Defendant-appellee, Robert Anthony Scotland (hereinafter appellee), was indicted by the Kauai Grand Jury for the offense of promoting a harmful drug in the first degree in violation of § 1244(1) (d) of the Hawaii Penal Code, as enacted by Act 9, Session Laws of Hawaii 1972. 1 The trial court quashed the indictment upon appellee’s motion and the State appeals. We reverse and remand the case for further proceedings.
We have scrutinized the transcript of the testimony received by the grand jury as to a narcotics trafficking investigation leading to the incident constituting the offense mentioned in the indictment. Such an examination reveals that a certain statement was made by the latter of two witnesses who appeared before the grand jury. In the course of his examination, the deputy prosecutor asked the second witness, a police detective: “Q: Will you tell the members of the grand jury the facts and circumstances under which you met with Officer Barry Born?” In response thereto, the witness replied: “A: Earlier we decided to work a case against this Scotland. We knew he had been pushing drugs.” 2 The trial court found that the latter sentence of the answer had a tendency to prejudice the appellee before the grand jury and granted his motion to dismiss the indictment.
Our review of the transcript of the evidence which was
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before the grand jury demonstrates, and we find, that there was more than sufficient legal and competent evidence for the grand jury to find probable cause that the appellee violated HRS § 712-1244(1) (d) (Special Pamphlet). By probable cause, we mean “[s]uch a state of facts as would lead a man of ordinary caution or prudence to believe, and conscientiously entertain a strong suspicion of guilt of the accused.
"Malleck v. Superior Court,
We have held that where sufficient legal and competent evidence is presented to a grand jury, the reception of illegal or incompetent evidence would not authorize the court to set aside an indictment if the remaining legal evidence, considered as a whole, is sufficient to warrant the indictment.
State v. Hassard,
It is not contended by appellee that the grand jury was “illegally constituted,”
Costello v. United States,
We hold that in proceedings determining the validity of an indictment, the state does not have the burden of proving that
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the alleged illegal or improper testimony is not prejudicial; it is the duty of the defendant to come forward and present a case proving prejudice. “[I]n the absence of proof, the court will not assume or conjecture, as a matter of fact, that the grand jury deliberations were so infected as to invalidate the indictment.”
United States v. Hoffa,
If the illegal or improper testimony clearly appears to have improperly influenced the grand jurors despite the presence of sufficient evidence amounting to probable cause to indict the defendant, he would be entitled to a dismissal.
People v. Barbour,
The appellee argues that our ruling in Joao controls in the instant case. In that case we found that the prosecutors by attesting to the credibility of a witness to be presented to the grand jury bolstered that sole witness’s testimony thereby prejudicing the defendant. Furthermore, we held in that case that an express finding by the trial court that “the grand jury might not have returned an indictment had the prosecutor not made the statement” established a tendency to prejudice; and that it was unnecessary to prove that the grand jury was in fact influenced by such statement. We are satisfied that the facts in Joao and this case are dissimilar. Aside from the fact that the prosecutor’s question did not amount to misconduct, there is no finding in this case by the trial court that the grand jury might not have returned an indictment if the improper statement had not been made.
Appellee also contends on the basis of
People v. Hargrove,
Reversed, the indictment is reinstated and this cause is remanded for further proceedings.
Notes
The text of the revised Title 37 of the Hawaii Revised Statutes which contains the Hawaii Penal Code, as enacted by Act 9, Session Laws of Hawaii 1972, is now contained in Hawaii Revised Statutes, Special Pamphlet. Therein §1244(1) (d) has been designated §712-1244(1) (d).
One definition for the word “push” given in Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary, 1973, is “c: to engage in the illicit sale of (narcotics).”
