Opinion
[ 1 Jimmy D. Guard appeals from his conviction for child kidnapping. Guard asserts that the trial court abused its discretion when it excluded his expert's testimony on the reliability of eyewitness identification from trial, We vacate the conviction and remand for a new trial.
BACKGROUND
1 2 Guard's conviction for child kidnapping resulted from the following evidence. Between 3:00 and 4:00 pm. on November 15, 2004, a nine-year-old child was grabbed from behind while she was walking from the school bus to her home. The abductor put his hand over the child's mouth and told her that he had a knife. The child kicked the abductor in the shin, causing him to release her. The child then turned around and poked the abductor in the eye repeatedly for about twenty seconds. The child and the abductor fought before the child broke free and ran home. While she was running, the child turned back onee to see the abductor running in the opposite direction.
[ 3 When the child reached her home, she reported the incident to her mother. The child and her mother went out to look for the abductor, and when they could not find him, the mother called the police. First an officer, and later a detective, responded to the call,. The child described the abductor to the officer as a male who was wearing white shoes, jeans, and a hat with curly hair sticking out from underneath. She also told the officer that the abductor could have been Hispanic and had a shadow of a mustache or beard but that she did not get a good look at his face. At that point, the detective, who had more experience and training in interviewing children, took over and was able to elicit from the child that the abductor was tall and slightly chubby with a dark complexion and dark hair. When pressed on how tall he was, the child stated that he was taller than the officer but shorter than the detective, a range of approximately 57" to 6'1" tall. The child also gave a more specific description of the abductor's clothing, describing the hat as a black baseball cap with the letter "A" on it and stating that he wore tennis shoes and a black "Stone Cold" Steve Austin T-shirt. The detective asked the child if she would be able to recognize the
4 The day after the kidnapping, the detective brought to the child's school a six-photograph lineup, which included a photograph of Guard.
15 Following the child's identification of Guard, the police obtained a search warrant for Guard's residence and began looking for additional witnesses. The search of Guard's home did not yield any of the clothing that the child described, but the police did find a pair of light blue running shoes. The police also located two people in the child's neighborhood who, after being shown Guard's picture, said they had seen a man who looked like Guard in the neighborhood on the day of the kidnapping. One neighbor reported that she "thought [she] had seen" Guard run past her house between 3:15 and 8:45 p.m. while she was in her yard waiting for her children to return home from school. She had found this behavior odd because the man was not wearing running clothes and because her neighborhood is not very popular with joggers due to the large number of dead-end streets. The second neighbor had seen a man who looked like Guard waiting at a Utah Transit Authority (UTA) bus stop across the street from the neighbor's house for approximately half an hour around mid-afternoon. The man was wearing denim pants and a dark shirt When the UTA bus arrived about 3:00 p.m., the man did not board the bus but instead stayed at the bus stop, which was near the school bus stop. The neighbor then saw the school bus drop off the children and the man follow three girls up the road. The neighbor did not see the man approach or grab any of the girls. The neighbor thought the UTA bus stop was "about 70 feet at the most" from his house but said that he is farsighted and can see well at a distance, even though his vision is poor "close up." An investigator for the defense measured the distance as 245 feet.
T6 Prior to trial, Guard gave notice that he intended to call Dr. David H.. Dodd to testify as an expert regarding the reliability of eyewitness identification, specifically "concerning the full range of cognitive processes associated with the eyewitness, including at
{7 The court scheduled a hearing on Guard's motion to suppress (the motion hearing) during which Guard explained that recent studies and case decisions from around the country have "consistent[ly]" identified the same factors he cited in his memorandum as indicating problematic eyewitness identifications. Guard then illustrated how those factors were present in the case, particularly as they related to the photographic lineup. In this context, Guard agreed to a hearing pursuant to State v. Rimmasch,
8 Guard renewed his motion to suppress, and the matter was set for a Rimmasch hearing two weeks later. Dr. Dodd's testimony at the Rimmasch hearing focused primarily on the reasons that the photograph-lineup identification should be suppressed.
T9 The case proceeded to jury trial. The State's entire case at trial consisted of the testimonies of the four eyewitnesses-the child, her schoolmate, and the two neighbors-and the officer and the detective who interviewed them. - Guard called several witnesses in support of an alibi defense, but Dr. Dodd did not testify. Although six months after trial the trial court issued a written decision explaining that it had granted a motion by the State to exelude Dr. Dodd's testimony about the general fallibility of eyewitness identification, both the motion and
ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
110 "The trial court has wide discretion in determining the admissibility of expert testimony." State v. Hollen,
ANALYSIS
€ 11 After Guard's trial, the Utah Supreme Court issued State v. Clopten,
1 12 In addition, there were concerns about the reliability of the other eyewitnesses in each case. In Clopten; one of the witnesses changed his story in response to the officer's ultimatum that he "'be a witness' or 'go to jail for many years'" and then disappeared prior to trial, while another "received a substantially reduced sentence in exchange for his testimony." Id. 142. A third witness saw a man in a red sweatshirt with whom she had spoken just prior to the shooting standing over the victim with a gun. Id. 145. Although she later identified Clopten as the shooter, she had told the police that the shooter had not been wearing red pants, as Clopten had been, and she had described a different red sweatshirt than the one Clopten was wearing when arrested that, in fact, matched the sweatshirt another suspect had been wearing prior to the lineup. Id. Here, the neighbors were shown Guard's picture before being asked if they had seen him the previous day. One neighbor reported that she "thought [she] had seen" Guard run by while she was in the front yard waiting for her children to return from school. That neighbor, who lived some blocks away from where the abduction occurred, did not witness the event itself. The other neighbor claimed to have observed Guard for some time but at a significant distance by his own measurement (and at a distance more than three times the neighbor's estimate, according to the defense investigator who measured it). And while the schoolmate witnessed the kidnapping and corroborated the child's de-seription of the abductor's clothing, she did not provide any information that would identify Guard as the perpetrator.
113 Furthermore, in both cases, defense counsel sought to have Dr. Dodd testify as an expert on the "various factors that can affect the accuracy of eyewitness identifications." See id. 18. And in each, the court excluded Dr. Dodd's testimony. In Clopten, the trial court excluded Dr. Dodd's expert testimony because it concluded that the potential problems with eyewitness identification could be adequately explained through the use of a jury instruction. Id. T4. Here, the court excluded the testimony because "[Guard] failed to meet the initial threshold requirement [of demonstrating that the scientific principles underlying Dr. Dodd's expert's opinion are reliable] in a Rimmasch analysis." It instead gave the jury a Long instruction.
1 14 We recognize that the facts in Clopten presented some additional concerns regarding the eyewitness identifications that are not present in this case and that even the existing analogous concerns are not entirely equivalent. Certainly, some aspects of the identification of Guard in this case were not as problematic as the identification of Clop-
I. The Unusual Cireumstances of This Case Require Application of the Same Analysis as in Clopten.
¶15 Following oral argument, we requested supplemental briefing from the parties to address the question of whether Clopten should apply to the decision before us. In response to our request, Guard asserts that when a procedural rule changes during a criminal case, the new rule is automatically retroactive to all nonfinal criminal cases, including those on direct appeal, unless the change is expressly declared to be prospective only. Because Clopten did not limit its application to future cases only, Guard argues that its rationale automatically applies to his case. The State counters that the issue is governed by the "clear break" exception, which provides that changes to procedural rules that are merely a clarification of existing rules are retroactive while changes that represent a clear deviation from prior practice are not. According to the State, because Clopten rejected the longstanding practice of instructing the jury on eyewitness reliability rather than routinely admitting this type of expert testimony, it "was a clear break with ... rulings in previous cases dealing with eyewitness expert testimony." (Citation and internal quotation marks omitted.)
116 In Griffith v. Kentucky,
117 Where a rule change is not constitutional, Utah appellate courts have ordinarily not applied "a new rule ... retroactively if it constitutes a clear break with the past."
18 Despite our conclusion that Clop-ten is not retroactive, we believe that the unusual cireumstances of Guard's case nevertheless require application of Clopten 's analysis. Clopten was tried and convicted in February 2006, id. 12, and Guard's trial and conviction occurred in May 2006. Both filed timely appeals. Guard's initial appeal was dismissed due to defense counsel's failure to file a docketing statement, and his appeal rights were duly reinstated four years later. Had Guard's initial appeal gone forward in a timely manner, it would have been at roughly the same stage of proceedings on appeal as Clopten. Given the similarities of both the facts and the issues in each case, as well as both defendants' intention to call the same expert witness, it seems almost inevitable that the two cases would have been either consolidated on appeal or treated as companion cases. See, eg., State v. Davis,
{ 19 Given that Guard's and Clopten's trials essentially paralleled each other and that the eyewitness issues in their cases were substantially similar, if not perfectly aligned, it seems inconsistent with the administration of justice to deny Guard the benefit of the supreme court's approach in Clopten where, but for the happenstance that delayed Guard's appeal, it appears to us that the same analysis would have been applied to both cases.
II. Application of the Principles Adopted in Clopten Leads to the Conclusion that Dr. Dodd's Eyewitness Identification Testimony Should Have Been Admitted.
120 Appellate courts have long recognized that " 'the vagaries of eyewitness identification are well-known; the annals of criminal law are rife with instances of mistaken identification.'" State v. Long,
21 It is in this kind of stranger identification-plus situation that the Utah Supreme Court determined that expert testimony is critical to ensuring that jurors understand the limitations of an eyewitness identification. As the court explained in Clopten, in the absence of expert testimony, defense attorneys have only two tools for conveying to the jury the possibility that an identification is mistaken: cross-examination and cautionary jury instructions.
122 In Clopten, the Utah Supreme Court recognized the shortcomings of the Long instruction for the first time and held that expert testimony is preferable in the stranger identification-plus situation. State v. Clopten,
1 23 The cireumstances of Guard's case fit the - stranger - identification-plus - model. Guard was unknown to the child and the other witnesses prior to their identifying him as the child's abductor, and there were additional factors that raised questions about the accuracy of the identification. For instance, the child's opportunity to view her abductor was of very short duration while she was also attempting to escape by fighting him off. When the child later identified Guard as the abductor, he was the only suspect in the photograph lineup who had curly hair, a prominent attribute in her description of the abductor. The child testified that upon seeing Guard's picture, she told the detective that "that was the person ... 'for sure."" The presence of this factor is important because "juries seemed to be swayed the most by the confidence of an eyewitness, even
{24 The State contends, however, that Guard cannot take advantage of the supreme court's acknowledgment of the reliability of eyewitness expertise. According to the State, Guard did not ask the court to take judicial notice of Dr. Dodd's testimony in the trial court and, instead, agreed to a Rim-masch hearing. Thus, Guard voluntarily took on the burden of establishing reliability, a burden the trial court said he did not meet.
125 That argument misses the mark. First of all, Guard could not be expected to foresee that a future decision would determine that the reliability of this type of testimony is subject to judicial notice given that, until Clopten, the widespread approach in Utah courts was to the contrary. And, in any event, at the motion hearing, Guard made what was, in all but name, an argument for judicial notice. Specifically, Guard identified the same factors outlined in Clopten as tending to affect the reliability of an eyewitness identification and asserted that "those items are well established in not only Utah case law but throughout the country." See
126 In fact, before trial, the trial court seemed to acknowledge that Dr. Dodd's testimony was based on principles "generally accepted by the relevant expert community," Utah R. Evid. 702(c). For instance, at the motion hearing, the trial court said that if Dr. Dodd's testimony was limited to "very generic ... testimony regarding cognitive processes associated with eyewitnesses," it "could allow that expert testimony to come in," presumably based on the court's own understanding that the reliability of this type of testimony was well established. Further, the court seemed to recognize a distinction between testimony that amounts to "generic education of the jury as it relates to fallibility of eyewitness [identification]" and testimony that "reachfes] conclusions and ... some opinion[s] relative to the reliability of this child." The Rimmasch hearing itself focused not on the reliability of the general principles underlying the fallibility of eyewitness testimony but principally on the particular issues related to the cireumstances of the photograph lineup and Guard's motion to suppress it as unreliable. In fact, at the hearing the court itself described the factors that are usually associated with mistaken identifications as if they were both well known and uncontroversial. While the court seemed to take a different view six months after the trial when it issued its memorandum decision justifying the decision to exclude Dr. Dodd's testimony, it is difficult to reconcile that decision with its earlier statements, and the court itself did not do so. In light of Clopten's definitive resolution of the question of the reliability of the same type of eyewitness expert testimony that Guard offered below (from the same expert witness), it would seem pointlessly technical to conclude that Guard is somehow foreclosed from raising the issue of judicial notice in this appeal because he acceded to a Rimmasch hearing and did not manage to put on enough evidence at that hearing to show the reliability of fundamental principles that the Utah Supreme Court has now recognized as the subject of widespread consensus. Thus, we do not find persuasive the State's argument that this case is procedurally distinct enough from Clopten to overcome its strong similarities.
127 Because Guard's conviction is based solely on eyewitnesses who identified him as the abductor, the reliability of those identifications is "of paramount importance." See State v. Clopten,
CONCLUSION
128 As the supreme court acknowledged in Clopten,
[wle are always reluctant to reverse a jury's decision to convict, particularly when the crime in question is as serious as this one. The seriousness of the crime, however, makes it only more imperative that the jury's decisionmaking abilities are supported by the best information available. If unreliable identifications are not addressed properly at trial, then there exists an unacceptable risk of the innocent being punished and dangerous criminals remaining at large.
Notes
. Guard was a person of interest in a similar kidnapping incident in another city. Because Guard fit the description of the person who had kidnapped the child, the detective thought Guard might be a suspect in this case.
. When asked about his ethnicity at trial, Guard responded, "My mother ... is Haitian and my father is American, Caucasian."
. Following the Rimmasch hearing, the court again denied Guard's motion to suppress the identification from the photograph lineup. Guard does not appeal that decision.
. The only additional material Guard promised the court on the record at the Rimmasch hearing was a two-page synopsis of Dr. Dodd's general testimony regarding eyewitness identification that Guard intended to present if the motion to suppress was denied. But because at least a portion of the proceedings after the Rimmasch hearing relating to the admission of Dr. Dodd's testimony took place off-record, we cannot determine whether the court, in its written decision to grant the State's motion to exclude Dr. Dodd's testimony, was referring to the synopsis or some other promised or requested briefing, the nature of which is not apparent. Despite the court's statement that Guard had failed to provide the supplemental material he promised, the court explained that the motion was not granted on that basis but because "[Guard had] failed to meet the initial threshold requirement [of demonstrating that the scientific principles underlying the expert's opinion are reliable] in a Rim-masch analysis." Thus, even if the court was referring to Guard's promised synopsis, the failure to provide it was not a factor in its decision and we do not address it further.
. The State suggests a third alternative, that Guard's failure to provide the synopsis may indicate that he decided simply to withdraw his notice to call Dr. Dodd. In the face of a barren record, this is simply an invitation to speculate, which we must decline.
. In this case, the child, who is African American, identified her abductor as "possibly Hispanic." The record establishes that Guard's mother "is Haitian" and his father "is American, Caucasian" and that Guard emigrated from Haiti to the United States as a teenager. The State argues that Haitians are of African descent and that because Guard was of the same race as the victim, her identification was not cross-racial. The record, however, does not provide a clear picture of Guard's racial status; thus, the question of whether the identification is cross-racial in reality or simply in perception cannot be re-soived here. That the victim perceived Guard as of a different race, though, suggests that the fundamental problem with cross-racial identification may still have been present. The concern raised by the child's possible misidentification of Guard's race presents a cross-racial identification issue similar to the one that has been widely recognized as a reliability concern and that was present in Clopten.
. Guard cites State v. Belgard,
. Prior to the adoption of an automatic retroac-tivity rule, the United States Supreme Court applied a three-part test to determine if a rule change may be retroactively asserted to challenge a conviction, regardless of whether the conviction was final or pending on appeal. Griffith v. Kentucky,
. Indeed, the Supreme Court in Griffith took note of what appear to be comparable concerns in its analysis of why disparity in treatment between "similarly situated defendants" undercuts the administration of justice. Griffith v. Kentucky,
. There is no dispute that Dr. Dodd, who was also the expert in Clopten, is qualified as an expert in eyewitness identification.
