Fоllowing a jury trial, the defendant, Adam Mueller, was convicted of three counts of felony wiretapping. See RSA 570-A:2, 1(a) (Supp. 2012). On appeal, he argues that the Superior Court {Brown, J.) committed plain error by instructing the jury that a violation of the felony wiretapping statute requires a mental state of “purposely,” when the statute specifically identifies “wilfully” as the applicable mental state. 1 The State agrees that the trial court’s instruction as to the requisite mens rea was erroneous, but asserts that reversal of the defendant’s convictions is not warranted because the prerequisites for application of the plain error doctrine have not been met. We reverse and remand.
The limited record reflects the following facts. The defendant is the founder of Copblock.org (Copblock), a self-described police accountability website. On October 4,2011, the defendant called three individuals seeking comment on an incident that occurred at West High School in Manchester involving a student and a police officer. The individuals contacted by the defendant were Captain Jonathan Hopkins of the Manchester Police Department; Mary Ellen McGorry, Principal of West High School; and Denise Michael, assistant to Principal McGorry. The defendant videotaped himself making the telephone calls, recorded the calls, and posted the recordings on Copblock. The defendant did not ask any of the individuals for their permission to record the conversations, nor did he advise them that he was doing so. A few months later, while speaking on a local radio show, the defendant commentеd that he did not tell Captain Hopkins, Principal McGorry, or Ms. Michael that he recorded their conversations, prompting the Manchester Police Department to investigate the matter further.
The defendant was charged with three counts of felony wiretapping, with each count alleging that he had “purposely” recorded a telephone conversation without the consent of all the participants. After a one-day trial, at which the defendant represented himself and did not testify, the jury found the defendant guilty of each charge.
The defendant argues that the trial court erred by instructing the jury that a violation of the felony wiretаpping statute requires a mental state of “purposely,” when the statute specifically states: “A person is guilty of a class B felony if . . . without the consent of all parties to the communication, the person . . .
[wjilfully
intercepts . . . any telecommunication or oral communication.” RSA 570-A:2, 1(a) (emphasis added). Becausе the defendant did not object at trial to the court’s definition of the crimes as requiring a purposeful
mens rea,
he raises the issue on appeal as plain error. “The plain error rule allows us to exercise our discretion
For us to find plain error: (1) there must be error; (2) the error must be plain; and (3) the error must affect substantial rights____ If all three of these conditions are met, we may then exercise our discretion to correct a forfeited error only if the error meets a fourth criterion: the error must seriously affect the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings. This rule is used sparingly, however, and is limited to those circumstances in which a miscarriage of justice would otherwise result.
Moussa,
The State concedes that the first two prongs of the plain error test are met in this case,
ie.,
that the trial court erred, and that the error was plain. We agree. “The purpose of the trial court’s charge is to state and explain to the jury, in clear and intelligible language, the rules of law applicable to the case.”
State v. O’Leary,
Although under RSA 626:2, IV (2007) a requirement that an offense be committed “wilfully” is generally satisfied if the defendant “acts knowingly with respect to the material elements of the offense,” this statute merely establishes a default rulе that is subject to exceptions where “a purpose to impose further requirements appears” in the statute defining the crime.
See Fischer v. Hooper,
“wilfully” in RSA 570-A:2,1, means that the defendant must act with an intentional or reckless disregard for the lawfulness of his conduct. In other words, the dеfendant has not violated RSA 570-A:2, I, if he has “a ‘good faith’ belief that [his] conduct was lawful.”
Fischer,
Here, the erroneous mental state of purposely merely required the State to
We next consider whеther, under the third prong of the plain error test, the trial court’s error affected the defendant’s substantial rights.
“Generally, to satisfy the burden of demonstrating that an error affected substantial rights, the defendant must demonstrate that the error was prejudicial,
i. e.,
that it affected the outcome of the proceeding.”
State v. Lopez,
The defendant argues that the error was prejudicial because the improper jury instruction lessened the State’s burden of proof regarding the applicable mental state, thus allowing the jury to convict him based simply upon its finding that he specifically intended to record the conversations without consent, without properly considering whether he knew or was recklessly ignorant of the fact that his actions were unlawful. The State responds that the evidence would have permitted the jury to infer that the defendant did know that the recordings were unlawful and, therefore, that the erroneous instruction as to the required mens rea did not affect the outcome of the trial. We find the State’s argument unconvincing.
To support its position, the State primarily relies upon stаtements made by the defendant during his opening and closing remarks to the jury and on the testimony of Captain Hopkins. In his opening statement, the defendant encouraged the jury to determine its verdict based not upon the trial court’s instructions, but rather upon what it thought was “right.” In his closing argument, the defendant told the jury, “I haven’t denied the fact thаt I did not tell these people that I was filming them. I’ll say that again: I did not tell them that I
I know [the prosecutor] would like you to believe that I’m asking you to allow me to break the law, but that’s just not true. I’m asking you to decide if this law applies to public officials or to use jury nullification .... We should not have to tell public officials we’re recording them, because everything a public official does is public information, plain and simple. And that’s why I feel I’m not guilty of these charges.
Even if we put aside the fact that opening and closing remarks are not evidence — a point which the trial court made clear to the jury in its final instructions —we do not believe that these statements were tantamount to a confession by the defendant that he knew that his conduct was illegal. The State generally claims that the defendant’s reference to jury nullification in both statements showed that he knew that his conduct violated the law and, thus, that he acted wilfully. However, the State takes the jury nullificatiоn argument out of context. During its opening statement, the State specifically told the jury that the mental state for the felony wiretapping statute was “purposely.” When the defendant then urged the jury not to follow the law and instead to consider jury nullification — because public officials should not have to be told they arе being recorded — he was not necessarily saying that he knew it was against the law to record conversations with such officials without their consent. Rather, he might well have been saying that even though it was his conscious object to record the conversations without consent, the jury should find that this conduct was not unlawful because the law should not apрly to conversations with public officials. Simply put, when considered in context, the defendant’s jury nullification argument is not singularly susceptible to the inference that he admitted to knowing that his conduct was unlawful, and therefore that he acted wilfully.
The State’s reliance upon Hopkins’s testimony also is unavailing. During cross-examinatiоn by the defendant, Hopkins testified that he had been recorded by Copblock members in the past, and had been told that he was being recorded. The State argues that the jury could have inferred from this testimony that the defendant knew it was unlawful to record conversations without consent, as other members of Copblock had sometimes notified Hopkins that they were recording him. However, the State did not further develop Hopkins’s statement on redirect examination, nor did it present any other evidence to link Hopkins’s past experience with Copblock members to the defendant. For example, there was no evidence about how many times Hopkins had been recorded by Copblock members, whether he was always told by other Copblock members when he was being recorded, or what the defendant’s relationship was with other Copblock members. We think it doubtful that the jury reasonably could have inferred the defendant’s willful mental state based upon Hopkins’s limited testimony regarding his past experience with other Copblock members.
The State also argues more generally that, based upon the defendant’s status as a founder of Copblock and his work with that organization, the jury could have inferred that he was familiar with wiretap law and thus knew that it was unlawful to record conversations without consent. However, because the State did not consider the defendant’s knowledge regarding the lawfulness of his conduct to be at issue during the trial, the record contains minimal evidence detailing the defendant’s activities or experience with Copblock.
Finally, the State points to the fact that the defendant did not dеfend against the charges based upon the claim that he acted
To summarize, although the evidence was overwhelming that it was the defendant’s conscious object to record the conversations without the consent of all parties, there was minimal evidence concerning whether the defendant knew or was recklessly ignorant of the fact that his conduct was unlawful. In this regard, this case is distinguishable from
State v. Ortiz,
We next consider whether the fourth prong has been satisfied. Under the fourth prong, we must decide whether the trial court’s error “seriously affect[s] the fairness, integrity, or public rеputation of judicial proceedings.”
Moussa,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
In his brief, the defendant also argued that, because he was a party to the conversations which formed the basis of the charges against him, his conduct constituted, at most, misdemeanor level offenses proscribed by RSA 570-A:2, I-a (Supp. 2013). However, at oral argument, the defendant explicitly abandoned this argument. We therefore do not address it.
Significantly, our construction of wilfully as requiring аn intentional or reckless disregard for the lawfulness of one’s conduct represents a departure from the usual rule that ignorance of the law is not an excuse for criminal conduct.
See State v. Stratton,
