After a bench trial, Jerome Jackson was convicted of a violation of the Bail Reform Act, D.C.Code § 23-1327(a) (2001), for failing to appear at a status hearing on a separate criminal charge. On appeal, Jackson claims that the trial court’s admission of certified copies of the docket entries and the Noticе to Return to Court contained in the District of Columbia Superior Court records violated his Confrontation Clause rights under
Crawford v. Washington,
I.
At Jackson’s bench trial on July 22, 2005, the government sought to prove a violation of the Bail Reform Act by showing (1) that Jackson had been released pending further criminal proceedings, (2) that Jackson was required to appear in court on a specific date, (3) that Jackson failed to appear, and (4) that this failure to appear was willful.
See Goldsberry v. United States,
The first of these exhibits, marked Government Exhibit Number 1, consisted of certified photocopies of three pages from the Superior Court case file in criminal case number M-841-05, the second page of which included two relevant docket entries dated February 17, 2005, and February 24, 2005. The February 17th entry contained checked boxes indicating that the defendant “is present” and that the “Defendant [was] Advised of Penalties for Failure to Appear” and showed the “continued date” of 2-24-05. The February 24th entry contained a checked box indicating that the defendant “is not present” and included a handwritten note indicating that the defendant had failed to appear. Each of the entries was signed with the initials of thе courtroom clerk who made the entry. 2
Defense counsel objected to the admission of the exhibits, invoking
Crawford
and the Sixth Amendment Confrontation Clause. The trial court, however, ruled that the records did not contain “testimonial statements] precluded by
Crawford”
and admitted the exhibits pursuant to the “public record” hearsay exception.
See Goldsberry, supra,
II.
Jackson’s primary contention on appeal is that his rights under the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment, as construed in Crawford, supra, were violated because the trial court admitted into evidence the certified copies of the Superior Court docket еntries and the Notice to Return to Court without testimony from the court clerk who created the records. 5
The Sixth Amendment Confrontation Clause forbids the “admission of testimonial statements of a witness who did not appear at trial unless [the witness] was unavailable to testify, and the defendant had had a prior opportunity for cross-examination” of the witness.
Crawford, supra,
In
Crawford,
the Court expressly left open the meaning of “testimonial.”
Id.
at 68,
In contrast to the primary purpose of the DEA chemist reports at issue in
As already noted, in
Goldsberry,
we concluded that the Notice to Return was not even hearsay because of the limited purposе for which it was admitted. In
Crawford,
the Supreme Court indicated that the Confrontation Clause “does not bar the use of testimonial statements for purposes other than establishing the truth of the matter asserted.”
Our conclusion that the records were not testimonial is further bolstered by the observations that the records in question “did not result from an investigation, аnd [that] courtroom clerks are not ‘law enforcement personnel.’”
See Goldsberry, supra,
Although a trial court may, at times, have difficulty determining the primary purpose for which records were created, in the present case the trial court was evaluating the familiar purpose of the same kinds of records that it creates every day. Furthermore, the trial court heard expert testimony before the records were admitted that suggested that the records were created primarily for administrative purposes. For example, expert witness Alonzo Wiggins testified that “[t]he courtroom clerk is responsible for various things — the management of the courtroom, the management of the judge’s calendar, the calling of cases, the making of jacket entries[,] ... swearing defendants out on bond and ... giving them notice for continue dates, handling jury voir dire, jury selection process. It’s various sundry duties.” With regard to the docket entries in particular, Mr. Wiggins testified that the clerk is required to record “the activity that took placet,] whether or not the defendant was present, counsel was present, prosecutor present — any parties that were present. ... You would also make notations as to whether or not the defendant was advised of his or her obligations to reappear.”
Because the challenged documents were created in the regular course of court operations, primarily for administrative purposes rather than with a primary eye towards future prosecution, we are satisfied that they did not constitute testimonial statements and that their admission did not violate Jackson’s rights under the Confrontation Clause. 8
Affirmed.
Notes
. “In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to be confronted with the witnesses against him_” U.S. Const. amend. VI.
. Defense witness Russell Barbie, a courtroom clerk, testified that he had made the February 17, 2005, docket notation indicating that Jackson had been informed of his duty to return to court. Mr. Wiggins, the expert witness, testified that he recognized the initials on the February 17, 2005, docket entry as those of Mr. Barbie and the initials on the February 24, 2005, docket entry as those of
.The other document in Exhibit 2 was a certified copy of the bench warrant that was issued after Jackson failed to appear. He does not challenge on appeal with any specificity the introduction of this document. In fact, in our view, this document presents no Confrontation Clause concern. Rather than establishing past facts that underlie a criminal charge for purposes of future prosecution, the warrant indicates only what appellant has been
charged
with. Furthermore, the warrant's primary purpose, plainly expressed through its text, is to notify the United States Marshal and Chief of Pоlice of the District of Columbia that they have both the power and responsibility to arrest appellant and bring him forthwith before the court — that is, to command police assistance with an ongoing set of circumstances, rather than to document information for future prosecution.
Cf. Davis v.
Washington, - U.S. -, -,
. Jackson, on cross-examination, admitted that the signature on the Notice to Return to Court looked like his signature but that he could not be certain because the signature did not legibly show his name.
. It is our understanding that the handwritten docket entries that were traditionally made in Superior Court case files, sometimes colloquially known as "jacket entries,” are being phased out in favor of an electronic docketing system, and indeed both records may exist in certain cases that span the transition period. We consider these handwritten and electronic docket entries to be indistinguishable for Confrontation Clause purposes.
. For a record to be admissible under the public record hearsay exception, the record must be authenticated as an official record of the governmental body in question and the proffering party must demonstrate that "the facts stated in the document are within the personal knowledge and observation of the recording official” and that "the document is prepared pursuant to a duty imposed by law оr implied by the nature of the office.”
Goldsberry, supra,
. We also said that, in any event, even if the Notice was intended to prove the truth of the matter asserted therein, the Notice would be admissible as a public record for the same reason that the docket entries were admissible.
Goldsberry, supra,
. We also reject Jackson’s second claim of errоr. The trial court informed Jackson before he testified that he had "an absolute right to testify or not to testify,” that a decision to not testify could never be held against him, and that a decision to testify would mean "that the prosecutor will be able to ask you a whole bunch of questions on cross examination.” Although Jackson indicated his understаnding and desire to testify and failed to lodge any contemporaneous objection, he now contends that the judge plainly erred by failing to also advise him of the obvious effect of testifying: that his testimony and demean- or could be considered by the fact-finder and potentially held against him.
Although in
Boyd v. United States,
