¶ 1 Rebecca
Lynn
Jacobson seeks review of the trial court’s denial of her motion for appointment at government expense of such experts as are reasonably necessary for her defense. She has no equally plain, speedy and adequate remedy by appeal. Ariz. R.P. Spec. Act. 1(a);
Martin v. Reinstein,
BACKGROUND
¶2 Jacobson was the driver of a vehicle involved in a single-vehicle-rollover accident in which two passengers were killed and a third passenger was injured. Based on evidence that she was legally intoxicated and speeding at the time of the accident, Jacobson was charged with two counts of manslaughter, class 2 dangerous felonies, and endangerment, a class 6 dangerous felony.
If 3 In preparation for trial, the State filed a witness list that included as expert witnesses an accident reconstructionist, D.J. Hansen, and a criminalist, Jennifer Klem. In response, Jacobson retained accident recon-structionist Michael Broughton and criminalist Chester Flaxmeyer, and listed them as witnesses.
¶ 4 Although Jacobson’s parents had retained counsel to represent her, she has been declared by the trial court to be indigent.
See
Ariz. R.Crim. P. 6.4 (“Determination of indigency”);
Knapp v. Hardy,
ANALYSIS AND CONCLUSION
¶5 Arizona Rule of Criminal Procedure (“Rule”) 15.9 permits the trial court to appoint expert witnesses for an indigent defendant who makes the proper showing. Indeed, due process requires the appointment of expert witnesses for an indigent defendant when such testimony is reasonably necessary to present an adequate defense.
See, e.g., Little v. Armontrout,
¶ 6 The legislature has explicitly protected the right of an indigent defendant to expert assistance in capital cases, Ariz.Rev. Stat. § 13-4013(B) (2001), but the fact that this is a non-capital case is not dispositive because Rule 15.9 is not merely applicable to capital eases. And we decline to “draw a decisive line for due-process purposes between capital and non-capital cases.”
Little,
¶ 7 Because Jacobson was declared by the trial court to be indigent, she is entitled to have the opportunity to demonstrate to that court that her proposed expert witnesses are reasonably necessary for her defense. Therefore, this matter is remanded, and the court is instructed to reconsider Jacobson’s motion.
Notes
. Arizona Rule of Criminal Procedure 15.9 was promulgated on January 30, 2002, effective June 1, 2002. It states: "An indigent defendant may apply for the appointment of an investigator and expert witness ... to be paid at county expense if the defendant can show that such assistance is reasonably necessary to present a defense adequately at trial or sentencing.”
. The Knapp case is distinguishable because, at that point in time in the case, "[w]hat the defendant [was] really requesting [was] the appointment of an expert to rebut the State’s anticipated evidence,” or, in other words, Knapp’s motion was premature.
