Defendant has petitioned for reconsideration of our opinion in State v. Durando,
“Because we cannot say that every reasonable judge would have understood defendant’s statement as requesting that the judge visit the website in question, we reject defendant’s contention that he adequately authenticated the document by making such a request.”
Id. at 310. Defendant particularly objects to that sentence in his petition for reconsideration, arguing tl at we should have applied our ordinary preservation analysis, which asks whether the appellant gave the “trial court the chance to consider and rule on a contention, thereby possibly avoiding an error altogether or correcting one already made[.]” Peeples v. Lampert,
On reconsideration, we acknowledge that the quoted sentence from our original opinion (along with two other sentences, addressed below) does not accurately reflect the standard that ordinarily applies when we consider whether a claim of error is preserved for appellate review. We also conclude, for the reasons set out in our original opinion, that application of the ordinary preservation standard leads to the same result. Defendant’s argument that he sufficiently authenticated the exhibit by “inviting the trial court to view
Accordingly, we modify our original opinion in three respects. First, we delete the following sentence, which appears at
“We conclude that the trial court did not err by not interpreting defendant’s statement as a request that the court take further steps in association with defendant’s attempt to authenticate the printout.”
In its place, we substitute:
“We conclude that defendant’s argument is not preserved for our review.”
Second, we delete the sentence that starts the next paragraph:
“Nonetheless, we cannot say that this judge committed reversible error by not interpreting defendant’s statement as a request that the judge take those actions.”
Id. at 309. In the place of that sentence, we substitute this one:
“Nonetheless, we cannot say that defendant’s statements, quoted above, fairly put the trial court on notice that defendant was asking the court to take those actions.”
Finally, we delete this sentence:
“Because we cannot say that every reasonable judge would have understood defendant’s statement as requesting that the judge visit the website in question, we reject defendant’s contention that he adequately authenticated the document by making such a request.”
Id. at 310. For it, we substitute the following sentences:
“Considered in context, defendant’s assertions about the website did not reasonably put the state or the trial court on notice that he was asking the court to visit the website*292 itself to verify the accuracy of the printout. Accordingly, defendant’s contention that he adequately authenticated the document by making such a request is not preserved for appellate review.”
We reject without discussion the remaining contentions in defendant’s petition for reconsideration.
Reconsideration allowed; former opinion modified and adhered to as modified.
