OPINION
Dоnald Williams appeals the revocation of his placement in home detention. Williams raises one issue, which we revise and restate as whether the trial court abused its discretion by admitting a urinalysis report and a home detention monitoring report into evidence. We аffirm.
The relevant facts follow. On March 28, 2009, Williams pled guilty to operating a vehicle while intoxicated as a class A misdemeanor and admitted to being an habitual substance offender. Williams was given an aggregate sentence of four years in home detention with the Hoch Corrеctional Consultants & Services Home Detention Program ("HOCCS") and 205 days suspended to probation. On February 2, 2010, Erich Hoch, president of HOCCS, filed a notice of violation of home detention stemming from a urinalysis drug sereen on February 1, 2010, in which Williams tested positive for marijuana. On February 10, 2010, Hoch filеd an addendum to the notice of violation. 1
On March 19, 2010, the trial court held a hearing on Williams's notices of violation, including the positive drug sereen, that Williams "tampered with the home detention field monitoring telephone device by failing to maintain a service-a monitoring device connected to a telephone service," and that he "was not present at a field visit by the Marion County Sheriff's warrant division on Friday, February 5th, 2010, at 11:50 A.M."
2
Transeript at 10, 18. At the hearing, Williams, by counsel, initially admitted to the violation that he was not present during the field visit on February
Regarding the Urinalysis - Report, Williams objected and stated that "there's no reliability of the test at issue. I don't know who performed the test, I don't know who filled out that document, and I don't believe this witness is the proper witness to enter that document in." Transcript at 9. The State responded that "[the rules of evidence аre laxed [sic] and the hearsay can come in.... [Todd has] explained where the document came from, how it originated...." Id. at 9-10. The court asked Todd who performed the test, and he responded that "Eric Hoch, himself," did so. Id. at 10. Todd also noted that Hoch's signature appears on Exhibit 1 as the person who collected and tested the specimen. The court overruled the objection.
Todd also testified regarding Exhibit 2 and stated that the report showed:
[Williams] was in mis-calling, which means that ... our monitoring device was disconnected from the telephone line. And later in the day it would be plugged back in and then we have a hello, which means that our monitoring device is being monitored by the B.I. monitoring company, the connection has been reestablished.
Id. at 12. Williams objected to Exhibit 2 because it "is a third-party document ... and there's nоt been a proper foundation laid...." Id. at 18. The State responded that "relevancy has been laid out and a foundation has been made," and the court overruled Williams's objection. Id.
After hearing the evidence presented, the court sentenced Williams to serve the remainder of the executed portion of his sentence, or 749 days, in the Marion County Jail. Id. at 21. The court noted that it did not "have any documentation regarding [Williams] going to work and he did test positive for marijuana consumption." Id. The court did not alter the suspended portion of Williаms's sentence of 205 days to probation following the executed portion of the sentence.
The issue is whether the trial court abused its discretion by admitting the Urinalysis Report and the Daily Summary into evidence. Regarding the Urinalysis Report, Williams argues that "there is inadequate evidence to support a foundation of trustworthiness" because "[nlo evidence demonstrates the test method used, margin for error or qualifications of the person performing the test." Appellant's Brief at 7. Williams argues that "there was no information about [Eric Hoch's] technical qualifications or of [the] urinalysis process utilized." Id. at 8. Regarding the Daily Summary, Williams argues that "the foundation of trustworthiness was not estab
Generally, we review the trial court's ruling on the admission or exclusion of evidence for an abuse of discretion. Roche v. State,
For purposes of appellate review, we treat a hearing on a petition to revoke a placement of in home detention the same as we do a hearing on a petition to revoke probation. Brooks v. State,
The Due Process Clause applies to probation revocation hearings. Reyes v. State,
The due process right applicable in probation revocation hearings allows for procedures that are more flexible than in a criminal prosecution. Id. Such flexibility allows courts to enforee lawful orders, address an offender's personal circumstances, and protect public safety, sometimes within limited time periods. Id. Within this framework, and to promote the aforementioned goals of a probation revocation hearing, courts may admit evidence during probation revocation hearings that would not be permitted in a full-blown eriminal trial. Id.; see also Ind. Evidence Rule 101(c)(2) ("The rules [of evidence] ... do not apply ... [to] [plroceedings relating to ... probation...."). "This does not mean that hearsay evidence may be admitted willy-nilly in a probation revocation hearing." Id.
In Reyes, the Indiana Supreme Court acknowledged that there are multiple tests employed by courts to decide whether spеcific hearsay evidence may be admitted without violating a probationer's right to confront a witness against him or her. Id. at 441. The Court adopted the substantial trustworthiness test for determining the hearsay evidence that should be admitted at a probation revocation hearing. Id. This test requires that the trial court evaluate the reliability of the hearsay evidence. Id. The Court stated that "ideally [the trial court should explain] on the record why the hearsay [is] reliable and why that reliability [is] substantial enough to supply good cause for not producing ... live witnesses." Id. at 442 (citation omitted). The Court adopted the substantial trustworthiness test to promote "flexibility" and avoid "the potentially onerous consequences of mandating a balancing inquiry for every piece of hearsay evidence in every probation revocation heаring" and that there was "no reason to require that the State expend its resources to demonstrate that its interest in not producing the de-
Here, we initially note that Williams admitted to one of the charged violations, that he was not present during the field visit, and that "[pJroof of any one violation is sufficient to revoke a defendant's probаtion." Figures v. State,
We also find that the trial court had sufficient information to deem the State's exhibits substantially trustworthy. For the Urinalysis Report, the court asked Todd who performed the test, and Todd answered that it was Eric Hoch, the president of HOCCS. Williams points out that in Reyes, the Court relied upon the lab scientific director's "resume and references to his involvement in the analysis ... [which] supported the finding of the аffidavits('] trustworthiness." Appellant's Brief at 8. However, in Reyes the issue concerned affidavits giving scientific opinion "that George Reyes would have had to use: cocaine some time in the 72 hours prior to collection," to which Reyes objected "as hearsay and violativе of Reyes's due process right to confrontation." - Reyes,
In this case, the State did not admit any opinion evidence and merely admitted a routine - report - demonstrating - that Williams had tested positive for marijuana. The Urinalysis Report was performed by Eric Hoch, who was the president of HOCCS, the company handling Williams's home detention. The Urinalysis Report contained a signed chain of custody which was signed by Williams and Hoch. Todd Williams, an еmployee of HOCCS, testified at the hearing and explained the Urinalysis Report to the court, including the fact that the specimen was provided on February 1, 2010, at 8:30 a.m.
The Daily Summary, documenting Williams's compliance with his electronic monitoring, was also substantially trustworthy evidence. As Todd Williams testified, the summary was prepared by BI Ine., which is the monitoring company HOCCS works with to handle home detention monitoring devices for its home detention clients. Todd explained to the court that the summary "explains ... the different transactions that our clients go through during a typical dаy," that this summary was specific to Williams, and that the summary details "several" in
Although the trial court did not make an explicit determinаtion of substantial trustworthiness on the record, we observe that the failure to do so is not fatal where the record supports such a determination. See Reyes,
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the revocation of Williams's probation.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The notices of violation are not contained in the record on appeal.
. Initially, the State also alleged a fourth notice of violation that Williams "failed to remain [sic] the home detention equipment plugged into the telephone service as of Sunday, February 7th. And at that time he was considered an absconder...." Transcript at 14. However, the State withdrew that allegation.
