¶ 1 In this special action, the State of Arizona seeks relief from the respondent judges’ orders precluding the state from presenting voice recognition testimony at trial. 1 The question raised is whether the respondents abused their discretion in precluding the state’s witness from testifying in the underlying criminal proceedings against the defendants, real-parties-in-interest herein, that, having monitored and transcribed numerous telephone conversations during a wiretap investigation, she was familiar with the defendants’ voices and was able to identify them individually as the same voices recorded in subsequent law enforcement interviews and jailhouse telephone calls. For the reasons stated below, we accept special action jurisdiction and grant relief. See Ariz. R.P. Spec. Actions 3(c).
¶ 2 We accept jurisdiction of this special action because the state has no equally plain, speedy, or adequate remedy by appeal.
See
Ariz. R.P. Spec. Actions 1(a);
State v. Bejarano,
Factual and Procedural History
¶ 3 The relevant facts are undisputed. In January and February of 2009, Counter Narcotics Alliance 2 detectives obtained warrants authorizing wiretap interceptions of calls made from three telephone numbers. To facilitate the investigation, the detectives contracted with a monitoring service supervised by Elia Gonzalez who, over that two-month period, listened to, transcribed, and translated the telephone calls, many of which were in Spanish. The detectives subsequently requested that Gonzalez compare the voices recorded during the wiretap with known recordings of defendants Juan Carlos Holguin and Orleans Paloma Estrella, as well as Jose Tapia-Palomo. 3 In early 2010, the state determined it would call Gonzalez to testify at trial, along with detectives who had spoken with the defendants, to provide foundation testimony for various transcripts and recordings by identifying the recorded voices. To refresh her memory in preparation for her testimony, the state asked Gonzalez to compare once again the verified recordings with those obtained during the wiretap. Her identification of Holguin, Estrella, and Tapia-Palomo as the individuals whose voices had been taped during the wiretap was disclosed to the defendants, who then filed a motion to preclude Gonzalez from testifying at trial based on alleged suggestiveness of the identification procedure.
¶ 4 The respondent judges focused on a different issue in ruling on the motion to preclude and motion for reconsideration. At the initial hearing, Judge Nichols questioned whether it was permissible for Gonzalez or any other lay witness 4 to identify a recorded *205 voice based on familiarity with another recording. The state argued that such foundational testimony was admissible, citing Rule 901, Ariz. R. Evid., and emphasizing that Gonzalez is bilingual, had become familiar with the nuances of the voices speaking Spanish, and was able to identify the voices better than a jury, whose members may not necessarily understand Spanish. The state further argued that the alternative — playing the recordings for the jury — would be tantamount to giving different evidence to the Spanish-speaking and non-Spanish-speaking jurors. Respondent Judge Nichols suggested that testimony pursuant to Rule 901 would be limited to someone who knows the speaker and therefore is familiar with his voice, and he granted the defendants’ motion to preclude Gonzalez from testifying. He further ruled that the state could play the recordings at trial and have the jury decide whether the voices on the recordings were the voices of the defendants. 5
¶ 5 Again relying on Rule 901, the state filed a motion for reconsideration, which was heal’d and ruled upon by respondent Judge Miller. Although Judge Miller acknowledged that ease law interpreting the analogous federal rule of evidence would permit voice identification via “voice exemplar’s,” he nevertheless affirmed Judge Nichols’s order, articulating several additional unrelated legal conclusions and factual findings. He also expressly noted that he would “not sustain any foundation objections to the playing of the tape recording[s]” as long as a law enforcement agent was available to testify that he or she previously had heard, “in person or by some other means such as telephone conversation,” the recorded communications. This special action by the state followed.
Discussion
Mootness
¶ 6 At the outset, Estrella and Holguin urge us to decline jurisdiction on the ground this special action is moot. They maintain there is no longer a need for Gonzalez’s foundational testimony, in light of Judge Miller’s statement that he would overrule a defense objection to the admission of tapes and transcripts of the conversations so long as detectives who are familiar’ with the voices on the tape from personal contact with the defendants provide requisite foundational evidence. However, absent a stipulation that the voices on the wiretap recordings were the same as the voices recorded by law enforcement personnel in interviews and at the jail, the state still has the burden of proving authenticity, even if an objection to foundation is overruled.
See State v. Lavers,
Rule 901
¶ 7 We therefore turn to the question whether the respondent judges abused their discretion in precluding Gonzalez from
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testifying.
See State v. Tucker,
¶ 8 It is well established that transcripts and recordings of telephone calls are admissible when properly authenticated.
See
Ariz. R. Evid. 901(a) (authentication or identification condition precedent to admissibility);
see also Wooten,
¶ 9 Based on the language of the rule, Gonzalez’s identification testimony appears to be proper foundational evidence for the admission of the transcripts and recordings.
See State v. Gortarez,
¶ 10 At the hearing on the defendants’ motion to preclude Gonzalez’s testimony. Judge Nichols expressed concern that if a voice identification witness’s only basis for recognizing a voice is familiarity with a recording, he or she is in no better position than the jury to identify the voice, and the jury could do so by listening to the recording.
7
The respondent judge thus suggested
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a voice recognition witness must have special familiarity with a particular voice to be permitted to testify. This, however, is not a requirement under Rule 901
8
and, even if it were, the respondent would have had no basis for concluding Gonzalez lacked such familiarity. No testimony was taken and the respondent’s ruling was based solely on the arguments of counsel. But the state pointed out Gonzalez had the opportunity not just to hear the defendants’ voices, but to study them carefully and at length, having spent “literally weeksf] worth of listening” in order to transcribe, translate, and review the wiretapped telephone calls. Additionally, the state proffered that, because Gonzalez speaks fluent Spanish, she became familiar with nuances and inflections in the defendants’ voices that might not readily be apparent to non-Spanish-speaking-listeners who lack familiarity with the language and these particular defendants’ voices. See
Gallo-Moreno,
Disposition
¶ 11 Because the respondent judges abused their discretion by precluding the state’s witness from testifying, based on an erroneous interpretation of Rule 901, we grant the state the relief it has requested and reverse the respondents’ rulings. 9
Notes
. Respondent Judge Nichols granted the real-parties-in-interest/defendants’ initial motion to preclude the state’s witness from testifying. Although the record is unclear, it appears the case then was transferred to respondent Judge Miller before the state filed its motion for reconsideration. Judges Nichols and Miller agreed that Judge Miller would preside over the motion for reconsideration.
. We presume the Counter Narcotics Alliance is an interagency task force, but the record provides no further information about it.
. Tapia-Palomo is not a party to this special action, already having pled guilty to charged offenses.
. Gonzalez was not proffered as an expert witness and the trial court did not make such a determination, nor was it necessary to do so. Under Rule 701, Ariz. R. Evid., a witness not testifying as an expert is entitled to testify on a matter "rationally based on [her] perception.”
. It is unclear that the jury would have at its disposal the same resources Gonzalez used to identify the voices. The record suggests Gonzalez not only relied on her Spanish language comprehension but was able to listen to the recordings using more sophisticated technological equipment than would be available to the jury.
. Although we will uphold a trial court if it is correct for any reason supported by the record,
see State v. Childress, 222
Ariz. 334, ¶ 9,
. The judges' concern appears to stem from Rule 702, Ariz. R. Evid., which pertains to the admission of expert testimony. Had the state presented Gonzalez as a witness who, by virtue of her training and expertise as an interpreter and voice monitor, is better qualified than the jury to make a voice identification, Rule 702 would apply.
See
Ariz. R. Evid. 702 (expert witness relies on "knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education” beyond that possessed by average person). But the available record suggests that Gonzalez's testimony instead would be based on her perceptions from having heard all the recordings of the defendants’ voices and the familiarity she gained through hearing them over a two-month period. Accordingly, her identifica
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tion based on these perceptions, as opposed to any conclusions she derived by virtue of being a monitoring or translation expert, would be proper lay testimony.
See
Ariz. R. Evid. 701;
see also United States v. Bush,
. It appears there is no authority for such a requirement under the Arizona or federal rules. Indeed, identification testimony based on a recorded voice has been accepted as an appropriate method of authentication under analogous federal Rule 901(a), Fed.R.Evid.
See United States
v.
Gallo-Moreno,
. The defendants also suggest the respondents’ findings relating to Gonzalez’s non-expert status and minimal prejudice to the state resulting from her preclusion are material for the purposes of this analysis. But we have addressed those issues and further agree with the state that several of the respondents’ other legal and factual conclusions are not relevant to Rule 901, nor, on this record, a basis for precluding Gonzalez’s testimony. Having already determined the respondents abused their discretion, we need not specifically address any superfluous findings.
