Opinion by
1 Everyone agrees that the Fifth Amendment prohibits compelling a defendant's testimony, but does not preclude evidence of the defendant's physical characteristics, Still, where a trial court orders a defendant to speak solely for voice identification by the jury, does the procedure involve improper testimonial or proper physical evidence? And even if the identification involves only physical evidence, is the procedure impermis-sibly suggestive because the jury hears only the defendant's voice? These questions are unresolved in Colorado,
T2 A jury convicted Ramon Anthony Ortega of distributing less than five pounds of marijuana. He appeals on two grounds. First, by forcing him to provide a live voice exemplar to the jury, the trial court violated his constitutional rights against self-inerimi-nation and to due process, and also admitted unfairly prejudicial evidence contrary to CRE 408. Second, by playing to the jury's concern about crime in the community during closing argument, the prosecutor committed misconduct. © Because we conclude that the voice identification procedure was proper and the prosecutor's comments were harmless error, we affirm, tot
1, The Voice Identification Procedure Was Proper
A. Background
3 This case began at a public park, where an:undercover police officer, who was wearing a wire, bought marijuana from a man. After the officer asked whether anyone sold eocaine at the park, the man replied: "Actually, they were here earlier but they were drunk." The officer then met with a detective, who had observed the transaction and recorded their conversation from her undercover car nearby, and described the man. The detective believed that the man was Ortega and produced Ortega's photograph, The officer agreed that the person in the photograph matched the seller,
[ 4 Weeks later, Ortega was arrested. He did not testify but defended on the basis of misidentification and offered alibi evidence.
15 At trial, the prosecutor moved to have Ortega read either a "generic" statement or a statement that was audible from the detective's recording of the drug buy-portions of which were garbled-to "allow the jury the opportunity to match up the defendant's way of speaking with the person speaking on that recording." Defense counsel objected, arguing that the statement was "communicative in nature," "tantamount to a one-on-one show up identification," and "far outweighed by any probative value [sic]." The court overruled the objection, concluding that the statement was not "forced incrimination in violation of the Fifth Amendment," and the "unfair danger of unfair prejudice [wals minimal." It did not address. the one-on-one confrontation issue.
B. Preservation and Standard of Review
17 Ortega preserved this issue by arguing that the procedure violated the right against self-incrimination, the right to due process, and CRE 403, Although the Attorney General argues that defense counsel did not preserve the due process argument, we conclude that her comparison "to a one-on-one show up identification" sufficiently "alertled] the trial court to the particular issue." People v. Cordova,
T8 We "defer to the trial court's findings of historical fact," People v. Rabes,
T9 Also, we defer to the trial court's factual findings but review de novo whether the court violated Ortega's right to due process by allowing an impermissibly suggestive identification procedure. See United States v. Thompson,
T10 In contrast, "[albsent an abuse of discretion, the trial court's [CRE 408] ruling will not be disturbed on appeal." People v. Rubanowitz,
C. Right Against Self-Inerimination
"11 Ortega first contends the trial court violated his Fifth Amendment right against self-inerimination when it required him to read the excerpt from the transeript of the drug buy. We reject this contention.
1. Law
112 "The privilege against self-incrimination protects the accused only from providing the state with evidence of a testimonial nature." People v. Renfrow,
2. Application
13 To begin, Colorado cases cited by the parties as being controlling do not involve the precise question presented in this appeal-whether the voice exemplar provided
{14 Based on Serratore v. People,
§15 The supreme court concluded that because the defendant "was being asked to participate in a contrived experiment or demonstration concerning his physical abilities to perform a particular act," with the purpose "to [clommunicate to the jury the defendant's physical abilities to perform an act that the prosecution believed him unable to perform," the demonstration violated his right against self-inerimination. Id. at 347,
16 The Attorney General relies on People v. Thatcher,
€ 17 In Thatcher, the court mentioned that a "defendant may be required to speak for identification purposes, and such compelled speech does not violate the constitutional privilege against self-incrimination." -
18 In Shackelford,
19 The Attorney General also cites Colorado cases upholding in-court identification procedures compelling defendants to reveal physical attributes to the jury. See, e.g., Renfrow, 193 Colo. at. 135,
¶ 20 With only a few Colorado cases for guidance, we turn to decisions from other jurisdictions. See People v. Clemens,
21 In many federal courts and some other states, "Alt is well-settled that requiring a defendant to provide a voice exemplar for purposes of identification" by a witness does not violate the Fifth Amendment. United States v. Flanagan,
123 In United States v. Leone,
124 In rejecting the Fifth Amendment claim, the Leone court concluded that "[i]t strain[ed] credulity to argue that uttering the phrases: 'About an hour,' 'I took the phone off the hook, one of them,' and 'I did, which [welre totally void of any incriminatory content, amount[ed] to an admission of guilt." Id.; see also State v. Morton,
'T25 For three reasons, thé analysis in these cases is persuasive. '
126 First, Ortega cites no contrary authority. ,
127 Second, courts have generally approved of non-communicative demonstrations that enable a witness to identify a voice even when they occur in the jury's presence.. See Williams,
28 'Third, we discern no meaningful distinction between a person's voice and any other physical characteristic. As explained in Gilbert v. California,
One's voice and handwriting are, of course, means of communication. It by no means follows, however, that every compulsion of an accused to use his voice or write compels a communication within the cover of the privilege. A mere handwriting exemplar, in contrast to the content of what is written, like the voice or body itself, is an identifying phys1cal charactenstlc outside its protection.
Thus, because the "prohibition against self-incrimination :.. does not exclude one's body as evidence," LaBlanc,
129 Ortega's emphasis on the demonstration being the only time that the jury heard his voice fails to explain why we should not apply this physical characteristic analysis.
130 Therefore, because Ortega was compelled only to participate in a non-communicative demonstration revealing the qualities of his voice, we conclude that the procedure did not violate his right against self-inerimi-nation. j
D. Right to Due Process
131 Ortega contends the in-court voice identification procedure constituted an impermissible one-on-one confrontation that was unnecessarily suggestive, thereby violating his right to due process. We also reject this contention, |
1, Law
. 182 "[UInder some cireumstances an in-court identification may constitute an impermissible one-on-one confrontation which is unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable mistaken identification." People v. Walker,
2. Application
~ 133 Ortega analogizes the procedure of the jury hearing only his voiee-with no other voices to compare with the recording-to a one-on-one confrontation that created a substantial likelihood of irreparable misiden-tification. For three reasons, this analogy is flawed.
134 First, Ortega cites no authority-nor have we found any in Colorado-precluding an in-court identification not based on a disputed pretrial confrontation as an impermissible one-on-one confrontation.
¶ 35 Sécond, an in-court identification hot derived from an earlier out-of-court confrontation involves "different considerations." Thompson,
136 Third, Ortega's challenge that impermissible, suggestion occurred because the jury heard only his voice could be made to any procedure in which the jury observes only a physical characteristic of the defendant-such as a sear or tattoo-but is not shown other persons with similar characteristies for comparison'. Yet, as discussed above, such procedures have been uniformly upheld. See, e.g., Renfrow,
137 But suppose the voice identification may have been somewhat suggestive, Defense counsel could have proposed procedures "to forestall suggestiveness in the course of the in-court identification." Monroe,
€38 In any event, one-on-one confrontations occurring in court have been upheld where the "identification [wals reliable under the totality of the cireumstances surrounding the confrontation." Walker,
¶ 39 Here, although the jurors had not seen or heard Ortega before trial, they listened to the officer's and detective's testimony describing their out-of-court identifications of Ortega. This testimony gave them "an independent basis" for identifying Ortega as the seller, Therefore, we conclude that the totality of the cireumstances indicates that the identification procedure did not violate due process.
E. CRE 408
$40 Asserting that the in-court identification procedure was more prejudicial than probative, Ortega contends it violated CRE 408. Again, we are not persuaded.
1. Law
"Even relevant evidence is ex-cludable if it is unfairly prejudicial, that is, if it has an undue tendency to suggest a decision on an improper basis, commonly but not necessarily an emotional one, such as sympathy, hatred, contempt, retribution, or horror." , People v. Brown,
2. Application
142 Ortega argues that the "prosecution sought to inflame the jury's indignation regarding the alleged 'drug market'" in the public park. He asserts that "rather than requesting that he recite an innocuous sentence," the prosecution impermissibly required him to reveal his familiarity with the "more serious drug dealing in the park."
€43 The court "ffound] it probative that the jury clould] compare what they hear[d]
~ T44 True, as Ortega argues, the better practice would have been to require that he read a completely neutral passage, rather than the marijuana seller's statement. Seq, e.g., Williams,
T45 But the statement that Ortega read was unconnected to the marijuana sale. And when the prosecutor initially proposed the procedure, he fmentioned the alfernative of using a "generic statement." Still, defense counsel did not ask the court to use a neutral statement rather than an excerpt from the recording.
T46 For these reasons, we conclude that the trial court's determination that the voice exemplar posed a minimal risk of unfair prejudice was not "manifestly arb1trary, unreasonable, or unfair." Melillo,
II, The Prosecutor's Improper Comments During Closing Arguments Do Not Require Reversal
147 Finally, Ortega contends the prosecutor's comments during closing argument denied him a fair trial, We discern no reversible error,. |
A. Background
48 During closing arguments, the prosecutor said: "Now, one of my problems in this case is getting you, the jury, to care about this." Defense counsel objected, arguing "Itlhere is a specific instruction that the jury is not to consider emotions, The District Attorney's burden is proof beyond a reasonable doubt." After the court overruled the objection, the prosecutor continued:
I have to get you to care. Why should you care about this crime? This isn't a robbery. This isn't a homicide. Why should you care? : You should care for this city. We do not want an open drug market. in Acacia Park right in the heart of Colorado Springs. We do not want an open drug market directly across the street from Palmer High School. We want people to have jobs and to be productive members of society. We don't want them to be drug dealers.
Now, this is marijuana. I am not going to ask you to care about marijuana. Care about the laws of this state that say distribution of marijuana is illegal. Care about the laws of this state and find the defendant guilty.
B. Preservation and Standard of Review
{49 The Attorney General concedes preservation of, thls issue.
¶ 50 In prosecutorial misconduct claims, "the reviewing court engages in a two-step analysis," Wend v. People,
151 Ortega's assertion that we must review this claim for constitutional harmless error is unsupported. See Crider v. People,
C. Law
Y52 "[A] prosecutor, while free to strike hard blows, is not at liberty to strike foul ones" Domingo-Gomez,
D. Application -
153 Ortega argues that the prosecutor's comments "appealed to the jurors' fears and concerns for public safety," thus denying him a fair trial, Because the park's proximity to the high school was not relevant to any element of the offense, he asserts that the prosecutor intended to "call to the mind of the jurors the image of young teenagers” becoming involved in the drug trade. ~
§54 The Attorney General responds by characterizing the statements as "rhetorical comment{s] reflecting on the nature of the charges and the evidence presented." But this characterization cannot avoid the widely-cited principle that a "prosecutor may urge a defendant in order to protect community- values, preserve civil order, or deter future lawbreaking." United States v. Monaghan,
55 Still, because this comment "was an isolated incident in an otherwise proper closing argument," we conclude that the error was harmless, Nee id. (harmless error even though prosecutor improperly appealed to jury's duty to fight evil in the community), Because two witnesses identified Ortega and the jury was instructed to apply the rules of law to the evidence presented at trial, we discern no. "reasonable probablhty that [any error] contributed to the defendant's conviction." Crider,
IIL Conclusion
{56 The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
Notes
. Instead, Ortega relies on- cases involving in-court identification procedures that allegedly were tainted by suggestive pretrial identification. Bernal v. People,
. Citing United States v. Thompson,
