Case Information
*1 FILED BY CLERK IN THE COURT OF APPEALS SEP 30 2013 STATE OF ARIZONA DIVISION TWO COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION TWO THE STATE OF ARIZONA, )
) Appellee, ) 2 CA-CR 2012-0405 ) DEPARTMENT B v. )
) O P I N I O N ROBERT CHARLES GLISSENDORF, )
)
Appellant. )
) APPEAL FROM THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PIMA COUNTY Cause No. CR20112756001
Honorable Michael O. Miller, Judge REVERSED IN PART
AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS Thomas C. Horne, Arizona Attorney General
By Joseph T. Maziarz and Alan L. Amann Tucson
Attorneys for Appellee Lori J. Lefferts, Pima County Public Defender
By Kristine Maish, David J. Euchner,
and Katherine A. Estavillo Tucson
Attorneys for Appellant
E C K E R S T R O M, Judge. Following a jury trial, appellant Robert Glissendorf was convicted of two
counts of child molestation and sentenced to consecutive prison terms totaling thirty-four years. On appeal, he argues the state unreasonably delayed his prosecution, the trial court erred in refusing to give a jury instruction concerning the destruction of evidence, and the court erroneously admitted evidence of an aberrant sexual propensity pursuant to Rule 404(c), Ariz. R. Evid. We conclude the trial court erred in failing to provide the instruction, and we therefore reverse Glissendorf’s conviction and seventeen-year sentence on count one. [1] In addition, because we agree with Glissendorf that the trial court erred in its Rule 404(c) analysis, we remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Factual and Procedural Background In August 2011, Glissendorf was charged with two counts of child molestation based on acts he had committed against separate victims. Count one alleged he had molested Olivia on a particular day between 1997 and 1999, when she was under eight years old; count two alleged he had molested Tamora, then six years old, at some point between 2009 and 2010. [2]
*3 ¶3 At trial, Olivia testified that Glissendorf had molested her one night when they both were staying at a relative’s house. According to Olivia, she first awoke on the living room floor, noticed her pajamas and underwear had been pulled down, observed Glissendorf touching her vagina, and went back to sleep. She then awoke in his bedroom and observed him touching her vagina again. Tamora testified that Glissendorf had once touched her underneath her underwear on the body part that “[m]akes you pee” when he was staying at Tamora’s mother’s house. The trial court permitted another witness, Wanda, to testify that in Nevada
in 1976, when she was six years old, Glissendorf had lured her to an apartment with candy, forced her to lie down on a couch, pulled down her pants and underwear, and touched her vulva. [3] He consequently was arrested in Nevada, although that case later was dismissed. The jury found Glissendorf guilty of molesting Olivia and Tamora, and this appeal followed the imposition of sentence. [4]
Motion to Dismiss Glissendorf first argues the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss count one of the indictment due to the state’s ten-year delay in bringing the charge. Although the motion refers to “pre accusation delay” and the denial of his “right to a speedy trial,” the state construed it below as a motion to dismiss based on pre- indictment delay, and we likewise treat it as such on appeal.
In 2001, Olivia first reported to law enforcement that Glissendorf had molested her. The state elected not to pursue charges at that time, and police closed the case. The state asserted below that it did not delay prosecution to secure any tactical advantage; rather, the delay was the result of its decision not to prosecute “a single victim case with no corroboration.” When Tamora came forward in 2010 alleging that Glissendorf had committed a similar act, the first case was reopened and the state elected to charge him based on Olivia’s accusations. The trial court denied the motion to dismiss without making express findings. The Due Process Clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments prevent
the state from bringing criminal charges against a person when it has unreasonably
delayed doing so.
State v. Lacy
,
delay prosecution to gain a tactical advantage or to harass Glissendorf. Instead, the
record indicates the state decided not to prosecute him in 2001 because it found the
evidence subject to reasonable doubt. The trial court thus did not abuse its discretion in
denying the motion to dismiss. Although Glissendorf asserts the state’s charging
decisions with respect to count one were “wholly improper,” he has cited no legal
authority to support this position, and we therefore need not address the point any further.
See In re $26,980.00 U.S. Currency
, 199 Ariz. 291, ¶ 28, 18 P.3d 85, 93 (App. 2000).
Because Glissendorf has failed to establish the first step in the two-step test, he has not
demonstrated that he is entitled to relief on appeal.
See Lacy
,
misinterpreted the United States Supreme Court’s precedents of
Marion
and
Lovasco
, and
he asserts that “tactical delay [i]s not a
sine qua non
of a due process violation.” Relying
in part on
United States v. Moran
,
Jury Instruction Glissendorf next contends the trial court erred in refusing his request for a jury instruction derived from State v. Willits , 96 Ariz. 184, 393 P.2d 274 (1964). Although he did not submit his proposed instruction in writing, in accordance with Rule 21.2, Ariz. R. Crim. P., the court nevertheless understood his request as one for the following “standard” 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.
State Bar of Arizona, Revised Arizona Jury Instructions (Criminal) Std. 10 (3d ed. rev. 2012). During the delay between Olivia’s allegation that she was molested and the
state’s pursuit of charges arising from that allegation, the state destroyed a video recording of Olivia’s 2001 interview with a detective from the Tucson Police Department (TPD) and an employee from Child Protective Services (CPS). The police department did not retain this evidence because its former policy called for the destruction of evidence within six to twelve months of closing a case. CPS likewise did not retain a *7 recording of this interview. As a result, a report prepared by Detective Ridgeway in 2001 is the only extant record of Olivia’s allegations at that time. That report memorializes Olivia’s statement, in relevant part, as follows:
The victim told me about an incident that happened to her when she was about six years old. [5] She was staying at her [relative’s] house with her sister and they were sleeping on the livingroom floor. [Glissendorf] went into the livingroom and picked up the victim[’]s sister and put her into his bed. [Glissendorf] then went back into the livingroom and pulled down the victim[’]s pajama bottoms and underwear down [sic] and started touching her vagina. The suspect then quit and left the room. This was the only time that this happened. As noted above, Olivia testified at the 2012 trial about two acts of
molestation on the night she stayed at her relative’s house: one in the living room and another in the bedroom. As to the living room incident, Olivia testified that when she awoke, she noticed her sister was no longer sleeping beside her, but she denied seeing Glissendorf carry her sister away to the bedroom. In regard to the bedroom incident, Olivia’s trial testimony described the layout of the bedroom and her position relative to Glissendorf on the bed. She specifically recalled the television being on and an “infomercial” playing when the second molestation occurred. In addition, Olivia testified that she remembered being five years old when she was molested, because she recalled suffering a leg injury later that same year. During cross-examination, Glissendorf attempted to highlight the
discrepancies between Olivia’s testimony and her allegations from 2001, using the police *8 report for impeachment. Olivia maintained the report was inaccurate. She claimed that Detective Ridgeway “misheard what [she had] said” during the interview and that he had omitted the bedroom incident from his report even though she had mentioned it at the time. She further claimed that her memory of the incident was better in 2012 than in 2001.
¶14 On redirect examination, the state elicited from Olivia that her interview with CPS had lasted approximately 1.5 hours, and the report summarizing that interview “was very short,” consisting of only six sentences. Olivia then gave an affirmative answer when the state asked, “Would it be fair to say that you said a lot more than five or six sentences during that hour and a half worth of interview?” The state later revisited the topic of the report with Detective Stacey Lee, who had reopened the case in 2010. She offered an opinion that Detective Ridgeway’s report was “brief, and it really didn’t give . . . a very good idea of what happened,” leading her to conduct another interview with Olivia. During closing argument, after the trial court had denied the proposed
Willits instruction, the state asked the jury to consider the court’s instructions relating to witness credibility when evaluating Olivia’s testimony. The state maintained that, contrary to Glissendorf’s assertion in his opening statement, “you didn’t hear an evolution in [Olivia’s] story. She testified to the exact same thing, him touching her vagina in the living room.” In Glissendorf’s summation, he emphasized that Olivia’s testimony had
differed from her 2001 allegations. He noted that Olivia first reported seeing him pick up *9 her sister and carry her to the bedroom, whereas in Olivia’s “more detail[ed]” testimony at trial, her sister was not present in the living room when Olivia awoke, and it was Olivia, not her sister, who was taken into the bedroom. According to Glissendorf’s theory of the case, Olivia’s memory was unreliable, at minimum, and she possibly had fabricated the additional allegations about the bedroom incident because her first report had not resulted in prosecution. Glissendorf also criticized the state for “impl[ying] . . . that somehow Detective Ridgeway must be incompetent” or that his report was “just a summary” rather than a complete and accurate record of the earlier interview. In rebuttal, the state claimed that neither side could make any assumptions about the lost recording, and it maintained that Glissendorf “can’t ask you to assume [the lost evidence i]s going to be against [Olivia] in any way, shape or form.” We review a trial court’s ruling regarding a Willits instruction for an abuse
of discretion.
See State v. Bolton
, 182 Ariz. 290, 309, 896 P.2d 830, 849 (1995). A
defendant is entitled to a
Willits
instruction, which permits the jury to draw a negative
inference against the state, when “‘(1) the state failed to preserve material and reasonably
accessible evidence that had a tendency to exonerate the accused, and (2) there was
resulting prejudice.’”
Broughton
, 156 Ariz. at 399, 752 P.2d at 488,
quoting State v.
Reffitt
, 145 Ariz. 452, 461, 702 P.2d 681, 690 (1985);
accord State v. Speer
, 221 Ariz.
449, ¶ 40, 212 P.3d 787, 795 (2009). By this standard, a defendant need not establish
with certainty that the lost evidence was exculpatory; an instruction is required if the state
“failed to preserve material evidence that
might
aid the defendant.”
State v. Youngblood
,
recording from 2001. When deciding whether the first condition for a
Willits
instruction
has been met, it is necessary to consider the nature of the case and the available evidence.
In cases such as the one before us, where the principal evidence of guilt is the testimony
of an alleged victim, the jury’s primary task is to assess the accuracy and credibility of
that testimony.
See State v. Jerousek
,
that occurred many years in the past, any prior statements made closer in time to the incident become an especially important yardstick by which the reliability of the testimony may be assessed. To the extent those statements are inculpatory and consistent with the trial testimony, they are material and potentially useful for the prosecution. [6] To the extent those statements are inconsistent with the witness’s trial testimony, they are material and potentially useful for the accused. See Ariz. R. Evid. 801(d)(1)(A); Trickel v. Rainbo Baking Co. of Phx. , 100 Ariz. 222, 226, 412 P.2d 852, 854 (1966) (noting witness’s inconsistent description of events “materially related to the subject matter”). With a concrete record of a victim’s past statements, a defendant can potentially identify any inconsistencies or other circumstances that might tend to create a reasonable doubt and suggest faulty memory, misperception, or untruthfulness by the victim. The recording of Olivia’s interview from 2001 was “obviously material . . .
and reasonably accessible,”
State v. Perez
, 141 Ariz. 459, 464, 687 P.2d 1214, 1219
(1984), as well as potentially useful for Glissendorf’s defense. This is not a case
involving mere speculation, in the face of contrary indications, about the exculpatory
potential of missing evidence,
e.g.
,
Smith
,
during trial and comments during closing argument testify strongly to the materiality of
the lost evidence.”
Leslie
,
Glissendorf observed below, was that he was deprived of the primary tool by which he could effectively cross-examine Olivia, the state’s only witness to the incident. The state then compounded the prejudice by suggesting the police report provided both an *13 incomplete and inaccurate record of her 2001 interview. The loss of the video thus created a two-fold harm, depriving Glissendorf of objective impeachment evidence and undermining the exculpatory impact of the evidence of the 2001 interview that survived. As the prosecutor’s questions and insinuations about the police report demonstrate, the state essentially sought a favorable inference from the destruction of the video recording—namely, that it might be consistent with Olivia’s trial testimony. And when Glissendorf attempted to argue the substance of the Willits instruction to the jury during closing argument, the state neutralized this effort by insisting the jury could not assume the missing evidence would be “against [Olivia] in any way, shape or form,” an assertion in direct contradiction to the instruction Glissendorf sought. When the trial court denied the requested instruction here, it abused its
discretion by applying an incorrect legal standard.
See State v. Mohajerin
,
ruling. Specifically, the state contended below that Glissendorf was not entitled to a
Willits
instruction in the absence of a showing that the state had acted in bad faith. We
agree that there is no suggestion of bad faith on the record before us, but such a showing
is not required for a
Willits
instruction to issue. Although the supreme court acknowledged in
Willits
that a bad faith effort to conceal the truth might motivate the
state to destroy evidence, the court also emphasized that “[e]vidence . . . may be
innocently destroyed without a fraudulent intent simply through carelessness or
negligence or . . . an unwillingness to make the necessary effort to preserve it.” 96 Ariz.
at 191,
in bad faith, the remedy would have been more than a jury instruction. “When the state
exhibits bad faith in the handling of critical evidence, it is fundamentally unfair to allow
the trial to proceed,” and the remedy is to bar the prosecution of the case.
Youngblood
,
Willits
instruction is designed to remedy,” because the state’s initial decision not to
prosecute provided “a fully adequate explanation for the loss of the evidence.” To the
extent this argument urges us “not [to] penalize the prosecution when its action is neither
malicious nor inadvertent,” this is the dissenting view from
Willits
, which we are neither
inclined nor at liberty to adopt.
a defendant must demonstrate the state’s negligence or wrongdoing to be entitled to an
instruction. Ordinarily, when the materiality and exonerating potential of evidence is
established, and when the state possessed or had reasonable access to this evidence, then
some degree of fault is implied by its loss, and the instruction is appropriate.
See State v.
Hill
, 174 Ariz. 313, 321 n.4, 848 P.2d 1375, 1383 n.4 (1993) (noting instruction
warranted “when the state fails to preserve evidence important to the case”). It bears
mention that
Willits
expressly applies to situations where evidence is “innocently
destroyed,” because “the damage to the defendant is equally great.”
adequacy of the state’s explanation for the loss of evidence.
[7]
But the state
misunderstands the import of this language, which actually relates to the jury weighing
the evidence. A
Willits
instruction “direct[s] the jurors’ attention to all matters properly
within the issues for their determination,” including the state’s explanation for the lost
evidence.
Willits
,
Notably, the Division One cases cited all rely upon
California v. Trombetta
,
Perez
,
apparent in “a single victim [molestation] case with no corroboration”—especially when the state initially has declined to prosecute. The state has not argued that the failure to provide a jury instruction was
harmless here, nor could we find it to be so.
See State v. Bible
,
Evidence of Aberrant Sexual Propensity
Last, Glissendorf maintains the trial court erred in granting the state’s
pretrial motion and admitting Wanda’s testimony pursuant to Rule 404(c), Ariz. R. Evid.,
*21
over his objection. We review a court’s admission of evidence under Rule 404(c) for an
abuse of discretion.
State v. Aguilar
,
that “evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts may be admitted . . . if relevant to show that the defendant had a character trait giving rise to an aberrant sexual propensity to commit the offense charged.” The rule directs the trial court to make a number of findings on the record before such other-act evidence may be admitted. Ariz. R. Evid. 404(c)(1)(D). Specifically, the court must find each of the following conditions is met:
(A) The evidence is sufficient to permit the trier of fact to find that the defendant committed the other act.
(B) The commission of the other act provides a reasonable basis to infer that the defendant had a character trait giving rise to an aberrant sexual propensity to commit the crime charged.
(C) The evidentiary value of proof of the other act is not substantially outweighed by danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of issues, or other factors mentioned in Rule 403[, Ariz. R. Evid.]
Ariz. R. Evid. 404(c)(1)(A) through (C). In weighing the probative value and risk of unfair prejudice posed by the admission of other-act evidence, Rule 404(c)(1)(C) requires the trial court to consider all relevant factors, including the remoteness of the other act, its frequency, the strength of the evidence showing the defendant committed it, its similarity or dissimilarity to the charged offenses, and any surrounding circumstances. Here, the trial court acknowledged that Wanda’s proposed testimony
related to an isolated act that was very remote in time and dissimilar in some respects *22 from the current offenses. The court nevertheless determined that, given the similar ages of the victims and the nature of the sexual touching, her proposed testimony provided a basis to infer Glissendorf had an aberrant sexual propensity to commit the charged offenses, and the probative value of this evidence was not substantially outweighed by its risk of unfair prejudice. These findings are supported by the record. Glissendorf maintains the trial court erred because the incident with Wanda
“was extremely remote, dissimilar and involved inconsistent allegations.” According to a Nevada police record from 1976, the incident involved a stranger who “pulled [Wanda] out of [a] tree” during the daytime, locked her inside an apartment, held her there despite her screams, attempted to penetrate her vagina with his penis, and then gave her $2 upon her release. In contrast to this “predatorial . . . stalking” and attempted rape, Glissendorf characterizes the charges in this case as involving the “opportunistic molestation” of sleeping victims who all knew him. He therefore asserts that “when all of these factors are properly evaluated,” they “mandate[] a conclusion that the probative value was substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice” and “compel[] the preclusion of the evidence.” We reject the argument that the evidence was necessarily inadmissible
under Rule 404(c). The parties discussed these discrepancies and differences at the pretrial hearing, and they were thus considered by the trial court. “Exact similarity between acts is not required” for admission under the rule. State v. Weatherbee , 158 Ariz. 303, 304, 762 P.2d 590, 591 (App. 1988). Furthermore, as the court noted at the hearing, the state did not seek to introduce any Nevada document into evidence. Rather, *23 the state sought to introduce Wanda’s proposed testimony based on her 2011 interview with Detective Lee. And, as noted above, Wanda’s trial testimony concerned an incident that was similar to the charged offenses insofar as it involved Glissendorf touching the genitals of a six-year-old girl. To the extent Wanda’s testimony was inconsistent with her allegations in
1976, this affected the weight to be given to her testimony, but it did not render it
inadmissible under Rule 404(c). The trial court noted it had listened to a recording of
Wanda’s interview with TPD and found her proposed testimony to be credible and “very
strong.” We cannot find the court abused its discretion in crediting this account or in
determining that it presented clear and convincing evidence of the prior incident.
See
State v. Herrera
, 232 Ariz. 536, ¶ 26, 307 P.3d 103, 113-14 (App. 2013) (noting
uncorroborated testimony of victim sufficient to justify admission under rule);
State v.
Vega
,
under Rule 404(c) was flawed and lacked an evidentiary basis. The court’s written ruling contains the following express finding:
Surrounding Circumstances. The 1976 act is similar in that the Defendant normally used inducement rather than assaultive force to commit the acts. Additionally, after the sexual act was completed, Defendant attempted to placate the girl to induce her silence.
Glissendorf notes, without dispute from the state, that the present offenses involved no
inducement or placating, and all the charges here involved sleeping children. When the
court weighed the potential prejudice and probative value of the other-act evidence under
*24
Rules 404(c)(1)(C) and 403, it thus failed to note a significant dissimilarity between the
present offenses and the prior act involving Wanda. The court unaccountably
characterized this as a similarity, which would tend to favor admission.
[9]
A trial court
abuses its discretion when the reasons given for its ruling are clearly untenable,
Herrera
,
result. Here, remand is appropriate to allow the trial court to clarify whether the error
made in the course of the evidentiary ruling has, in fact, resulted in the admission of
inadmissible evidence.
See Herrera
,
We decline to consider de novo whether the challenged evidence was
admissible. As noted, the trial court credited Wanda’s account from her recorded
interview with police, finding it to be “very strong” evidence relevant to the assessments
under Rule 404(c)(1)(A) and (C)(iii). That audio recording has not been included in the
record on appeal. Furthermore, it is not our role to evaluate the credibility of this
witness’s account and resolve conflicts in the evidence.
See State v. Smith
,
*26 Sentencing Minute Entry In disposing of this appeal, we encountered the following error on page
three of the trial court’s sentencing minute entry: “IT IS ORDERED, all fines, fees,
assessments and/or restitution are reduced to a Criminal Restitution Order, with no
interest, penalties or collection fees to accrue while the defendant is in the Department of
Corrections.” Such an order was unauthorized by law.
See State v. Lopez
,
Disposition For the foregoing reasons, we reverse Glissendorf’s conviction and sentence on count one. We remand the case for a redetermination of the admissibility of the sexual propensity evidence under Rule 404(c). If the trial court, consistent with this court’s instructions, finds the evidence admissible, the conviction and sentence on count two are affirmed, as modified; if the evidence is inadmissible, the conviction and sentence on count two are reversed.
/s/ Peter J. Eckerstrom PETER J. ECKERSTROM, Judge CONCURRING:
/s/ Virginia C. Kelly
VIRGINIA C. KELLY, Presiding Judge
/s/ Philip G. Espinosa
PHILIP G. ESPINOSA, Judge
Notes
[1] Our disposition on this count renders moot Glissendorf’s additional argument that
count one is an unconstitutionally duplicitous charge. In the event of a retrial,
Glissendorf may assert a timely objection and seek to cure any duplicity problem either
by requesting a special verdict form or jury instruction.
See State v. Butler
, 230 Ariz.
465, n.4,
[2] For ease of reading, and in order to preserve the victims’ anonymity, we have provided pseudonyms for E.G. and I.K., the respective victims in counts one and two. See Ariz. R. Sup. Ct. 111(i).
[3] We have provided a pseudonym for this witness, whose initials are C.L.
[4] Glissendorf was acquitted of a third count of molestation against a different victim, and that charge is not a subject of this appeal.
[5] The record suggests that Olivia’s statement to the detective occurred at least two years after the alleged incident.
[6] Although prior consistent statements generally are not admissible to support the credibility of a witness’s testimony, they are admissible to rebut a challenge to the witness’s testimony. See Ariz. R. Evid. 801(d)(1)(B) (permitting prior consistent statements offered to rebut charge of recent fabrication, improper influence, or improper motive).
[7]
See Youngblood
, 173 Ariz. at 506, 844 P.2d at 1156 (“[I]f [jurors] find that the
state has lost, destroyed or failed to preserve material evidence that
might
aid the
defendant and they find the explanation for the loss inadequate, they may draw an
inference that that evidence would have been unfavorable to the state.”);
Willits
, 96 Ariz.
at 191,
[8] In that event, the supreme court has emphasized that the state’s fault is a threshold question to be decided by the trial court:
[9] Given the disharmony of this statement with the trial court’s other findings, as well as the illogic of such a finding given the facts in the record, we think it possible that this language in the order may have arisen from a clerical error. However, we are bound to consider the record before us and cannot disregard an express finding based on our own speculation about its origin.
[10] A finding of inadmissibility also would provide an independent ground for reversing the conviction and sentence on count one, which we have already set aside due to the jury instruction error.
