INTRODUCTION
1 1 This appeal concerns the corpus delicti rule. Specifically, we consider whether the corpus delicti rule should be replaced by the trustworthiness standard that has been adopted by a growing number of jurisdictions. The corpus delicti rule prohibits convicting a person based upon his or her confession alone. Stated differently, if there is no independent evidence that a crime occurred, apart from the confession, a person cannot be convicted, even if the confession was trustworthy.
12 In this case, the defendant, Brent Mauchley, filed a motion to dismiss charges against him for insurance fraud and theft by deception because, absent his confession, there was no independent evidence that either crime actually occurred. The district court denied Mauchley's motion. He then
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pleaded guilty to attempted insurance fraud, but reserved his right to appeal the denial of his motion. On appeal, the court of appeals reversed the district court's denial of Mauch-ley's motion to dismiss because the State conceded there was insufficient evidence to convict him under the corpus delicti rule. State v. Mauchley,
' 3 Despite its concession, the State argues that we should reverse the court of appeals' decision because (1) the corpus delicti rule is anachronistic, (2) the rule should be abandoned in favor of the trustworthiness standard, and (8) under the trustworthiness standard, sufficient evidence exists to affirm the denial of Mauchley's motion to dismiss. We agree that the corpus delicti rule is anachronistic and we adopt the trustworthiness standard in its stead. We nevertheless affirm the court of appeals' decision because the Ex Post Facto Clause of the United States Constitution prevents application of the trustworthiness standard to this case.
BACKGROUND
€4 Brent Mauchley filed an insurance claim against Salt Lake City for injuries he allegedly sustained from falling into an uncovered manhole. He claimed he fell into the manhole the evening of January 5, 1995. That same evening, he checked himself into a nearby emergency room and received treatment for his purported injuries. After seeing that the manhole was indeed uncovered, one of the hospital's security officers barricaded the opening until the problem could be remedied.
15 Salt Lake City's insurance company conducted an independent investigation of the incident. During the investigation "[tlhere was never any question that [Mauch-ley] had fallen in the hole." Instead, the focus of the investigation was on "who was at fault for the open manhole" and the measure of damages that Mauchley should recover for his purported injuries. The insurance company settled with him on August 17, 1998.
T6 Approximately six months after the settlement, Mauchley went to the South Salt Lake Police Department and voluntarily confessed that he had fabricated the story about falling into the manhole and sustaining injuries from the fall. He admitted he fabricated the story after seeing the uncovered manhole. Prior to his confession, there was no suspicion that his story was false, nor was there any evidence that a erime had been committed.
T7 As a result of his confession, Mauchley was charged with two second degree felonies: insurance fraud and theft by deception. He filed a motion to dismiss the charges, arguing that the corpus delicti rule prohibited the State from using his confession to convict him because there was no independent evidence of the crime.
18 On March 23, 2000, the district court held a hearing on Mauchley's motion to dismiss. At the hearing, the court found there was sufficient evidence to satisfy the corpus delicti rule because Mauchley had filed a false insurance claim and received a settlement based on that claim. The court concluded that the claim and settlement constituted independent evidence of the crime. Moreover, it found that his "confession corroborate[d] the evidence of a false insurance claim." Therefore, the district court denied defendant's motion to dismiss. Mauchley then pleaded guilty to attempted insurance fraud, a third degree felony, but reserved his right to appeal the denial of his motion to dismiss.
T9 Before the court of appeals, the State conceded that "the stipulated facts did not reflect the existence of inculpatory evidence independent of [Mauchley's] confession," Mauchley,
1 10 We granted the State's petition for a writ of certiorari. We have jurisdiction to review the court of appeals' decision pursuant to Utah Code Ann. § 78-2-2(8)(a) (2002).
*481 ANALYSIS
I. STARE DECISIS
{11 The State is asking this court to abandon the corpus delicti rule and to replace it with the trustworthiness standard that has been adopted by a growing number of jurisdictions. "Those asking us to overturn prior precedent have a substantial burden of persuasion" due to "the doctrine of stare decisis." State v. Menzies,
II. HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE CORROBORATION RULE
A. Development of the Corroboration Rule in England and the United States
€12 Courts adhere almost universally to the principle that "an extrajudicial confession,
1
by itself, is not sufficient to sustain a conviction of a crime." State v. Weldon,
{13 Although the exact origin of the corpus delicti rule is unknown, many historians attribute the rule's development to a seventeenth century case, wherein a defendant was executed after he falsely confessed to murdering a man. Thomas A. Mullen, Rule Without Reason: Requiring Independent Proof of the Corpus Delicti as a Condition of Admitting an Extrajudicial Confession, 27 U.S.F. L.Rev. 385, 399-400 (1993) (citing Perry's Case, 14 How. St. Tr. 1311 (1660). In Perry's Case, when the supposed victim disappeared one evening, and his hat was found "hacked and bloody," it was suspected that the defendant had murdered him. Note, Proof of the Corpus Delicti Aliunde the Defendant's Confession, 108 U. Pa. L.Rev. 638, 638 (1955). Following questioning, the defendant confessed that he had killed the "victim," and he also implicated his brother and mother in the crime. Id. at 688-39. All three were "tried, convicted, and executed." Id. at 689. Several years later, however, the "victim" appeared alive. Id. "This and similar cases led the British courts to question the sufficiency of confessions to prove that a crime had been committed." Id. In response to this concern, British courts developed a corroboration rule to help prevent such events from recurring.
' 14 At its inception, British courts applied this corroboration rule only to murder and bigamy cases. Id. at 640. Courts in the United States, however, extended the rule to apply to most crimes. Id. at 641. As early
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as 1909, this court required corroborative evidence, independent of a defendant's confession, in all criminal trials. State v. Wells,
B. The Orthodox Version of the Corroboration Rule: The Corpus Delicti Rule
« 15 The corroboration rule is most "often termed the 'corpus delict?' rule because the orthodox version of the rule requires corroboration of the corpus delicti, or body of the crime." Ayling, supra, at 1124 n. 9. Here, the term "corpus delicti' means "evidence that the [charged] crime was committed." Johnson,
116 Generally, " '[tlo establish guilt' " in a eriminal case, " 'the prosecution [must] show that [1] the injury or harm specified in the crime occurred, [2] this infu-ry or harm was caused by someone's criminal activity, and [8] the defendant was the [perpetrator].' " State v. Talbot,
117 For example, in a homicide case, the State must produce evidence that a person died and that the death was caused by a criminal act in order to establish that an injury or harm occurred by criminal means. Allen,
118 Thus, onee the State establishes the first two elements,
2
the defendant's confession may be admitted to otherwise establish guilt by (1) bolstering the evidence that has already been introduced, or (2) proving the third element-that the defendant was the perpetrator of the crime. See Talbot,
C. New Version of the Corroboration Rule: The Trustworthiness Standard
119 Although we currently adhere to the orthodox corpus delicti rule, the federal courts and a growing number of state
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courts have adopted a different version of the corroboration rule. Unlike the orthodox version of the corroboration rule, the new version focuses on the confession itself. Parker,
11 20 The State is urging us to abandon the orthodox corpus delicti rule and to replace it with the trustworthiness standard. For the reasons discussed below, we are persuaded that the orthodox corpus delicti rule should be replaced by the trustworthiness standard.
III. INHERENT WEAKNESSES OF THE ORTHODOX CORPUS DELICTI RULE
¶ 21 It is beyond dispute that some people falsely confess to committing a crime that was never committed or was committed by someone else. See Richard A. Leo & Richard J. Ofshe, Criminal Law: The Consequences of False Confessions: Deprivations of Liberty and Miscarriages of Justice in the Age of Psychological Interrogation, 88 J.Crim. L & Criminology 429, 432-33 & n. 10 (1998); Richard J. Ofshe & Richard A. Leo, The Decision to Confess Falsely: Rational Choice and Irrational Action, 74 Denv. U.L.Rev. 979, 983 (1997). Because "the experience of the courts, the police and the medical profession recounts a number of false confessions voluntarily made," Smith v. United States,
A. Corpus Delicti Rule Does Not Guard Against Innocent Persons Falsely Confessing to Actual Crimes °
1 22 One of the inherent weaknesses of the corpus delicti rule is that it "serve[s] an extremely limited function." Smith,
123 Onee the State establishes injury by criminal act, the corpus delicti rule is satisfied and no longer operates to bar the admission of a confession. Thus, in situations where there is independent proof of the crime, but "no proof as to the perpetrator," a defendant's false confession may be used to establish one of the most important elements necessary for conviction-the identity of the
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perpetrator. Lucas,
B. Corpus Delicti Rule Inadequately Protects the Innocent Because It Focuses on the Body of the Crime Rather than the Confession
1124 Another weakness of the corpus de-licti rule is that it focuses solely on whether a crime occurred instead of on whether a confession was true or false. Since originally the rule was designed to detect false confessions, this focus is misplaced. The rule requires the State to introduce evidence, apart from the defendant's confession, that (1) a harm or injury occurred, and (2) the harm or injury occurred by a criminal act. Johnson,
125 The belief seems to be that if the State can introduce independent evidence supporting the occurrence of the charged crime, a confession about the crime must be reliable. Ayling, supra, at 1128. The assumption is that the supporting evidence proves the "confession was not the imaginary product of a mentally diseased or deficient mind." Lucas,
£26 Although theoretically this reasoning seems tenable, the very case to which historians attribute the rule's creation shows that merely to establish that a crime has been committed does not necessarily establish that a confession was true or trustworthy. In Perry's Case, a man was "waylaid, kidnapped, and held as a slave in Turkey." Ayling, supra, at 1126 n. 18. During the course of the ambush and kidnapping, the victim's hat was hacked, bloodied, and left behind. Note, supra, at 688. Following the discovery of this piece of evidence, searchers believed the victim had been murdered, and authorities were able to induce a suspect to confess to committing the wholly imaginary crime. Id. Thus, the independent evidence, alone, was insufficient to ensure that the suspect's confession was reliable.
1 27 Particularly when a person is missing, it may appear as though a given crime was committed when in truth it was not 3 Yet, if a person falsely confesses to the supposed crime after hearing about it through the news media, or after being brought in for questioning as a suspect, the rule likely would not preclude the confession from being used to establish guilt due to the independent evidence of the supposed erime. The corpus delicti rule is ill-suited to detecting such false confessions, though, because it focuses only on the evidence and not the confession. Hence, even though the rule's purpose is to prevent innocent persons from being convicted for a crime that never occurred, the rule's inherent design fails to adequately address the evil at which it is aimed.
C. Corpus Delicti Rule May Work to Obstruct Justice
128 In addition to failing to adequately protect the innocent from the consequences of their false confessions, the corpus delicti rule potentially operates to obstruct justice. Professor McCormick "submitted that hard- and-fast rules requiring corroboration are as likely to obstruct the punishment of the guilty as they are to safeguard the innocent." Lucas,
129 For example, in State v. Ray,
1 30 Infanticide by suffocation presents another area where the corpus delicti rule has been troublesome. The rule may preclude convicting an individual who voluntarily confesses to smothering a child because "as is often the case with death by smothering, there [is] no way to determine conclusively whether the death was by natural causes or was a homicide." Catherine L. Goldenburg, Comment: Sudden Infant Death Syndrome as a Mask for Murder: Investigating and Prosecuting Infanticide, 28 Sw. U.L.Rev. 599, 621 (1999) (citing State v. Reed,
{31 These and other similar situations
4
cause concern because "safeguards for the accused should not be turned into obstacles whereby the guilty can escape just punishment." Lucas,
32 The corpus delicti rule obstructs justice, in part, because it makes "irrational distinctions and [yields] incongruous results." American Fork City v. Crosgrove,
133 Moreover, since the rule's weaknesses were present from its inception, we conclude the rule was ill-conceived and originally erroneous. When a rule was originally erroneous, we are not inexorably bound to retain it. Nor are we precluded from replacing the rule with one that is more sound. Furthermore, as will be discussed below, changed conditions since the advent of the rule provide additional support "that more good than harm will come by departing from precedent." State v. Menzies,
IV. THE CORPUS DELICTI RULE IS NO LONGER NECESSARY DUE TO CHANGED CONDITIONS
A. Newly Recognized Constitutional and Procedural Safeguards Militate Against Coercive Police Practices and Encourage More Effective Low Enforcement
1 34 An underlying goal of the corpus de-licti rule is " 'to minimize the weight of a
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confession and [to] require collateral evidence to support a conviection.' " McMahan,
1 35 Subsequent to the advent of the corpus delicti rule, however, the United States Supreme Court has recognized additional procedural and constitutional safeguards to protect against coerced confessions. These safeguards help encourage better law en-foreement because police must seek out independent evidence "through skillful investigation," rather than relying on confessions obtained through abusive police practices. Id. at 488-89,
1. Prohibiting Coercive Physical and Psychological Interrogations
136 In 1986, the United States Supreme Court held that confessions elicited by physical force or duress constituted a fundamental wrong that could not be tolerated under the Constitution's procedural due process requirements. Brown v. Mississippi,
137 Following the Court's decision in Brown, police substituted coercive psychological methods in place of brute force. See id. at 448,
1 38 In a series of cases, the Court deemed unconstitutional "[plrotracted, systematic and uncontrolled subjection of an accused to interrogation by the police for the purpose of eliciting disclosures or confessions," especially when coupled with denying the accused of sleep and contact with friends or family. Watts,
2. Extending the Right to Counsel
[ 39 In addition to prohibiting coercive interrogations, the Court recognized the need for suspects to have counsel available to them during custodial interrogations because "most confessions are obtained during the period between arrest and indictment." Escobedo,
3. Prophylactic Procedural Measures
1 40 Next, the Court introduced a prophylactic rule to further dispel the likelihood of coerced confessions. In Miranda, the Court mandated that "[plrior to any [custodial] questioning" police officers must inform suspects of their constitutional right to remain silent and to have the assistance of counsel. Id. at 444,
T 41 In addition to these safeguards, courts also play a role in protecting against involuntary confessions when they look at the totality of the cireumstances under which a confession was made to ensure it was voluntary. Blackburn v. Alabama,
B. Corpus Delicti Rule Is Unworkable in an Age Where Statutory Crimes Have Become Increasingly Complex and Numerous
T42 As early as 1909, this court applied the corpus delicti rule to all crimes. Thus, in all criminal trials the State is required to introduce evidence, independent of a defendant's confession, that a harm or injury occurred by someone's criminal act. See State v. Wells,
€43 For example, in Utah "[al person is guilty of capital murder" if he or she "intentionally or knowingly causes the death of another under any of seventeen different aggravating cireumstances." State v. Archuleta,
' 44 Other jurisdictions, however, have not taken the same approach. In Roach v. Commonwealth,
{45 Because the rule is ill-equipped to adapt to the changing face of criminal law,
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courts are faced with either selectively applying the rule to certain crimes or abandoning it for all crimes. See State v. Daugherty,
146 In summary, we conclude the corpus delicti rule was originally erroncous because it inadequately protects the innocent, yet allows the guilty to go free. Furthermore, additional procedural and constitutional safeguards that have been recognized since the rule's inception make the rule unnecessary. Finally, the changing face of criminal law also supports abolishing the rule because the changes have made the rule more unworkable. Each of these factors persuade us that more good than harm will come from abolishing the rule. See State v. Menzies,
147 Although we overturn the corpus de-licti rule, we are not eliminating the corroboration rule because we recognize the need still exists "to prevent 'errors in convictions based upon untrue confessions alone.! " United States v. Dickerson,
V. TRUSTWORTHINESS STANDARD
(48 The United States Supreme Court established the trustworthiness standard in two cases issued on the same day in 1954. Opper v. United States,
A. Formulation of the Trustworthiness Standard
149 Under the trustworthiness standard, the State must still establish "(alll elements of the offense." Smith,
Before it can introduce a defendant's confession, however, the State must "introduce substantial independent evidence which would tend to establish the trustworthiness of the [confession]." Opper,
1. Establishing Trustworthiness When There Is No Independent Evidence that a Crime Occurred
T51 Substantial independent evidence supporting the trustworthiness of a confession need not necessarily include independent evidence of the crime. In cases such as this one, where there is no evidence of a crime independent of the confession, the
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State may nevertheless "establish the trustworthiness of the confession with other evidence typically used to bolster the credibility and reliability of an out-of-court statement." United States v. Singleterry,
[ 52 Factors used in other areas of the law to bolster the credibility and reliability of an out-of-court statement include the following: evidence as to the spontaneity of the statement; the absence of deception, trick, threats, or promises to obtain the statement; the defendant's positive physical and mental condition, including age, education, and experience; and the presence of an attorney when the statement is given. See State v. Ramirez,
153 We emphasize, however, that since a demonstrably wrong statement may indicate that a confession is false, Leo & Ofshe, supra, at 488-40, the overall facts and cireumstances related in the confession must be consistent with " 'facts otherwise known or established," " State v. Lucas,
2. Establishing Trustworthiness There Is Independent Evidence When
154 At times, there may be substantial independent evidence of a crime but not of the perpetrator's identity. Or, there may be independent evidence of a crime and the perpetrator, but not enough to establish guilt. In such situations, the independent evidence itself may "bolster the confession . and thereby prove the offense 'through' the statements of the accused." Smith,
{55 While not exclusive, three factors tending to demonstrate personal knowledge include the following: (1) providing information that "lead[s] to the discovery of evidence unknown to the police," (2) providing information about "highly unusual elements of the crime that have not been made public," and (8) providing "an accurate description of the mundane details of the crime seene which are not easily guessed and have not been reported publicly," because "mundane details [are] less likely to be the result of [suggestion] by the police." Id. at 488-40. Examples of mundane details may include the following: "how the victim was clothed, disarray of certain furniture pieces, presence or absence of particular objects at the crime seene," "or which window was jimmied open." Id. at 439; see also Lucas,
156 Here, too, the degree of "fit between the specifics of a confession and the crime facts" is critical because the "fit" determines whether a confession should be deemed trustworthy. Leo & Ofshe, supra, at 488. If a person merely provides information already known by the police or the public, or if the information provided is inaceu-rate, a confession may be untrustworthy. Id. at 439.
B. Trial Judge as Gatekeeper
157 Generally, the Utah Rules of Evidence allow the State to use a defendant's out-of-court statement against him or her. Utah R. Evid. 801(d)(2). The corpus delicti rule, however, imposed an additional requirement that the corpus delicti had to be proved before a confession could be admitted. Although we no longer adhere to the corpus delicti rule, we recognize that "no other class of evidence is as potentially prejudicial to defendants as confessions." Stephen A. Saltzburg, Standards of Proof and Prelimi *490 nary Questions of Fact, 27 Stan. L.Rev. 271, 293 (1975).
158 Thus, we hold that before a confession may be admitted, the trial court must determine as a matter of law that the confession is trustworthy. When making its determination, the trial court must review the totality of the cireumstances. Only after a confession is deemed trustworthy by a preponderance of the evidence may it be admitted into evidence. 6
159 Furthermore, the trustworthiness standard does not obviate the trial court's responsibility to ensure a confession is admissible under the other rules of evidence or "as a matter of constitutional law under decisions such as Miranda v. Arizona." Edward L. Kimball & Ronald N. Boyce, Utah Evidence Law § 8-23 (1996) (discussing holding in State v. Maurer,
160 Although the trial court must determine as a matter of law whether a confession is sufficiently trustworthy to be admitted into evidence, this does not "preclude[ ] the jury from independently assessing the weight it wishes to attribute to the [confession]." Dickerson,
{61 In summary, we adopt the trustworthiness standard in place of the corpus delicti rule. Under the trustworthiness standard, the State must introduce substantial independent evidence that tends to establish the trustworthiness of a defendant's confession before it may be admitted into evidence. Additionally, the trial judge must determine as a matter of law that the confession is trustworthy before it may be admitted. A jury may nevertheless still consider for itself the weight it wishes to give to the confession. Finally, a defendant may not be convicted unless there exists independent evidence of the crime, a corroborated confession, or a combination of both that "furnishes proof beyond a reasonable doubt" that the defendant is guilty of the crime charged. Harris,
VI. TRUSTWORTHINESS OF MAUCHLEYS CONFESSION
T 62 Mauchley filed an insurance claim and received a settlement based on that claim. Approximately six months after receiving the settlement, Mauchley entered a police station on his own volition and voluntarily confessed that his insurance claim was false. Absent his confession, there is no independent evidence that a crime occurred because merely filing an insurance claim and receiving a settlement do not constitute eriminal acts.
T 63 The State concedes it has insufficient independent evidence to convict Mauchley under the corpus delicti rule. It argues nevertheless that the court of appeals erred in reversing the denial of Mauchley's motion to dismiss because "[slubstantial independent evidence tended to establish the trustworthiness of [his] confession." It further argues that since his confession was trustworthy, it was proper for the district court to consider his confession and to deny the motion to dismiss. While the State may be correct that Mauchley's confession was trustworthy, we decline to address its argument because the Ex Post Facto Clause of the United States Constitution prohibits application of *491 the trustworthiness standard to Mauchley's case.
A. Types of Criminal Laws to Which the Ex Post Facto Clause Applies
164 According to the United States Supreme Court, the Ex Post Facto Clause applies to
[1] [elvery law that makes an action done before the passing of the law, and which was innocent when done, criminal, and punishes such action[;] [2] [elvery law that aggravates a crime, or makes it greater than it was, when committed[;] [8] [elvery law that changes the punishment, and inflicts a greater punishment, than the law annexed to the crime, when committed[;] and [4] [eJvery law that alters the legal rules of evidence, and receives less, or different, testimony, than the law required at the time of the commission of the offense, in order to convict the offender.
Carmell v. Texas,
T 65 Procedural changes refer to "changes in the procedures by which a criminal case is adjudicated, as opposed to changes in the substantive law of erimes." Id. at 45,
166 Here, our challenge is to determine whether the trustworthiness standard altered an admissibility rule or a sufficiency of the evidence rule. Only if it altered a sufficiency of the evidence rule is the Ex Post Facto Clause implicated. To make this determination, we turn to a recent United States Supreme Court case that addressed Calder's fourth category.
B. Application of Calder's Fourth Category
167 In Carmell v. Texas,
T68 Under the old law, the defendant could not be convicted based on his stepdaughter's uncorroborated testimony because she was older than fourteen at the time of the offenses. Id. at 519,
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1 69 Although the statute at issue did "not establish an element of the offense," it nevertheless went to the sufficiency of evidence necessary to sustain a conviction. Id. at 531,
170 Next, the Court clarified that when Calder's fourth category referred to evidence " 'required ... in order to convict, " it was not referring to evidence that was necessary to convict in every case. Id. at 548-49,
T 71 Finally, the Court found that although the statute involved both admissibility and sufficiency of the evidence components, the relevant question was whether the law changed the "evidence required to comvict." Id. at 551,
T72 Moreover, the Court noted an additional difference between admissibility rules and sufficiency of the evidence rules:
Ordinarily, when evidence that should have been excluded is erroneously admitted against a defendant, the trial court's error is remedied on appeal by reversing the conviction and remanding for a new trial. A trial court's failure to comply with the requirements of [a sufficiency rule}, by contrast, results not in a remand for a new trial, but in the reversal of conviction and remand for entry of an order of acquittal.
Id. at 518 n. 2,
C. The Trustworthiness Standard Requires Less or Different Evidence to Convict than the Corpus Delicti Rule
173 Our adoption of the trustworthiness standard requires the State to produce less or different evidence to sustain a convietion than the corpus delicti rule. This is significant because Calder's fourth category addressed not only laws that changed the quantum of proof necessary to convict, but also laws that changed the nature of proof necessary to convict. Id. at 522,
174 Under the corpus delicti rule, the State had to produce clear and convincing evidence that a crime had occurred before a confession could be admitted. State v. Johnson,
T75 Under the trustworthiness standard, the State no longer has to produce independent evidence that a crime occurred before a confession may be admitted. Instead, the State must now introduce evidence that establishes the trustworthiness of a defendant's confession. If a confession is deemed trustworthy by a preponderance of the evidence it may be admitted to establish guilt even if there is no other evidence that a crime was committed.
1 76 Thus, we have changed the corroboration rule in two respects. First, we no longer require independent evidence of the crime before a defendant's confession may be admitted in order to establish guilt. Now, corroboration of the confession itself is sufficient to sustain a conviction. Second, we altered the quantum of proof the State must produce before a confession may be admitted; we changed the quantum of proof from clear and convincing evidence to a preponderance of the evidence. Hence, evidence that is sufficient to support a conviction now was insufficient to support a conviction before because the trustworthiness standard requires less or different evidence than what was required to convict under the corpus delicti rule. This supports the conclusion that the trustworthiness standard pertains to the sufficiency of the evidence necessary to obtain a conviction.
177 Moreover, several federal court decisions have held that the corroboration rule pertains to the sufficiency of the evidence. First, in Warszsower v. United States,
178 Hence, we conclude the trustworthiness standard pertains not just to the admissibility, but also to the sufficiency of the evidence. Moreover, we conclude it has altered the sufficiency of the evidence that was required to convict under the corpus delicti rule because it requires less or different evidence than the corpus delicti rule required. As such, it falls under Calder's fourth category, and we are precluded from retroactively applying the trustworthiness standard. Hence, we affirm the court of appeals' decision that the district court erred in denying Mauchley's motion to dismiss.
CONCLUSION
179 In summary, while we consider the corroboration rule to be an important safeguard to our system of justice, the corpus delicti version of the rule fails to adequately protect the innocent person who falsely confesses to an actual crime. The rule also inadequately addresses the evil at which it is aimed because it focuses on whether a crime occurred instead of on the trustworthiness of a defendant's confession. Thus, we conclude that the corpus delicti rule was erroneous at its inception. In addition, changed cireum-stances support the conclusion that even if the rule was not originally erroneous, it has outlived its usefulness.
*494 1 80 Given the rule's limited usefulness in protecting the innocent, we conclude its detrimental effect on the administration of justice is too high. Moreover, we find that "we can best give effect to the substantial state interest involved" in protecting the public, "and at the same time adequately protect the rights of the individual," American Fork City v. Crosgrove, TOL P.2d 1069, 1075 (Utah 1985), through the trustworthiness standard. We therefore abandon the corpus delicti rule and replace it with the trustworthiness standard.
{81 Under our interpretation of the Ex Post Facto Clause, however, the trustworthiness standard may only be applied prospectively. Hence, we affirm the court of appeals' decision that the district court erred in denying Mauchley's motion to dismiss.
Notes
. An extrajudicial confession is a confession made out of court. Black's Law Dictionary 297 (6th ed.1990). The corpus delicti rule is inapplicable when a confession is made "before a magistrate or court in the due course of legal proceedings." Id.; accord Corey J. Ayling, Comment, Corroborating Confessions: An Empirical Analysis of Legal Safeguards Against False Confessions, 1984 Wis. L.Rev. 1121, 1131.
. Although the corpus delicti rule requires the State to introduce independent evidence that a crime occurred before a defendant's confession may be admitted, this burden of proof goes only to the quantum of proof "required to allow introduction of a defendant's confession." Johnson,
. See Leo & Ofshe, supra, at 449-51, for a discussion of more recent cases involving individuals who have falsely confessed to committing non-existent crimes after being confronted with independent evidence that seemed to support that a given crime had occurred.
. Income tax evasion, solicitation, conspiracy, certain attempt crimes, offering to sell narcotics, and the promotion of gambling are other examples of crimes involving intangible injuries that do not easily fit under the corpus delicti rule. State v. Daugherty,
. Moreover, "[the reasonable-doubt standard [also] plays a vital role" in "reducing the risk of convictions resting on factual error." In re Winship,
. We note that this same gatekeeping function is required by other jurisdictions that have adopted the trustworthiness standard, see United States v. Dickerson,
. The difficulty in distinguishing between procedural and legal rules of evidence is demonstrated well by Carmell since it was a five to four majority decision. The dissent argued strongly against the Court's interpretation of the fourth Calder category, stating it was a departure from precedent. See id. at 575,
