The defendant, Angel Cosme, appeals his two convictions for misdemeanor sexual assault, RSA 632-A:4 (2007), arguing that the Superior Court (.Fauver, J.) erred in denying his motion to strike the jury panel. We affirm.
The following facts appear in the record. In April 2006, the defendant was charged with one count of aggravated felonious sеxual assault and two counts of misdemeanor sexual assault. In August, he filed a motion to record and to be present at the pretrial jury orientation because, he alleged, the trial court had a practice of verbally instructing prospective jurors on legal concepts and resрonding to questions of individual prospective jurors. Defense counsel averred that he had been present at prior orientations during which the presiding justice gave an instruction on reasonable doubt which deviated from the
Wentworth
model,
see State v. Wentworth,
During jury selection, the defendant moved to strike the jury panel based upon Part I, Article 15 of the State Constitution and the Fifth, Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, arguing that the trial court’s practice of discussing legal concepts with prospective jurors during orientation deprived him of both his right to be present for a critical stage of the criminal process and the ability to raise and preserve substаntive issues for appellate review. The trial court denied the motion to strike. The trial proceeded, and at the close of the evidence, the jury was *42 instructed on the applicable law. The jury returned guilty verdicts on the two misdemeanor sexual assault charges and acquitted the defendant of the felony charge. This appeal followed.
The defendant challenges our state’s practice for jury orientation; that is, the process prior to criminal, civil or equitable proceedings when individuals reporting for jury duty are first assembled in the courthouse but not yet selected to potentially sit as a juror on any specific case. Jury orientation has been a common practice among courts in the United States for some time.
See, e.g., State v. Vance,
The defendant does not object to educating and orienting prospective jurors. Rather, he contends that the trial court’s unrehearsed and unrecorded interaction with the pool of prospective jurors outside thе presence of the defendant and his counsel, which may have included instructions of law, violated his constitutional rights. He specifically relies upon Part I, Article 15 of the State Constitution and the Fifth, Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. We review questions of constitutional law
de novo. State v. Dupont,
“The defendant’s right undеr the State Constitution to be present at trial derives from the specific guarantees set forth in part I, article 15 to produce all favorable proofs, confront witnesses, and be fully heard in one’s defense, as well as the right to due process.”
State v. Hannan,
The right to be present also encоmpasses the right to a record of
ex parte
judicial communications with a juror made in the course of criminal proceedings.
See Castle,
We have had occasion to review the right to be present, and the corollary right to a record, in the context of
ex parte
judicial contact with jurors during
voir dire
and after the commencement of trial. For example, we have held constitutional the trial court’s practice, in cases other than first degree and capital murder, of holding discussions on the record with individual venire panelists that are outside of the hearing of counsel but are followed by a recitation to counsel on the record of the substancе of the discussion.
Id.; State v. Bailey,
The “mere occurrence of an
ex parte
conversation between a trial judge and a juror does not constitute a deprivation of any constitutional right. The defense has no constitutional right to be present
at every interaction
between a judge and a juror, nor is there a constitutional right to have a court reporter transcribe
every such
communication.”
Gagnon,
Jury orientation is not the type of proceeding that triggers a criminal defendant’s right to be present or right to a record under Part I, Article 15 of our State Cоnstitution. Judicial commentary during orientation is not the same as communication during jury selection, while a trial is in progress, or at some point prior to the rendering of a verdict because such commentary is not made in the course of criminal proceedings against any specific defendаnt.
Cf. id.
at 421 (judicial statement made to jurors “in the course of criminal proceedings,” such as jury
voir dire,
is subject to defendant’s right to a record);
see Delgado,
Likewise, a defendant’s presence at orientation, either personally or through legal counsel, would not provide him with any meaningful opportunity to defend against the charges pending against him because during orientation no specific case is ever discussed.
Cf. Snyder v. Massachusetts,
*45
Jury orientation simply provides an oppоrtunity for prospective jurors to be informed about the legal process and generally educated about legal concepts they will later face should they be chosen to sit on a case. Therefore, we conclude that orientation of prospective jurors is not a critical stage of criminal proceedings instituted against a defendant, and does not bear the hallmarks of a proceeding in which his presence is necessary to preserve his ability to defend against pending criminal charges.
See Vance,
The Federal Constitution offers the defendant no greater protection than does the Statе Constitution under these circumstances.
See Hannan,
We acknowledge, nevertheless, that a defendant’s right to a fair and impartial jury may be potentially threatened, to some degree, whenever a trial judgе engages in
ex parte
communications with prospective jurors.
See Vance,
*46 Obviously, because the oriеntation at issue in this appeal was not recorded, we cannot review the propriety of the actual statements made by the trial judge. However, the trial court in this case informed counsel of its regular practice; namely, that:
in addition to the video ... it is the practice of this Court, and I bеlieve just about every court in the state, every trial court in the state or jury court in the state, that we go in after and answer questions, and we make — we sort of make you feel better, we supplement somewhat the — what’s on the video and we answer questions. I did that in this case, and that’s just for the record.
See Delgado,
Moreover, based upon the record before us, the defendant has failed to meet his burden of establishing that he suffered any actual prejudice. Indeed, the possibility of the survival of any prejudice is so slight as to give it no constitutional significanсe.
See id.
at 704. Orientation occurred sometime between one and two weeks prior to trial, the trial was conducted over the course of two days, and the trial court instructed the jury on the law applicable to the case just prior to deliberations, without objection. In its instructions, the court еxplained the nature of direct and circumstantial evidence, including the standard of proof required concerning both, and also defined the concept of reasonable doubt, all without objection. Further, the trial court directed that, ‘You will decide the case by applying the law that I givе to you to the facts as you find them to be,” and also provided the jury with a written copy of the instructions to rely upon during deliberations. Jurors are presumed to follow the court’s instructions,
see State v. Ayer,
On a prospective basis, in order to curtail the possibility of compromising the fairness of trial proceedings and jury impartiality, specific procedures governing the interaction between the trial court and prospective jurors during jury orientation should be accomplished through rulemaking.
See
Sup. Ct. R. 51(A)(1)(b);
State v. Abram,
Affirmed.
