*362 OPINION OF THE COURT
Defendant was convicted of first degree manslaughter and two counts of first degree assault, primarily on the basis of an eyewitness’s Grand Jury testimony, which was admitted over vigorous defense objection. Although the witness had initially come forward and accused defendant, the witness subsequently left the State and refused to give trial testimony consistent with his earlier story. The issue on this appeal is whether there was sufficient evidence establishing that the witness had been intimidated by defendant to warrant the use of that witness’s Grand Jury testimony as part of the People’s direct case. Concluding that these facts must be established by no less than "clear and convincing evidence,” we hold that the People’s proof in this case sufficed to meet that standard.
On April 20, 1990, following a brief argument in a Brooklyn nightclub, an individual named Anthony Gránese was fatally stabbed. Although many people were present in the club on the night in question, only one individual, Peter Terranova, came forward and identified defendant as the person who had wielded the knife. Terranova, who testified before the Grand Jury, stated that the incident had begun with a shoving match and had ended when defendant pulled a knife out of his waistband and stabbed Gránese in the chest. Terranova also stated that he saw defendant stab another individual, Rocky Giamportone. Giamportone himself was unable to identify the person who stabbed him.
Immediately after the incident, some of the club patrons attempted to aid Gránese while others moved outside. According to Terranova, defendant also ran outside, was met by his brother, Frank Geraci, and the two men sped away in a white car. Some of the club patrons who had moved outside attempted to chase the car, throwing objects at it. One of those patrons later testified that he saw another of defendant’s brothers, Paul Geraci, fire a gun into the air, possibly wounding Anthony Gallo, another patron.
Defendant was indicted principally on the basis of Terranova’s Grand Jury testimony. However, shortly before the trial was scheduled to begin, Terranova left his job and, without *363 notifying his employer or his family, moved out of the State. After making contact with Terranova and learning that he did not wish to testify against defendant at trial, the prosecutor successfully sought a Sirois hearing 1 to establish the cause of Terranova’s change of heart and to obtain an advance ruling as to the admissibility of Terranova’s Grand Jury testimony.
At the hearing, which was commenced on March 16, 1992, two police investigators testified for the People. According to these investigators, Terranova had given a detailed oral statement about the night of the stabbing and had subsequently given a sworn statement to an Assistant District Attorney. Although he had also met with the officers more than once before he gave his Grand Jury testimony, Terranova had never voiced any reluctance to testify.
Soon after the Grand Jury indictment was handed up, Terranova told an investigating officer that defendant, who was at liberty, approached him and said something like: "You were there that night; I want you to come down to my lawyer’s with me.” As the date for the trial drew nearer, the investigating officers learned from Terranova’s mother that she had not seen her son in several months and did not know his whereabouts.
Terranova subsequently called the investigators from Florida and told them: "they showed me my testimony, they showed [or shoved] it in my face.” He also asked the officer how "they found out about me” and stated that someone from the police or the District Attorney’s office "ratted on me.” Terranova expressed fear for himself and his family and told the officer that he would not be available for trial "if this is what it’s going to take to stay alive * * * and keep them away from [his] family.” He stated: "I know for sure I’m gonna have problems with it down the road if I testify * * *. But I don’t know if I’m gonna have problems with him the other way.” While he said he "hate[d] him” and wanted "to see him go to jail,” Terranova stated that he would not repeat the story he told the Grand Jury if he were required to testify at defendant’s trial.
*364 On March 5, 1992, Terranova appeared in New York pursuant to a material witness order. He met with police investigators at that time and identified a redacted police report as the document that he had been "showed [or shoved]” in his face. Terranova also told an investigator that a friend, whom he refused to identify, had intervened with the people who were coming "to break his legs.” At a subsequent meeting with investigators, Terranova stated that a friend of his had talked with defendant’s uncle in Harlem and that, as a result, he (Terranova) had received money "from them or from the defense.” He stated that he had already received $2,000 and was to receive an additional $250 per week until the trial was over, receiving a final lump-sum payment of $10,000 at the end. During this meeting with investigators, Terranova claimed that he had never seen the stabbing and had, in fact, been outside the club at the time of the incident.
During his own Sirois hearing testimony, Terranova contradicted much of the officers’ statements. He denied having been threatened or approached by defendant about changing his testimony and stated that he had previously expressed fear only because of his desire to remain uninvolved in the case and because of his concerns about being prosecuted for perjurious Grand Jury testimony. With respect to the events on April 20, 1990, Terranova denied having seen the stabbing and, in fact, stated that he had been outside the club at the time it occurred.
Finding that Terranova had been "markedly evasive” in his Sirois testimony, the hearing court concluded that "pressures had been brought to bear * * * making him unwilling to testify.” Accordingly, the court held that Terranova was "practically unavailable” because of his unwillingness to testify and that the People had satisfactorily established defendant’s responsibility for the circumstance. On that basis, the court concluded that Terranova’s sworn statements before the Grand Jury could be used as a substitute for his live testimony.
In so ruling, the trial court rejected the defense’s contention, based on
People v Banks
(
Defendant’s subsequent jury trial resulted in a guilty verdict. On his appeal from the judgment of conviction, the Appellate Division upheld the trial court’s Sirois determination, holding that the People had met their burden of proof under the applicable "clear and convincing” evidence standard. In so ruling, the Appellate Division held that defendant’s personal meeting with Terranova, as well as the meeting between defendant’s uncle and Terranova’s friend, sufficed to satisfy that "clear and convincing evidence” standard.
On this appeal, defendant once again raises the propriety of the People’s use of Terranova’s Grand Jury testimony as the centerpiece of their case-in-chief. Although he does not dispute the general principle that a witness’s Grand Jury testimony may be used in lieu of live testimony under certain circumstances, he contends that the foundation proof in his case fell short of what the law demands. Resolution of this claim requires that we explore the principles and standards that have led other courts to admit the out-of-court statements of witnesses who have become unavailable due to the defendant’s act.
As a general rule, the Grand Jury testimony of an unavailable witness is inadmissible as evidence-in-chief
(see, People v Green,
While the principle is often characterized as involving "waiver by misconduct”
(United States v Mastrangelo, supra,
at 273;
accord, United States v Thevis, supra),
it is more realistically described as a forfeiture dictated by sound public policy
(see, Steele v Taylor, supra,
at 1201, and n 8).
2
Indeed, the courts that have applied the rule have frequently justified it by invoking the maxim that the law will not " 'allow a person to take advantage of his own wrong’ ”
(United States v Mastrangelo, supra,
at 272, quoting
Diaz v United States,
The more difficult question is what standard of proof should be required to establish a foundation for the admission of hearsay evidence under this rule. The Second and Sixth Circuits apply the relatively undemanding "preponderance of the evidence” standard (see, e.g., United States v Mastrangelo, supra, at 273 [2d Cir]; Steele v Taylor, supra, at 1202 [6th Cir]). *367 In contrast, the Fifth Circuit and the lower courts of this State have used the "clear and convincing evidence” standard (United States v Thevis, supra; Matter of Holtzman v Hellenbrand, supra). We conclude that the latter, more exacting standard, which is the one most protective of the truth-seeking process, should be adopted in this State.
Because human fact finders lack the quality of omniscience, the process of determining the truth in adjudicative proceedings necessarily involves some margin of error
(see,
2 McCormick, Evidence § 341, at 445 [Strong 4th ed]). The size of the margin of error that the law is willing to tolerate varies in inverse proportion to the importance to the party or to society of the issue to be resolved. On one end of the spectrum are most civil disputes, where, from a societal standpoint, "a mistaken judgment for the plaintiff is no worse than a mistaken judgment for the defendant”
(id.).
On the other end are criminal determinations of guilt or innocence, "[w]here one party has at stake an interest of transcendent value”
(Speiser v Randall,
A determination that the defendant has procured a witness’s unavailability results in the admission of hearsay statements and the forfeiture of the right to cross-examine about the substance of those statements. Obviously, a defendant’s loss of the valued Sixth Amendment confrontation right constitutes a substantial deprivation. Additionally, and even more significantly, society has a weighty investment in the outcome, "[b]ecause of the intimate association between the right to confrontation and the accuracy of the fact-finding process” (United States v Thevis, supra, at 631).
In this regard, it is significant that, unlike most exceptions to the rule against hearsay, the exception at issue here is justified not by the inherent reliability of the evidence
(see, e.g., Ohio v Roberts,
These factors militate in favor of a standard of proof that is high enough to assure a great degree of accuracy in the determination of whether the defendant was, in fact, involved in procuring the witness's unavailability for live testimony. While we recognize the need for the use of this less trustworthy class of evidence when necessitated by the defendant’s misconduct, we also believe that such use should be authorized only to the extent that the misconduct is clearly and convincingly shown.
Finally, the use of a heightened standard of proof in this context is dictated by our State’s restrictive approach to the use of Grand Jury testimony as direct evidence in criminal trials. CPL 670.10 authorizes the use of a witness’s prior testimony under certain limited conditions, but does not list Grand Jury testimony among its "three carefully worded and enumerated exceptions”
(see, People v Harding,
This is not to suggest that circumstantial evidence may not be used to establish, in whole or in part, that a witness’s unavailability was procured by the defendant
(see, e.g., Steele v Taylor, supra).
Circumstantial evidence is not a disfavored form of proof and, in fact, may be stronger than direct evidence when it depends upon "undisputed evidentiary facts about which human observers are less likely to err * * * or to distort”
(People v Cleague,
The evidence in this case provides an example of the type of circumstantial proof that suffices to satisfy the proponent’s foundational burden. 4 Unquestionably, defendant, who was out on bail during the months preceding his trial, had the opportunity to orchestrate Terranova’s intimidation. Further, a fact finder could infer from the proof before it that defendant had a strong motive for rendering Terranova unavailable to testify. Although his brothers may have been subject to criminal prosecution for their roles in the incident, defendant alone was on trial for intentional murder. Additionally, the evidence regarding the postindictment personal encounter between defendant and Terranova supports the inferences that defendant was aware both of Terranova’s value as a *370 potential witness and of Terranova’s unwillingness to cooperate with the defense.
The proof of defendant’s motive and opportunity were not the only circumstances from which an inference of defendant’s involvement could be drawn. There was evidence that Terra-nova had been confronted by an unidentified individual and shown a police document that recorded his accusation against defendant. There also was evidence that Terranova was to receive weekly payments for the duration of defendant’s trial and that he was to receive an additional $10,000 at the close of that trial. This evidence provided a logical basis for a fact finder to single out defendant rather than one or both of his brothers or some other interested party as the moving force behind the attempt to intimidate and bribe this witness.
Moreover, Terranova’s own words to the investigators could rationally be construed to attribute his intimidation to defendant. Terranova’s statement to law enforcement officials that ”1 know for sure I’m gonna have problems with it down the road if I testify * * * [b]ut I don’t know if I’m gonna have problems with him the other way” logically pointed to defendant as the person responsible for Terranova’s evident fear. The witness’s additional statement that "I hate him\f\ I wanna see him go to jail” lends support to the conclusions that the "him” Terranova referred to was defendant and that the strong feelings Terranova expressed were the product of the fear and resentment he felt against the person who had placed him in such jeopardy.
Finally, the likelihood of defendant’s involvement was multiplied dramatically by Terranova’s Sirois hearing statements that it was defendant’s uncle who had offered more than $10,000 to keep Terranova silent for the duration of defendant’s trial. The existence of a financial arrangement made by defendant’s uncle that directly benefitted defendant was certainly a circumstance that bore directly on whether the intimidation and bribery had been initiated or approved by defendant.
In short, the cumulative evidence and the inferences that logically flow therefrom were sufficient to support a determination by a rational fact finder, under the clear and convincing evidence standard, that defendant either was responsible for or had acquiesced in the conduct that rendered Terranova unavailable for trial. The trial court’s conclusion rested not merely on speculation and surmise, but rather on concrete
*371
facts from which its conclusions naturally and reasonably could be drawn
(cf., People v Hamilton,
In this connection, we note our rejection of defendant’s contention that where the proponent’s foundational case rests exclusively on circumstantial evidence, the proof must exclude to "a moral certainty” every reasonable hypothesis other than the accused’s culpability
(see, People v Banks,
Finally, because of the trial court’s statements about the standard for assessing the evidence, we find it necessary to comment briefly upon the difference between the standard for the initial determination of a disputed fact question and the standard that is mandated for purposes of appellate and CPL 210.20 (1) (b) review
(see generally, People v Wong,
Thus, although the trial court was correct in its rejection of the "moral certainty” standard, it erred to the extent that it invoked the People v Deegan (supra) standard for the legal sufficiency of the circumstantial evidence before it. Since the court’s role on this preliminary question was not one of reviewing but rather of initial fact finding, it was bound to consider the circumstantial evidence as a whole and to determine for itself whether it was clearly and convincingly persuaded. This required something more than an assessment of whether defendant’s involvement was more probable than not and something less than a determination that all of the innocent inferences could be excluded to a "moral certainty” (see, People v Cleague, supra). It required a fact-based inquiry that is genetically different in kind from the legal assessment of whether the inference of guilt could be rationally drawn (see, People v Deegan, supra).
However, despite the trial court’s erroneous use of the legal sufficiency standard, it is not necessary to reverse the judgment of conviction under the circumstances presented here. Although the court rested its primary analysis on the inapt Deegan standard, it was careful to note that it would have reached the same ultimate conclusion using even the most exacting standard. Indeed, the court expressly held that, after reviewing the evidence, it could "exclude by clear and convincing evidence every * * * reasonable” hypothesis other than defendant’s involvement in the loss of Terranova’s live testimony. In view of that alternative holding, it would be inappropriate for us to reverse.
In sum, the trial court’s decision to admit the Grand Jury testimony of Peter Terranova was supported by the evidence and furnishes no ground for reversal. Defendant’s remaining contention — that evidence of his brother Paul’s conduct at the crime scene was erroneously admitted — was not preserved by a sufficiently specific objection.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Simons, Bellacosa, Smith, Levine and Ciparick concur.
Order affirmed.
Notes
. This type of hearing has been named after the defendant in
People v Sirois,
the criminal case that was considered in
Matter of Holtzman v Hellenbrand
(
. A "waiver” ordinarily involves a conscious and voluntary relinquishment of a known right
(see, e.g., Johnson v Zerbst,
. This strict position differentiates New York from Federal law, which, under certain conditions, allows the use of Grand Jury evidence under a catchall exception to the hearsay rule for "reliable” evidence (see, Fed Rules Evid, rule 804 [b] [5]).
. Although much of the People’s
Sirois
evidence consisted of out-of-court statements Terranova had made to investigators, the trial court concluded that the receipt of such hearsay was justified because the hearing concerned only the admissibility of evidence and because ” 'often the only evidence of coercion will be the statement of the coerced person, as repeated by government agents’ ” (appellant’s appendix, at 384, quoting
United States v Batano,
618 F2d 624, 629,
cert denied
