SUPPLEMENTAL OPINION
¶ 1 Aftеr a jury trial, appellant Israel Joaquin Alvarez was convicted of first-degree murder based on felony murder and aggravated robbery and was sentenced to concurrent prison terms of life and 6.5 years. In our prior opinion on his appeal, we affirmed those convictions and sentences.
State v. Alvarez,
¶ 2 This case returns to us from our supreme court, which previously granted Alvarez’s petition for review and, after holding oral argument, remanded the case to this court for reconsideration in light of
Davis v. Washington,
— U.S. -,
I
¶ 3 We briefly review the facts bearing on the Confrontation Clause issue. In so doing, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to upholding the convictions,
see State v. Greene,
¶ 4 In the mid-afternoon of June 10, 2001, Deputy Othic was on routine patrol in “a low-traffic area,” driving westbound on Irvington Road. As he approached Butts Road, Othic saw a man (the victim, S.) “staggering back and forth” in the northbound lane of Butts Road. Believing that S. might be intoxicated, Othic made a U-turn and then drove down Butts Road toward him. As Othic apprоached, he noticed that S. was “bleeding badly from the face.” The blood covered “a majority of his face” and also was “all in his hair.” Othic immediately requested medical assistance on his radio, and as he exited his patrol car, S. “collapsed on the back of [the car’s] trunk.”
¶ 5 Othic testified that during his approximate one-minute encounter with S., Othic “basically asked him two questions, his name and what happеned.” Because at first S. “wasn’t responding” at all, Othic “kept asking him his name.” S. eventually gave his first name and, when Othic asked him what had happened, S. stated three men had “jumped him” and had taken his 1995 white Suzuki. 2 According to Othic, S. “was in pain,” “kept going in and out of consciousness,” “kept asking for a doctor” and was “talking real low.” S. then “lost consciousness” shortly before medical personnel arrived, and Othic had no further contаct with him. S. died two days later. An autopsy revealed that his death was caused by multiple blunt force injuries to his head and brain damage.
¶ 6 The Confrontation Clause issue first arose in this case in September 2004, several months after Alvarez’s appeal came at issue and after the United States Supreme Court issued its opinion in
Crawford.
3
At that time, Alvarez merely filed with this court a notice of supplemental authority, citing
Crawford.
In our first opinion, we addressed and rejected any Confrontation Clause argument on the merits, without discussing whether Alvarez had properly preserved that issue below.
¶ 7 A “hearsay” objection does not preserve for appellate review a claim that admission of the evidence violated the Confrontation Clause.
See State v. Hernandez,
¶ 8 As the appellant, Alvarez bears “the burden of persuasion in fundamental error review” and “must first prove error.”
Id.
¶¶ 19, 23;
see also State v. Lavers,
Ill
¶ 9 Applying those principles here, we begin our analysis by examining whether, in light of
Davis,
the trial court committed constitutional error in admitting Deputy Othic’s testimony about what the victim had told him at the scene.
4
Alvarez argues the victim’s
¶ 10 In
Crawford,
the Supreme Court held the Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause bars “admission of testimonial statements of a witnеss who did not appear at trial unless he was unavailable to testify and the defendant had had a prior opportunity for cross-examination.”
¶ 11 In
Davis,
the Supreme Court attempted to clarify the distinction between testimonial and nontestimonial statements for purposes of the Confrontation Clause. — U.S. -,
¶ 12 Although the Court in Davis again did not “attempt[ ] to produce an exhaustive classification of all conceivable statements — or even all conceivable statements in response to police interrogation — as either testimonial or nontestimonial,” the Court held:
Statements are nontestimonial when made in the course of police interrogation under circumstances objectively indicating that the primary purpose of the interrogation is to enable police assistance to meet an ongoing emergency. They are testimonial when the circumstances objectively indicate that there is no such ongoing emergency, and that the primary purpose of the interrogation is to establish or prove past events potentiаlly relevant to later criminal prosecution.
Id.
at -,
IV
¶ 13 According to Alvarez, this case is closer to Hammon and Crawford than to Davis. Unlike the situation in Davis, Alvarez argues, the victim’s statement here was not made during an ongoing crime or crisis, but rather, Othic’s “questioning occurred hours after the emergency.” 5 “Viewed objectively,” Alvarez further asserts, “the officer’s questions were designed to produce information useful in a prosecution” and were solely “geared to discover what had happened in the past.” According to Alvarez, the victim’s “inculpаtory answer in response to [Othic’s] open-ended questioning” constituted “a brief but nonetheless narrative report of a past crime.” Therefore, Alvarez argues, the statement must be considered testimonial because, viewed objectively, the brief exchange between Othic and the victim “related only to past events” and “had nothing to do with medical treatment or injuries.”
¶ 14 The question of whether a statеment is testimonial “is a factually driven inquiry and must be determined on a case-by-case basis.”
State v. Parks,
¶ 15 Although not entirely clear, the Court in
Davis
apparently shifted the focus from the motivations or reasonable expectations of the declarant to the primary purpose of the interrogation.
See
— U.S. at -, -,
¶ 16 First, assuming Othic’s brief questioning of the victim during his one-minute encounter with him constituted “interrogation,”
7
nothing in the record suggests the victim “would [have] reasonably expected] [his statement] to be used prosecutorially or ... made [it] under circumstances that would lead an objective witness reasonably to believe the statement would be available for use at a later trial.”
Parks,
¶ 17 As the Wisconsin court in Rodriguez noted, “[victims’ excited utterances to law-enforcement officers responding to еither an on-going or recently completed crime, serve, as with the 911-call, a dual role — the dichotomy between finding out what is happening as opposed to recording what had happened.” Id. ¶ 23. The court in that case concluded, “given [the victims’] contemporaneously endured trauma, it cannot be said that objectively they said what they said to the officers with a conscious expectation that their words would somehow have the potential for use in court agаinst Rodriguez.” Id. ¶ 27. The same can be said with respect to S.’s statement to Deputy Othic in this case. As in Rodriguez, neither the statement itself nor the circumstances surrounding it suggests that S. “overtly or covertly intended ... to implicate an accused at a later judicial proceeding,” but rather merely spoke in “a burst of stress-generated words whose main function [was] to get help and succor, or to secure safety.” Id. ¶ 26.
¶ 18 Second, viewed objectively, the circumstances under which S. made his statement “indicat[e] that the primary purpose of the interrogation [was] to enable police assistance to meet an ongoing emergency,” rather than “to establish or prove past events potentially relevant to later criminal prosecution.”
Davis,
— U.S. at -,
¶ 19 Here, S. was found staggering in a roadway, bleeding profusely from his head, and slipping in and out of consciousness, prompting Deputy Othic to immediately summon medical assistance. S.’s injuries obviously were serious; indeed, they resulted in his death within forty-eight hours. We disagree with Alvarez’s contentions that these facts dо not reflect any “ongoing emergency,”
Davis,
— U.S. at -,
¶20 In sum, the trial court’s admission of Othie’s testimony about the victim’s statement at the scene did not violate Alvarez’s Confrontation Clause rights. Finding no errоr in the court’s evidentiary ruling, we need not address whether any alleged error was fundamental and prejudicial. 8
V
¶21 Alvarez’s convictions and sentences are affirmed.
Notes
. We infer from our supreme court’s order of remand and its reference solely to the
Davis
case that our reconsideration now is limited to only that portion of our prior opinion that addressed the Confrontation Clause issue.
See State v. Alvarez,
. Police ultimately learned that on the date in question, S. actually had been driving a white Chevrolet Cavalier rental vehicle, not a Suzuki, and previously had reported his registered vehicle, a Suzuki, stolen in May 2001. On the same day that Deputy Othic found S. staggering on the road, Alvarez and two other men were found in the Cavalier, detained in Nogales at the port of entry to Mexico, and later arrested and charged with the crimes committed against S.
. Both
Crawford
and
Davis
apply to this case because Alvarez's convictions were not yet final when those decisions were issued.
See Griffith v. Kentucky,
. We do not revisit our prior ruling that the trial court did not err in overruling Alvarez’s hearsay objection and admitting as an excited utterance the victim’s statement to Deputy Othic.
Alvarez,
. Alvarez does not point to any evidence in the record that reflects either the amount of time that had elapsed between the assault and the victim's statement to Othic, or the distance between the two locations where those events occurred. The record reflects, however, that the assault on the victim occurred approximately 1100 feet from where Othic had contacted him.
. After granting the state's petition for review in
Parks,
our supreme court remanded the case to Division One of this court for reconsideration in light of
Davis,
as it did in this case. On remand, Division One reaffirmed its reversal of the defendant's manslaughter conviction after again concluding the deceased witness's post-incident statements to police officers were testimonial and had been improperly admitted at trial over defendant’s objection on both hearsay and Confrontation Clause grounds.
State v. Parks,
. "[A]n interrogation, as that term is used in
Crawford,
does not turn on whether police questioning occurred during a field investigation or can be labeled formal or structured.”
Parks,
. We note, however, that Alvarez claims he was prejudiced because S.’s statement was the оnly evidence that “made [him] a participant in the assault and defeated his defense of mere presence.” But as the state correctly notes, it is just as likely Alvarez "was convicted because he and his two accomplices were found inside [S.’s] stolen rental car within a few hours after [S.] was attacked, [Alvarez] repeatedly lied about how they came into possession of the car, told [a detective] that he had never seen [SJ, subsequently admitted being present during the robbery and beating, and [S.'s] blood was found on [Alvarez's] shoes.”
