ANDREW WILLS v. UNITED STATES. , 147 A.3d 761 ( 2016 )


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  •                            District of Columbia
    Court of Appeals
    No. 14-CM-208
    OCT 13 2016
    ANDREW WILLS,
    Appellant,
    v.                                                        DVM-2423-13
    UNITED STATES,
    Appellee.
    On Appeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia
    Criminal Division
    BEFORE: BECKWITH and MCLEESE, Associate Judges; and REID, Senior Judge.
    JUDGMENT
    This case was submitted to the court on the transcript of record and the
    briefs filed, and without presentation of oral argument. On consideration whereof, and
    for the reasons set forth in the opinion filed this date, it is now hereby
    ORDERED and ADJUDGED that appellant’s conviction for attempted
    theft is reversed, and the matter is remanded to the Superior Court for further
    proceedings. Appellant’s assault conviction is affirmed.
    For the Court:
    Dated: October 13, 2016.
    Opinion by Associate Judge Corinne Beckwith.
    Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
    Atlantic and Maryland Reporters. Users are requested to notify the Clerk of the
    Court of any formal errors so that corrections may be made before the bound
    volumes go to press.
    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
    No. 14-CM-208
    10/13/16
    ANDREW WILLS, APPELLANT,
    V.
    UNITED STATES, APPELLEE.
    Appeal from the Superior Court
    of the District of Columbia
    (DVM-2423-13)
    (Hon. Rhonda Reid Winston, Trial Judge)
    Christine Pembroke was on the brief for appellant.
    Ronald C. Machen Jr., United States Attorney at the time the brief was filed,
    and Elizabeth Trosman, Elizabeth H. Danello, and James A. Ewing, Assistant
    United States Attorneys, were on the brief, for appellee.
    (Submitted January 7, 2015                             Decided October 13, 2016)
    Before BECKWITH and MCLEESE, Associate Judges, and REID, Senior Judge.
    BECKWITH, Associate Judge: After a bench trial, the trial judge in this case
    convicted appellant Andrew Wills of simple assault1 and attempted second-degree
    1
    D.C. Code § 22-404 (2012 Repl.).
    2
    theft2 stemming from an altercation between Mr. Wills and his wife in a gas station
    parking lot. Mr. Wills contends that his wife’s on-the-scene statement that Mr.
    Wills “snatched” her keys from her—uttered in response to a police officer’s
    question about “how he got the keys”—was admitted in violation of the
    Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. U.S.
    Const. amend. VI, cl. 2.     We conclude that the complainant’s statement was
    “testimonial” under this court’s and the Supreme Court’s Confrontation Clause
    decisions, that Mr. Wills has satisfied the requirements of the plain error test that
    applies to his claim, and that his conviction for attempted theft must therefore be
    reversed. We affirm Mr. Wills’s conviction for assault, however, because the
    admission of the complainant’s statement did not affect the assault charge and
    because we find no merit in Mr. Wills’s other claims challenging that conviction.
    I.
    Ndya Silas testified that she was coming out of a gas station convenience
    store in Northeast Washington, D.C., one evening when she heard a scream. She
    turned and saw a man on top of a woman inside a yellow Ford Mustang that was
    2
    D.C. Code §§ 22-1803, -3211, -3212 (b) (2012 Repl.).
    3
    parked near the station’s air pump.3 The man, whom she described as wearing a
    black jacket and jeans, struck the woman at least once with his fists and pulled her
    out of the car by her hair. Ms. Silas called 911 and reported the assault to the
    police, who arrived about two minutes later. She testified that she did not hang up
    the phone until she saw the police arriving at the gas station with their lights on,
    that she left the scene when the police arrived, and that the man she saw striking
    the woman did not leave the scene. A recording of Ms. Silas’s 911 call reporting
    these observations was played at trial.
    Over defense counsel’s objection on both hearsay and Confrontation Clause
    grounds, the government introduced a recording of another 911 call—this one
    placed by an unidentified caller who stated that he was at a gas station watching a
    man and a woman “physically arguing” near a yellow Mustang. The caller also
    stated that the man, whom he (like Ndya Silas) described as wearing a black jacket
    and jeans, had thrown a set of car keys “over onto the highway.”
    Metropolitan Police Department Sergeant Brett Parson testified that he
    responded to “a radio assignment for an assault in progress.” When he arrived at
    the gas station, he saw two people next to a yellow Mustang—a woman seated on a
    3
    According to Ms. Silas, neither the Mustang nor a red truck parked near it
    was there two minutes earlier when she walked into the store to buy a snack.
    4
    step and a man standing above her. The woman was crying and “breathing a little
    heavily.” The officer exited his police car and “motioned to the female to come to
    [him].” According to Sergeant Parson, she got up “very quickly” and walked over
    to him, looking over her shoulder toward the man as she approached the officer.
    The officer asked if she was okay and she “answered in the affirmative.” Pointing
    to Kenilworth Avenue, she then told him, “You need to get my phone. He threw
    my phone into the street. . . . And he’s got my keys. You need to get my keys.”
    The officer then asked “how he got the keys,” to which she responded, “He
    snatched them from me.” Sergeant Parson then called another officer over to
    conduct a “more thorough interview.” A third officer later recovered keys from
    the man at the scene, whom Sergeant Parson identified at trial as the appellant,
    Andrew Wills. According to Sergeant Parson, the woman at the scene described
    herself as Mr. Wills’s wife, though her name was never introduced into evidence.
    The trial court found Mr. Wills guilty of attempted second-degree theft and
    assault.4 The court first determined that Mr. Wills was the person who committed
    the assaults described by Ms. Silas and the anonymous 911 caller. The court then
    also found, based on Sergeant Parson’s recounting of the complainant’s statements,
    4
    The government dismissed a third charge, destruction of property (for
    allegedly throwing the complainant’s cell phone), at the close of its case.
    5
    that Mr. Wills took his wife’s keys with the intent to deprive her of those keys.
    Mr. Wills timely appealed.
    II.
    Mr. Wills contends that the admission of his wife’s statement that he
    “snatched” her keys violated his constitutional right to confrontation.5         The
    Confrontation Clause “guarantees a defendant’s right to confront those who bear
    testimony against him,” Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts, 
    557 U.S. 305
    , 309
    (2009) (internal citations and quotation marks omitted), and ensures that he has a
    “full and fair opportunity” to challenge the evidence against him through
    adversarial cross-examination of the government’s witnesses.           Delaware v.
    Fensterer, 
    474 U.S. 15
    , 22 (1985). It is not enough for the government to present
    reliable evidence; the Confrontation Clause requires that “reliability be assessed in
    a particular manner: by testing in the crucible of cross-examination.” Crawford v.
    Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
    , 61 (2004). The protection is thus procedural, reflecting
    the Framers’ judgment “about how reliability can best be determined” to ensure
    5
    Mr. Wills argues that the admission of the complainant’s other
    statements—including “he’s got my keys” and “[y]ou need to get my keys”—also
    violated his right to confrontation. Because our analysis of the “snatch[ing]”
    statement is dispositive, we need not decide whether these other statements should
    have been excluded.
    6
    fairness in the criminal justice system. 
    Id. As the
    U.S. Supreme Court has interpreted it, the Confrontation Clause bars
    admission of “testimonial” out-of-court statements unless the witness testifies at
    trial or the witness is unavailable and the defendant has had prior opportunity for
    cross-examination. 
    Id. at 68.
    In the consolidated cases Davis v. Washington and
    Hammon v. Indiana, 
    547 U.S. 813
    (2006), which both involved the admissibility of
    the complainant’s out-of-court statements about a domestic dispute, the Supreme
    Court held that statements are nontestimonial “when made in the course of police
    interrogation under circumstances objectively indicating that the primary purpose
    of the interrogation is to enable police assistance to meet an ongoing emergency.”
    Statements are testimonial, however, “when the circumstances objectively indicate
    that there is no such ongoing emergency, and that the primary purpose of the
    interrogation is to establish or prove past events potentially relevant to later
    criminal prosecution.” 
    Id. at 822.
    Mr. Wills’s trial counsel never argued to the trial court that the
    complainant’s statements were testimonial and that they should be excluded on
    Confrontation Clause grounds. He objected to the statements’ admission, but only
    on hearsay grounds, prompting a discussion about whether they were admissible as
    excited utterances and ultimately a ruling by the trial court that they were. Because
    7
    Mr. Wills’s trial counsel argued only that the complainant’s statements were
    inadmissible hearsay, we apply a plain-error standard of review to his
    constitutional claim. Long v. United States, 
    940 A.2d 87
    , 91 (D.C. 2007); Marquez
    v. United States, 
    903 A.2d 815
    , 817 (D.C. 2006). Under that standard, Mr. Wills
    must show error that is plain, that affected his substantial rights, and that seriously
    affected the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of the judicial proceedings.
    Guevara v. United States, 
    77 A.3d 412
    , 418 (D.C. 2013).
    A. Error
    Here, the complainant did not testify at trial and Mr. Wills did not have prior
    opportunity to cross-examine her, so Mr. Wills’s Confrontation Clause claim turns
    on whether the complainant’s statement that he “snatched” her keys was
    “testimonial” under Crawford. In assessing the testimonial nature of statements
    made when police respond to an emergency call for help, we “objectively
    evaluate” the circumstances and “the statements and actions of both the declarant
    and [the] interrogators,” and we consider these circumstances from the
    perspectives of both parties to the interrogation. Michigan v. Bryant, 
    562 U.S. 344
    ,
    359, 367 (2011).
    Turning first to Sergeant Parson’s actions and the events from his viewpoint,
    the record is silent as to whether the officer knew what the 911 callers had reported
    8
    as he drove to the gas station within minutes of receiving a call about an assault in
    progress. When he arrived, by all indications the incident was over, and the
    evidence did not suggest that the scene he arrived to was volatile or chaotic.
    Sergeant Parson had the support of at least two other officers who arrived in
    marked cruisers at the same time he did, he testified that there were “people
    coming and going from the gas station that didn’t pay much of a mind,” and he
    immediately separated the complainant from Mr. Wills by motioning her over to
    him. The officer did not testify that he saw any weapons, Mr. Wills and the
    complainant were not physically fighting or arguing, and although the complainant
    was crying and breathing heavily—facts that in some cases could suggest an
    ongoing emergency6—she had no apparent injuries. Though Mr. Wills was still on
    the scene and was described as standing over the complainant when Sergeant
    Parson first arrived, and though the complainant looked back at Mr. Wills when
    she walked toward the officer, Sergeant Parson did not approach the scene as
    would an officer expecting to encounter armed and dangerous individuals, drawing
    his gun, for example, or ordering Mr. Wills onto the ground or away from his wife.
    6
    Andrade v. United States, 
    106 A.3d 386
    , 389 (D.C. 2015) (that the
    complainant “was crying and appeared obviously upset” provided “some support
    for a finding of ongoing emergency”); Frye v. United States, 
    86 A.3d 568
    , 573
    (D.C. 2014) (stating that the declarant’s “acute emotional distress” supported a
    finding that her statement was nontestimonial).
    9
    Particularly after the complainant was standing with Sergeant Parson away from
    Mr. Wills and immediately assured the officer that she was okay, the officer had no
    grounds apparent from the record for thinking the complainant was still in danger.
    By the time Sergeant Parson was questioning the complainant about how Mr. Wills
    had come into possession of her keys, another officer was with Mr. Wills. See
    
    Hammon, 547 U.S. at 831
    (distinguishing testimonial statements in Hammon from
    nontestimonial statements in Davis, which were taken when the complainant was
    “unprotected by police” and thus “apparently in immediate danger from Davis”).
    Sergeant Parson’s first question to the complainant—was she okay?—was
    the sort that in some circumstances might be directed at a possible emergency.
    Andrade v. United States, 
    106 A.3d 386
    , 390 (D.C. 2015) (noting that questions
    “such as ‘Are you hurt?’; ‘Do you need medical attention?’; ‘Was a weapon
    involved?’; or ‘Did he say anything about coming back or about harming anyone
    else?’” are “questions specifically directed at possible emergencies”). Yet any
    prospect that Sergeant Parson would need to act to protect the complainant or seek
    medical treatment on her behalf faded when she said—and he saw—she was okay.
    The officer’s next question—how did the man get the keys?—seems a
    straightforward investigative inquiry, a “natural way[] for an investigating officer
    to try to ‘establish or prove past events potentially relevant to later criminal
    prosecution.’” 
    Id. (quoting Davis,
    547 U.S. at 822).
    10
    The government contends that Sergeant Parson’s question about how Mr.
    Wills got his wife’s keys evinced an attempt to assess “whether or not appellant
    was lawfully in possession of the keys or whether appellant had some sort of
    weapon that he used to take possession of the keys—rather than preparation for a
    future criminal prosecution.” Setting aside that Sergeant Parson never described
    the purpose of his questioning that way,7 this observation actually bolsters Mr.
    Wills’s position given the absence of any reason to think Mr. Wills was armed.
    See 
    Andrade, 106 A.3d at 389
    (rejecting the government’s unsubstantiated
    argument that the officer did not know “whether weapons had been involved” and
    thus “needed to get an account from [the complainant] in order to determine
    whether there was an emergency”); 
    Bryant, 562 U.S. at 364
    (noting the importance
    of evidence regarding the presence of a weapon and the type of weapon to the
    question whether there was an ongoing emergency). Similarly, the government’s
    portrayal of Sergeant Parson as trying to determine whether Mr. Wills was in
    lawful possession of the keys suggests the officer’s interest in investigating
    criminal conduct that had already occurred, lending further support to the
    7
    Cf. 
    Andrade, 106 A.3d at 390
    –91 (assuming without deciding that the
    officer’s stated reasons for questioning the complainant were irrelevant while
    noting that “the Supreme Court in Davis appeared to treat as relevant an officer’s
    testimony about the purpose of police questioning”).
    11
    conclusion that “the primary, if not indeed the sole, purpose of the interrogation
    was to investigate a possible crime.” 
    Hammon, 547 U.S. at 830
    .
    Considering the complainant’s actions and statements and the situation from
    her perspective, her matter-of-fact answers to the officer’s questions—that yes she
    was okay, that Sergeant Parson “need[ed] to get [her] phone” and “need[ed] to get
    [her] keys,” and that Mr. Wills had snatched her keys—do not suggest an
    emergency was under way. On the contrary, the complainant’s statement that Mr.
    Wills had taken her property was a straightforward reporting of a past event that
    police had a duty to investigate. See 
    Hammon, 547 U.S. at 830
    (“[I]nvestigat[ing]
    a possible crime . . . is, of course, precisely what the officer should have done.”).
    The government argues that the fact that the complainant said nothing to the police
    about the assault against her shows that she was “merely attempting to gain the
    police’s assistance to leave a volatile situation,” not “attempting to make a record
    for a future trial.” The more objective (and less speculative) relevance of that
    omission to the Confrontation Clause analysis, however, is that it tends to show
    that the complainant was not specifically seeking physical protection or medical
    assistance when she was responding to the officer’s questions. See 
    Andrade, 106 A.3d at 391
    (“[The complainant] did not request medical assistance, ask the police
    to take any other emergency steps, or communicate any other information
    indicating that there was an ongoing emergency. Rather, [she] simply described
    12
    the circumstances of the earlier incident.” (citations omitted)). As Sergeant Parson
    pointed out, another officer promptly conducted “a more thorough interview”—an
    interview that was not introduced at trial and that the government in its brief
    concedes “potentially would have been closer to the ‘testimonial’ line.” The
    government is not contending, therefore, that Mr. Wills’s wife never mentioned the
    assault to police on the scene, only that she did not mention it at the outset to
    Sergeant Parson. Moreover, the government’s acknowledgement that the second
    officer’s interview may have produced testimonial statements is telling given that it
    was conducted in the immediate wake of the statement at issue in this appeal and
    inevitably shared most if not all of the hallmarks of the initial questioning.
    The circumstances of this case most relevant to the Confrontation Clause
    analysis replicate those in the Supreme Court’s decision in Hammon. In Hammon,
    when police arrived at the home of Hershel and Amy Hammon after a report of a
    “domestic disturbance,” they found Amy on the front porch—appearing
    “somewhat frightened” but telling police that “nothing was the matter”—and
    Hershel in the 
    kitchen. 547 U.S. at 819
    . They also saw, in the corner of the living
    room, a gas heating unit with pieces of glass on the floor in front of it and flames
    coming out of the front of the unit. 
    Id. Hershel told
    police that he and Amy had
    been in an argument but that “everything was fine now” and that it “never became
    physical.” 
    Id. When another
    officer went to the living room to talk to Amy,
    13
    Hershel “made several attempts to participate in Amy’s conversation with the
    police” and “became angry” when police kept them separated. 
    Id. at 819–20.
    Amy told the officer what had happened, then penned a handwritten affidavit
    indicating that Hershel had broken the furnace and shoved her down into the
    broken glass. 
    Id. at 820.
    Amy did not appear at Hershel’s trial on domestic battery
    charges, but he was convicted after the government presented the officer’s
    testimony about what Amy told him had happened and Amy’s affidavit to the
    judge presiding at the bench trial. 
    Id. at 820–21.
    The Supreme Court held that it was “entirely clear” from these
    circumstances “that the interrogation was part of an investigation into possibly
    criminal past conduct.”     
    Id. at 829.
       In reaching that conclusion, the Court
    emphasized several circumstances that are also present here:       though Hershel
    Hammon was present, there was “no emergency in progress,” there was “no
    immediate threat to [the complainant’s] person,” and the complainant told police
    she was all right. 
    Id. at 829–30.
    The officer’s questions—like Sergeant Parson’s
    question here about how Mr. Wills got the keys—sought to determine “what
    happened” rather than “what is happening.” 
    Id. at 830.
    Here, as in Hammon, the
    complainant’s statement “took place some time after the events described were
    over” and “deliberately recounted, in response to police questioning, how
    potentially criminal past events began and progressed.” 
    Id. “Such statements
                                            14
    under official interrogation are an obvious substitute for live testimony, because
    they do precisely what a witness does on direct examination; they are inherently
    testimonial.” 
    Id. (emphasis omitted).
    The government contends that Hammon is distinguishable because the police
    there saw no emergency in progress or immediate threat to the complainant. But
    we have already concluded the same is true here. Noting that Amy Hammon had
    assured police that everything was fine, 
    id. at 819,
    the government also suggests
    that Amy’s statements were more deliberate and that more time passed before she
    uttered them. The cases are factually more alike than the government allows,
    however.    Mr. Wills’s wife also told police that she was okay.           And the
    interrogation in both cases took place on the scene not long after the offense each
    complainant was describing.      When the Supreme Court noted that “Amy’s
    narrative of past events was delivered at some remove in time from the danger she
    described,” its focus was more on the fact that the incident was over than that it
    was long over. 
    Id. at 832;
    see 
    id. at 830
    (noting that Amy Hammon’s statement
    “took place some time after the events described were over”); see also, e.g., 
    id. at 829
    (noting that when police arrived, they “heard no arguments or crashing and
    saw no one throw or break anything”). Several factual differences only paint the
    situation in Hammon as more potentially volatile than that here.         Unlike in
    Hammon, for example, where Hershel Hammon was angry and trying to interfere
    15
    with the officer’s questioning of his wife, the record here is devoid of evidence that
    Mr. Wills was disruptive or dangerous. And Amy Hammon’s statements that
    “nothing was the matter” and that “things were fine” were less than reassuring
    when there were flames coming out of the broken heating unit and pieces of glass
    strewn about the living room floor. 
    Id. at 819,
    830.
    And finally, the statements that the Supreme Court found to be testimonial in
    Hammon were not more deliberate than the statement at issue here. As an initial
    matter, informal statements in response to police questioning can be testimonial
    “whether reduced to a writing signed by the declarant or embedded in the memory
    (and perhaps notes) of the interrogating officer,” 
    id. at 826,
    and the Court held in
    Hammon that Amy Hammon’s initial oral statements, not just her subsequent
    written affidavit, were admitted in violation of the Confrontation Clause. 
    Id. at 830–32.
    The Court also emphasized that Amy’s statements were testimonial even
    though her questioning was far less formal than the tape-recorded stationhouse
    interrogation at issue in Crawford. See 
    id. at 830
    (citing 
    Crawford, 541 U.S. at 53
    n.4).
    “Whether formal or informal, out-of-court statements can evade the basic
    objective of the Confrontation Clause, which is to prevent the accused from being
    deprived of the opportunity to cross-examine the declarant about statements taken
    16
    for use at trial.” 
    Bryant, 562 U.S. at 358
    . In our recent decision in Andrade v.
    United States, that constitutional objective was evaded where the police, having
    arrived at the scene less than five minutes after receiving a 911 call about a
    domestic assault, promptly asked a crying and still upset complainant what had
    
    happened. 106 A.3d at 387
    –88. The “relatively informal” nature of the police
    questioning in Andrade did not preclude the complainant’s statements in response
    to that questioning from being deemed testimonial, 
    id. at 389,
    391, 393, and it does
    not preclude us from reaching the same conclusion based on the comparable
    interrogation of the complainant here. Sergeant Parson’s on-the-scene question
    about “how [Mr. Wills] got the keys” may not have been especially formal, but the
    complainant’s response, that Mr. Wills “snatched” her keys from her, shares with
    Hammon and Andrade the critical characteristic that it deliberately reported—in
    response to a police officer’s question—how a “potentially criminal past event[]”
    occurred.
    The government contends that this court’s decision in Frye v. United States,
    
    86 A.3d 568
    (D.C. 2014), establishes that the complainant’s statement was not, in
    fact, testimonial. But as the Supreme Court has made clear, whether a statement is
    nontestimonial—that is, made in response to an ongoing emergency—is a “highly
    17
    context-dependent inquiry,” 
    Bryant, 562 U.S. at 363
    , and the context in which the
    complainant in Frye made her statements differs markedly from that in this case.8
    After receiving a call from a child about an assault involving the child’s parents,
    the police in Frye arrived at the house to find five children downstairs and a man
    and a woman a foot apart at the top of the stairs shouting at each other as the
    woman backed away nervously and the man paced back and forth with his fist
    clenched 
    up. 86 A.3d at 569
    . Though the police separated the pair, they were still
    close to each other when an officer asked the complainant what happened. The
    complainant was shaking and crying when she responded, had visible abrasions on
    her arms and neck, and appeared to need medical treatment. 
    Id. at 570.
    Nearby,
    the man had his fists balled up and was speaking loudly to another officer. 
    Id. The officer
    who spoke to the woman testified that at the time he had no information
    about how many people were involved in the assault, who the perpetrator was, or
    8
    Bryant states that “there may be other circumstances, aside from ongoing
    emergencies, when a statement is not procured with a primary purpose of creating
    an out-of-court substitute for trial 
    testimony.” 562 U.S. at 358
    . The government
    focuses on the ongoing-emergency ground, however, and we are unaware of any
    other ground on which the statements in this case could have been nontestimonial.
    See, e.g., United States v. Polidore, 
    690 F.3d 705
    , 718 (5th Cir. 2012) (statements
    nontestimonial when made to “request police assistance in stopping an ongoing
    [drug trafficking] crime” even though no “ongoing emergency”); cf. 
    Frye, 86 A.3d at 571
    (noting that “the existence of [an ongoing] emergency ‘is among the most
    important circumstances’ to be considered in making that determination’”)
    (quoting 
    Bryant, 562 U.S. at 361
    , 370).
    18
    whether any weapons were involved. 
    Id. Most of
    the facts the court in Frye deemed critical to its determination that
    the complainant’s statements to police were not testimonial are not present here—
    specifically, that the officers arrived to find a “heated dispute” still in progress, that
    the situation was “fluid and somewhat confused,” 
    id. at 571–72
    (quoting 
    Bryant, 562 U.S. at 377
    ), that there were five children in the house who were possibly in
    danger or in need of “assistance from a social services agency,” and that the
    complainant had visible injuries that required medical treatment, 
    id. at 572–73.
    Although the court in Frye also relied upon the complainant’s distraught condition,
    
    Frye, 86 A.3d at 572
    ; see also 
    Davis, 547 U.S. at 818
    , and here, Mr. Wills’s wife
    was likewise crying and upset, the complainant’s demeanor took on more
    significance in Frye where a still active quarrel required officers to “clarify what
    exigencies . . . existed requiring immediate action,” and where officers had not
    “completely subdued” the suspect even by the time they led him out of the 
    house, 86 A.3d at 572
    –73 (noting that the man “kicked luggage and other items on the
    way out”). In cases lacking such confusion, evidence that a complainant was
    distressed has not defeated a Confrontation Clause claim.              In Andrade, for
    example, the complainant’s visible distress was insufficient to render her
    statements nontestimonial when “a number of considerations point[ed] in the
    opposite 
    direction.” 106 A.3d at 389
    . Here, as in Andrade, “[t]he conclusion that
    19
    the questioning in Frye had the primary purpose of addressing an ongoing
    emergency thus does not support the same conclusion in the present case.” 
    Id. at 393;
    see also 
    Hammon, 547 U.S. at 819
    , 832 (holding that the “somewhat
    frightened” complainant’s on-the-scene statements were testimonial).
    Considering the totality of the circumstances in this case, we are persuaded
    that Sergeant Parson did not ask his question about “how [Mr. Wills] got the keys”
    for the primary purpose of enabling police to deal with an ongoing emergency, and
    Mr. Wills has therefore satisfied the first prong of the plain error test by
    demonstrating that the complainant’s statement in response to that question was
    testimonial for purposes of the Confrontation Clause.
    B. Plainness
    We next address whether this error was plain. An error is plain when it is
    “clear or obvious, rather than subject to reasonable dispute” under current law. In
    re Taylor, 
    73 A.3d 85
    , 99 (D.C. 2013) (quoting Puckett v. United States, 
    556 U.S. 129
    , 135 (2009)). We assess plainness in light of the state of the law at the time of
    appellate review, not the state of the law at the time of trial. Muir v. District of
    Columbia, 
    129 A.3d 265
    , 267 (D.C. 2016); 
    Taylor, 73 A.3d at 99
    ; see also
    Henderson v. United States, 
    133 S. Ct. 1121
    , 1129–30 (2013) (“[P]lain-error
    review is not a grading system for trial judges.”).
    20
    The government makes no separate and specific argument in its brief about
    the plainness of the error, but there is no reasonable dispute that the Supreme
    Court’s case law—most notably Hammon—compels the conclusion that the
    statement at issue here was testimonial. Where no emergency was in progress
    when the police arrived, the complainant was distraught but told police she was
    okay and showed no signs of injury, the suspect was not armed and was separated
    from the complainant when she made the statement, and the complainant’s
    statement in response to police questioning described a past incident, it is “clear
    and obvious” that the oral statement the complainant made to the police about Mr.
    Wills “snatch[ing]” her keys was testimonial.
    No subsequent cases in the Supreme Court or this court have complicated or
    cast doubt upon the Hammon Court’s conclusion that the testimonial nature of
    statements provided in circumstances closely akin to those here is clear-cut.
    Though the government relies more on our decision in Frye than on the Supreme
    Court’s fairly recent decision in Michigan v. Bryant, it is important to note, in
    assessing plainness, that nothing in the Supreme Court’s decision in Bryant—
    which rejected Mr. Bryant’s claim that the statements of a dying victim of a
    gunshot wound to a responding police officer were testimonial—purported to
    change or narrow the Court’s holding in Hammon. The Court instead took pains to
    distinguish Hammon on the grounds that the case involved “a neutralized threat,”
    21
    “a known and identified perpetrator” who was unarmed and had not caused serious
    injury, and a domestic-violence situation, which often meant “a narrower zone of
    potential victims than cases involving threats to public 
    safety.” 562 U.S. at 363
    –
    64. In each respect, the same is true here.
    Our own precedent reinforces Hammon’s continued bearing on domestic
    abuse cases where the police had separated the unarmed suspect from the
    complainant, there was no sign of injury, and the complainant responded to
    informal on-the-scene police questioning by describing aspects of an incident that
    had just occurred. Andrade, this court’s most recent case addressing a Crawford
    ongoing-emergency question, confirmed the view that Bryant did not change the
    constitutional landscape in domestic abuse cases such as Andrade and the present
    case. 
    Andrade, 106 A.3d at 392
    (noting that Bryant “distinguished its earlier
    holding in Hammon” by “explaining that the statements deemed testimonial in
    Hammon arose in the context of a domestic-violence assault that involved neither a
    weapon nor serious injury”) (citing 
    Bryant, 562 U.S. at 364
    ). And Andrade’s
    distinguishing of Frye, this court’s other recent ongoing-emergency decision,
    makes clear that Frye did not signal a more expansive view of what constitutes an
    ongoing emergency after Bryant, and that its holding stemmed instead from its
    unique and “very different circumstances.” 
    Id. at 392–93.
    And while Andrade
    involved a suspect who had left the scene, Andrade’s own holding that a
    22
    complainant’s statements to police were testimonial under circumstances that were
    otherwise very similar to this case independently supports Mr. Wills’s argument
    that the error here was plain.9 Factually similar cases in other jurisdictions further
    bolster that contention. See, e.g., State v. Lucas, 
    965 A.2d 75
    , 85–86 (Md. 2009)
    (holding that a domestic-violence complainant’s responses to questions about
    “what happened” and “where she got the marks” were testimonial where the
    complainant was crying and upset and had red marks on her neck, but where the
    complainant was separated from the defendant during the questioning); Zapata v.
    State, 
    232 S.W.3d 254
    , 256–57, 260 (Tex. App. 2007) (same where the
    complainant was “crying and shaking” during questioning and had scratches on her
    neck and a large bruise on her arm, but where the complainant was separated from
    the defendant during questioning); Commonwealth v. Galicia, 
    857 N.E.2d 463
    ,
    467, 470 (Mass. 2006) (same where officers arrived to find the door to the
    complainant’s apartment open, several chairs turned over, and the complainant
    visibly upset, with scratches on her face, but where the complainant was separated
    9
    Andrade also provides an example of a case in which this court found a
    domestic-abuse complainant’s statements to be testimonial in circumstances where
    the officer’s questioning was unstructured and informal. This lends clear and very
    recent support to our conclusion that the fact that the complainant in Hammon
    formalized her initial oral statements in an affidavit carries little weight in this
    case, particularly as the oral statements’ admission into evidence against Hershel
    Hammon independently violated the Confrontation 
    Clause. 547 U.S. at 830
    –32.
    23
    from the defendant during questioning).
    That the ongoing-emergency inquiry is “highly context-dependent” does not
    preclude a determination that the Confrontation Clause error here is beyond
    reasonable dispute, as “the ‘plainness’ of the error can depend on well-settled legal
    principles as much as well-settled legal precedents.” Conley v. United States, 
    79 A.3d 270
    , 290 (D.C. 2013); see also Arthur v. United States, 
    986 A.2d 398
    , 412
    (D.C. 2009) (“[T]rial judges are presumed to know and apply the legal principles
    enunciated in appellate decisions, and not simply to match factual scenarios, as few
    cases present the same facts.”); cf. Wiggins v. Smith, 
    539 U.S. 510
    , 520 (2003)
    (explaining, in the federal habeas corpus context, that a court’s “misappli[cation]
    [of] a ‘governing legal principle’” can be grounds for a finding that the court
    unreasonably applied clearly established law, even where the case involves “a set
    of facts different from those of the case in which the principle was announced”)
    (quoting Lockyer v. Andrade, 
    538 U.S. 63
    , 76 (2003)). In this case, the principles
    and the precedents align. If it was “entirely clear” to the Hammon Court that Amy
    Hammon’s statements were testimonial, 
    Hammon, 547 U.S. at 829
    , it is also clear
    that the statement at issue here was testimonial. Cf. 
    id. (calling it
    a “much easier
    task” to evaluate the testimonial character of Amy Hammon’s statements “since
    they were not much different from the statements [the Court] found to be
    testimonial in Crawford”).
    24
    C. Substantial Rights
    To establish that this error affected Mr. Wills’s substantial rights, Mr. Wills
    must show “a reasonable probability that the Confrontation Clause violation had a
    prejudicial effect on the outcome of his trial.” Thomas v. United States, 
    914 A.2d 1
    , 21–22 (D.C. 2006) (citing United States v. Dominguez Benitez, 
    542 U.S. 74
    , 81–
    82 (2004)). Here, the complainant’s statement “was the main, if indeed not the
    only, proof offered by the prosecution,” 
    id. at 22,
    to establish that Mr. Wills took
    the property of another with intent to deprive the other of the property, see D.C.
    Code § 22-3211 (b) (2012 Repl.). In finding that “the Government has proved
    beyond a reasonable doubt that [Mr. Wills] attempted to deprive [the complainant]
    permanently of the keys,” the trial court relied only on Sergeant Parson’s testimony
    “that as the woman came towards him, she looked back over her shoulder at the
    man and said, ‘You need to get my keys, he took my keys’” 10 and on evidence that
    “the keys were later recovered by a different officer from somewhere on or near
    the defendant.”
    10
    “[H]e took my keys”—a paraphrase of the complainant’s statement “[h]e
    snatched them from me”—constitutes direct evidence that Mr. Wills had
    wrongfully obtained the keys from the complainant. The complainant’s other
    statements about her keys indicated only that Mr. Wills had them in his possession
    and that the complainant wanted the police to retrieve them.
    25
    The trial evidence included two other references to the complainant’s keys
    not mentioned by the judge in her verdict.        The anonymous 911 caller who
    witnessed the incident stated that the perpetrator threw a set of car keys “over onto
    the highway,” and on cross-examination Ndya Silas disagreed with defense
    counsel’s statement that she “didn’t see keys get taken.”11 Such evidence is far
    from compelling. Assuming the person the anonymous caller mentioned was Mr.
    Wills, his statement does not say whose keys they were, how Mr. Wills came to
    possess them, or to what extent the keys’ owner (if not Mr. Wills) was actually
    deprived of possession when keys landed in the street.         Nor did Ms. Silas’s
    testimony add much to this picture, as she did not suggest who took the keys from
    whom or how they were taken, and she admitted she did not know whose keys they
    were. Given the government’s otherwise thin case on theft, we cannot conclude
    that the erroneous admission of the complainant’s statement about Mr. Wills
    11
    The prosecutor elicited no testimony about keys from Ms. Silas on direct
    examination. On cross-examination the colloquy went as follows:
    Q: You didn’t see a phone get thrown, did you?
    A: No.
    Q: You didn’t see keys get taken, did you?
    A: Yes.
    Q: You don’t know whose keys they were?
    A: No.
    26
    “snatch[ing]” her keys was harmless. In re Ty.B., 
    878 A.2d 1255
    , 1266 & n.18
    (D.C. 2005) (citing Fox v. United States, 
    421 A.2d 9
    , 14 (D.C. 1980)). There is at
    least “a reasonable probability that the Confrontation Clause violation had a
    prejudicial effect on the outcome” of Mr. Wills’s trial on the attempted theft
    charge, Otts v. United States, 
    952 A.2d 156
    , 161 (D.C. 2008), and therefore Mr.
    Wills’s substantial rights were affected by the constitutional error. 12
    12
    We nevertheless reject Mr. Wills’s challenge to the sufficiency of the
    evidence underlying the attempted theft conviction. When it includes the
    complainant’s improperly admitted statement, the government’s proof of attempted
    theft was constitutionally sufficient. See Thomas v. United States, 
    557 A.2d 599
    ,
    601 (D.C. 1989) (en banc) (citing Lockhart v. Nelson, 
    488 U.S. 33
    , 40–42 (1988))
    (holding that a reviewing court addressing a challenge to the denial of a motion for
    judgment of acquittal considers the same erroneously admitted evidence that was
    considered by the trial court). Though admitted into evidence in violation of the
    Confrontation Clause, the evidence that the complainant told Sergeant Parson that
    Mr. Wills had “snatched” her keys, combined with the evidence that the
    complainant sought assistance in retrieving them, is sufficient to establish that Mr.
    Wills tried to wrongfully obtain another person’s property of some value with the
    intent to deprive her of the right to or benefit of that property. See D.C. Code
    §§ 22-1803, -3211 (b)(1)–(2), -3212 (b) (2012 Repl.). Mr. Wills argues that the car
    and the keys were marital property, jointly owned by Mr. Wills and the
    complainant. But other than Sergeant Parson’s testimony that “the complainant . . .
    identified Mr. [Wills] as her husband,” there is no evidence in the record to support
    this argument. And according to Sergeant Parson’s testimony, the complainant
    described the keys as “my keys” (emphasis added). Mr. Wills also argues that
    there is no evidence in the record that the keys had value. But a reasonable
    factfinder could infer that the keys had at least some value in light of their capacity
    to unlock and start the yellow Mustang. See Jeffcoat v. United States, 
    551 A.2d 1301
    , 1303 (D.C. 1988) (“[T]he value of an item is to be determined by its ‘useful
    (continued…)
    27
    With respect to Mr. Wills’s conviction for assault, we conclude that the
    erroneous admission of the testimonial statement did not affect Mr. Wills’s
    substantial rights. This is so even if we assume that the complainant’s other
    statements, see supra note 5, were also testimonial and thus improperly admitted.
    The complainant’s statements, as recounted by the officer, did not provide any
    evidence of an assault; the assault conviction was based on Ms. Silas’s testimony
    and the anonymous 911 call. Mr. Wills argues that his wife’s statement that he
    took her keys was the only evidence linking him to Ms. Silas’s testimony, as Ms.
    Silas did not identify him as the perpetrator of the assault she witnessed. But the
    timing of Ms. Silas’s 911 call, the officers’ arrival at the scene, and Ms. Silas’s
    departure from the scene is strong evidence that Mr. Wills and his wife were the
    two individuals involved in the incident Ms. Silas witnessed. The similarities
    between the descriptions given by Ms. Silas and the anonymous 911 caller also
    support a reasonable inference that Mr. Wills and his wife were the individuals
    involved in the assault witnessed by the anonymous caller. We conclude that as to
    the assault conviction, Mr. Wills has failed to satisfy the third prong of the plain
    error test. For the same reasons, we reject Mr. Wills’s challenge to the sufficiency
    (…continued)
    functional purpose.’” (quoting Jenkins v. United States, 
    374 A.2d 581
    , 586 n.9
    (D.C. 1977))).
    28
    of the evidence underlying his assault conviction.
    D. The Fairness, Integrity, or Public Reputation of the Trial
    If the first three parts of the plain error test are satisfied, we “exercise [our]
    discretion to correct the error” when the error “seriously affects the fairness,
    integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” 
    Thomas, 914 A.2d at 22
    (quoting Johnson v. United States, 
    520 U.S. 461
    , 470 (1997)). The government
    makes no fourth-prong argument in its brief.
    In Thomas v. United States and Otts v. United States, this court held that a
    Confrontation Clause violation did not satisfy the fourth prong of the plain-error
    test when the trial court erroneously admitted a DEA chemist’s report that a
    particular substance was cocaine and there was “no reason whatsoever to believe
    that the chemist’s report was unreliable.” 
    Thomas, 914 A.2d at 22
    –24; 
    Otts, 952 A.2d at 162
    –63. In contrast, this court has held that when a trial court bases its
    verdict entirely on officers’ testimony regarding a complainant’s out-of-court
    statements, a Confrontation Clause violation “would seriously affect the fairness
    and integrity of the proceedings.” Drayton v. United States, 
    877 A.2d 145
    , 148–49
    (D.C. 2005).
    Although this is a case-by-case inquiry, 
    Thomas, 914 A.2d at 23
    , the
    29
    principle in Drayton informs our analysis here. This is not a case like Thomas, in
    which the evidence of guilt was “essentially uncontroverted” and 
    “overwhelming.” 914 A.2d at 22
    (quoting Johnson v. United States, 
    520 U.S. 461
    , 470 (1997)).
    Without the complainant’s testimonial statement, the evidence of attempted theft
    was meager, if not legally insufficient, and to allow a conviction to stand in such
    circumstances “would seriously call into question the fairness and integrity of these
    proceedings.” United States v. Bruno, 
    383 F.3d 65
    , 80–81 (2d Cir. 2004); United
    States v. Cromer, 
    389 F.3d 662
    , 679 (6th Cir. 2004). The unfairness of leaving the
    Confrontation Clause violation without a remedy is more pronounced still where
    the government’s proof that Mr. Wills committed the offense of attempted theft
    consisted almost entirely of unconfronted out-of-court statements—namely, the
    complainant’s statements to Sergeant Parson and the anonymous 911 caller’s
    reference to Mr. Wills throwing car keys.13 “The perception that confrontation is
    essential to fairness has persisted over the centuries because there is much truth to
    it,” and “the right to face-to-face confrontation . . . ‘ensur[es] the integrity of the
    fact-finding process.’” Coy v. Iowa, 
    487 U.S. 1012
    , 1019–20 (1988) (quoting
    Kentucky v. Stincer, 
    482 U.S. 730
    , 736 (1987)). We conclude that the erroneous
    13
    Trial counsel unsuccessfully challenged the 911 call on Confrontation
    Clause grounds but Mr. Wills has not presented that claim on appeal.
    30
    admission of Mr. Wills’s wife’s statement seriously affected the fairness, integrity,
    and public reputation of the proceedings in this case.
    III.
    Having determined that Mr. Wills has satisfied the requirements for plain
    error, we reverse his conviction for attempted theft and remand to the Superior
    Court for further proceedings.14 Mr. Wills’s assault conviction is affirmed.
    So ordered.15
    14
    At least as to the theft conviction, therefore, we need not consider Mr.
    Wills’s alternative argument—not raised at trial—that the trial court erred by
    failing to make a missing witness inference adverse to the government. As to the
    assault conviction, Mr. Wills cannot establish that any error in this regard would
    have affected his substantial rights where an adverse inference would not have
    undermined the main evidence of assault, which came from two neutral 911 callers
    who gave similar descriptions of the incident, not from any of the complainant’s
    own statements. See Marquez v. United States, 
    903 A.2d 815
    , 817 (D.C. 2006).
    15
    The government notes in its brief that certain docket entries and the
    judgment and commitment order in this case indicate that Mr. Wills was convicted
    of destruction of property rather than attempted theft. This clerical error should be
    corrected on remand.