After being convicted at trial on three counts of illegal possession of firearms, Brian K. Ellis was sentenced as an armed career criminal to 300 months’ imprisonment. He now raises three issues on appeal, including one argument relying on the decision of
Crawford v. Washington,
I. HISTORY
Ellis was pulled over in Gibson County, Indiana, when a police officer noticed him driving erratically. He failed some initial field sobriety tests, but a field test for the presence of alcohol came up negative. With the officer’s prompting, Ellis agreed to go to a hospital to have his blood and urine tested for drugs.
At this point, the officer placed Ellis in custody. An inventory search of the pickup truck Ellis was driving led to the discovery of a loaded .22 caliber revolver on the driver’s side floorboard, .22 caliber ammunition scattered throughout, drug paraphernalia, and several cans of beer. The only other passenger, Bradley Ventress, was interviewed and quickly denied ownership of the gun. Ellis, who has a lengthy criminal history including three felony convictions, also disclaimed ownership of the gun.
After undergoing tests at a local hospital, Ellis was released from custody. A warrant was later issued for his arrest on a state DUI charge. That state charge was followed by a federal indictment charging Ellis with unlawful possession of a firearm. Ellis was not interested in facing the warrant or the indictment and apparently went into hiding.
About a month later, police were tipped off that Ellis was at a residence in rural Illinois near the Indiana border. The local authorities made plans to arrest him. Ellis had other plans. As the jury heard, a sheriffs deputy attempted to effect a traffic stop on Ellis after he drove away from the residence, but by the time Ellis’s car stopped, it was on fire. He then jumped out of the car with a can of Coleman fuel in his hands, which he used to feed the fire. After dousing the flames and throwing the whole fuel can into the car, Ellis ran into a cornfield. The Illinois State Police were called to assist, and in a matter of hours Ellis was arrested. When taken into custody, he had in his possession a .22 caliber Beretta and a receipt from the retailer Wal-Mart. What the jury did not hear was that before dousing his car with fuel *922 and fleeing the scene, Ellis led authorities on a harrowing car chase during which he repeatedly fired shots at the police. 1
Subsequent investigation revealed that the Wal-Mart receipt documented a recent purchase of ammunition. Federal agents traced the receipt to a store in Vincennes, Indiana, where they were able to obtain video footage (later shown to the jury) of Ellis purchasing the ammunition.
Ellis was charged by a superseding indictment with three counts. Counts I and II, both based on the initial traffic stop in Indiana, charged that he was a felon in possession in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), and a user of a controlled substance in possession of a firearm in violation of § 922(g)(3), respectively. Count III charged that Ellis was a felon in possession in violation of § 922(g)(1) based upon the events leading to his final arrest in Illinois. The indictment also alleged that Ellis would be subject to the fifteen-year mandatory minimum of § 924(e) because of his three previous felony convictions.
A trial was held on all three counts over Ellis’s motion to sever Count III. A certified copy of the results of Ellis’s blood and urine tests was introduced at trial over Ellis’s objection under Crawford. The results were introduced as business records to help prove that Ellis was a user of controlled substances. Authentication of these records was established under Federal Rule of Evidence 902(H). 2 The records were admitted during the testimony of the arresting officer. He testified that he took Ellis to the hospital and witnessed a lab technician draw blood and Ellis urinate in a cup. He also testified that the results of the urine tests were positive for methamphetamine.
The actual exhibit of medical records admitted at trial contains a number of pages, including a certification of authenticity performed by a laboratory technician at the local hospital. The exhibit also contains two forms filled out at the local hospital, which apparently accompanied Ellis’s blood and urine samples. These forms indicate that the “Collector” of the samples was a person with the first name Kristy. These forms were signed by Ellis and had a number of preprinted “Reason[s] for Test.” The box checked on Ellis’s forms indicates that the reason for his tests was “Reasonable Suspicion/Cause.” Furthermore, in the section of one of the forms indicating which tests would be performed, presumably the form accompanying Ellis’s blood, there is a handwritten note stating “Blood Drug Screen — Requested by Officer.”
The exhibit also includes pages indicating three separate tests of Ellis’s samples. An initial test of Ellis’s urine was performed by Kristy at the local hospital on the same day Ellis was there. It returned a positive result for methamphetamine. The samples were then apparently shipped out of state to two separate companies for further tests — one for blood and one for urine. Both companies produced documents — dated after Ellis’s trip to the hospital — indicating that Ellis had methamphetamine in his system.
The jury convicted on all counts. At sentencing, Ellis, relying on
United States v. Booker,
II. ANALYSIS
We can easily dispose of two of the issues. First, denial of the severance motion, which we review for abuse of discretion, was not reversible error.
See United States v. Stokes,
Second, we reject Ellis’s invitation to find error in his being sentenced as an armed career criminal on the basis that
Almendarez-Torres v. United States,
Having dealt with those issues, we are left with Ellis’s argument relying on
Crawford
attacking the admission of the medical records establishing the presence of methamphetamine in his system. Evidentiary rulings affecting a defendant’s right to confront witnesses are reviewed de novo.
United States v. Gilbertson,
But we are not without guidance. The prototypical case of testimonial evidence is that created by the civil-law tradition of a judicial officer examining a witness in private and then later reporting the results in court.
Crawford,
On the other end of the spectrum, the Court in
Crawford
explicitly noted, quite importantly for this case, that business records “by their nature were not testimonial.”
Id.
at 56,
The disputed tests were introduced as a business record under Federal Rules of Evidence 803(6) and 902(11), and we note that Ellis has advanced no argument here or objection below under those rules. His only claim of error is under Crawford. Neither his argument here nor his objection below were particularly well-developed. Nevertheless, we will construe his argument as one directed not only to the business records themselves, but also to the certification of those records pursuant to Rule 902(11). We will consider these in turn.
A. The Business Records of the Underlying Medical Tests
Faced with the obvious obstacle of the Court’s designation of business records as nontestimonial, Ellis attacks the underlying medical records by arguing that they were created not because of routine medical procedures, but because of a government investigation. What we gather from this argument is that most business records would by their very nature have been created prior to any investigation of criminal activity, and that these are the type of business records the Court had in mind. The records used against Ellis, however, might be considered testimonial because they were created under police supervision and during an investigation for the purpose of determining whether a crime had been committed.
Whether a statement was made with an eye toward prosecution, that is, with the knowledge or for the purpose that it would be used later for prosecution, is an important aspect of delineating between testimonial and nontestimonial evidence. Two of the possible definitions of testimonial provided by the Court in
Crawford
focus on this circumstance.
See Crawford,
We, in fact, have previously rejected a
Crawford
argument on the basis that the challenged statements (certified certificates of vehicle titles, including odometer statements used to prove fraud) were “not testimonial because they were not made with the respective declarants having an eye towards criminal prosecution.”
United States v. Gilbertson,
Given the focus of the courts of appeals and our own precedent on the declarant’s reasonable expectations of whether a statement would be used prosecutorially, Ellis may appear to be on strong ground in arguing that the results of his medical tests were testimonial. It must have been obvious to Kristy (the laboratory technician at the local hospital) that her test results might end up as evidence against Ellis in some kind of trial. After all, she indicated on the form that the reason for the tests was “Reasonable Suspicion/Cause.” Moreover, the police officer’s participation in initiating these tests — the officer accompanied Ellis to the hospital and even watched him urinate in a cup— would also have led Kristy to believe that her test results would be used for criminal prosecution. The same might go for the professionals performing the tests out of state. The forms which we assume accompanied. the samples bore the ominous “Reasonable Suspicion/Cause” indication checked by Kristy, and the blood sample form also had the. notation that it was “Requested by Officer.”
Nevertheless, we do not think these circumstances transform what is otherwise a nontestimonial business record into a testimonial statement implicating the Confrontation Clause. There is no indication that the observations embodied in Ellis’s medical records were made in anything but the ordinary course of business. Such observations, the Court in
Crawford
made clear, are nontestimonial.
We agree with these courts that the mere fact a person creating a business record (or other similar record) knows the record might be used for criminal prosecution does not by itself make that record testimonial. The Court’s recent decision in Davis (though we recognize the Court made no such pronouncement) supports this conclusion because we think it necessarily rejects a strict adherence to denominating as testimonial all statements made under circumstances where a reasonable person would know the statements might be used as evidence of a crime.
In
Davis,
the Court addressed a statement made by a woman to a 911 operator reporting she had been assaulted.
While the medical professionals in this case might have thought their observations would end up as evidence in a criminal prosecution, the objective circumstances of this case indicate that their observations and statements introduced at trial were made in nothing else but the ordinary course of business. Therefore, when these professionals made those observations,
*927
they — like the declarant reporting an emergency in
Davis
— were
“not
acting as ...
witnesses];
” and were “not
testifying.” See Davis,
B. Certification Pursuant to Rule 902(11)
Prior to
Crawford,
we held that Rule 803(6) remained a firmly rooted exception to the hearsay rule, and, therefore, did not violate the Confrontation Clause despite the then-recent amendment allowing authentication by written certification pursuant to Rule 902(11).
See United States v. Klinzing,
As should be clear, we do not find as controlling the fact that a certification of authenticity under 902(11) is made in anticipation of litigation. What is compelling is that
Crawford
expressly identified business records as nontestimonial evidence.
Crawford,
The certification at issue in this case is nothing more than the custodian of records at the local hospital attesting that the submitted documents are actually records kept in the ordinary course of business at the hospital. The statements do not purport to convey information about Ellis, but merely establish the existence of the procedures necessary to create a business record. They are made by the custodian of records, an employee of the business, as part of her job. As such, we hold that the written certification entered into evidence pursuant to Rule 902(11) is nontestimonial just as the underlying business records are. Both of these pieces of evidence are too far removed from the “principal evil at which the Confrontation Clause was directed” to be considered testimonial.
Crawford,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reason, Ellis’s convictions and sentence are Affirmed.
Notes
. The district court judge granted Ellis's motion in limine to preclude any mention at trial of him shooting at the police. At sentencing, the local sheriff testified to being shot at by Ellis.
. Before trial, the government complied with Rule 902(11) and provided written notice of its intent to offer the medical records by a written declaration of the custodian. Ellis did not challenge the authenticity of the records.
. The justice dissenting in the Supreme Court of Washington’s ruling in
State v. Davis
found the statements to be testimonial in large part because the 911 caller had to have known her call would be used prosecutorially.
