INTRODUCTION
T1 Travis Timmerman was charged with attempted rape, forcible sexual abuse, and assault. At the preliminary hearing, the vice-tim, Mrs. Timmerman, invoked her spousal privilege not to testify against her husband. The State then introduced into evidence Mrs. Timmerman's previous statements to the police and to a sexual assault nurse. With those statements, the magistrate bound Mr. Timmerman over for trial. Mr. Timmerman subsequently filed a motion to quash the bindover. The district court denied the motion and held that the admission of Mrs. Timmerman's statements did not violate Mr. Timmerman's constitutional rights or Mrs. Timmerman's spousal testimonial privilege. Mr. Timmerman now appeals the district court's denial of his motion. We are asked to consider whether the Confrontation Clauses of the United States Constitution and Utah Constitution apply to preliminary hearings and whether the spousal testimonial privilege embodied in the Utah Constitution applies to a spouse's voluntary, out-of-court statements. We affirm the trial court.
BACKGROUND
12 During the early morning hours of June 80, 2007, the Timmermans' neighbor heard a woman screaming "Stop it!" and "Help me!" The neighbor thought the screams came from the Timmermans' house. Around 7:00 a.m., the neighbor notified the police. Officer McLelland responded and spoke with Mrs. Timmerman. During their conversation, Officer McLelland observed bruises on her arms and face. He asked Mrs. Timmerman to fill out a witness statement. In her three-page statement, Mrs. Timmerman wrote that Mr. Timmerman repeatedly hit her and tried to force her to have anal and vaginal intercourse.
13 Another police officer, Detective Harding, interviewed Mrs. Timmerman and asked her to submit to a sexual assault examination at the hospital. When Mrs. Timmer-man arrived at the hospital, a sexual assault nurse examined her and filled out a Sexual Assault Nurse Examination (SANE) report. In the report, the nurse cataloged Mrs. Tim-merman's bruises and her statements that Mr. Timmerman hit her and tried to have forced sex with her.
T4 Mr. Timmerman was charged with attempted rape, a first-degree felony; forcible sexual abuse, a second-degree felony; and assault, a class B misdemeanor. 1 At the preliminary hearing, the State called Mrs. Timmerman as a witness, but she invoked her spousal privilege not to testify against her husband. Instead, Officer MeLelland and Detective Harding testified for the State, and the State introduced Mrs. Timmerman's witness statement and SANE report. Mr. Timmerman objected to the admission of the statement and the report on the grounds that they violated Mrs. Timmerman's spousal *593 privilege and Mr. Timmerman's confrontation rights under the federal and state constitutions. The magistrate admitted both doeu-ments and bound Mr. Timmerman over for trial.
T5 In his motion to quash the bindover before the district court, Mr. Timmerman argued that his confrontation rights under the federal and state constitutions were violated because he could not cross-examine Mrs. Timmerman at the preliminary hearing regarding her out-of-court statements. He also argued that the magistrate had ignored Mrs. Timmerman's spousal privilege when he admitted her out-of-court statements into evidence. Without Mrs. Timmerman's statements, there was insufficient evidence to bind Mr. Timmerman over for trial on the attempted rape charge. The district court held that confrontation rights under the federal and state constitutions do not apply to preliminary hearings and that out-of-court statements made by spouses to third parties are not excluded under the spousal testimonial privilege.
T 6 Mr. Timmerman subsequently filed this interlocutory appeal. We have jurisdiction pursuant to Utah Code section 78A-3-102(8)(h) (2008).
STANDARD OF REVIEW
T7 Interpretations of federal and state constitutions are questions of law. Grand County v. Emery County,
ANALYSIS
18 Mr. Timmerman argues that the right to confrontation in preliminary hearings is guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution and by article 1, section 12 of the Utah Constitution. He also argues that the spousal testimonial privilege found in the Utah Constitution prevents the use of out-of-court, voluntary statements.
I. THE CONFRONTATION CLAUSES OF THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION AND THE UTAH CONSTTI-TUTION DO NOT APPLY TO PRELIMINARY HEARINGS
A. The Sixth Amendment Does Not Require Confrontation at State Preliminary Hearings
{9 The Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution, which applies to both federal and state eriminal prosecutions, grants the accused "the right ... to be confronted with the witnesses against him." U.S. Const. amend. VI See Crawford v. Washington,
T 10 Crawford's holding does not extend to preliminary hearings in state proceedings. In State v. Rhinehart, the court of appeals held that Sixth Amendment confrontation rights apply only to trials and not to Utah's preliminary hearings.
€ 11 Mr. Timmerman argues that the decision in Rhinehart was incorrect and should be reversed. He faults the court of appeals for its reliance on two Supreme Court cases: Pennsylvania v. Ritchie, and Gerstein v. Pugh. Specifically, Mr. Timmerman argues that the court of appeals improperly relied on Ritchie because it was a plurality opinion. However, in citing to Ritchie, the court of appeals also cited to two majority opinions, Barber v. Page and California v. Green, that explicitly limited confrontation rights to trial. We agree with the court of appeals that Barber, Green, and Ritchie establish Supreme Court precedent confining the Sixth Amendment Confrontation Clause to trial.
"12 Mr. Timmerman also asserts that the court of appeals improperly relied on Gerstein. He argues first that the case is not on point, but that if it is on point, language therein supports full rights of confrontation at preliminary hearings because the opinion contemplates a difference between the nature of a probable cause determination at an arraignment as opposed to a preliminary hearing. See
113 Accordingly, we hold that the federal Confrontation Clause does not apply to preliminary hearings. In so doing, we note that a substantial number of jurisdictions have reached the same conclusion. 2
*595 B. The Right to Confront Witnesses at a Preliminary Hearing No Longer Exists Because of the Amendment to Article 1, Section 12 of the Utah Constitution
T 14 Pursuant to article I, section 12 of the Utah Constitution, the accused has the right to "be confronted by the witnesses against him." In 1980, this court analyzed the application of Utah's Confrontation Clause to preliminary hearings and held that "a strict reading of the language of Section 12 would provide the accused the entire panoply of guaranteed rights at the preliminary examination." State v. Amderson,
Nothing in this constitution shall preclude the use of reliable hearsay evidence as defined by statute or rule in whole or in part at any preliminary examination to determine probable cause or at any pretrial proceeding with respect to release of the defendant if appropriate discovery is allowed as defined by statute or rule.
Utah Const. art. I, § 12. Rule 1102(a) of the Utah Rules of Evidence codified the amendment: "Reliable hearsay is admissible at criminal preliminary examinations." Mr. Timmerman, nonetheless, argues that confrontation rights should apply at preliminary hearings because of the continuing viability of Anderson and the historical application of confrontation rights to preliminary hearings prior to the constitutional amendment.
1 15 The plain language of the amendment expressly allows reliable hearsay in preliminary hearings. By allowing hearsay, the amendment clearly removed confrontation rights from the preliminary hearing stage and overruled Anderson's holding on this point. The Advisory Committee note to Utah Rule of Evidence 1102 acknowledges as much: "To the extent that State v. Anderson prohibited the use of hearsay evidence at preliminary examinations, that case has been abrogated." (Citations omitted). Although we have recently cited to Anderson, these references have been for the proposition that the purpose of a preliminary hearing is to ferret out groundless claims. See Virgin,
116 In sum, we hold that the plain language of the 1995 amendment to article I, section 12 of the Utah Constitution removed *596 the constraints of Utah's Confrontation Clause from preliminary hearings. Admission of evidence at preliminary hearings is exclusively governed by the reliable hearsay language in the Utah Constitution and rule 1102 of the Utah Rules of Evidence. 3
II. THE TRIAL COURT PROPERLY DENIED THE MOTION TO QUASH BECAUSE THE CONSTITUTIONAL SPOUSAL TESTIMONIAL PRIVILEGE APPLIES ONLY TO COMPELLED, IN-COURT TESTIMONY
T17 Mr. Timmerman argues that the trial court erred when it allowed Mrs. Timmer-man's out-of-court statements into evidence even though Mrs. Timmerman invoked her spousal privilege not to testify against her husband. Utah recognizes two different spousal privileges: the spousal testimonial privilege and the spousal communications privilege. The spousal testimonial privilege is defined in article I, section 12 of the Utah Constitution: "[A] wife shall not be compelled to testify against her husband, nor a husband against his wife." The Utah Rules of Evidence codifies the privilege in rule 502(a). In contrast, the spousal communications privilege, as codified in Utah Code seetion 78B-1-~187 and Rule 502(b) of the Utah Rules of Evidence, protects confidential communications between spouses during their marriage. However, the accused spouse cannot invoke the spousal communications privilege if the accused spouse is charged with a crime. Utah R. Evid. 502(b)(4)(C). Mr. Timmerman argues that the privileges were violated, but since Mr. Timmerman is accused of a crime against his spouse, he cannot invoke the spousal communications privilege. See Utah R. Evid. 502(b)(4)(C)@). Hence, only the spousal testimonial privilege is at issue here.
118 Mr. Timmerman argues that Mrs. Timmerman's out-of-court statements were improperly admitted after she invoked her spousal testimonial privilege. Mr. Tim-merman relies on the following language from this court's decision in State v. Carter: "The State is free to interrogate and receive information from a witness spouse on any matter, including confidential communications, so long as the witness spouse's statement is not introduced into evidence at trial over the objections of the accused spouse."
Article I, section 12 of the Utah Constitution provides, "[A] wife shall not be compelled to testify against her husband." In examining the language of the privilege, we recognize that a privilege should be "strictly construed in accordance with its object," Jackson v. Kennecott Copper Corp.,
120 The purpose of the spousal testimonial privilege is to foster "the harmony and sanctity of the marriage relationship." Trommel v. United States,
$21 Construing the privilege strict, ly, according to its plain language and in light of its purpose, we interpret the spousal testimonial privilege to apply only to compelled testimony, or in other words, involuntary, in-court testimony. We believe this narrow interpretation of the privilege will not serve to exclude relevant testimony or extend the privilege beyond its narrow purpose. Further, admitting an out-of-court statement into evidence does not force one spouse to testify against the other or tempt the testifying spouse to commit perjury.
122 Criticism of the spousal testimonial privilege further bolsters this narrow interpretation. The privilege enables "abusers to silence their victims" and makes the testifying spouse "vulnerable to coercion from the defendant-spouse and his lawyer." Amanda H. Frost, Updating the Marital Privileges: A Witness-Centered Rationale, 14 Wis. Women's L.J. 1, 34 (1999). Similarly, the Advisory Committee of the Utah Rules of Evidence is convinced that the justifications for the spousal testimonial privilege are insufficient: "[The privilege] does not promote marital felicity, is based on the outmoded concept that the husband and wife are one, and causes suppression of relevant evidence." Utah R. Evid. 502 advisory comm. note. The Advisory Committee recommends that only the spousal communications privilege be preserved and the spousal testimonial privilege be repealed. However, such a change is dependent on a constitutional amendment to article I, section 12 that would remove the spousal testimonial privilege.
¶23 In this case, the introduction of Mrs. Timmerman's statements into evidence at the preliminary hearing did not violate her spousal testimonial privilege, which protects a spouse from giving involuntary, in-court statements. Mrs. Timmerman was not forced to testify at the preliminary hearing. She invoked her privilege and was dismissed from the witness stand. In lieu of her in-court testimony, the State introduced Mrs. Timmerman's witness statement and her statements in the SANE report. Mrs. Tim-merman made those statements voluntarily. She was not forced to attend a sexual assault examination or write a witness statement. Because the statements were neither compelled nor in-court, the spousal testimonial privilege does not apply.
§ 24 We also note that barring the statements would not comport with the justifications for the privilege. Whatever degree of marital harmony that previously existed between the Timmermans was most likely absent when Mrs. Timmerman voluntarily gave her statements to the police and to the sexual assault nurse. Blocking her statements from admission into evidence at the preliminary hearing would promote excluding relevant evidence more than it would promote marital harmony. Furthermore, Mrs. Timmerman was not placed in a position where she had to choose either to perjure herself or harm her husband because she was not forced to testify in court. 4
*598 125 Because the spousal testimonial privilege does not apply to the voluntary, out-of-court statements given to the police and to the sexual assault nurse, the trial court properly held that the spousal testimonial privilege was not violated and denied the motion to quash the bindover. 5 We therefore affirm.
Notes
. Mr. Timmerman was also charged with commission of domestic violence in the presence of a child, but the magistrate dismissed that charge at the preliminary hearing.
. See Whitman v. Superior Court,
. We also reject Mr. Timmerman's argument that hearsay, in order to be reliable, must be subject to cross-examination. His argument hinges on Crawford's discussion of testing reliability by cross-examination. However, Crawford discusses reliability in the context of a witness's statement introduced at trial being subjected to cross-examination at some point. Crawford v. Washington,
. Although out-of-court, voluntary statements may be used at a preliminary hearing despite the invocation of the spousal testimonial privilege, we recognize that those same statements may conflict with the Confrontation Clauses of both the federal and state constitutions if introduced at trial; in such cases, the statements could only be admitted if the declarant was unavailable and the defendant had a prior opportunity to cross-examine. See Crawford,
. Mr. Timmerman also argues in iwo paragraphs that the witness statement and the SANE report lacked proper foundation. We decline to address the issue because it was inadequately briefed. See Loveland v. Orem City Corp.,
