Case Information
*1 IN THE
S UPREME C OURT OF THE S TATE OF A RIZONA S TATE O F A RIZONA , Appellee,
v. R OBERT C HARLES G LISSENDORF ,
Appellant.
No. CR-13-0388-PR
Filed July 18, 2014
Appeal from the Superior Court in Pima County
The Honorable Michael O. Miller, Judge
No. CR20112756-001
REVERSED AND REMANDED
Opinion of the Court of Appeals, Division Two
COUNSEL: Lori J. Lefferts, Pima County Public Defender, David J. Euchner (argued), Katherine A. Estavillo, Assistant Public Defenders, Tucson, for Robert Charles Glissendorf
Thomas C. Horne, Arizona Attorney General, Robert L. Ellman, Solicitor General, Joseph T. Maziarz (argued), Chief Counsel, Criminal Appeals Sectiоn, Phoenix, for State of Arizona
CHIEF JUSTICE BALES authored the opinion of the Court, in which, VICE CHIEF JUSTICE PELANDER, JUSTICE BERCH, JUSTICE BRUTINEL, and JUSTICE TIMMER joined.
CHIEF JUSTICE BALES, opinion of the Court:
Fifty years ago, this Court held that if the state fails to
preserve evidence that is potentially exonerating, the accused might be
*2
entitled to an instruction informing the jury that it may draw an adverse
inference from the state’s action.
See State v. Willits
,
I.
¶2 In 2012, Robert Charles Glissendorf was tried for three counts of child molestation. Count 1 involved his niece, E.G., who testified that when she was between five and sevеn years old she awoke one night to find Glissendorf touching her vagina. This incident occurred between 1997 and 1999, but E.G. did not report it until 2001. That year, a Tucson detective tape-recorded his interview of E.G. about the incident and summarized the interview in a written report. A Child Protective Services (“CPS”) employee was also present and recorded the interview on video. The State initially decided not to prosecute. Six to twelve months later, the Tucson Police Department (“TPD”), consistent with its then-existing policy, destroyed its recording. The CPS recording was also destroyed. Counts 2 and 3 involved similar molestations reported in 2010 by I.K., who was then five years old. I.K. testified that, sometime between 2009 and 2010, she and her sister, A.K., were each mоlested by Glissendorf one night when he slept over at their mother’s house. Count 2 was based on the molestation of I.K., and Count 3 concerned the molestation of A.K. Because A.K. was not awake during the incident, I.K.’s testimony provided the evidence for both counts. Over Glissendorf’s objection, the trial court allowed another
witness, C.L., to testify under Evidence Rule 404(c)’s оther-act exception about an alleged incident in Nevada in 1976. C.L. testified that, when she was six years old, Glissendorf lured her into an apartment with candy, forced her to lie down on the couch, and touched her vagina. He then gave her two dollars and let her go. Glissendorf was later arrested in Nevada but was never charged for this incident. At trial, Glissendorf rеquested a instruction regarding
the destruction of the TPD and CPS recordings of the 2001 interview with E.G., arguing that the recordings would have been useful in impeaching her *3 2012 testimony. The trial court construed Glissendorf’s request as seeking the following standard jury instruction:
If you find that the State has lost, destroyed, or failed to preserve evidence whose contents or quality are important to the issues in this case, then you should weigh the explanation, if any, given for the loss or unavailability of the evidence. If you find that any such explanation is inadequate, then you may draw an inference unfavorable to the State, which in itself may create a reasonable doubt as to the defendant’s guilt.
Rev. Ariz. Jury Instr. (“RAJI”) Stand. Crim. 10. The court denied the request because the recordings had not been maliciously destroyed and Glissendorf had not shown that they contained exculpatory evidence. The jury convicted Glissendorf on Counts 1 and 2 and
acquitted him on Count 3; he was sentenced to consecutive prison terms
totaling thirty-four years. Glissendorf appealed and raised several issues,
including the denial of a instruction аnd the admission of C.L.’s
testimony under Rule 404(c). The court of appeals concluded that the trial
court erred in refusing to give a instruction, but the court reversed
only the conviction and sentence on Count 1.
State v. Glissendorf
, 233 Ariz.
222, 233–34 ¶ 32,
II. We review rulings regarding a Willits instruction for abuse of
discretion.
See State v. Bolton
,
We think that the rule permitting an inference is not based only on the notion that the destruction is motivated by *4 a desire to conceal the truth. Evidence, of course, may be innocently destroyed without a fraudulent intent simply through carelessness or negligence or, as the case might have appeared to the jury here, an unwillingnеss to make the necessary effort to preserve it. In any event, the State cannot be permitted the advantage of its own conduct in destroying evidence which might have substantiated the defendant's claim regarding the missing evidence. But the damage to the defendant is equally great because the evidence was no longer available at the trial by which the facts with certainty could be determined.
Willits
,
fashioning a two-element test: “To be entitled to a instruction, a
defendant must prove that (1) the state failed to preserve material and
reasonably accessible evidence that could have had a tendency to exonerate
the accused, and (2) there was resulting prejudice.”
State v. Smith
, 158 Ariz.
222, 227,
defendant must do more than simply speculate about how the evidence
might have been helpful.
See, e.g.
,
Speer
,
¶13
Nonetheless, the State urges us to overrule , essentially
arguing that consequences for the loss or destruction of evidence should
only apply if it were done in bad faith. We decline the State’s invitation. A
consequence for even innocent loss or destruction is necessary both to deter
such action and tо ensure that defendants do not bear the burden of the
state’s actions.
See Cost
,
the State contends that the instruction lacks a statutory or constitutional
basis. The State correctly observes that this Court has never held that
Arizona’s due process clause requires the issuance of
Willits
instructions.
Instead, the Court has held that the same bad-faith test applies to identify
violations of either the Arizona due process clause or the federal due
process clause.
See Speer
,
constitutions or evidentiary rules require measures similar to a Willits instruction when the state’s failure to preserve evidence does not involve bad faith. See Cost , 10 A.3d at 193–95 (describing several states’ approaches). Such holdings recognize that when potentially exonerating evidence is lost or destroyed, an adverse-inference instruction may be appropriate because the accused is presumed innocent and the state bears the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. While jurors generally are instructed to determine the facts from the admitted evidence, a Willits instruction permits them to draw an adverse inference from the loss or destruction of evidence by the state. Even if is characterized as a court-adopted rule of
evidence, see id . at 194, we believe that it properly balances the state’s duty to prove guilt with the dеfendant’s presumed innocence. We therefore decline to abrogate a rule that has been part of Arizona law for fifty years *7 and has been applied in dozens of cases by this Court and the court of appeals. Alternatively, the State argues that a Willits instruction is
appropriate only if the exculpatory value was apparеnt when the evidence
was destroyed. In support of this argument, the State cites several court of
appeals’ opinions.
See State v. Davis
,
exonerate” standard. He noted several differences between E.G.’s story as
recounted in the 2001 police report and her trial testimony more than a
decade later, including the number of times she claimed Glissendorf
touched her. The recordings thus had the potential to assist Glissendorf in
impeaching E.G. Without this tool for impeaching the State’s only witness
to the incident, Glissendorf was prejudiced. The prejudice was
compounded by E.G.’s suggestion on cross-examination that the written
police report was both inaccurate and incomplete. As the court of appeals
observed, “The loss of the [recordings] thus created a two-fold harm,
depriving Glissendorf of objective
impeachment evidence and
*8
undermining the exculpatory impact of the evidence of the 2001 interview
that survived.”
Glissendorf
,
to infer that the similarity of the acts supported convictions on all counts.
For example, during closing arguments, the prosecutor stated that the
“evidence as a whole shows . . . a pattern over and over again of the same
man, the same targets, the same acts again and again.” Repeating this
theme, the prosecutor said “[t]he common thread is the defendant doing
the same thing, picking out the same little girls over and оver again,” and
“those facts are the same every single time. The same man, the same age
they were at, the same acts over and over again.”
The court of appeals, however, held that the denial of a
Willits
instruction was harmless as to Count 2 because Glissendorf did not argue
that the error had affected that count.
Glissendorf
,
State to prove that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
State
v. Henderson
,
convincing argument that the error did not affect both counts. See id. (“Harmless error review places the burden on the state to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the error did not contribute to or affect the verdict or sentence.”). The State’s case rested entirely on testimony, and Rule 404(c) allowed the State to urge the jury to consider the evidence for one count as supporting the other counts. Denying a instruction thus affected both Counts 1 and 2, because uncertainty about Count 1 might have undermined the State’s arguments that it proved Count 2 beyond a reasonable doubt. Because Glissendorf showed error with regard to both counts and the State failed to show harmlessness, we must reverse the convictions and sentences for both counts. Although we also granted review to consider whether the
court of appeals erred by remаnding for clarification of the trial court’s Rule 404(c) analysis, this issue is now moot, and we decline to address it. On remand, the trial court shall reconsider the admission of the Rule 404(c) evidence, if it is again offered.
III. We reverse the convictions and sentences, vacate the opinion
of the court of appeals, and remand this case to the trial court for a new trial.
