11WRIT GRANTED. The decision of the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeal to grant defendant’s expert access to videotaped interviews with the victim and witness is hereby reversed. The decision of the Juvenile Parish Court for the Parish of Orleans, permitting defense counsel to view the videotapes but denying defendant’s motion for expert access to the videotaped interviews, is reinstated.
La. R.S. 15:440.1 et. seq. address electronic recordings of “protected persons.” As defined for this part, protected persons include a victim of a crime or a witness in a criminal proceeding who is under the age of seventeen years. La. R.S. 15:440.2(C). At the time the interviews at issue were videotaped, the victim in this rape case was eight years old and the eyewitness was twelve years old. Thus, the victim and eyewitness are protected persons under the statute. La. R.S. 15:440.5(0 addresses discovery of and access to videotaped statements of protected persons. The statute provides, in pertinent part, that:
In a criminal prosecution, when the state intends to offer as evidence a copy of a videotaped oral statement of a protected person made pursuant to the provisions of this Subpart, the defendant, through his attorney only, may be provided a copy of the videotape if the court determines it necessary to prepare a proper defense. If the defendant’s attorney is provided a copy of the videotaped statement by court order or by permission of the district attorney, only the attorney and the defendant shall be permitted to view the tape, and no copies shall be made by any person. The copy shall be securely retained by the defendant’s attorney at all times and shall not be possessed, transferred, distributed, copied, or viewed by any unauthorized party-
li>La. R.S. 15:440.5(0) (emphasis added). In allowing defendant’s expert access to the videotaped interviews at issue, the Fourth Circuit presumably
The First and Fifth Circuits, by contrast, have adopted a narrow and literal reading of R.S. 15:440.5(0). In State v. Bolden, 03-0266, pp.
1 ¡jSimilarly, in State v. Cyrex, 97-2520, p. 4 (La.App. 1 Cir. 9/25/98),
We believe the legislature’s recent amendments to R.S. 15:440.4(C), 2008 La. Acts 85, remove any doubt as to how narrowly or expansively courts should read its terms. The statute continues to provide that “only the attorney and the defendant shall be permitted to view the tape,” but now adds the admonition that any copy obtained by defense counsel “shall be securely retained by the defendant’s attorney at all times and shall not be possessed, transferred, distributed, copied, or viewed by any unauthorized party.” The statute continues to provide for a contempt citation for any violation of its terms but it now also provides that “[a]ny person who makes an unauthorized disclosure of the videotape or its contents may also be subject to liability for civil damages, including punitive damages.” These amendments clearly indicate the legislature’s intent to limit strictly pre-trial access by the defense to the videotaped statements. Under the plain terms of the statute, only defense counsel and the defendant may view the videotaped statements in preparation for trial.
The statute is not unconstitutional as drafted. Defendant argues that a narrow construction of the statute would result in a violation of his Sixth Amendment right to confront his accusers. However, La. R.S. 15:440.5(A)(8) specifically provides as a prerequisite for admission of the statement that “[t]he protected person is available to testify.” La. R.S. 15:440.5(B) further provides:
The admission into evidence of the videotape of a child as authorized herein shall not preclude the prosecution from calling the child as a witness or taking the child’s testimony outside of the courtroom as | ¿authorized in R.S. 15:283. Nothing in this Section shall be construed to prohibit the defendant’s right of confrontation.
Id. Thus, on its face, the statute does not violate defendant’s constitutional right of confrontation. See Crawford v. Washington,
We likewise find defendant’s other constitutional arguments to lack merit. The right to present a defense does not encompass the right to present expert tes
Therefore, in the present case, we find that the decision of the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeal to grant defendant’s expert access to videotaped interviews with the victim and witness violated the explicit language of La. R.S. 15:440.2(0, and thus this decision must be reversed. The decision of the Juvenile Parish Court for the Parish of Orleans, denying defendant’s motion for expert access to the videotaped interviews, is therefore reinstated.
REVERSED.
Notes
. The Fourth Circuit did not give written reasons supporting its decision to reverse the ruling of the Juvenile Parish Court for the Parish of Orleans.
