Lead Opinion
OPINION
T1 Thе Appellant, Christopher Wortham, has appealed to this Court from an order of the District Court of Oklahoma County, entered by the Honorable Jerry D. Bass, District Judge, revoking Appellant's suspended sentence in Case No. CF-1995-2711. In that case, Appellant entered a plea of guilty, pursuant to a plea agreement, to the offense of Robbery With a Firearm. He was convicted and sentenced to a term of twenty-five (25) years, with all except the first eight (8) years suspended under rules and conditions of probation.
T2 On June 5, 2006, the State filed an application to revoke Appellant's suspended sentences alleging that he violated probation by committing the new erimes of ten counts of Rape in the First Degree, and four counts of Sexual Abuse of a Child, as charged in Oklahoma County District Court Case No. CF-2005-6074.
13 At the revocation hearing, the only evidence offered by the State was the preliminary hearing transcript from Case No. CF-2005-6074, and State's Exhibit #1, a DNA paternity report. The DNA was from a baby of one of the victims who got pregnant when she was eleven or twelve years old, which established a "99.99 something" percent probability that Appellant was the father.
T4 Counsel for Appellant objected to the DNA report on confrontation grounds. Judge Bass denied the objection stating that hearsay is admissible, and is competent evidence as against Appellant. Counsel for Appellant also objected to the use of the preliminary hearing transcript from Case No. CF-2005-6074 on several different grounds. As reflected in the transcript, Appellant's objection pertinent to this appeal stated that the "[plreliminary hearing judge, Judge Hubbard, was not allowed-was the judge allowed to see and hear the witnesses, is not allowed to make a determination about voracity [sic] wherein this particular hearing you are. And we believe it would be necessary for you to see and hear these witnesses, specifically the two victims that were called, so that you can determine thе person's voracity [sic] because you are allowed to do that at this hearing." Judge Bass asked Appellant's counsel if she cross-examined both witnesses at the preliminary hearing in Case No. CF-2005-6074, and Appellant's counsel responded that she did.
€ 5 The State noted it was the facts elicited at the preliminary hearing and not the magistrate's decision that were being offered into
T6 Appellant brings this appeal asserting one proposition of error. Appellant contends the trial court's reliance on a tran-seript of testimony and a paternity report, absent a showing of witness unavailability, violated Mr. Wortham's fundamental right to confront witnesses and did not constitute sufficient competent evidence to support the revocation order.
T7 As a preliminary matter, one of the State's arguments needs to be addressed. The State argues that Appellant objected to admission of the preliminary hearing tran-seript and paternity report in the District Court on different grounds than he is raising on appeal. The State claims Appellant objected that the revocation hearing judge was permitted to make determinations regarding witness veracity whereas a preliminary hearing judge cannot. While Appellant's objection may not have been stated as well as it could have been, it includes more than what the State is claiming. Defense counsel also stated "we believe it would be necessary for you to see and hear these witnesses, specifically the two victims that were called, so that you can determine the person's voracity [sic]." When she madе this statement, defense counsel was complaining of not being able to confront the witnesses in the crucible of cross-examination before the trier of fact, a confrontation issue. See Crawford v. Washington,
T8 In support of his arguments in this appeal, Aрpellant relies extensively on Montemayor v. State,
T9 In this case, the decision to revoke Appellant's probation was made by Judge Bass, a neutral and detached judicial officer. Rather than simply presenting a DOC file as in Montemayor, the State presented the DNA paternity report and the testimony and evidencе contained in the preliminary hearing transcript in Oklahoma County District Court Case No. CF-2005-6074. Judge Bass considered that testimony and evidence in making his decision to revoke Appellant's suspended sentence. Appellant acknowledged he was able to confront and cross-examine the witnesses who testified concerning the facts and evidence at that preliminary hearing, and who originated the allegations forming the basis for Appellant's revocation.
{10 As Appellant notes, this Court has issued some conflicting decisions concerning whether the State can introduce the tran-seript of a previous judicial hearing into evidence in a revoсation hearing without showing that the witnesses who testified at that previous hearing are unavailable. In Garcia v. State, No. RE-2006-885 (Okl.Cr. June 29, 2007) (not for publication), and Gilbert v. State,
{ 11 A probationer is provided the statutory right to confront the witnesses against him or her in a revocation hearing. 22 O.S$.Supp.2005, § 991b(D) (a "person whose suspended sentence is being considered for revocation at the hearing shall have the right ... to be confronted by the witnesses against the defendant."). Any constitutional right to confront witnesses in a revocation hearing was found in the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution. Morrissey,
112 A probationer's right to confront witnesses at a revocation hearing is not found in the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution. By its express language, the Confrontation Clause only applies to criminal trial prosecutions. U.S. Const. amend. VI ("[in all criminal prоsecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to be confronted with the witnesses against him"). "Probation revocation, like parole revocation, is not a stage of a criminal prosecution." Scarpelli,
113 The full panoply of rights due a defendant in a criminal trial prosecution does not apply to parole and probation revocations. Morrissey,
T14 We acknowledge Appellant's argument that Gilbert might be distinguished by the fact that Gilbert involved the preliminary revocation hearing transcript in the very same revocation case. (Gilbert, ¶¶ 2-6,
1 15 We find that neither the relaxed due process standards nor the provisions of Seetion 991b are violated when a transcript of a previous judicial hearing is admitted into evidence at a rеvocation hearing, without requiring the State to prove the unavailability of the witnesses, so long as the defendant was allowed to confront and cross-examine the witnesses at the previous judicial hearing. To the extent Allison, Woods, and Moore require the State to prove witnesses are unavailable before allowing admission into evidence of a transcript of a previous judicial proceeding, they are hereby overturned. Allison, ¶¶ 6-13,
116 Applying these principles to the present case, the District Court did not err in allowing the State to introduce into evidence at the revocation hearing the tran-seript of Appellant's preliminary hearing in Oklahoma County District Court Case No. CF-2005-6074, without requiring the State to prove the unavailability of the witnesses testifying at that hearing. The appeal record establishes that counsel for Appellant acknowledged she had confronted and cross-examined the witnesses during that preliminary hearing in Case No. CF-2005-6074. We further find it was not error for the District Court to admit into evidence the DNA paternity report challenged by Appellant. Such a report is the type of other material or documentary evidence, not generally admissible in an adversary criminal trial, which can be considered in parole or probation revocation proceedings. Morrissey,
DECISION
117 The revocation of Appellant's suspended sentence in Case No. CF-1995-2711 in the District Court of Oklahoma County is AFFIRMED. Pursuant to Rule 3.15, Rules of the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appеals, Title 22, Ch. 18, App. (2008), the MANDATE is ORDERED issued upon the filing of this decision.
Notes
. The Oklahoma County District Court Docket reflects that, on January 19, 2007 in Case No. CF-2005-6074, Appellant entered a plea of guilty to all fourteen counts and was sentenced to thirty-five years on each, with the sentences to run concurrently. The District Court Docket and this Court's Docket both reflect that Appellant did not seek to withdraw his guilty plea in Case No. CF-2005-6074 within applicable time periods and failed to perfect direct appeal proceedings from that Judgment and Sentence.
. It can also be noted that, less than one year after Gilbert was decided, this Court eliminated the preliminary hearing in revocation proceedings, thus requiring only one revocation hearing in a case. Pickens v. State,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
[ 1 Wortham committed crimes, a series of rapes and sexuаl abuse of a child, while
T2 It is true that revocation proceedings offer the defendant fewer procedural protections than those affordеd in a criminal trial.
3 I agree that affidavits, letters and other material which might be inadmissible in a criminal trial may be introduced in a revocation proceeding.
1 4 The majority relies on Gilbert, in which we held that a transcript of the preliminary hearing held on the revocation proceedings was admissible without a showing that witnesses were unavailable.
T5 The issues in a revocation hearing differ from those in a criminal proceeding, such as a preliminary hearing designed to determine whether there is probable cause to believe that a crime was committed, and that the defendant committed it. In fact, it is in part on that difference that the lesser protection afforded criminal defendants in a revocation proceeding depends. Conceivably, the questions asked in cross-examination during such a preliminary hearing on a new criminal charge may differ from questions asked the same witnesses in a revocation hearing. In any event, while Wortham had an opportunity to cross-examine witnesses on the sex offense charges, he had no opportunity to
T6 Because I interpret Gilbert according to its facts, and in light of the settled law at the time it was decided, I do not believe Hilbert conflicts with our previous сases. The State did not seek to introduce a tran-seript of a proceeding in the same revocation case in Allison, Woods or Moore. Consequently, this Court applied the settled law that introduction of a transcript from a different court proceeding must be accompanied by a showing that the witnesses were unavailable. Gilbert discussed the unusual situation where the defendant had already сross-examined the revocation hearing witnesses about the revocation case, and that questioning was memorialized in the transcript introduced by the State. This complements rather than conflicts with the settled case law. I believe this, rather than some oversight on the Court's part, is why Gilbert did not overturn our previous cases, as the majority does today. Taken together our case law upholds a defendant's statutory and due process right to confrontation in a revocation hearing by showing witness unavailability, while recognizing that right may be satisfied by the chance to cross-examine the witnesses in a case in an earlier proceeding in that same case. I would apply this settled law, require a showing of witness unavailability, and grant relief.
. Gagnon v. Scarpelli,
. Gagnon,
. 22 0.$.Supp.2005, § 991b (D).
. Gilbert v. State,
. Gilbert,
. Allison v. State,
. Gilbert,
