benefits of cross-examination, does not raise this issue on appeal.
See United States v. Dunkel,
We agree with the Minnesota Supreme Court that the child’s videotaped statement to a police officer and a social worker was merely cumulative and its admission was at most harmless error. Indeed, Larson waived his Confrontation Clause objection to the videotape before trial, asking the trial court to overrule its earlier suppression order. We thus conclude Larson has failed to show admission of his daughter’s out-of-court statements violated his Sixth Amendment confrontation right.
Accordingly, we affirm.
