Opinion by
T1 Defendant, Lisa Lynne Hard, appeals the judgment of conviction entered on jury verdicts finding her guilty of possession of a schedule II controlled substance and possession of a schedule III controlled substance.
T2 The People cross-appeal defendant's sentence as to her conviction for failure to present proof of insurance.
13 We vacate defendant's conviction for possession of a schedule II controlled substance, reverse her conviction for possession of a schedule III controlled substance, vacate her sentence in pаrt, and otherwise affirm.
I. Background
T4 According to the prosecution's evidence, State Trooper Blake Hancey pulled over defendant's car after seeing that defendant was speeding and not wearing a seat belt. He asked to see her driver's license, vehicle registration, and proof of insurance. She provided only her driver's lHcense.
T5 During the traffic stop, Trooper Han-cey noticed that defendant smelled faintly of alcohol, her eyes were bloodshot and watery, her speech was rapid and slurred, and she was squirming in her seat. He asked her why she was not wearing a seat belt, and shе said that she was on her way to the emergency room because she was having back spasms. He also asked whether she had been drinking and whether she was taking any medications. She responded that she had "had a beer earlier, and that she had taken a half a Xanax earlier."
T6 Trooper Hancey then checked whether defendant had any outstanding warrants for her arrest, and discovered that she had a warrant for failure to appear on a charge of driving under the influence. He then asked whether she would consent to perform roadside maneuvers. She refused, and Trooрer Hancey arrested her.
T7 Incident to the arrest, Trooper Hancey searched defendant and found ten pills in her pants pockets. Defendant said that she had
T8 Before taking defendant to the police station, Trooper Hancey accessed the website Drugs.com to identify the pills. He identified one pill as oxycodone, a controlled substance, and seven of the pills as alprazolam, another controlled substance.
T 9 Trooper Hancey then took defendant to the Arapahoe County Jail, where she consented to a blood test. The test showed that her blood-aleohol content was .089. No drugs were detected.
10 As relevant here, the People charged defendant with possession of a schedule II controlled substance (oxycodone), possession of a schedule III controlled substance (al-prazolam),
T11 A jury acquitted defendant of the driving under the influence charge, but found her guilty of the other charges. The district court sentenced her to two years of probation for the drug possession convictions, and imposed monetary fines for the other convie-tions.
{12 On appeal, defendant challenges only her drug possession convictions.
IL Defendant's Appeal
13 Defendant contends that (1) the district court erroneously admitted testimonial hearsay; (2) there was insufficient evidence to support her convictions for possession of controlled substances; (8) the district court erroneously admitted expert testimony; and (4) the mittimus incorrectly identified one of her convictions.
T 14 We agree with defendant's first contention, agree with the second as to the conviction for possession of a schedule II controlled substance, disagree with the second as to possession of a schedule III (actually IV) controlled substance, and do not address her other two contentions.
A. Hearsay Evidence
4 15 Defendant first contends that (1) the district court erred by admitting hearsay testimony about information Trooper Hancey obtained from Drugs.com and (2) the admission of that evidence violated her state and federal confrontation rights. We agree with defendant that the Drugs.com evidence was inadmissible hearsay.
1. Procedural Background
116 Before trial, defendant's counsel moved to exclude Trooper Hancey's testimony about his Drugs.com search results. Counsel argued, as relevant here, that the evidence was inadmissible hearsay and that its admission would violate defendant's right to confrontation.
T17 The prosecutor argued in response that the evidence was admissible under CRE 808(17), the hearsay exception for market reports and сommercial publications. Specif
118 Defendant's counsel replied that the information from Drugs.com is insufficiently reliable to be admissible under CRE 808(17). Specifically, defendant's counsel pointed to the fact that Drugs.com disclaims the accuracy of the information on its website, and argued that a police officer's testimony that he relies on a given source of information is insufficient to establish the reliability оf that source.
19 The district court ruled first that the Drugs.com evidence was not testimonial and that it therefore did not implicate defendant's confrontation rights. The court further determined that information from Drugs.com is sufficiently reliable to be admissible under CRE 803(17), reasoning that "literally scores of judicial opinions rely independently on [DJrugs.com for both the description of drugs, drug side effects, and drug interactions." Thus, the court ruled that it would allow testimony about the Drugs.com search results, assuming Trooper Hancey could first lay a proper foundation.
$20 At trial, Trooper Hancey testified, over objection, that Drugs.com is а nationally recognized website and that he and other law enforcement officials rely on Drugs.com to identify prescription drugs. He then described how the search function on Drugs. com is used:
On [Drugs.com], [it] allows you to put in specific identifiers. The one that I typically use that's been the easiest is simply the number rather than deal with the color and shape. So I'll put in the number or numbers into the search function. That will give-some cases I've seen it's given multiple pills with similar markings and you're able to determine by simply size, shape and color on whether or not it is the same marking as the pill that I'm looking at.
He testified that Drugs.сom indicated that the pills in defendant's possession were oxy-codone and alprazolam. Specifically, he said that the numerical markings, shape, and col- or of the pills matched those of oxycodone and alprazolam, respectively, as shown on the website.
{21 On cross-examination, Trooper Han-cey said that he is not a drug recognition expert, and that he had not requested any confirmatory chemical testing of the pills.
2. Standard of Review and Applicable Law
[ 22 We will not disturb a district court's evidentiary rulings absent a showing of an abuse of discretion. Davis v. People,
T23 Where, as here, the defendant objected to the admission of evidence, we review any error under the harmless error standard. Yusem v. People,
24 CRE 803(17) codifies an exeeption to the hearsay rule for market reports and commercial publications. Specifically, that exсeption provides that "[mlarket quotations, tabulations, lists, directories, or other published compilations, generally used and relied upon by the public or by persons in particular occupations" are admissible CRE 803(17).
125 At common law, this exception was recognized as a narrow exception that was to be applied to a well-defined category of cases. See 6 John Henry Wigmore, Evidence in Trials at Common Law § 1702, at 38 (Chadbourn rev. ed. 1976); see also id. §§ 1704-06, at 41-51 (describing the common-law origins of the exception); 4 Christopher B. Mueller & Laird C. Kirkpatrick, Federal Evidence § 8:101, at 885 (3d ed.
1] 26 "As with other hearsay exceptions, the admissibility of market reports and commercial publications under Rule 803(17) is predicated on the two factors of necessity and reliability." 5 Jack B. Weinstein & Margaret A. Berger, Weinstein's Federal Evidence § 803.19[1], at 803-131 (Joseph M. MceLaughlin ed., 2d ed. 2014). Admitting such evidence is considered necessary because it would be difficult or impracticable to locate and summon every person who hаd contributed to the report or list,. Id.; Mueller & Kirkpatrick § 8:101, at 882. The evidence is considered reliable because the compilers know that if the material they publish is inaccurate, the public or the trade will cease consulting their publication. Weinstein & Berger § 808.19[1], at 808-131; see also Mueller & Kirkpatrick § 8:101, at 882 material is considered trustworthy because many people rely on it in connection with their very livelihoods.... [A] pattern of unreliability invites users to turn elsewhere, which would make those who make or compile and publish such material lose stature and perhaps income.").
8. Analysis
127 The only published Colorado appellate сourt decision applying CRE 803(17) is People v. Thornton,
The evidence at issue in this case, however, fits less obviously within the market reports exception. We must therefore determine whether information from Drugs. com meets the requisite criteria of necessity and reliability to be admissible under that exception for the purpose of identifying a controlled substance. We conclude that it does not.
29 The People have not argued that using Drugs.com is a necessary means of identifying drugs. And it seems clear to us that it is not. Visually identifying a drug based on a Drugs.com search is not the only method-or even the most effective or reliable method-available to law enforcement officials. Rather, as Trooper Hancey acknowledged, another available method for identifying the pills in this case would have been to submit them to the Colorado Bureau of Investigation for chemical testing. Thus, use of Drugs.com to identify the drugs was by no means necessary.
130 We also conclude that the People failed to establish that information from Drugs.com is sufficiently reliable for the purpose of identifying a controlled substance, for the following reasons.
31 First, although the People argue that information from Drugs.com is reliable because Trooper Hancey testified that Drugs. com is "nationally recognizеd" and that law enforcement officials rely on it when identify
1 32 Second, courts in several other jurisdictions have held that mere visual identification of prescription drugs-that is, identification of a drug by comparing its physical attributes to a reference material such as Drugs.com-is not a sufficiently reliable method of proof in a criminal trial. See, e.g., People v. Mocaby,
33 Third, although the People argue that information from Drugs.com is reliable because that website compiles and publishes material from reliable sources, they provide no support for that proposition. And, indeed, courts in several jurisdictions have questioned the reliability of several of Drugs. com's sources-including the Physicians' Desk Reference and Micromedex. See, e.g., Garvey v. O'Donoghue,
35 Finally, we are not persuaded by the district court's rationale that information from Drugs.com is sufficiently reliable because numerous courts have cited Drugs.com in published judicial opinions. Nearly all of the decisions we have found that cite Drugs. com do so in the context of providing general information about a particular drug (e.g., its intended uses or side effects). See, e.g., Gentry v. Comm'r of Soc. Sec.,
136 For thesе reasons, we conclude that the People failed to show that information from Drugs.com was sufficiently necessary and reliable to be admissible under CRE 808(17). The district court therefore erred in admitting the hearsay evidence obtained from that website.
¶ 37 We further conclude that this error was not harmless. Trooper Hancey's testimony about what he saw on Drugs.com was the only evidence presented at trial to identify some of the pills found in defendant's possession as oxycodone, and was the primary evidence that any of the pills were alprazolam.
B. Sufficiency of the Evidence
138 We must also consider defendant's challenge to the sufficiency of evidence. If the evidence presented at trial was insufficient to support the convictions, a see-ond trial on the same charges would violate defendant's right to be free from double jeopardy. See Burks v. United States,
139 We review de novo to determine whether sufficient evidence supports a conviction. Dempsey v. People,
$40 The prosecution presented the following evidence to support defendant's conviction for possession of alprazolam:
® defendant said that she had taken Xanax earlier that day;
® defendant repeatedly told Trooper Han-cey that she had prescriptions for the pills he had found in her pockets;
©Trooper Hancey never found any pre-seriptions or prescription bottles;
® although defendant's blood test did not detect any Xanax, the concentration of Xanax in a person's blood can drop below the detection limit within two hours;
® defendant's blood was tested approximately two hours after her arrest; and
e the pills in defendant's possession were the same shape and color as alprazolam, and borе numerical markings matching that drug.
¶ 41 Giving the prosecution the benefit of every reasonable inference that might fairly be drawn from the evidence, although this presents a close question, we conclude that a rational fact finder could have found beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant possessed alprazolam. Defendant is therefore subject to retrial on the charge for possession of that substance.
142 However, we conclude that the evidence was insufficient to prove possession of oxycodone. The evidence relating to the identity of that drug consisted оnly of Trooper Hancey's testimony that the appearance of certain pills matched the appearance of oxy-codone as shown on Drugs.com. The People were required to prove that the pills were oxycodone, not merely that they appeared to be oxycodone. Without some other confirmatory evidence (such as defendant's statement to the officer that she had taken Xanax (alprazolam) earlier in the day), the Drugs. com evidence was insufficient to prove identity of the pills as oxycodone beyond a reasonable doubt. Therefore, the conviction for possession of a schedule II controlled substance must be vacated, and the People cannot retry defendant on that charge. ©
III. The People's Cross-Appeal
$48 The People contend on cross-appeal that the district court imposed an illegal sentence by suspending half of the mandatory minimum fine for defendant's conviction for failure to present proof of insurance. We agree.
A. Procedural Background
1 44 At the sentencing hearihg, defendant told the court that her car had been aue-tioned off and that she was no longer driving. -
145 The court observed that the sentencing statute permits a court to suspend half of the $500 mandatory minimum fine for failure to present proof of insurance if the defendant shows that she has obtained insurance. The court then reasoned as follows:
Since you have no ear and have no need to drive, it would appear to me the same reduction would be appropriate. Because you are-what the statute implies here is that if you are still a risk, you have to pay the full fine. If you are no longer a risk, either because you have insurance or because you don't have a car and [are] not driving, that is the case.
The cоurt thus sentenced defendant to a reduced fine of $250 based on defendant's representation that she was no longer driving.
B. Standard of Review and Applicable Law
146 We review de novo the legality of a sentence. People v. Bassford, 2014 COA
T47 Our determination whether the statutory reduction in the mandatory minimum fine applies to defendant requires us to interpret section 42-4-1409(4)(a), C.R.S.2014. Statutory interpretation is also a question of law that we review de novo. Finney v. People,
T48 When interpreting a statute, our primary goals are to determine and effectuate the intent of the General Assembly. Finney, 112; Lacallo, 175. To do so, we look first to the statute's plain language, giving the words and phrases therein their plain and ordinary meanings. Finney, 112; People v. Green,
49 "A statutory interpretation leading to an illоgical or absurd result will not be followed." Frazier v. People,
50 Section 42-4-1409(4)(a) provides that, when a person is convicted for failure to present proof of insurance, she "shall be punished by a minimum mandatory fine of not less than five hundred dollars." That section further provides, however, that "[the court may suspend up to one half of the fine upon a showing that appropriate insurance . has been obtained." § 42-4-1409(4)(a).
C. Analysis
{51 We conclude that the plain language of section 42-4-1409(4)(a) is clear and unambiguous, and therefore must be enforced as written. Under that section's plain language, the only cireumstаnce in which a court may suspend half of the mandatory minimum fine is when a defendant shows that she has obtained qualifying insurance. Nothing in the plain language of the statute provides an exception where a defendant represents that she has relinquished ownership of her car or is not currently driving. Nor, contrary to the district court's reasoning, is any such exception implicit in the statute. Indeed, interpreting the statute to provide such an exception would lead to an illogical and absurd result. It seems evident that the purpose of the provision allowing a court to suspend up to one-half of the mandatory fine is to encourage drivers to obtain statutorily-required insurance, so that when they drive after having been cited for failing to present proof of insurance, they will do so in compliance with the law. A driver's representation that she does not own a car or is not currently driving does not serve this purpose, as the driver could drive someone else's car or change her mind about driving at any time. Were she to do so without having obtained insurance, she would violate the law, despite having obtained a reduction in sentence available only as an incentive to avoid such a future violation.
¶ 52 Because the district court imposed a sentence that was contrary to the plain language of the sentencing statute, we conclude that the sentence was illegal. We therefore vacate defendant's sentence as to her convietion for failure to present proof of insurance, and remand for resentencing on that conviction.
IV. Conclusion
€53 We conclude that the district court erred by admitting hearsay testimony about information from Drugs.com. Because we have determined that the evidence was insufficient to support the conviction for possession of oxycodone, the judgment is vacated as to that conviction and the People may not retry defendant on that charge. The judgment is reversed as to the conviction for possession of alprazolam, and defendant may be retried on that charge.
« 54 We also conclude that the court erred by suspending half of the $500 mandatory
1 55 The judgment is affirmed in all other respects.
Notes
. Oxycodone is the generic namе of Percocet; alprazolam is the generic name of Xanax.
. The People concede on appeal that alprazolam is actually a schedule IV controlled substance, not a schedule III controlled substance. § 18-18-206(b)(I), C.R.S.2014.
. We disagree with defendant, however, that her confrontation rights were implicated in this case. The information on Drugs.com is not testimonial for purposes of the Sixth Amendment's Confrontation Clause, as it was not created primarily for the purpose of establishing facts relevant to later criminal prosecution. See Raile v. People,
. Because CRE 803(17) is substantially identical to Fed.R.Evid. 803(17), we may consider federal authorities construing the federal rule in determining the scope of Colorado's rule. See People v. Melendez,
. Arguably, as defendant points out, information from Drugs.com does not fit within the plain language of CRE 803(17) because it is not a "market report" or "commercial publication." Cf. Hardy v. State,
. Some courts have noted in this context that by criminalizing possession of counterfeit controlled substances, legislatures have recognized expressly that counterfeiters can make substances appear, by markings and physical character, to be controlled substances. E.g., State v. Ward,
. We do not express any opinion on the use of information from Drugs.com to establish reasonable suspicion or probable cause.
. And contrary to the People's suggestion, defendant did not have ample opportunity to question the accuracy of the Drugs.com information at trial. Trooper Hancey did not know how the information had been compiled, and so would not have been able to answer any questions about the accuracy of the information.
