Michael Albert appeals from his conviction for statutory rape following a jury trial. He argues that the district court erred by excluding all of his alibi witnesses as a sanction for discovery violations and by denying Albert’s motion to compel the State to produce the name and telephone number of another adult with whom the alleged victim previously had sexual relations. Because we hold that the district court committed reversible error in excluding Albert’s alibi witnesses, we vacate the judgment of conviction and remand the case for a new trial.
BACKGROUND
Albert was indicted for rape, Idaho Code § 18-6101, on October 12, 1999. The State alleged that on the night of July 3, 1999, he had sexual intercourse with fifteen-year-old J.H. in a warehouse in Meridian, Idaho. Albert’s trial was initially scheduled for February 27, 2000. On January 12, the State filed a discovery request pursuant to I.C. § 19-519 1 asking for notice of any planned alibi defense, including notice of the place where Albert claimed to have been at the time of the alleged offense and the names and addresses of alibi witnesses. On February 2, Albert responded with a notice that he intended to present an alibi defense through two witnesses, Scott and Brenda Farnworth. The notice misspelled the Farnworths’ name as “Farworth” but correctly stated their then-current address in McCall, Idaho. The notice described the place ' where Albert claimed to have been at the time of the alleged offense as the “Farworths’ ” home in Nampa, Idaho but did not give the street address of the Nampa home. On February 9, the State filed a motion to require that the Farnworths appear for deposition or, alternatively, to exclude their testimony from trial because the Farnworths had declined to speak with state investigators and because Albert’s discovery response was vague about the alibi location. After hearing this motion, the court continued the trial date to May 16, 2000 and ordered Albert to provide a complete disclosure of the alibi information as required by I.C. § 19-519.
Albert did not serve an amended disclosure of alibi information until May 4. That same day, he also gave the name and correct address of an additional witness, Allison Vieira, but did not identify her as an alibi witness. The amended notice stated the address of the Farnworths’ former home, where Albert claimed to have been on the night of the alleged offense, as a lot in a mobile home park at “2119 Caldwell Boulevard,” in Nampa, Idaho. This was an incorrect address, however, for the Farnworths’ former residence was actually at 2819 Caldwell Boulevard. Upon the receipt of this amended notice, the prosecutor and an investigator who sought to interview witnesses at or near the alibi location found that “2119 Caldwell Boulevard” referred to an empty parcel.
The State did not notify defense counsel of this apparent error in the address or request clarification. At the outset of the second day of trial, Albert’s counsel informed the district court and the State that he had a fourth alibi witness, Crystal Ward, who had not been previously disclosed. Later that day, during discussion of the order in which witnesses would testify, Albert’s counsel referred to the address of Albert’s alibi location as 2819 Caldwell Boulevard. The State then informed the court that the address Albert had previously disclosed was 2119 Caldwell Boulevard. The State claimed prejudice due to the incorrect disclosure and requested the
Albert appeals. The primary issue on appeal is whether the district court erred in precluding Albert from presenting his alibi defense.
ANALYSIS
A. Exclusion of Alibi Witnesses
On appeal from an order imposing discovery sanctions, we review the trial court’s decision for an abuse of discretion.
State v. Harris,
The right of an accused to call witnesses in his defense is guaranteed by the Compulsory Process Clause of the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Taylor v. Illinois,
To accommodate these competing interests, when faced with a request by the State to exclude defense evidence due to late disclosure or nondisclosure, the trial court must weigh the prejudice to the State against the defendant’s right to a fair trial.
Harris,
In the present case, the record does not demonstrate that the address error in Albert’s amended alibi notice was willful.
The State argued to the trial court, and asserts again on appeal, that it was prejudiced because, being ignorant of the correct address of the Nampa residence, investigators were unable to interview neighbors or other potential witnesses who might have refuted the alibi. We are unpersuaded by this argument because the State’s prejudice was readily avoidable. The prosecutor could have acquired the correct address by the simple expedient of informing defense counsel that the disclosed address was a vacant parcel and requesting the correct information. Instead, the prosecutor elected to say nothing until mid-trial when Albert was about to call his first witness and to then cite the address error as a basis to preclude Albert from presenting his alibi. Further, although witnesses Scott and Brenda Farnworth had refused to speak with the state investigator, the State also had the name and current address of another of the alibi witnesses, Vieira. Nothing in the record indicates that the prosecutor could not have obtained the correct alibi location by interviewing her.
Avoidable prejudice of just this sort has been held not to justify the exclusion of alibi evidence as a sanction. In
People v. Osborne,
A similar case is
State v. Massey,
As in
Osborne,
the prosecutor in the present case was aware of the defect in Albert’s disclosure information well in advance of trial and elected to forego notifying defense counsel of the error so that the correct address could be obtained. The State argues that it had no “duty” to point out Albert’s error in his disclosure response. That is an issue that we need not decide, for here, the question is not whether the State had an affirmative obligation to notify defense counsel or whether the State could have remained silent until trial and then used the error in cross-examination of alibi witnesses to discredit the defendant. Rather, the question before us is whether the State, having elected not to demand the correct address so as to investigate the validity of the alibi defense, may use this largely self-imposed prejudice to entirely prevent presentation of the defense to the jury. We hold that it may not. The overarching obligation of the prosecution is not merely to secure convictions but to secure justice. “It is the primary and fundamental duty of the prosecuting attorney and his assistants to see that an accused receives a fair trial____‘It is as much his duty to refrain from improper methods calculated to produce a wrongful conviction as it is to use every legitimate means to bring about a just one.’ ”
State v. Wilbanks,
The district court’s frustration with Albert’s persistently untimely and defective discovery responses is understandable, but the exclusion of all of Albert’s alibi witnesses was not necessary in order to rectify the address error. Here, the State was able to interview all of the witnesses during the evening before Albert would have begun presenting his evidence. If the State needed to conduct follow-up investigation that could not be completed during the course of the trial, a continuance could have been granted.
5
In addition, where discovery violations involve egregious misconduct of an attorney, monetary sanctions may be assessed against the attorney.
See Stradley,
We conclude that the district court exceeded the bounds of its discretion by imposing the extreme sanction of witness exclusion. Because the sanction precluded any presentation of Albert’s alibi defense, the error
B. Denial of Albert’s Motion to Compel
We must also address a second claim of error posed by Albert. The day before his trial began, Albert moved for an order compelling the State to produce the name and telephone number of a nineteen-year-old man who, according to a police report, had been sexually involved with J.H. within six months preceding the night of the alleged rape. The district court denied the motion on the ground that J.H.’s past sexual history was irrelevant. Albert argues, as he did at the hearing, that the disclosure of the nineteen-year-old man’s name and telephone number may have led to the exculpatory evidence that it was this man, rather than Albert, with whom J.H. had sexual intercourse on July 3, 1999. Albert theorizes that J.H. may have falsely accused Albert in order to protect the real perpetrator, the unnamed young man. He argues that withholding this allegedly exculpatory information violated the prosecution’s duty of disclosure under
Brady v. Maryland,
We conclude that the district court correctly denied Albert’s motion because he has not demonstrated that the evidence he sought was material. Albert’s assertion that he might have been able to show that the nineteen-year-old man. was J.H.’s actual sexual partner on the night in question is based upon nothing but conjecture and surmise. He has not shown the slightest reason to believe that J.H. had any continuing relationship with the young man as of July 1999, that the man was the perpetrator of the alleged offense, or that J.H. was motivated to harm Albert. Materiality, for purposes of a Brady/Bagley analysis, must rest on something more than wild speculation. Albert has not shown a reasonable probability that disclosure of the information he sought could have led to a different result at trial.
CONCLUSION
On the circumstances presented here, the exclusion of all of Albert’s alibi witnesses as a sanction for an inadequate discovery response was impermissible and necessitates a new trial. The district court was correct, however, in denying Albert’s motion to compel disclosure of the identity of the young man with whom the victim allegedly had previously had sexual relations. The judgment of conviction is vacated, and this case is remanded to the district court for further proceedings.
Notes
. Idaho Code § 19-519 provides in part:
(1) At any time after arraignment before a magistrate upon a complaint and upon written demand of the prosecuting attorney, the defendant shall serve, within ten (10) days or at such different time as the court may direct, upon the prosecuting attorney, a written notice of his intention to offer a defense of alibi. Such notice by the defendant shall state the specific place or places at which the defendant claims to have been at the time of the alleged offense and the names and addresses of the witnesses upon whom he intends to rely to establish such alibi.
(4) Upon the failure of either party to comply with the requirements of this section, the court may exclude the testimony of any undisclosed witness offered by such party as to the defendant's absence from or presence at, the scene of the alleged offense.
. We note that "[t]he absence of a good excuse is not necessarily commensurate with ‘willful’ conduct."
Escalera v. Coombe,
. Witnesses Scott and Brenda Farnworth declined to speak to the State's representative, but it has not been shown that this refusal was attributable to Albert. Scott Farnworth told the state investigator who telephoned him that Farnworth had only a cell phone and was not going to use up his cell phone time talking to the State's agents. The record does not indicate whether the State made any effort to contact Vieira.
. The State has argued that if we reject its claim of prejudice here, we will be applying a double standard, disallowing relief to the State in circumstances where a remedy would be provided for a defendant. The State is wrong. Decisions are legion in which Idaho appellate courts have held that a criminal defendant who was denied a remedy for the State's late disclosure of evidence will not find relief on appeal without a demonstration of genuine prejudice.
See, e.g., State v. Byington,
. The prosecutor represented to the trial court that as a result of the witness interviews, she learned the names of other persons who allegedly were at the Farnworth residence on the night in question; but that despite considerable effort, she had been unable to learn current addresses or other information on the whereabouts of these potential witnesses. There is no indication, however, that it would have been easier to locate these individuals if Albert’s original alibi disclosure had included an accurate address for the Farnworth residence in Nampa.
