Appellant, Reginald Kinloch, was convicted of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. We affirm.
FACTS
Kinloch was accused of the August 27, 1994 murder of Venus Murphy, a prostitute. Murphy’s skull had been crushed with a cement block. Kinloch admitted having consensual sex with Murphy sometime after midnight on August 27th, but maintained he had left Murphy between 3:00 and 4:00 a.m.
Kinloch did not testify at trial. However, he presented the testimony of his nephew, Kevin Molen, to the effect that Molen had seen Kinloch come home around 5:30 a.m. and go to sleep. 1 Around 6:30 a.m., Molen saw Kinloch’s ex-girlfriend, Barbara Milligan, wearing a pair of white pants, walk to the clothesline and retrieve a pair of blue pants and a white shirt. She went into an abandoned house in the back yard and came out wearing the blue pants. She put the white pants into a trash bag. The trash bag was subsequently discovered by police and the white pants had blood spatters which matched the DNA analysis of both Murphy and Kinloch. According to Molen, Kinloch was not wearing white pants when he came home at 5:30 a.m. 2
Subsequent to Molen’s testimony, defense counsel proffered the testimony of Shirley Robinson, 3 to the effect that, a couple of months after Murphy’s death, Robinson “met up” with Barbara Milligan. The two were smoking crack cocaine together when Milligan told Robinson she “got that bitch for fucking with my man.” Kinloch contended the statement should be admitted as a “declaration against Milligan’s penal interest.” The trial court refused to allow Milligan’s statement into evidence.
*388 ISSUE
Did the trial court err in refusing to permit Kinloch to introduce the hearsay statement of Milligan?
DISCUSSION
In
State v. Doctor,
Rule 804(b)(3), SCRE, codified this exception to the hearsay rule.
State v. Cooper,
Statement Against Interest. A statement which was at the time of its making so far contrary to the declarant’s pecuniary or proprietary interest, or so far tended to subject the declarant to civil or criminal liability, or to render invalid a claim by the declarant against another, that a reasonable person in the declarant’s position would not have made the statement unless believing it to be true. A statement tending to expose the declarant to criminal liability and offered to exculpate the accused is not admissible unless corroborating circumstances clearly indicate the trustworthiness of the statement, (emphasis supplied).
We have not previously engaged in an in depth analysis of the precise degree of corroboration prerequisite to admission of a declaration against penal interest. Other courts, however, hold the party offering the statement bears a “formidable burden” in meeting the requirements of Rule 804(b)(3).
United States v. Lowe,
Here, we cannot say Milligan’s alleged statement to Robinson has such clearly corroborating circumstances as to warrant its admission. Robinson testified Milligan made the statement after smoking crack cocaine. The fact that the alleged declarant had been smoking crack cocaine clearly reflects adversely on both Milligan’s trustworthiness, and the trustworthiness of whether the statement was, in fact, made.
Accord United States v. MacDonald,
Kinloch nonetheless contends the testimony of his cousin Molen to the effect that he witnessed Milligan putting white pants in a trash bag outside Kinloch’s house on the morning after the murder is sufficiently corroborative. While Molen’s testimony may be some evidence of corroboration, it is not, in our opinion, so clearly corroborating as to render the trial court’s exclusion of this testimony an abuse of discretion.
Accord United States v. Salvador,
Moreover, we find insufficient corroboration under the cases of this Court. In State v. Forney, supra, the unavailable declarant allegedly admitted to a total of five witness that he had been the triggerman in murdering the victim. We found no independent evidence corroborating the declarant’s claim, and found the declarant’s credibility questionable, given that he had told a sixth person he had not killed the victim. Accordingly, in Forney, we held the trial court did not abuse its discretion in excluding the statement. Here, the only person to whom Milligan made the allegedly inculpatory statement was Robinson, after the two had been smoking crack cocaine. Further, although Molen’s testimony is some independent evidence of corroboration, his testimony was contradicted by police officers who testified, contrary to Molen, that Kinloch admitted he was wearing white pants on the night of the murder. As neither the making of the statement nor its *391 truth were clearly corroborated, we find no abuse of discretion in exclusion of Robinson’s testimony. Forney, supra.
Finally, in State v. Doctor, supra, we reversed the trial court’s exclusion of the hearsay statements of two nontestifying minors who had confessed, separately and in the presence of family members, to the crime. The nontestifying minors’ testimony was directly corroborated by the testimony of a third testifying minor who admitted committing the crime with the two minors. Further, three independent witnesses testified they had seen all three of the minors in the stolen car with the stolen stereo on the day of the crime, and they had not seen the defendant Doctor in the car that day. Accordingly, we found sufficient corroboration both of the statements themselves, (i.e., that they had been made and not fabricated), and of the contents of the statements. Unlike the present case, the hearsay declarations in Doctor easily meet the standard of clear corroboration. 5
We find no abuse of discretion in exclusion of Milligan’s alleged declaration against penal interest. The judgment below is
AFFIRMED. 6
Notes
. Molen and Kinloch shared a residence with other family members.
. Police officers testified that Kinloch admitted to them that he was, in fact, wearing a pair of white pants while he was with the victim.
. He also proffered the testimony of Shirley Smith. However, he does not appeal the trial court’s exclusion of Smith’s testimony.
. Courts appear divided as to any precise test for determining whether a declaration has been sufficiently corroborated.
Compare United States v. Salvador,
. As pointed out in footnote 4, and as our holdings in Fomey and Doctor indicate, the test for when a statement has been sufficiently corroborated is not precise. We decline, however, to adopt a specific test for determining whether a statement has been clearly corroborated. We find the matter is best left to the trial court’s discretion after considering the totality of the circumstances under which a declaration against penal interest was made.
. Although we need not rest our decision on this basis, we are also concerned with Kinloch’s failure to demonstrate Milligan's "unavailability.” To be admissible under Rule 804(b)(3), a witness must be "unavailable” as defined by Rule 804(a). The burden of showing unavailability is upon the party offering the witness.
See
M. Graham,
Federal Practice and Procedure-Evidence,
Vol. 31, § 6792 at p. 554 (1997). Moreover, according to
McCormick on Evidence,
mere absence of the declarant from the hearing, standing alone, does not establish unavailability. The proponent of the statement must also show he is unable to procure the declarant’s attendance by process or other reasonable means. String,
McCormick on Evidence,
§ 253, p. 134. (4th
*392
Ed. 1992). Although a lesser showing may be adequate as to defense witnesses in criminal cases than is necessary for the government’s showing, some effort at locating the witness is necessary.
Id
at Nt. 28, p. 135.
Accord State
v.
Blankenship,
Here, there is simply no evidence Kinloch ever attempted to locate Milligan. Although Kinloch’s cousin, Molen, testified he had not seen Milligan since 1994, Kinloch offered no reason for her unavailability, nor is there any indication in the record that he made any attempts to locate her or subpoena her for trial. Notwithstanding the state’s concession at oral argument before this Court that it was unable to locate Milligan prior to trial, the mere fact that the government and defense are unaware of a declarant's whereabouts does not establish "unavailability.”
See United States v. Draiman,
