Defendant appeals a judgment of conviction for two counts of sexual abuse in the first degree, ORS 163.427, and two counts of unlawful sexual penetration in the first degree, ORS 163.411. He advances several assignments of error related to the trial court’s evidentiary rulings and to the imposition of his sentence. Among other things, defendant argues that, under
Crawford v. Washington,
The relevant facts are not in dispute. Defendant was charged with sexually abusing a four-year-old girl, A. Defendant was the boyfriend of A’s mother, Snider. In the summer of2001, defendant began living with Snider and A in Eugene. Later that year, the three moved to Clatsop County. Snider then noticed changes in her daughter’s behavior; A was resisting being alone with defendant and was wetting the bed. She developed a rash and complained about feeling sick. In December 2001, A told her mother that defendant “touches me” and pointed to her genital area. Snider took the matter to the police, who made arrangements for A to be seen at a child abuse assessment center called the Lighthouse.
A was seen at the Lighthouse by Dr. Stefanelli, who interviewed A and performed a physical examination. A told Stefanelli that defendant had touched her genital area. During the physical examination, Stefanelli found physical evidence that A had been sexually abused. The staff at the Lighthouse then referred A to a clinical psychologist, Berdine, for treatment.
*273 Berdine met with A in December 2001. At that session, A again stated that defendant had touched her genitals. A also told Berdine that the touching had taken place at her home in Clatsop County. In addition, A told Berdine that defendant had previously touched her when they had lived in Eugene and that she had seen defendant touch her five-year-old cousin, R, at that time.
In July 2002, both A and R took part in videotaped interviews at the Lane County Child Advocacy Center. Because the nature of the center and the circumstances in which those interviews were conducted is significant to the disposition of defendant’s appeal, we briefly describe them.
The Lane County Child Advocacy Center is part of a network of similar centers throughout the state. It operates in partnership with the district attorney’s office and provides a number of services related to child abuse investigation. Children are referred to the center by law enforcement agencies or Child Protective Services. In addition to performing videotaped interviews of the kind in which A and R participated, the center houses a grand jury and performs medical exams. The center does not offer mental health treatment, but it does refer children for such treatment.
Ray Broderick, the center’s director, interviewed A and R separately. In both instances, a Eugene Police Officer videotaped the interview from behind a one-way mirror. Broderick told the children that the interviews were being videotaped. According to Broderick,
“the whole idea is that the child and family have knowledge that it’s going to be video recorded and audio recorded. * * * And it’s also done with the parents knowing that this is information that is going to be turned over to whoever the agency that’s involved, whether its law enforcement or Child Protective Services.”
Broderick himself is a former police officer who describes his current role as “forensic child interviewer” whose job it is to “conduct forensic video interviews” of child abuse victims and to “coordinate interview participation among law enforcement, child protection services and prosecutors.”
*274 At the outset of his interviews with A and R, Broderick engaged in an exercise designed to gauge the extent to which the children were suggestible. Thus, Broderick pointed to common animals on a nearby poster and deliberately misidentified them to see if the children were willing to correct him. Later during the course of their respective interviews, both girls stated to Broderick that defendant had inappropriately touched them. A told Broderick that defendant had touched her genital area on more than one occasion. A also told Broderick that she had seen defendant touch R in a similar manner, in an incident that had taken place at R’s house in Lane County. R stated to Broderick that defendant had “touched me right here” while pointing to her genital area. R also told Broderick that she had seen defendant touch A.
Defendant was charged by indictment with two counts of sexual penetration and two counts of first-degree sexual abuse, based on the incidents involving A that took place in Clatsop County. Before trial, defendant moved to exclude, as inadmissible character evidence, evidence regarding his conduct in Eugene. The trial court denied that motion.
Defendant’s case was tried to a jury. At trial, after both children appeared frightened and refused to answer questions during a competency hearing, the court ruled that A and R were unavailable. The court ruled that the children’s hearsay statements regarding defendant’s abusive touching, as relayed to Snider, Stefanelli, and Berdine, and the videotaped interviews with Broderick were admissible under exceptions to the hearsay rule. Snider, Stefanelli, and Berdine testified regarding, among other things, the out-of-court statements that A had made to them. In addition, Broderick testified about the nature of the interview process, after which the videotaped interviews were played for the jury. In closing arguments, the prosecution referred to the videotapes several times, reminding the jury that the tapes had been admitted into evidence and that the jury would be able to watch them again as it deliberated.
The jury returned a verdict of guilty on both counts of first-degree sexual abuse and both counts of first-degree *275 unlawful sexual penetration. The trial court imposed consecutive sentences of 100 months’ imprisonment for each of the sexual penetration convictions and imposed concurrent sentences of 75 months’ imprisonment on the sexual abuse convictions.
On appeal, defendant advances several assignments of error related to the admission of evidence at his trial and, in a supplemental brief, to his sentencing. He first argues that the court erred in denying his motion to exclude evidence of defendant’s conduct in Lane County because that “other bad acts” evidence was inadmissible character evidence,
see
OEC 404(3), and, in any event, was unfairly prejudicial under OEC 403. Defendant next argues that, under the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Crawford,
the trial court erred multiple times by admitting the hearsay statements of the child victims — through the testimony of Stefanelli and Berdine, and through the playing of the videotapes — in violation of his confrontation right under the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution. In a supplemental brief, defendant also argues that, under
Blakely v. Washington,
In
Crawford,
the Supreme Court held that the confrontation right guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment requires that “testimonial” hearsay of an unavailable declarant is not admissible unless the defendant has had a prior opportunity to cross-examine the declarant.
The state responds that the admission of the statements at issue is not reviewable as plain error because it is at least reasonably debatable whether they are the kind of “testimonial” statements to which Crawford applies. The state argues that, with respect to the statements made to Berdine and Stefanelli, they are not testimonial because they were made for treatment purposes, to health professionals, outside the presence of police or other government officials. The state concedes that the children’s interviews with Broderick present a “closer, or less open, question,” but it nonetheless argues that their introduction was at least not plainly erroneous.
We disagree with the state. In light of recent cases from the Oregon Supreme Court and the United States Supreme Court, the children’s videotaped statements to Broderick were undebatably “testimonial.” The admission of those statements was therefore plain error. Further, given the gravity of the error, we exercise our discretion to correct it. Because we conclude that the admission of the videotapes requires reversal, we do not reach the question whether Crawford also applies to the children’s hearsay statements to Stefanelli or Berdine.
To be reviewable as “plain error,” an error must be one of law, it must be “obvious, not reasonably in dispute,” and it must appear on the face of the record.
Ailes v. Portland Meadows, Inc.,
*277
As we have noted, whether the admission of a hearsay statement infringes on a defendant’s Sixth Amendment confrontation right depends at the threshold on whether the statement is “testimonial.”
Crawford,
In
State v. Mack,
The state appealed, arguing that Crawford did not apply because the interview had not been conducted by a police officer. The court rejected that argument, concluding that there was no relevant distinction between the child’s statements to the caseworker and the testimonial statements that the court held to be inadmissible in Crawford. The court reasoned that the DHS caseworker was functioning as an agent for the police, because she had “elicited statements from [the child] at the request of the officers while they videotaped the interviews” and had “structured the interviews in an age-appropriate way” in order “to elicit information from [the child] relevant to the police investigation.” Id. at 594. The court concluded that, because the caseworker was serving as a “proxy” for the police and gathering information to assist their investigation, the child’s statements to her *278 were the kind of testimonial statements to which Crawford applies. Id.
More recently, in
Davis v. Washington,
_ US _,
“Statements are nontestimonial when made in the course of police interrogation under circumstances objectively indicating that the primary purpose of the interrogation is to enable police assistance to meet an ongoing emergency. They are testimonial when the circumstances objectively indicate that there is no such ongoing emergency, and that the primary purpose of the interrogation is to establish or prove past events potentially relevant to later criminal prosecution.”
Returning to the facts of this case, we readily conclude that the children’s interview with Broderick at the Lane County Child Advocacy Center were “testimonial” under
Mack
and
Davis.
The circumstances of the interview
*279
do not differ in a meaningful way from those in
Mack.
In this case, as in that one, the interviewer interviewed and elicited statements from a young child “so that police officers could videotape them for use in a criminal proceeding.”
Mack,
Under
Davis,
the children’s videotaped statements to Broderick likewise are unquestionably testimonial, because their primary purpose was to “establish or prove past events potentially relevant to later criminal prosecution.”
Davis,
Because the statements were plainly testimonial, under
Crawford,
their admission was plainly erroneous. As we have noted, however, that does not end our analysis, because we have to decide whether to exercise our discretion to reach that error.
See State v. Cox,
Whether to exercise our discretion to do so is a case-specific inquiry that involves several factors.
Ailes,
In other cases, we have found the erroneously admitted evidence to be an essential or critical part of the state’s case. In those cases, we have exercised our discretion to review the error.
See, e.g., State v. Page,
Guided by those principles, we conclude in this case that admission of the videotapes was error sufficiently grave to warrant the exercise of our discretion to correct it. All of the state’s evidence in this case, ultimately, derived from statements of the two girls, whose credibility was the linchpin of the case. The videotapes thus served a unique and potentially critical purpose of allowing the jury to gauge firsthand the credibility of the children and assess the veracity of their accusations.
Cf. State v. Keller,
Under the circumstances of this case, therefore, we conclude that the videotapes comprised a crucial part of the state’s case and very likely played a significant role in the jury’s deliberations. For that reason, we choose to exercise our discretion to reach the trial court’s error in admitting them. Because that requires reversal, we do not reach defendant’s other assignments of error related to his conviction and sentencing.
Reversed and remanded.
