OPINION
This is a case of first impression, where we are called upon to decide the applicability of the rule set forth in Crawford v. Washington,
We conclude that the admission of the breath test instrument certification documents at issue here did not violate the rule set forth in Crawford. And our legislature has provided that certificates regarding the inspection and compliance with relevant regulations of breath test instruments are admissible in prosecutions for operating a vehicle with a BAC of .08% or great *146 er. However, we also find that admitting into evidence the BAC ticket purporting to prove the breath test results-absent any "live" testimony that would establish a foundation for its admission-was improperly admitted. Thus, we reverse Napier's conviction on this basis.
FACTS
The parties do not dispute that Napier was operating his vehicle on November 12, 2003, at 1:80 a.m. in Morgan County. Napier stipulated that the police officer that stopped him had probable cause to do so. Napier also did not dispute that there was probable cause to offer him a breath test.
While Napier was originally charged with Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated (OVWI) as well as the BAC charge, the State subsequently dismissed the OVWI charge. During a bench trial that commenced on April 14, 2004, the State presented the certification of the breath test operator and the machine, and the breath test ticket showing Napier's BAC. The printout of the breath test showed that Napier's breath contained .14 grams of alcohol per 210 liters of breath. Neither the arresting officer nor any other "live" testimony was presented at trial.
During the course of the proceedings, the State sought to introduce the various certification materials contained in a document regarding the breath test machine that was used. Napier objected on the grounds that the admissibility of the document is controlled by the Crawford case and that "most hearsay exceptions contained in evidentiary rules and statutes are not permissible." Tr. p. 6. Napier went on to note that the fact that the particular machine was certified and satisfied certain accuracy requirements of regulations amounted to testimonial evidence. Napier further contended that he "can't eross-examine either the inspector's conclusions that are contained here in the ... report or the director of the Department of Toxicology or his representative concerning whether he should or should not have certified the document." Tr. p. 7.
Napier then offered maintenance records of the BAC DataMaster that was used in the breath test, along with records of a different DataMaster machine. Napier also objected to the admission of the instrument certification that the State offered on the grounds of hearsay and that Crawford v. Washington prohibits the admission of that evidence because it was testimonial and was not subject to cross-examination. Napier went on to object to the document's admissibility in accordance with this court's opinion in Wray v. State,
the ability to attack this document's facial statement with contrary evidence showing in fact that it may not have been inspected in accordance with the regulations. Since I can't cross-examine the person I can attack the document under Wray. And if I can attack it and show that the regulations weren't followed then this document is not admissible. And if it's not admissible the first foundation requirement of the State getting the test in at all regardless of result has not been met. And in fact, the ... the hearsay objection dovetails with this simply because the State has not [sic] required to call an inspector or a representative of the department to testify about how the machine's set up and about these issues so I can't cross examine on any of these things.
Tr. p. 18.
When the State offered Exhibit Three into evidence, which was a certified document showing a "recertification" of the *147 breath test instrument, Napier's counsel lodged the following objection:
[Ilt's hearsay again. And the statutes permit the introduction of ... certifications that are within 180 days prior to the test, and don't say anything about subsequent certifications. And since we ... don't have an inspector here to examine him about what he went through with the certification process we don't know specifically how the director reached his conclusion on this one.
Tr. p. 17.
Finally, Napier objected to the printout of the breath test results that indicated a content of .14 grams of alcohol per 210 liters of breath upon the same grounds advanced that were advanced with respect to the other exhibits. Further, Napier's counsel remarked:
This isn't a record that is kept in the course of directors inspections of machines. It ... isn't even a certified doe-ument. It is clearly hearsay. It says to the Court that at a certain time my client's breath test result is .14. I can't question it about what it might have been at a time earlier when he was driving. I can't ask it questions about what might have effected [gic] this.
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I think this is just a étraight up hearsay document that is inadmissible under both Crawford, the rules, and the statute.
Tr. p. 19, 23. In the end, the trial court overruled Napier's objections and all exhibits offered by the State were admitted into evidence. Napier was found guilty as charged, and he now appeals.
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
I. The Confrontation Clause, Crawford and the Certification Documents
In addressing Napier's argument that the admission of the certified documents regarding the inspection and regulations pertaining to the breath test machine was erroneous, we note that for a number of years, our statutes have permitted the State to introduce hearsay documents at trial in order to establish an evidentiary foundation regarding the inspection and compliance with relevant regulations of breath test instruments. To be sure, Indiana Code section 9-80-6-5 permits the introduction of certificates of the director of the Department of Toxicology regarding the inspection and compliance issues. The result of such a process is that a breath test evidence ticket may be introduced against a defendant without the defendant's ability to question the reliability or accuracy of the methodology that is used to obtain such a result.
In Crawford, the previously well-settled rule announced in Ohio v. Roberts,
Here, the State contends that the certificates of inspection and compliance are not testimonial in nature and, therefore, do not *148 fall within the rule pronounced in Crawford. While the Crawford court did not precisely define the word "testimonial," a number of examples were noted:
Ex parte in-court testimony or its functional equivalent ... such as affidavits, custodial examinations, prior testimony that the defendant was unable to cross-examine, or similar pretrial statements that declarants would reasonably expect to be used prosecutorially ... extrajudicial statements contained in formalized testimonial materials, such as affidavits, depositions, prior testimony, or confessions ... statements that were made under cireurmstances which would lead an objective witness to believe that the statement would be available for use at a later trial, were examples of evidence cited by the Supreme Court as being 'testimonial in nature.'
Id. at 1364. 3
We note that prior to Crawford, our supreme court addressed a confrontation objection to the State's use of certification documents like the ones at issue here, where it found that such evidence could be used instead of live testimony. Specifically put, the court in Platt v. State,
As we said earlier, for a statute to be declared unconstitutional, its fatal defects must be clear. None are apparent in Ind.Code § 9-11-4-5 [now L.C. § 9-30-6-5]. Platt was not deprived of his confrontation rights. He had the opportunity to confront his accuser face-to-face. It was Deputy Ruch. The alternative would be to have a toxicologist in every courthouse every day giving testimony concerning his or her actual inspection of a particular Intoxilyzer machine, and his or her certification of the officer as a competent administrator of the test.
Id. at 230.
In light of the above, it is apparent that our supreme court has accepted the proposition that hearsay exceptions may be either judicially or statutorily created. Indeed, in Mullins v. State,
Napier notes that this court reversed a defendant's conviction for operating a vehicle with a blood aleohol content of at least 10% when the uncontradicted evidence at trial established that the operator of the breath test machine was not properly cer
*149
tified under the Department of Toxicology regulations. Wray v. State,
In this case, the State introduced the Director of Toxicology's certificate, which stated that an inspection and tests were performed on the machine on a specified date, and that "[the instrument is in good operating condition satisfying the accuracy requirements set out by the State Department of Toxicology Regulations." Appellant's App. p. 98. The certificate specifies that: "tlhe original Letter of Certification, issued by the State Department of Toxicology, must be kept on file in the office of the Clerk of the Cireuit Court and may be duplicated as needed for use in Court." Id. The result is that the eviden-tiary foundation is satisfied for the admissibility of the breath test evidence ticket, the certificate of inspection and compliance. Moreover, the certificate of inspection and compliance is proffered, admitted, and treated as prima facie evidence not only as to what it states regarding inspection and compliance, but as to the inference to be given to it by the trial court that the machine was in working order at the time of the breath test.
Even if it could be said that these types of certificates are akin to affidavits as Napier urges and, therefore, should be considered "testimonial" under Crawford, we do not see how the admission of these certificates would serve to preclude any meaningful cross-examination of the breath test evidence presented against him. Even though the inspector of the machine and the Director of Toxicology who executed the certification of inspection did not testify at trial, the information contained in the certificates does not pertain to the issue of guilt. Rather, that information simply goes to inspection and certification matters. See Platt,
The principal evil at which the Confrontation Clause was directed was the civil-law mode of criminal procedure, and particularly its use of ex parte examinations as evidence against the accused. It was these practices that the Crown deployed in notorious treason cases like Raleigh's; that the Marian statutes invited; that English law's assertion of a right to confrontation was meant to prohibit; and that the founding-era rhetoric decried. The Sixth Amendment must be interpreted with this focus in mind.
Id. at 1363.
In considering this language, it is our view that the inspection and operator certifications are simply not included in the class of evidence that pertains to "prior testimony at a preliminary hearing, before a grand jury, or at a former trial and to police interrogations" identified by the Crawford court as "the modern practices *150 with closest kinship to the abuses at which the Confrontation Clause was directed." Id. at 1374. That said, we reject Napier's contention that this evidence was improperly admitted simply because there was no "live testimony" offered by the State to establish an evidentiary foundation with regard to the breath test machine's certification and inspection. Hence, we cannot say that the trial court erred in admitting this evidence at trial. As a result, we conclude that the procedures permitted by our supreme court and our legislature for establishing a foundation for the admission of the certifications regarding the breath test machine and the regulations of the Toxicology Department do not run afoul of the rule announced in Crawford and the Confrontation Clause. Thus, Napier does not prevail on this issue.
II. Admissibility Of Breath Test Results
In a related issue, Napier contends that his conviction must be reversed on the grounds that the printout of the evidence ticket was improperly admitted to prove the results of his breath test. As Napier argued above, he urges that the admission of this evidence to establish the existence of his blood aleohol level was inadmissible hearsay under our statutes, the court rules and Crawford.
A. -Standard of Review
In resolving this issue, we note that this court has determined that the results of chemical breath tests are not admissible if the test operator, test equipment, chemicals used in the test, or techniques used in the test have not been approved in accordance with the rules adopted by the Department of Toxicology. Fields v. State,
B. Napier's Claims
In addressing Napier's argument that the method in which the State sought to prove the breath test results was erroneous, we note that the Department of Toxicology sets the standards and regulations for the selection and certification of breath test equipment and chemicals. I.C. § 9-30-6-5(a)(2); Fields,
More recently, in Haddin v. State,
Officer Hancock testified that he instructed Haddin to remove his chewing gum before he began the twenty-minute waiting period. The record also indicates that, after the twenty-minute waiting period, Officer Hancock inspected the breath test machine and found that it was in working order. Additionally, Officer Hancock testified that, after the breath test, the results revealed that there was no indication of a foreign substance in Haddin's mouth at the time of the test.
Id. at 1060. In light of this testimony, we concluded that the officer followed the rules for administering the breath test as promulgated by the Department of Toxicology, and we held the breath test results admissible. Id.
Unlike the circumstances in Lloyd and Haddin, the State, in this case, offered the DataMaster "evidence ticket" into evidence displaying the breath test results, absent any witness to present that exhibit. Hence, Napier was not only precluded from conducting any ecross-examination with respect to the breath test operator's qualifications, he was not afforded the opportunity to question or attack the purported results of his breath test. Without that "live" testimony, Napier could not challenge those results. And the ability to challenge the breath test results directly pertains to the issue of guilt or innocence in this case.
We also note that the defendant in Wray was able to cross-examine the officer who administered the breath test and, because of that opportunity, the defendant was able to establish that the officer was not trained in most of the areas in which the regulations require breath test operators to be trained. Wray,
Notes
. Ind.Code § 9-30-5-1(a)(2).
. U.S. Const. Amend. VL.
. The meaning of "testimonial" evidence has been addressed by this court in two very recent decisions: Hammon v. State,
. Ind. Evidence Rule 803(8).
