In the Interest of E. T., a Child , 342 Ga. App. 710 ( 2017 )


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  •                                FIFTH DIVISION
    MCFADDEN, P. J.,
    BRANCH and BETHEL, JJ.
    NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be
    physically received in our clerk’s office within ten
    days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed.
    http://www.gaappeals.us/rules
    September 8, 2017
    In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
    A16A1575. IN THE INTEREST OF E. T., a child.
    BRANCH, Judge.
    Following his adjudication of delinquency for aggravated assault, aggravated
    battery, and criminal attempt to commit a felony, E. T. appeals, contending the trial
    court improperly allowed the victim to testify via two-way video conference during
    the adjudicatory hearing. He also contends the trial court improperly amended the
    order of disposition and improperly merged certain charges. For the reasons that
    follow, we hold that the trial court erred by allowing the victim to testify via video
    conference and that a new trial is required.
    “On appeal of an adjudication of delinquency, the appellate court determines
    whether after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any
    rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the acts charged
    beyond a reasonable doubt.” In Interest of L. J., 
    337 Ga. App. 653
    , 653 (788 SE2d
    531) (2016) (citations omitted).
    E. T. does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence, but we find it
    sufficient to support the adjudication. The record shows that on June 30, 2015, R. R.,
    a long-time friend of E. T.’s, persuaded another friend, the victim, to come along with
    R. R. on a walk to a subdivision where supposedly, there were girls to meet. At that
    subdivision, and shortly after R. R. had been engaged in texting someone else, a
    person wearing a mask and holding a gun appeared from behind a truck and
    attempted to rob the victim using the gun. Because the mask had large holes for the
    eyes, nose, and mouth, the victim immediately recognized E. T., who he had met
    previously through R. R., as the robber. The victim later identified E. T. during a pre-
    trial photo lineup and at trial as the robber. When a struggle for the gun ensued, the
    victim was shot and suffered severe injuries, including loss of all or part of several
    internal organs. Meanwhile, E. T., age 15 at the time, fled the scene but moments later
    sent R. R. a text “to delete everything.” R. R. made several inconsistent statements
    to the police: in one, he admitted that E. T. had been present before and during the
    robbery but that he had run away; in a separate statement, R. R. said that it was
    possible that E. T. had been the shooter. R. R. also gave the investigating officer a
    2
    description of the shooter that was different from E. T.’s general description. But R.
    R. did not testify at the adjudicatory hearing.
    The victim, who was age 18 at the time of the incident, testified that he was in
    a hospital in Miami awaiting a transplant of his entire digestive system. He explained
    that he received liquid nutrition via an intravenous tube. But he told the court that he
    was “feeling perfectly fine” at the end of his testimony, and he remained connected
    to the video conference after his testimony concluded. The victim’s initial treating
    physician in Savannah testified to the severity of the victim’s injuries (he lost all of
    his small intestine and one kidney and half of his stomach, large intestine, and
    pancreas); the doctor also testified about the effort to save the victim’s life and to the
    fact that he was awaiting a transplant in a Miami hospital. The doctor added that the
    victim could receive his IV therapy outside of the hospital.
    On August 6, 2015, the State filed a delinquency petition in which E. T. was
    charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, aggravated battery by
    maliciously causing bodily harm by rendering the victim’s intestines useless, and
    criminal attempt to commit a felony (armed robbery); the indictment asserted that
    3
    each charge was a class A designated felony.1 Following the adjudicatory hearing, at
    which the victim testified via video conference from a hospital in Miami, the juvenile
    court adjudicated E. T. delinquent on all three counts; the court also found that the
    aggravated battery conviction merged into the conviction of aggravated assault. Two
    days later, however, the juvenile court amended the adjudication sua sponte and
    without notice to either party, to show that E. T. had committed aggravated assault
    with intent to rob rather than with a deadly weapon as alleged in the indictment; the
    court reentered the remainder of the original adjudication, including merging
    aggravated battery into aggravated assault. The court also ordered that the child
    remain in a youth detention center pending the disposition hearing, which was set for
    October 15, 2015, but later continued to November 10, 2015. Following the
    disposition hearing, at which the victim and his mother made statements via video
    conference from the Miami hospital where the victim was still awaiting a transplant,
    1
    Petitions alleging delinquency must state whether the child “is being charged
    with a class A designated felony act or class B designated felony act.” OCGA § 15-
    11-522 (5); In the Interest of J. H., 
    335 Ga. App. 848
    , 851 (783 SE2d 367) (2016).
    See also OCGA § 15-11-2 (12) & (13) (defining class A and class B designated
    felony acts). When a child is adjudicated to have committed a class A designated
    felony act, the order of disposition may include placing the child in restrictive custody
    for up to 60 months; the maximum for a class B designated felony act is 36 months.
    OCGA § 15-11-602 (c).
    4
    the court entered an order of disposition requiring E. T. to serve 48 months in
    restrictive custody, with credit for time spent in secure detention, followed by 12
    months of intensive supervision. E. T. appealed to this Court.2 In addition to asserting
    that the trial court erred by allowing the video-conference testimony, E. T. contends
    the court erred by amending the order of disposition to reflect the commission of
    aggravated assault with intent to rob rather than with a deadly weapon as charged.
    The State agrees and urges this Court to remand for resentencing on the correct
    charge. E. T. also contends the trial court erred by not merging criminal attempt at
    armed robbery with aggravated assault with intent to rob. The State finds issue with
    a different aspect of the trial court’s decision on what charges to merge.
    1. In three enumerations of error, E. T. contends that the trial court’s decision
    to allow the victim to testify via video conference violated Rule 2.7 of the Uniform
    2
    We initially transferred this appeal to the Supreme Court on the ground that
    the issue presented involves construction of the right to confrontation as found in
    both the state and federal constitutions. See Atlanta Independent School System v.
    Lane, 
    266 Ga. 657
    , 657 (1) (469 SE2d 22) (1996); 1983 Ga. Const., Art. VI, Sec. VI,
    Par. II. The Supreme Court returned the appeal to this Court on the ground that this
    Court has jurisdiction to address issues involving settled principles of constitutional
    law.
    5
    Rules for the Juvenile Court (URJC)3 and his right to confrontation as found in the
    Constitution of Georgia and the United States Constitution.
    The record shows that initially, the adjudicatory hearing was scheduled for
    August 28, 2015. But on that day, the State requested that it be allowed to present the
    victim’s testimony via Skype from a hospital in Miami, and E. T. objected. The court
    therefore ordered that the hearing be continued until September 2, 2015, so that the
    State and E. T. could determine whether they could depose the victim. On September
    1, 2015, however, the State filed a notice of intent to present the victim’s testimony
    by video conference or, in the alternative, that the victim’s testimony be taken by
    deposition in advance of trial. In support, the State asserted that the victim was
    hospitalized, awaiting a multi-organ transplant in Miami; that his injuries “left him
    so infirm as to afford reasonable grounds to believe that he will be unable to testify
    in person as a witness at a criminal trial or proceeding”; and that his “long-term
    prognosis” was “speculative.” The State added that the victim was a material witness
    3
    The Council of Juvenile Court Judges, comprised of “[a]ll of the judges and
    associate judges of the courts exercising jurisdiction over children,” is authorized to
    “promulgate uniform rules and forms governing procedures and practices of the
    courts.” OCGA § 15-11-58 (a) & (b); see also Ga. Const. Art. VI, § IX, ¶ I. And in
    1985, the Council promulgated the Uniform Rules for the Juvenile Courts, which
    have been modified from time to time since then. See Ga. R. Unif. Juv. Ct. Rule 1.1
    et seq.
    6
    and that his testimony and identification of the defendant “are crucial to the State’s
    case.” The State indicated that it preferred the video conference option “to avoid the
    unnecessary expense, delay, and inconvenience of traveling to Miami, Florida,” but
    that it was willing to consent to testimony by deposition “if said deposition can be
    transacted by video-conferencing.” The State explained that even with a deposition,
    it was concerned for the victim’s safety in the presence of the defendant:
    [U]nless the defendant waives in writing his right to be present, the State
    has safety concerns about transporting the defendant to and from Miami,
    Florida, and [safety concerns about the defendant’s] physical presence
    in the victim’s hospital room where the victim is lying helpless in bed,
    connected to medical equipment necessary to keep him alive, and is
    physically unable to run or defend himself.
    E. T. responded by objecting to the video conference option on the same grounds
    raised on appeal; E. T. did not object to the deposition option.
    Based on the representations of the State and without conducting an evidentiary
    hearing on the motion, the trial court held that it had the discretion under URJC Rule
    2.7-2 to allow video conference testimony upon a showing of good cause, that good
    cause had been shown, that the child’s right to confrontation could be protected if the
    procedure used preserved the essence of effective confrontation, and that the same
    7
    rule provided such a procedure. The court therefore granted the State’s motion to
    present the victim’s testimony via video conference and held that the request for
    testimony via deposition was therefore moot. At the beginning of trial, E. T. reiterated
    his objections. At trial, the prosecutor, the defense, and the victim each had a
    computer monitor in front of them that allowed each to see, hear, and communicate
    with each other simultaneously, and all participants could observe each other’s
    demeanor and non-verbal communications. But it is unclear whether anyone was in
    the hospital room with the victim during his testimony. The technology being
    employed was named WebEx, which is a program for transmitting two-way live
    video; the picture on at least one of the screens would change based on who was
    speaking, and the live video was recorded for the record.
    (a) E. T. first contends that the court’s decision to allow the victim to testify via
    video conference was prohibited by the Uniform Juvenile Court Rules. Both parties
    contend there is an inconsistency between in Rule 2.7-2 (A) and (C). We disagree.
    Like the construction of statutes, the construction of court rules is a question
    of law for the courts. See, e.g., Jones v. State, 
    276 Ga. 171
    , 172 (575 SE2d 456)
    (2003) (construing the Uniform State Court Rules). The plain language of subsection
    8
    (A) allows a Juvenile Court to conduct “any Juvenile Court matters” by video
    conference with two exceptions, including formal adjudicatory delinquency hearings:
    At the discretion of the court, any Juvenile Court matters may be
    conducted by video-conference with the following exceptions: 1. Formal
    adjudicatory hearings on Petitions alleging the delinquency or
    unruliness of a child; and 2. Hearings alleging the violation of a juvenile
    court protective order which may result in the loss of liberty of the
    person alleging to have violated the protective order.
    Thus, under these exceptions, the court may not conduct the actual hearing itself by
    video conference but instead must hold the hearing in court.
    On the other hand, Rule 2.7-2 (C) provides that “In any pending matter, a
    witness may testify via video-conference.” (Emphasis supplied). Thus, subsection
    (C), which pertains to witnesses rather than matters or hearings, gives a court
    conducting “any pending [juvenile court] matter” — without stating any exceptions
    — the discretion to allow individual witnesses to testify via video conference.
    Although subsection (C) (2) provides that parties may object to a notice of video
    conference testimony and that “[i]n a delinquency or unruliness matter, such
    objection by the child shall be sustained,” (emphasis supplied), subsection (C) (2)
    goes on to provide that “such objection shall act as a motion for continuance and shall
    9
    toll the applicable time limits,” and subsection (C) (3) provides that the juvenile court
    “may modify these requirements upon a showing of good cause.” Further, “[t]he
    discretion to allow testimony via video-conference shall rest with the judge.” 
    Id. Thus, the
    continuance gives the State time to determine whether good cause for a
    modification exists, to make arrangements to bring the witness to court, or to preserve
    the witness’s testimony by deposition. See OCGA § 15-11-17 (b) (providing that
    juvenile court hearings be conducted in accordance with Title 24, except as otherwise
    provided); OCGA § 24-13-130 (providing for taking of a material witness’s testimony
    by deposition).
    As shown above, the plain language of Rule 2.7-2 gave the juvenile court in
    the present case the discretion to allow the victim to testify via video conference upon
    a showing of good cause. Because E. T. does not challenge the finding of good cause,
    we conclude that the trial court acted within its discretion under that rule. Whether
    that rule protects the defendant’s constitutional rights is another question.
    (b) E. T. contends that allowing the victim to testify via video conference
    violated his right to confrontation as found in Art. I, Sec. I, Par. XIV of the
    Constitution of Georgia and the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United
    States Constitution. “The admission of testimony by two-way video conference
    10
    presents a mixed question of law and fact; therefore, we review de novo [the
    appellant’s] claim that [his] Sixth Amendment rights were violated.” United States
    v. Yates, 438 F3d 1307, 1311 (I) (11th Cir. 2006) (citation omitted). We begin with
    the Sixth Amendment.
    “The Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment, made applicable to the
    States through the Fourteenth Amendment, provides: ‘In all criminal prosecutions,
    the accused shall enjoy the right to be confronted with the witnesses against him.’”
    Maryland v. Craig, 
    497 U.S. 836
    , 844 (II) (110 SCt 3157, 111 LE2d 666) (1990).
    This right applies in a Georgia deprivation proceeding.4 “The combined effect of [the
    four] elements of confrontation — physical presence, oath, cross-examination, and
    observation of demeanor by the trier of fact — serves the purposes of the
    Confrontation Clause by ensuring that evidence admitted against an accused is
    4
    “[W]here the proceedings may result in the incarceration of the juvenile
    offender, certain due process requirements must be observed.” Florida Publishing
    Co. v. Morgan, 
    253 Ga. 467
    , 469 (a) (322 SE2d 233) (1984), citing In re Gault, 
    387 U.S. 1
    (87 SCt 1428, 18 LE2d 527) (1967); see also In Interest of C. M. M., 
    244 Ga. 787
    , 787 (262 SE2d 103) (1979) (juvenile court delinquency hearings must measure
    up to the “essentials of due process and fair treatment”). Thus, as this Court has
    explained, a juvenile charged with delinquency is entitled to “the right to adequate
    notice of the charges, appointment of counsel, the constitutional privilege against
    self-incrimination, and the right to confront opposing witnesses.” In Interest of S. H.,
    
    220 Ga. App. 569
    , 571 (469 SE2d 810) (1996).
    11
    reliable and subject to the rigorous adversarial testing that is the norm of Anglo-
    American criminal proceedings.” 
    Id. at 846
    (II) (citation omitted).5 And, the Supreme
    Court “[has] recognized, for example, that face-to-face confrontation enhances the
    accuracy of factfinding by reducing the risk that a witness will wrongfully implicate
    an innocent person.” 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    Although in general “the Confrontation Clause guarantees the defendant a
    face-to-face meeting with witnesses appearing before the trier of fact,” the Supreme
    Court has explained that it has “never held . . . that the Confrontation Clause
    guarantees criminal defendants the absolute right to a face-to-face meeting with
    witnesses against them at trial.” 
    Craig, 497 U.S. at 844
    (II) (citations omitted;
    emphasis in original). Rather, the majority held, “in certain narrow circumstances,
    competing interests, if ‘closely examined,’ may warrant dispensing with confrontation
    at trial.” 
    Id. at 848
    (II) (citations and punctuation omitted). In what is now referred
    to as the Craig test, the Supreme Court held that “a defendant’s right to confront
    accusatory witnesses may be satisfied absent a physical, face-to-face confrontation
    5
    In Craig, a 5-4 decision, Justice Scalia, joined by Justices Brennan, Marshall,
    and Stevens, dissented, arguing that the majority’s reasoning was erroneous “because
    the Confrontation Clause does not guarantee reliable evidence; it guarantees specific
    trial procedures that were thought to assure reliable evidence, undeniably among
    which was ‘face-to-face’ confrontation.” 
    Craig, 497 U.S. at 862
    , J. Scalia, dissenting.
    12
    at trial only where denial of such confrontation is necessary to further an important
    public policy and only where the reliability of the testimony is otherwise assured.”6
    6
    Although Craig involved the use of one-way video conferencing, the 11th
    Circuit has held, en banc, that the Craig test applies to two-way video conference
    testimony as well, and most other federal circuit courts that have addressed the issue
    agree. Yates, 438 F3d at 1313, 1315 (“The Sixth Amendment’s guarantee of the right
    to confront one’s accuser is most certainly compromised when the confrontation
    occurs through an electronic medium.”), and cases cited therein; see also United
    States v. Bordeaux, 400 F3d 548, 554 (I) (8th Cir. 2005) (“It is true that a two-way
    closed-circuit television creates an encounter that more closely approximates a face-
    to-face confrontation than a one-way closed-circuit television does because a witness
    can view the defendant with a two-way system. But two-way systems share with one-
    way systems a trait that by itself justifies the application of Craig: the
    “confrontations” they create are virtual, and not real in the sense that a face-to-face
    confrontation is real.”). But see United States v. Gigante, 166 F3d 75, 81 (I) (2d Cir.
    1999) (Craig test not required for two-way video conference testimony; rather,
    “[u]pon a finding of exceptional circumstances, . . . a trial court may allow a witness
    to testify via two-way closed-circuit television when this furthers the interest of
    justice.”); United States v. Benson, 79 Fed. Appx. 813, 821 (II) (5) (6th Cir. 2003)
    (following Gigante). We will therefore apply the Craig test in this case involving
    two-way video conferencing.
    Although it is not controlling, we also note the following:
    In 2002, the Advisory Committee on the Criminal Rules suggested a
    revision to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 26 that would have
    allowed testimony by means of two-way video conferencing. Thereafter,
    the Supreme Court transmitted to Congress proposed amendments to the
    Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. The Court declined to transmit the
    proposed revision to Rule 26 that would have allowed testimony by two-
    way video conference. Justice Scalia filed a statement explaining that he
    shared “the majority’s view that the Judicial Conference’s proposed Fed.
    13
    
    Id. at 850
    (II). The Court held that “[t]he requisite finding of necessity must of course
    be a case-specific one[.]” 
    Id. at 855
    (III). Under Craig, it is the State’s burden to make
    an adequate showing of necessity during a required evidentiary hearing. Id.7
    In Craig, the Supreme Court held that the Sixth Amendment did not
    categorically prohibit a child sexual abuse victim from testifying by one-way closed
    circuit television in accordance with a Maryland statutory procedure.8 Rather, based
    Rule Crim. Proc. 26 (b) is of dubious validity under the Confrontation
    Clause of the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution.”
    Order of the Supreme Court, 207 FRD 89, 93 (2002). He remarked that
    the proposed amendments were “contrary to the rule enunciated in
    Craig” in that they would not limit the use of remote testimony to
    “instances where there has been a ‘case-specific finding’ that it is
    ‘necessary to further an important public policy.’ 
    Id. (citation omitted).
          Rule 26 was not revised to allow such testimony.”
    Yates, 438 F3d at 1314-1315 (III) (A).
    7
    We also agree with the Eleventh’s Circuit’s conclusion that the United States
    Supreme Court’s opinion in Crawford v. Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
    (124 SCt 1354,
    158 LE2d 177) (2004), does not alter the need to apply the Craig test in this case. See
    Yates, 438 F3d at 1314, n. 4.
    8
    The procedure was described by the Supreme Court as follows:
    Once the procedure is invoked, the child witness, prosecutor, and
    defense counsel withdraw to a separate room; the judge, jury, and
    defendant remain in the courtroom. The child witness is then examined
    14
    on expert testimony about the effect on the individual child victims of testifying in
    the presence of the accused under the circumstances of that case, the court found that
    the testimony was necessary to further the important public policy of protecting the
    physical and psychological well-being of those child abuse victims. 
    Craig, 497 U.S. at 853
    (III). The Supreme Court found that the trial court properly heard evidence
    regarding the need for the closed circuit testimony and made a case-specific finding
    that the use of one-way closed circuit television was necessary to further the public
    interest stated above. 
    Id. at 855
    -856 (III). The Supreme Court also found that
    Maryland’s statutory procedure for the introduction of one-way closed circuit
    testimony adequately safeguarded the reliability of that evidence. 
    Id. at 851-852
    (III).9
    and cross-examined in the separate room, while a video monitor records
    and displays the witness’ testimony to those in the courtroom. During
    this time the witness cannot see the defendant. The defendant remains
    in electronic communication with defense counsel, and objections may
    be made and ruled on as if the witness were testifying in the courtroom.
    
    Craig, 497 U.S. at 840-842
    (I).
    9
    Like Craig, most Georgia criminal cases applying Craig involve whether a
    trial court may take steps to protect a child victim of sexual abuse from having to see
    the defendant while the child victim testifies in court based on the state’s interest in
    protecting the physical and psychological well-being of child abuse victims. See In
    the Interest of B. H., 
    295 Ga. App. 297
    , 300 (5) (671 SE2d 303) (2008) (considering
    15
    In the case before us, the trial court did not hold an evidentiary hearing or
    examine whether having the victim testify via video conference was necessary to
    further an important public policy. The trial court determined only that, based on the
    State’s representations, good cause for a video conference had been shown under
    URJC Rule 2.7.2 and that the defendant’s right to confront the witnesses against him
    could be safeguarded as long as the technical standards of video conferencing found
    whether trial court in a deprivation case erred by “requiring the father [who was
    accused of sexually abusing the victim] to view [the victim’s] courtroom testimony
    from a television monitor in a separate room” in order to protect the child from the
    trauma of testifying in the father’s presence where the trauma would impair the
    child’s ability to communicate); Harris v. State, 
    269 Ga. App. 316
    , 319 (3) (604 SE2d
    565) (2004) (child victim of sexual abuse allowed to testify with a blackboard placed
    in a position where the defendant could see the witness and the jury and the child
    could see the defendant, “though not as easily as she might have without the
    blackboard”); see also Ortiz v. State, 
    188 Ga. App. 532
    , 533 (2) (374 SE2d 92) (1988)
    (a pre-Craig case where “trial court allowed the witness chair to be turned at an angle
    so the [child victims of sexual abuse] would not be forced to directly face [the
    defendant]”). Other cases involve whether a juvenile judge may take steps to
    accommodate a child witness’ fears in testifying in the presence of allegedly abusive
    parents in cases involving child custody and the termination of parental rights. See,
    e.g., In Interest of C. W. D., 
    232 Ga. App. 200
    , 202, 210 (5) (501 SE2d 232) (1998)
    (children permitted to testify via closed circuit television where they had allegedly
    suffered physical, psychological, and emotional abuse by parent); In the Interest of
    B. G., 
    225 Ga. App. 492
    , 493-494 (1) (484 SE2d 293) (1997) (in a case involving the
    termination of parental rights, the trial court erred by excluding the mother from the
    courtroom during her children’s testimony because the court failed to “make an
    evidentiary finding that the child would be substantially traumatized by the event and
    that the child’s welfare compels a limitation on the party’s right to confront the child
    witness”) (citation omitted).
    16
    in that rule were met.10 But that rule’s standards do not address public policy
    concerns. Rather, they are related to Craig’s concern regarding the reliability of the
    evidence, the second prong of the Craig test. And even if the rule’s technical
    standards were sufficient to satisfy the reliability prong of the Craig test, which we
    do not decide here, “a mere finding that evidence is reliable is insufficient to
    outweigh a defendant’s confrontation rights if the denial of confrontation is not
    necessary to further an important public policy.” Brumley v. Wingard, 269 F3d 629,
    10
    Subsection (E) of Rule 2.7.2 provides:
    Technical Standards. Any video-conferencing system utilized under this
    rule must conform to the following minimum requirements: 1. All
    participants must be able to see, hear, and communicate with each other
    simultaneously; 2. All participants must be able to see, hear, and
    otherwise observe any physical evidence or exhibits presented during
    the proceedings, either by video, facsimile, or other method; 3. Video
    quality must be adequate to allow participants to observe each other’s
    demeanor and nonverbal communications; and 4. If the proceeding is
    one from which the general public may not be excluded as provided by
    O.C.G.A § 15-11-78 (b), the location from which the judge is presiding
    shall be accessible to the public to the same extent as such proceeding
    would if not conducted by video conference. In any such case, the court
    shall accommodate any request by interested parties to observe the entire
    proceeding.
    17
    643, II (B) (1) (b) (6th Cir. 2001) (footnote omitted). Also, for the reasons that follow,
    we cannot conclude that the “good cause” portion of the Rule 2.7.2 test can, in this
    case, substitute for the first part of the Craig test — that video-conference testimony
    by the victim was “necessary to further an important public policy,” especially when
    the court had another option, namely a face-to-face videotaped pretrial deposition.
    First, the State failed to articulate an important public policy, and therefore we
    have no basis to conclude that the trial court equated good cause under Rule 2.7.2
    with any important public policy. See United States v. Jacobs, 97 F3d 275, 282 (1)
    (8th Cir. 1996) (“Mere speculation [as to the state’s public policy interest in requiring
    the defendant to cross-examine a witness by telephone] is insufficient to justify
    abridgement of defendant’s constitutional right to confront his accuser face-to-face
    in the jury’s presence.”). Second, the State argued that good cause was shown
    because (1) the victim was too infirm to travel to Savannah to testify; (2) the victim’s
    testimony was crucial to the case; and (3) video conference testimony was more
    economical than the option of taking the victim’s testimony via a pretrial deposition.
    Yet the fact that video conference testimony may be more economical than face-to-
    face video deposition testimony does not justify a departure from the rules of
    confrontation. See Brumley, 269 F3d at 644, II (B) (1) (b) (“administrative
    18
    convenience and budgetary concerns” do not outweigh a defendant’s Sixth
    Amendment rights). And even if we were to read the trial court opinion as saying that
    there is an important public policy to allow video testimony of critical witnesses who
    are physically unable to travel to court during a reasonable period of time for
    conducting a juvenile court adjudicatory hearing, see Horn v. Quarterman, 508 F3d
    306, 320 (II) (A) (5th Cir. 2007) (“protection of seriously ill witnesses may give rise
    to the type of necessity required under Craig to permit testimony by way of closed-
    circuit television”) (citation omitted), in this case, the trial court did not conduct a
    hearing or take any evidence regarding the victim’s specific medical circumstances
    before deciding whether to permit video testimony. By contrast in Horn, the Fifth
    Circuit noted that the trial court considered evidence and conducted a telephone
    conference with the witness’s doctor in Ohio regarding the witness’s illness and
    inability to travel before overruling Horn’s objection to the witness’s testimony via
    video conference. Id.11
    11
    Horn was a habeas case decided under a different standard, which makes that
    and other habeas cases distinguishable. 
    Id. at 312
    (I) (“There are two categories of
    cases in which a state prisoner may obtain federal habeas relief with respect to a claim
    that was adjudicated on the merits in state court: if the state court decision was either
    ‘contrary to clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court’ or
    ‘involved an unreasonable application of clearly established Federal law, as
    determined by the Supreme Court’.”) (citation omitted). See also Harrell v.
    19
    Although the seriousness of the victim’s injuries, as represented by counsel for
    the State, was not disputed, the court did not obtain specific evidence as to whether
    the victim could travel while awaiting a transplant, whether he might have been able
    to testify in court within a reasonable amount of time in the future, or whether, as
    more fully addressed below, a video deposition in Miami would have been
    appropriate. The State’s representation that there were “reasonable grounds to believe
    that he will be unable to testify in person” may be true, but it was not supported by
    Butterworth, 251 F3d 926 (11th Cir. 2001). In Harrell, a habeas case, the Eleventh
    Circuit held that the following findings of the trial court were not contrary to nor an
    unreasonable application of federal law:
    The Court began by recognizing public policy reasons justifying an
    exception to face-to-face confrontation. First, the witnesses lived beyond
    the subpoena power of the court and thus there was no way to compel
    them to appear in court. The Court found this to be an important
    consideration, because it was “clearly in the state’s interest to
    expeditiously and justly resolve criminal matters that are pending in the
    state court system.” Second, there was evidence that one of the
    witnesses was in poor health and could not travel to this country.
    Finally, the testimony of these two witnesses was “absolutely essential
    to this case.” The Court concluded that “these three concerns, taken
    together, amount to the type of public policy considerations that justify
    an exception to the Confrontation Clause.”
    
    Id. at 929
    (I) (citations and punctuation omitted).
    20
    any medical testimony. Many victims of violent crimes require hospitalization and
    significant periods of rehabilitation as a result of their injuries, which can make it
    difficult for victims to testify in court. But the simple fact that a victim has medical
    issues or is hospitalized for a period of time does not mean that the State
    automatically can present the testimony of any such victim via video conference.
    Rather, under Craig, the Sixth Amendment requires a court to take evidence and
    make a case-specific determination that a video conference satisfies an articulated
    important public policy. In this case, the trial court failed to do so.
    For example, as stated by the Eighth Circuit in a case involving a witness with
    medical issues,
    the [trial] court must determine the necessities of the specific case by
    weighing the importance of the absent witness for the case; the nature
    and extent of the cross-examination; the nature of the illness; the
    expected time of recovery; the reliability of the evidence of the probable
    duration of the illness; and any special circumstances counseling against
    delay.
    Jacobs, 97 F3d at 282 (2) (citations and punctuation omitted) (holding that trial
    court’s decision to require defense to complete cross-examination of important
    witness via telephone due to her pregnancy was a violation of defendant’s right to
    21
    confrontation, although harmless under the circumstances); see also Stoner v.
    Sowders, 997 F2d 209, 212-213 (6th Cir. 1993) (“When the government is claiming
    witness unavailability due to illness, the specific inquiry must focus on both the
    severity and duration of the illness. The court must inquire as to the specific
    symptoms of the illness to determine what tasks the patient is able to perform, and the
    court must determine whether there is the probability that the illness will last long
    enough so that, with proper regard to the importance of the testimony, the trial cannot
    be postponed.”) (citation and punctuation omitted).
    Also, although the Juvenile Code requires that juvenile delinquency matters
    proceed on a fast-track schedule, see OCGA 15-11-582, the juvenile court is
    authorized to grant continuances for good cause, see OCGA § 15-11-478, which, if
    the confined accused is so inclined, can include protection of his Sixth Amendment
    right to confront the witnesses against him. “[A] continuance under the juvenile court
    rules is mandatory when the lack thereof will result in injury or prejudice to the
    defendant.” In Interest of D. W., 
    232 Ga. App. 777
    , 779 (1) (b) (503 SE2d 647)
    (1998), citing Sanchez v. Walker County Dept. of Family & Children Svcs., 
    237 Ga. 406
    , 410 (229 SE2d 66) (1976).
    22
    Moreover, an alternate procedure was available to the trial court that would
    have protected E. T.’s right to confrontation — a video-taped deposition in Miami
    with E. T. present. OCGA § 24-13-130 provides that upon motion of a party, the trial
    court may order that the testimony of a material witness may be taken by deposition
    if
    it appears to the satisfaction of the court that the testimony of the
    witness is material to the proceeding and the witness: (1) Is in imminent
    danger of death or great bodily harm; . . . [or] (4) Is so sick or infirm as
    to afford reasonable grounds to believe that such witness will be unable
    to testify as a witness at a criminal trial or proceeding.
    A deposition provides “the opportunity to be present at the deposition and thus an
    opportunity for physical face-to-face confrontation.” Yates, 438 F3d at 1314 (III) (A).
    As held in Yates,
    under the circumstances of this case (which include the availability of
    a . . . deposition), the prosecutor’s need for the video conference
    testimony to make a case and to expeditiously resolve it are not the type
    of public policies that are important enough to outweigh the Defendants’
    rights to confront their accusers face-to-face.
    
    Id. at 1316
    (III) (A) (case involving two witnesses from Australia who were not
    willing to travel to the United States to testify in a criminal trial).
    23
    In sum, the trial court erred by failing to apply the Craig test to the specific
    circumstances raised in this case. Further, an alternate procedure was available
    whereby a face-to-face confrontation could have been accomplished. Yates, 438 F3d
    at 1315-1316 (III) (A) (trial court erred by allowing two-way video conference
    testimony in part because the court failed to hold hearing to consider evidence of
    necessity for video conference testimony and instead relied on the government’s
    assertions, and failed to make case-specific findings of necessity); State v. Thomas,
    376 P3d 184, 195 (II) (B) (3) (NM 2016) (where court “did not conduct an
    evidentiary hearing or enter any findings on the [Craig test] . . . the admission of
    remote testimony violated Defendant’s right to confrontation”). As for the State’s
    concern for the victim’s safety from E. T. during such a deposition, the State did not
    provide any factual basis for such a concern, and security measures are certainly
    available to alleviate routine security matters.
    We therefore hold that the trial court erred by failing to apply the Craig test
    before allowing the victim to testify via two-way video conference. Given that the
    trial court itself admitted that the victim’s testimony was the critical factor used to
    identify E. T. as the assailant, we cannot conclude that the error was harmless. We
    therefore vacate E. T.’s adjudication and remand for a new adjudicatory hearing. The
    24
    remaining enumerations of error are not likely to recur and therefore need not be
    addressed.
    Judgment vacated and case remanded with direction. McFadden, P. J., and
    Bethel, J., concur.
    25
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A16A1575

Citation Numbers: 342 Ga. App. 710, 804 S.E.2d 725

Judges: Branch, McFadden, Bethel

Filed Date: 9/8/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024