A jury convicted defendant of unlawful possession of methamphetamine, ORS 475.894, and unlawful delivery of methamphetamine within 1,000 feet of a school, ORS 475.892.
Our review to determine whether an evidentiary error was harmless requires us to review all pertinent portions of the record. State v. Sierra-Depina,
Connor questioned Chase after defendant’s departure and searched the bag that defendant had left with her. The bag contained about 20 grams of methamphetamine and related paraphernalia, including two glass pipes with white methamphetamine-like residue on them and a leather case with “M Watts” (defendant’s first initial and last name) written on it. During questioning, Chase told Connor that she had set up methamphetamine deals in the past and was at the restaurant setting up a methamphetamine deal for defendant.
Officer Rilee testified at trial that, based on his training and experience, defendant’s pauses during their conversation indicated deception:
“I asked * * * if he’d ever been with somebody that had purchased methamphetamine or if he has ever purchased methamphetamine. I asked [defendant] if he had ever sold methamphetamine. And then after another pause I received a reply of, ‘No.’”
After answering questions about his training in analyzing answers to interview questions, Rilee gave the following testimony:
“[Prosecutor]: Given [your interrogation] training and experience, did you use any of that education as it relates to what you saw in [defendant’s] responses to you?
“[Rilee]: Yes. I have been trained to look at all facets of a person’s answers that they give; the verbal cues, the tone and pitch of their voice, the, you know — whether or not they’re sitting closed up and they’re not accepting anything you tell them or whether they’re open and looking at you and they seem receptive to your questioning.
“As far as when I interview somebody and I’m getting answers right away and keep getting answers right away— there’s no pausing — as soon as I ask another question and there’s a pause—
«* * * * *
“When I asked a question, after numerous immediate answers and somebody pauses, that’s an indicator to me that there’s a deceptive answer.”
(Emphasis added). Defendant’s counsel unsuccessfully objected to those statements. The judge later instructed the jury that
On appeal, defendant contends that Rilee’s testimony was an improper comment on credibility. See State v. Lowell,
A judgment of conviction will be affirmed, despite the erroneous admission of evidence, if there is little likelihood that the error affected the verdict. State v. Davis,
Here, we cannot conclude that the erroneous admission of Rilee’s testimony was harmless. The focus of our harmless error analysis is the jury’s determination that defendant knowingly possessed and delivered methamphetamine under ORS 475.892. As the jury was instructed, a necessary element of both counts is a finding that defendant
To find defendant guilty, the jury must have found that defendant acted with knowledge. If the jury believed Chase, it would believe that defendant acted with full knowledge that the bag contained methamphetamine. However, if the jury believed defendant, it would believe that defendant had no knowledge of the methamphetamine or paraphernalia recovered that day. Thus, the jury had to assess credibility in order to determine whether or not defendant acted with the requisite knowledge. In these circumstances, Rilee’s testimony regarding defendant’s credibility was likely to be harmful. See Lowell,
Further, the jury’s determination was likely affected by Rilee’s testimony that he had the training and experience to make such a credibility determination. See id. (explaining that there was a significant risk that a detective’s testimony that a defendant was not credible affected the jury’s verdict because it was couched in terms of his expertise and training in detecting untruthfulness). In view of those circumstances, we cannot conclude that there is little likelihood that the error affected the verdict.
Convictions for unlawful possession of methamphetamine and unlawful delivery of methamphetamine within 1,000 feet of a school reversed and remanded; otherwise affirmed.
Notes
The jury also acquitted defendant of two related charges: unlawful possession of a firearm, ORS 166.250, and unlawful manufacture of methamphetamine, ORS 475.886.
The court’s jury instruction defined “knowingly” as an act carried out “with an awareness either that his conduct is of a particular nature or that a particular circumstance exists.”
