Lead Opinion
OPINION
Appellant Samantha Anne Heiges challenges her conviction of second-degree murder for the death of her newborn daughter. Heiges contends that (1) there
FACTS
Heiges became pregnant in 2004. At that time she was 19 and lived with the father of the child, E.M. Heiges’s relationship with E.M. was marked with verbal, emotional, and physical abuse. According to Heiges, E.M. threw beer cans at her, punched the wall of their apartment, and frequently threatened her. Heiges’s friends noticed that she occasionally had bruises and scratches. Heiges admitted that she feared E.M., but she always felt that she could take care of herself.
When Heiges learned she was pregnant, E.M. was initially excited, but he soon changed his mind and demanded that she not have the child. Heiges did not wish to abort the child, and E.M. opposed giving the child up for adoption. Heiges continued the pregnancy, but she received no prenatal care and took steps to hide her pregnancy from family and friends. Despite her efforts at concealment, several staff members at her apartment complex and friends learned of the pregnancy.
In April 2005, one of Heiges’s classmates, R.C., asked Heiges if she was pregnant. Heiges admitted that she was and said that she and E.M. were trying to induce a miscarriage by having her take drugs, drink alcohol, and starve herself. Heiges further stated that if these efforts to end the pregnancy did not succeed, she and E.M. planned to go up north to a family cabin, deliver thе child, and bury it in the woods. R.C. told Heiges that she could live with her and give the child up for adoption or leave it at a hospital. Heiges declined the offer of assistance, stating that she did not want to leave E.M. R.C. reported this information to the Ea-gan Police Department on April 14, 2005, but the department did not locate Heiges until September, at which time she denied ever being pregnant.
On or about May 5, 2005, Heiges went into labor, drew herself a bath, and delivered a baby girl. Heiges claimed that she was prevented from lifting the child out of the water by E.M., who told her to hold the child under the water and not allow it to breathe. The child appeared to be trying to cry under the surface of the water. Heiges acknowledged that it took a couple of minutes for the infant to drown.
Heiges placed the child’s body in a shoebox and went to work. A few days later, Heiges found the shoebox in a garbage bag. She and E.M. рlaced the bag in the apartment building’s garbage chute.
Approximately one week later, E.M. found Heiges in the bathtub with her wrists slit. She had written SYD, the first three letters of the child’s intended name, Sydney, in blood on the tiles surrounding the bathtub. E.M. removed Heiges from the bathtub and applied pressure to stop the bleeding. But he did not seek medical assistance for Heiges because he had outstanding arrest warrants. Heiges ended her relationship with E.M. a few months later.
Heiges met A.B. in October 2006. During the early morning of January 1, 2007, A.B. accompanied Heiges to her apartment. After they had sexual intercourse, Heiges began to cry uncontrollably. She told A.B. about her child. A.B. initially assumed that she had given the child up for adoption or had a late-term abortion. But Heiges told him that “she had actually
On January 30, 2007, Detective Pfaff and another detective interviewed Heiges at her apartment. Detective Pfaff used a hidden device to record the conversation. He used special interviewing techniques to build a rapport with Heiges, never told her that she was a suspect, and led her to believe that E.M. was the focus of the investigation. He also used leading questions based on A.B.’s statement to direct the interview.
Detective Pfaff interviewed Heiges three times over six months. During the first interview, Heiges initially stated that the child wasn’t born alive. But when Detective Pfaff indicated that they had heard otherwise, Heiges admitted that the child was born alive. In response to Detective Pfaff s leading questions, Heiges recounted that the child cried “under the water” and that she believed that if shе “didn’t do it [herself] that he was going to do something to her.” In subsequent recorded conversations, Heiges gave statements consistent with what she had told A.B. and R.C. prior to the beginning of the police investigation: that she had delivered a live baby girl, held her under water in the bathtub until she drowned, and placed the body in a shoebox, and that the shoebox was later dumped in the garbage chute of her apartment building. The details of the account remained the same from the pre-investigation statements to friends through the statements to the police.
Detective Pfaff interviewed other witnesses, including E.M. Detective Pfaffs investigation included contact with the Dakota County Medical Examiner and officials at the landfill that serviced Heiges’s apartment complex, to determine whether the child’s remains could be located. He learned that because the body would have been compacted and buried in a large section of landfill, it would be virtually impossible to recover any remains.
Investigations discovered small traces of blood on the floor and walls of the bathroom where Heiges delivered the child. When the blood was tested, it proved to contain a mixture of DNA from three or more individuals. The tests revealed that 75.5% of the general population could be excluded as potential sources of the DNA. Neither Heiges nor E.M. could be excluded as potential sources for the DNA. It was also possible that some of the DNA could have come from the child. However, no further conclusions could be drawn from this evidence.
Heiges was charged with second-degree intentional murder under Minn.Stat. § 609.19, subd. 1(1) (2004), and first-degree manslaughter under Minn.Stat. § 609.20(3) (2004).
Prior to trial, Heiges moved to dismiss the charges on the basis that the state did not have sufficient evidence to corroborate her confessions tо Detective Pfaff as required by Minn.Stat. § 634.03 and, therefore, could not show probable cause. The district court denied the motion.
The jury trial commenced in September 2008. A.B. testified that Heiges told him that she had killed the child herself, and that he assumed that the child had been born alive and had lived for some time after birth. He testified that Heiges told him, during the early morning hours of January 1, 2007, that she had drowned her child in the bathtub, and that she confirmed this statement in a subsequent telephone conversation with A.B.
During trial, the state first learned about R.C. The district court conducted a one-half day hearing outside the presence of the jury to give the defense the opportunity to investigate and interview R.C. Heiges did not dispute the fact that neither the prosecutor nor the Burnsville Police Department had prior knowledge of R.C. The district court ruled R.C. could testify and gave the defense a two-day continuance in order to fully prepare for her testimony.
When the trial resumed, R.C. testified about her conversation with Heiges prior to the child’s birth. R.C. recounted that Heiges said “they were going to go up north somewhere to a cabin or something and have the baby there, and then bury it in the woods.” R.C. also testified about a conversation that took place a few days after the child’s death in which a distraught Heiges admitted that “they had went through with killing the baby, and she had put it in a shoebox and kept it, and she couldn’t find it.” R.C. said that Heig-es was upset because she could not find the shoebox containing the child’s body.
At the close of the state’s case and at the conclusion of the trial, Heiges moved the district court for judgment of acquittal based on the lack of evidence corroborating her confessions. See Minn. R.Crim. P. 26.03, subd. 17. The district court denied the motions, finding that the corroborative evidence was sufficient to submit the case to the jury.
The jury found Heiges guilty of second-degree intentional murder but acquitted her on the manslaughter charge. The district court denied Heiges’s request for a durational or dispositional departure, and imposed a guidelines sentence of 299 months’ imprisonment. This appeal follows.
ISSUES
I. Were Heiges’s confessions to the police sufficiently corroborated as required by Minn.Stat. § 634.03?
II. Did the district court properly instruct the jury as to the burden of proof аnd the duress element of the manslaughter charge?
III. Did the district court abuse its discretion by permitting R.C. to testify?
IV. Did the district court abuse its discretion by imposing a guidelines sentence?
ANALYSIS
I.
A defendant’s confession is not sufficient to sustain a conviction “without evidence that the offense charged has been committed.” Minn.Stat. § 634.03. The statute codifies the common-law doctrine of corpus delicti. This corroboration requirement serves two purposes — discouraging coercively acquired confessions and assuring the reliability of the defendant’s admission. In re Welfare of M.D.S.,
Heiges argues that her conviction cannot stand because the state failed to present sufficient evidence to corroborate her ad
In State v. Vaughn,
But in State v. Koskela,
This conclusion is consistent with the rationale behind the long-standing rule that admissions made prior to a criminal act do not require corroboration. See State v. Smith,
The rule requiring corroboration of confessions protects the administration of the criminal law against errors in convictions based upon untrue confessions alone. Where the inconsistent statemеnt was made prior to the crime this danger does not exist. Therefore we are of the view that such admissions do not need to be corroborated. They contain none of the inherent weaknesses of confessions or admissions after the fact.
The majority of courts have adopted this rule. See, e.g., Castillo v. State,
We are also guided by the analysis and decision of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals in State v. Hauk,
The Hauk court noted the purpose of the corroboration requirement: “the main concern behind the corroboration rule is that an accused will feel coerced or induced when he or she is under the pressure of a police investigation and make a false confession as a result.” Id. (quotations omitted). The court observed that these concerns do not apply to statements made to friends before a police investigation has begun. Id. Without the external pressure of a police investigation, the risk of police coercion or intimidation is not implicated.
As in Hauk, Heiges made incriminating statements to friends before a criminal investigation was initiated and in the absence of any other coercive or threatening circumstanсes. The distinction the Hauk court drew between such statements and confessions to police is consistent with the express purposes of the corroboration requirement. The concern that a statement is not reliable if it is made under coercion or intimidation is absent here, and the desire to discourage inappropriate police tactics is not implicated. Accordingly, we conclude that statements made to friends or acquaintances prior to the commencement of a police investigation need not be corroborated and may be used to corroborate a defendant’s later confession to police.
We now consider whether the evidence here, including Heiges’s statements to friends prior to the commencement of the criminal investigation, sufficiently corroborate her later confessions to Detective Pfаff as required by section 634.03. In April 2005, Heiges admitted to R.C. that she was pregnant and that she intended to deliver the child up north, kill it, and bury the body in the woods. Because this pre-crime statement does not require corroboration, it may be used to corroborate Heig-es’s post-crime confessions to police. See Smith,
Heiges’s statements to R.C. and A.B. are consistent and, like those in Koskela and Hauk, were not the product of police coercion or intimidation. They corroborate the essential elements of hеr later confession to the police: she delivered and drowned the child in her apartment bathtub in early May 2005, and the body was eventually dumped in a garbage chute. These pre-investigation statements to friends make Heiges’s confession sufficiently reliable that a jury could reasonably conclude that she committed the crime.
There is also circumstantial evidence that corroborates aspects of Heiges’s confessions to police. See, e.g., M.D.S.,
Heiges contends that the state could not prove that the child was born alive and obtained a separate and independent existence from her mother. See State v. Soto,
The evidence needed to corroborate a confession to police is not required to address every element of the charged offense. Rather, the elements of the offense may be “ ‘sufficiently substantiated by independent evidence of attending facts or circumstances from which the jury may infer the trustworthiness of the confession.’ ” M.D.S.,
We conclude that the corroborative evidence is sufficient to bolster Heiges’s confessions to police and ensure their reliability. It is undisputed that Heiges was pregnant and near full-term on the day of the child’s birth. Heiges told R.C., during the previous month, of the plan to kill the child. Heiges’s admissions to R.C. and A.B. after the child’s death are consistent and indicate that Heiges acted according to her plan. E.M.’s testimony and the DNA evidence support a finding that the child died in the apartment bathtub. This evidence, along with Heiges’s multiple confessions to police, establish the elements оf second-degree murder.
II.
Heiges challenges the district court’s jury instructions, arguing that (1) the district court did not properly instruct the jury that it needed to find the death of a live infant in order to convict, and (2) the district court did not properly instruct the jury on the duress element of the manslaughter charge.
The district court is afforded “considerable latitude” in fashioning jury instructions. State v. Baird,
Heiges requested that the jury be instructed on the first element of both charges as follows:
In this case, there is a separate element of each of these offenses which you must determine, and that is whether the state has proven thаt a human being was born to Ms. Heiges on May 5, 2005. Where the human being alleged to have been killed is a newborn, the state is required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the infant was born alive. To be born alive means that the infant attained a separate and independent existence from its mother.
The district court modified the standard jury instruction for second-degree murder to specify that “the death of a live human being, a newborn infant, must be proven” in order to return a guilty verdict. The district court added this same language to the first-degree manslaughter instruction. Because the instructions advised the jury that it must find the death of a live human being, they properly state the law. The
Heiges next argues that the district court erred in instructing the jury on the manslaughter charge. Specifically, she asserts that the manslaughter instruction deprived her of a fair trial because it did not permit the jury “to consider whether Heiges, if she intentionally caused the death of her newborn, acted under duress by [E.M.].” We disagree.
We first note that Heiges did not raise this issue before the district court, so we review the instruction given for plain error. See State v. Jackson,
The district court instructed the jury on the duress element of the manslaughter charge:
Fourth, [Heiges] participated in the crime because she was coerced by threats made by someone who is not her co-conspirator, which caused her to rear sonably believe that her act was the only means of preventing imminent death to herself. If you find that [E.M.] is a co-conspirator of [Heiges], [Heiges] is not guilty оf manslaughter in the first degree.
Heiges does not assert that the instruction misstates the law. Rather, she argues the instruction was misleading because the district court did not permit witnesses other than Heiges to testify about their fear of E.M.
III.
Heiges challenges the district court’s admission of R.C.’s testimony on the ground that the state failed to disclose her identity prior to trial. Evidentiary rulings rest within the sound discretion of the district court and will not be reversed absent a clear abuse of discretion аnd prejudice to the defendant. State v. Amos,
It is undisputed that, prior to trial, only Heiges and the Eagan Police Department
IV.
Finally, Heiges asserts that the district court abused its discretion in imposing a guidelines sentence. District courts have broad discretion in sentencing. State v. Daniels,
The record demonstrates that the district court took great care and devoted considerable time to determining the appropriate sentence. The district court considered the various mitigating factors, including the rarity of neonaticide, the domestic abuse Heiges sustained, Heiges’s mental condition at the time of the offense, and her amenability to probation. See State v. Trog,
DECISION
Heiges’s statements to her friends, made prior to her confessions to police are not subject to the corroboration requirements of Minn.Stat. § 634.03. These statements, coupled with other evidence, are sufficient to corroborate Heiges’s confessions to police. And because the district court did not abuse its discretion with respect to the jury instructions, evidentia-ry issues, or sentencing, we affirm.
Affirmed.
Notes
. At oral argument, Heiges contended that Minn.Stat. § 634.051 (2008) presents another basis for reversing her conviction. We disagree. The statute provides thаt "[n]o person shall be convicted of murder or manslaughter unless the death of the person alleged to have been killed, and the fact of killing by the defendant, as alleged, are each established as independent facts beyond a reasonable doubt.” Minn.Stat. § 634.051. This statute restates the prosecution’s burden of proof in every homicide case: to establish (1) the death of the victim and (2) the fact of the killing by the defendant. Id. Because the evidence at trial, including Heiges's confessions, was sufficient to establish, beyond a reasonable doubt, the child’s live birth, its death, and Heiges’s culpability, this argument is unavailing.
. The district court excluded that testimony as inadmissible character evidence. See Minn. R. Evid. 404(a) (“Evidence of a person’s character or a trait of character is not admissible for the purpose of proving action in conformity therewith on a particular occasion.”).
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
Appellant’s conviction is not supported by sufficient evidence to prove the corpus
Appellant “confessed” to A.B. and ultimately confessed to police, after lengthy and leading questioning, that she and E.M. held the infant Sydney under water, preventing her from breathing. There was little evidence apart from these statements to prove the corpus delicti — the death of a live-born child who could be considered a “human being.” See generally Minn.Stat. § 609.19, subd. 1(1) (2004) (defining second-degree murder to require the death of a “human being”); State v. Soto,
The majority concludes that there was sufficient evidence of the corpus delicti under Minn.Stat. § 634.03, which requires that a defendant’s confession be corroborаted by independent evidence of the corpus delicti. There was evidence that appellant had stated to R.C. her “intention” to kill her baby, if born alive. I suggest future speculation does not support a murder conviction when there is no body, no solid proof of a body (baby) being born alive, and no solid proof that if there was a birth, that the baby (body) was not stillborn. DNA evidence from blood found at the scene could not exclude one of the contributors being a child of appellant and E.M. But so what. The “exclusion” was that 75% of the population could be excluded, but 25% of the population could not. Is that 25% of the people in Minnesota, about 1.3 million, or 25% of the population of the metro area, about 600,000? In paternity cases, where blood work is vital, the statute calls for 99% before a presumption arises, and a presumption is never proof beyond a reasonablе doubt. See Minn.Stat. § 257.62, subd. 5(b) (2008) (establishing evidentiary presumption of paternity at 99% probability based on blood or genetic tests). The majority concludes that there was other corroboration in appellant’s later admissions to people other than police officers. I disagree. A confession may not be used to corroborate another confession under Minn.Stat. § 634.03 merely because it was not made to police. In the similar situation of accomplice testimony, in which the legislature has specified that accomplice testimony must be corroborated by other evidence in order to support a conviction, the corroboration may not come from another accomplice’s testimony. Minn.Stat. § 634.04 (2008); State v. Harris,
The majority itself cites State v. Vaughn,
A statement to a person who is not a police officer is just as much a “confession” as a statement to a person concealing his status as an officer. To ignore that is to ignore the Constitution and seek only an outcome.
The majority relies on State v. Koskela,
The majority suggests a rule that would not require corroboration of post-crime statements made to friends before the commencement of a police investigation. Minn.Stat. § 634.03 does not include such a limitation. See generally State v. Hulst,
The majority relies heavily on a Wisconsin decision adopting such a post-crime, pre-investigation admissions exception. See State v. Hauk,
But even if the statements to others were sufficient to corroborate appellant’s confessions under Minn.Stat. § 634.03, they still were not sufficient to prove that the child was “born alive” and attained a separate and independent existence, under Soto and State v. Kinsky,
Appellant’s statement of an intention at some time in the future to kill her baby (if it survived childbirth) does not provide evidence of a live birth. The DNA evidence is consistent with a miscarriage as well as a live birth (and that evidence is сolored by the weak 25%/75% inclusion). Even assuming, which I do not concede, that Minn.Stat. § 634.03 is satisfied, that statute merely describes the required proof of corpus delicti in all criminal offenses. Prosecutions for murder, and particularly alleged infanticide, present differ
Although corpus delicti may be proven without the infant’s body, the supreme court has strongly implied that there must be evidence that the child was “born alive” and had a separate and independent existence apart from its mother. The court in Soto, in rejecting the argument that a viable fetus was a “human being” for purposes of the homicide statutes, cited with approval cases from other jurisdictions adopting the “born alive” rule. Soto,
Even if Soto and Kinsky have not categorically adopted the “born alive” rule, I do not see how the corpus delicti requirement for a homicide prosecution involving a newborn could be met without proving the fetus was “born alive.” Given the risks of childbirth, particularly an unattended birth, and the possibility of miscarriage, the corpus delicti in a charge of homicide of a newborn cannot, under Minn.Stat. § 634.051, be proven without proof beyond a reasonable doubt that the infant was born alive.
Minn.Stat. § 634.051
No person shall be convicted of murder or manslaughter unless the death of the person alleged to have been killed, and the fact of killing by the defendant, as alleged, are each established as independent facts beyond a reasonable doubt.
(Emphasis added.) This statute, which was adopted from the New York Penal Code in 1885 and has been amended only once since then, codifies the common-law requirement of corpus delicti in homicide cases. See Baker v. Ploetz,
MinmStat. § 634.051 can only be read as requiring that, in homicide cases, the cor
This construction of Minn.Stat. § 634.051 is the only reasonable interpretation оf that provision. The statute is poorly written because proof of “the fact of killing by the defendant” necessarily implies a “killing,” i.e. a felonious death of the victim. But the statute is completely superfluous unless it is read to require that the proof of the “death of the person alleged to have been killed” be separate from the proof of “the fact of killing by the defendant.” The fact of “the death of a human being” is an element of second-degree murder, which must, therefore, necessarily be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. Minn.Stat. § 609.19,' subd. 1(1). And the criminal agency of the defendant in causing that death is also, obviously, an element to be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. It would be completely unnecessary to restate these two elements in Minn.Stat. § 634.051. See generally Urban v. Am. Legion Dep’t of Minn.,
Section 634.051 has obscure origins. See People v. Lipsky,
This stricter corpus delicti requirement for homicides is justified by the more serious penalties attached to homicide. The “corpus delicti rule” was developed in response to erroneous confessions to homicides, particularly in cases in which the alleged victim reappeared, to the court’s embarrassment, after the confessing defendant had been executed. See Note, Confession Corroboration in New York: A Replacement for the Corpus Delicti Rule, 46 Fordham L.Rev. 1205,1208 (1978).
The independent evidence of the corpus delicti here — the death of a live-born baby — falls far short of proof beyond a reasonable doubt. As discussed above, only appellant’s stated intention to commit such an act and the DNA evidence establishing the possible presence of fetal blood, possibly connected to defendant, provided evidence independent of appellant’s confessions to prove that a child was born live and then died. The other evidence cited by the district court — the evidence of appellant’s pregnancy and E.M.’s description of the incident, which was consistent with a miscarriage — merely establishes that the corpus delicti was possible.
The humanity of the law, as reflected in Minn.Stat. § 634.051, as well as Soto and Kinsky, requires this result. The corpus delicti rule recognizes the risk of false confessions and states that it is unaccepta
This record falls far short of providing that proof. Appellant’s conviction should be reversed.
Retired judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, serving by appointment pursuant to Minn. Const, art. VI, § 10.
. The parties have not cited Minn.Stat. § 634.051. But this court has an obligation to decide cases in accordance with applicable law. State v. Hannuksela,
. This analysis finds support in the case of Leslie Berg, who confessed to infanticide initially in chemical-dependency treatment and later to police. Berg v. State,
