UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Tremale Odale HENRY, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 15-6181
United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit.
Filed February 3, 2017
847 F.3d 1204
Timothy W. Ogilvie, Assistant U.S. Attorney (Mark A. Yancey, Acting U.S. Attorney, with him on the brief), Office of the U.S. Attorney, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Before GORSUCH, BALDOCK, and PHILLIPS, Circuit Judges.
What began as a fight at a strip club finds its way here as a clash over hearsay. Three years ago, Tremale Henry finished a prison sentence for violating federal drug laws and began a five year term of supervised release. As a condition of his release Mr. Henry had to refrain from committing further crimes. But last summer he was arrested for assaulting another man outside Night Trips, an Oklahoma City night club. And at the probation revocation hearing that followed the district court found Mr. Henry responsible for two separate assaults with a dangerous weapon. In the first assault, the court found that Mr. Henry swung a knife at his victim but missed. In the second assault an hour later, the court found that Mr. Henry struck again, this time successfully stabbing his victim. The court found each assault independently sufficient to warrant revocation of Mr. Henry‘s supervised release. It then concluded that the two assaults, along with a third violation for lying to his probation officer, collectively warranted a new prison term of 24 months followed by six further years of supervised release. On appeal Mr. Henry argues that the district court impermissibly relied on hearsay in reaching its judgment, but with this we can only partially agree.
Take the first assault first. In finding that Mr. Henry committed this assault the district court relied largely on statements from Candace Ramsey. Ms. Ramsey testified at the revocation hearing that she saw Mr. Henry lunge at his victim with a small object, though she said she couldn‘t see exactly what the object was. Meanwhile, a probation officer took the stand to relate that, before the hearing, Ms. Ramsey told him she had, in fact, seen Mr. Henry use a knife. The district court apparently credited this hearsay. The court also said it relied on a surveillance video. To be sure, the video “was of poor quality” and it is not possible to discern a knife. But the video does show Mr. Henry making a rapid movement toward the victim, followed by witnesses fleeing the area, and the court found this reaction consistent with a violent assault involving a dangerous weapon. In reaching its judgment, the district court considered as well testimony from the defendant‘s own witnesses who suggested that the victim “deserved what happened to him that night” and that there was “ill will” between the two men. Taken together, the court found, these facts established Mr. Henry indeed committed the first assault with a dangerous weapon.
We see no problem with the district court‘s findings here. Mr. Henry doesn‘t object to the use of the video, to Ms. Ramsey‘s live testimony, or to the district judge acting as fact-finder. His only qualm is with the court‘s apparent reliance on Ms. Ramsey‘s hearsay statement, relayed by the probation officer, that she had seen a knife. But the fact is that “the usual rules of evidence need not be applied” in revocation hearings. See
In the face of all this, Mr. Henry attempts a reply along these lines. He notes that
This reply, however, overstates the reach of the rule. For neither
So it is Mr. Henry has no valid complaint under
The government doesn‘t dispute any of this. Instead, it tries to work around the problem by pointing to the district court‘s statement that the admission of hearsay from absent witnesses in this case was designed to serve the “interest of justice,” a phrase used in the text of
We cannot quite agree. The government can‘t (and doesn‘t) dispute that Jones offers controlling guidance concerning how district courts should go about determining if the “interest of justice” permits the introduction of hearsay from absent witnesses. Neither does (or can) the government dispute that Jones generally demands the application of a balancing test, or that the advisory note to
The question remains, of course, whether the error here proved harmless. See
But though attractive on first blush, closer scrutiny reveals problems with this argument too. It‘s certainly true, as the government notes, that the district court found each assault independently sufficient to warrant revocation. But after doing that much the court proceeded to consider both of these violations together when fashioning its sentence, adding to the mix a third violation not challenged here (Mr. Henry‘s lies to his probation officer). And on the record before us, we simply cannot disaggregate what role, if any, the second violation played in the district court‘s final sentencing decision. To be
On remand, the district court‘s options remain considerable. It might engage in a new sentencing analysis without relying on the second assault as a second independent probation violation. It might conduct a Jones balancing test and determine the hearsay from absent witnesses was, indeed, properly considered in finding the second assault took place. It might conduct the Jones test, determine that the hearsay from absent witnesses it entertained was not properly considered, and conduct a new hearing on the second assault. Or it might consider even a still different path. We do not encourage or prejudge the propriety of any potential remedial avenue, but hold only that on the record before us the failure to conduct a Jones balancing test cannot be dismissed as harmless error.3
Remanded.
