State v. Williams. ( 2020 )


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  • ***      FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAIʻI REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER     ***
    Electronically Filed
    Supreme Court
    SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX
    03-JAN-2020
    08:19 AM
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF HAWAII
    ---oOo---
    ________________________________________________________________
    STATE OF HAWAII, Respondent/Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    PATRICK WILLIAMS, Petitioner/Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX
    CERTIORARI TO THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS
    (CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX; 1FC151000047)
    JANUARY 3, 2020
    RECKTENWALD, C.J., NAKAYAMA, McKENNA, POLLACK, AND WILSON, JJ.
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY McKENNA, J.
    I.   Introduction
    Patrick Williams (“Williams”) was charged with assault in
    the second degree1 against his two-year-old son (“minor son”) in
    violation of Hawaiʻi Revised Statutes (“HRS”) § 707-711(1)(a)
    1
    HRS § 707-711 (2014) states: “Assault in the second degree. (1) A
    person commits the offense of assault in the second degree if: (a) The person
    intentionally or knowingly causes substantial bodily injury to another; (b)
    The person recklessly causes serious or substantial bodily injury to another
    . . . .”
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    and/or § 707-711(1)(b),2 via an August 11, 2015 indictment in the
    Family Court of the First Circuit (“family court”).3            On January
    12, 2017, a jury found Williams guilty of the lesser included
    offense of assault in the third degree, in violation of HRS §
    707-712.4   On March 28, 2017, the family court5 entered its final
    judgment, sentencing Williams to one year of probation.
    2
    The indictment read:
    On or about September 21, 2014 to and including September
    22, 2014, in the City and County of Honolulu, State of
    Hawaiʻi, PATRICK WILLIAMS, being the parent or guardian or
    any other person having legal or physical custody of [minor
    son], did intentionally or knowingly cause substantial
    bodily injury to [minor child], and/or did recklessly cause
    substantial bodily injury to [minor son], a person less
    than eighteen years of age, thereby committing the offense
    of Assault in the Second Degree, in violation of Section
    707-711(1)(a) and/or Section 707-711(1)(b) of the Hawaiʻi
    Revised Statutes.
    3
    The parties and the Intermediate Court of Appeals (“ICA”) refer to the
    trial court as the “circuit court,” but the indictment and proceedings were
    in the family court. At all times pertinent to this case (as well as now),
    the family court had exclusive original jurisdiction “[t]o try any offense
    committed against a child by the child’s parent or guardian or by any other
    person having the child’s legal or physical custody” pursuant to
    HRS § 571-14(a)(1) (2018).
    4
    HRS § 707-712 (2014) states:
    Assault in the third degree. (1) A person commits the
    offense of assault in the third degree if the person:
    (a) Intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly causes
    bodily injury to another person; or
    (b) Negligently causes bodily injury to another
    person with a dangerous instrument.
    (2) Assault in the third degree is a misdemeanor
    unless committed in a fight or scuffle entered into by
    mutual consent, in which case it is a petty misdemeanor.
    The jury instruction for the lesser included offense of Assault in the
    Third Degree, the charge on which Williams was found guilty, read as follows:
    (continued. . .)
    2
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    Williams appealed the family court’s final judgment to the
    Intermediate Court of Appeals (“ICA”), arguing the family court
    plainly erred by failing to strike certain improper opening
    statements made by the deputy prosecuting attorney and by
    admitting certain x-rays into evidence without the necessary
    (. . .continued)
    If and only if you find the defendant not guilty of
    the offense of Assault in the Second Degree, or you are
    unable to reach a unanimous verdict as to this offense,
    then you must consider whether the defendant is guilty or
    not guilty of the included offense of Assault in the Third
    Degree.
    A person commits the offense of Assault in the Third
    Degree if he intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly causes
    bodily injury to another person.
    There are four material elements of the offense of
    Assault in the Third Degree, each of which the prosecution
    must prove beyond a reasonable doubt.
    These four elements are:
    1. That, on or about September 21, 2014, to and
    including September 22, 2014, in the City and County of
    Honolulu, the defendant, Patrick Williams, was the parent,
    or guardian, or any other person having legal or physical
    custody of [minor son]; and
    2. That the defendant, Patrick Williams, knew or
    reasonably should have known that [minor son] was less than
    eighteen years of age; and
    3. That, on or about September 21, 2014, to and
    including September 22, 2014, the defendant, Patrick
    Williams, caused bodily injury to [minor son]; and
    4. That the defendant, Patrick Williams, did so
    intentionally, knowingly or recklessly.
    5
    The Honorable Rom A. Trader presided.
    3
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    foundation.     Williams also argued there was insufficient
    evidence to sustain his conviction.
    In its summary disposition order (“SDO”), the ICA concluded
    the points of error alleged by Williams lacked merit.              The ICA
    ruled: (1) although the deputy prosecuting attorney’s comments
    in his opening statement were improper, the family court had
    instructed the jury to refrain from considering the comments as
    evidence so, therefore, the error was harmless; (2) there was no
    reasonable possibility that any error in admitting the contested
    x-rays into evidence contributed to Williams’s conviction; and
    (3) viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    State, there was sufficient evidence that Williams at least
    recklessly caused minor son to suffer bodily injury.              See State
    v. Williams, No. CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX, at 4–6 (App. June 15, 2018)
    (SDO).    The ICA then entered its judgment on appeal affirming
    the family court’s final judgment.
    Williams’s certiorari application asks that this court
    address the three issues he had presented to the ICA:
    Whether the ICA gravely erred in holding that: (1) the
    prosecutor’s improper comments constituted harmless error;
    (2) the [family] court did not err in admitting the x-rays
    into evidence without the improper [sic] foundation; and
    (3) there was sufficient evidence to sustain Williams’s
    conviction.
    We hold that Williams’s conviction on the charge of assault
    in the third degree must be vacated because the deputy
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    prosecuting attorney’s elicitation of evidence regarding Child
    Welfare Services involvement in violation of a defense motion in
    limine was improper and not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
    As we set aside the conviction, we also address the
    evidentiary foundation issue regarding the x-rays not addressed
    by the ICA, and hold there was insufficient foundation for
    admission of the contested x-rays into evidence because the
    physician through whom the x-rays were introduced was not a
    custodian or “other qualified witness” able to lay a foundation
    pursuant to Hawaiʻi Rules of Evidence (“HRE”) Rule 803(b)(6)
    (2002).   We also hold, however, that Williams’s conviction on
    the charge of assault in the third degree was supported by
    substantial evidence.
    Accordingly, we vacate the family court’s March 28, 2017
    final judgment as well as the ICA’s September 25, 2018 judgment
    on appeal and remand this case to the family court for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    II.   Background
    A.    Child Welfare Services Issue
    In his January 3, 2017 motion in limine, Williams included
    a request to exclude “[a]ny reference to an investigation and
    case by the Child Welfare Services, Department of Human
    Services, State of Hawai[ʻ]i and any legal issues stemming from
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    said investigation and case” as item 2.c.          At the January 9,
    2017 hearing on Williams’s motions in limine, the family court
    granted this request.
    Williams’s jury trial took place on January 9, 11, and 12,
    2017.   Before the parties’ opening statements, the family court
    explained, “Please remember that what the attorneys say is not
    evidence.    What actually counts is the sworn testimony of the
    witnesses and the exhibits or other things that are received as
    evidence.”
    During opening statements on January 9, the deputy
    prosecuting attorney stated:
    [Y]ou will find out that [minor son] is subsequently
    transferred to another family and reunited with his mother.
    You’ll meet Detective Melvin Raquedan, who assists
    with the transfer of custody. You’ll also meet social
    worker Robert Asato, who aids in the transfer from Tripler
    Army Medical Center after [minor son] is treated and
    released and how he is ultimately reunited down the road
    with his mother.
    Williams did not raise a specific objection to these statements.
    On January 11, Wiliams’s deputy public defender requested
    an offer of proof regarding what testimony the deputy
    prosecuting attorney expected to elicit from witnesses Melvin
    Raquedan of the Honolulu Police Department (“Detective
    Raquedan”) and social worker Robert Asato.           The deputy
    prosecuting attorney indicated that both witnesses were being
    called to establish “a material element” of “custody of the
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    child, who was formerly or solely in the defendant’s care, and
    the transfer out of that care.”           After the deputy public
    defender objected to any evidence regarding “care out of Mr.
    Williams’ hands,” the deputy prosecuting attorney stated that he
    would not “get into what happened to the child.            It’s
    essentially to establish the parent, guardianship care and
    custody.”
    The next day, the State called Detective Raquedan as a
    witness.    During his direct examination, the following exchanged
    occurred:
    [DEPUTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]: And in order to explain the
    next steps you took, what did dispatch request your
    assistance with?
    [WITNESS]: Assist in taking police custody of a minor.
    [DEPUTY PUBLIC DEFENDER]: Objection, Your Honor. Violates
    the motion.[6]
    THE COURT: No speaking objections. At the bench please.
    (The following proceedings had at the bench:)
    THE COURT: All right. So the objection is violates the
    motions in limine?
    [DEPUTY PUBLIC DEFENDER]: Yes, Your Honor. The concern
    raised yesterday on record.
    THE COURT: All right. At the end of the day in terms of
    what was discussed at court, I believe I only permitted
    testimony with respect to what the status of the child and
    relative to the defendant having care and custody of the
    6
    This was presumably the granted motion in limine prohibiting “[a]ny
    reference to an investigation and case by the Child Welfare Services,
    Department of Human Services, State of Hawai[ʻ]i and any legal issues stemming
    from said investigation and case,” as well as the discussions that had taken
    place the day before regarding the nature of the evidence to be elicited.
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    child versus transfer of custody. I believe that was
    precluded. So where do you intend to go with this?
    [DEPUTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]: Yes. The prosecution intends
    to show that in order to have the transfer of custody from
    the father’s care to the State, there needs to be a two-
    party assistance, and he responded to that in order to work
    with Mr. Asato. That is what he was given via dispatch and
    that’s all he’s going to testify to with respect to
    assisting in the transfer of the custody.
    THE COURT: Okay.
    [DEPUTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]: But that’s what it is. And
    the State does not intend to get into the details anywhere.
    But he was the responding officer.
    THE COURT: All right. [DEPUTY PUBLIC DEFENDER].
    [DEPUTY PUBLIC DEFENDER]: Your Honor, I think that’s highly
    prejudicial -- the fact that two witnesses are needed to
    establish one of the elements. I think the route that the
    State is taking is unnecessary and it sheds Mr. Williams in
    a different light than it would otherwise need to do to
    establish that same element. I think they can do it in a
    multiple number of other ways, and I think it still does
    violate. I don’t think –-
    THE COURT: All right.
    [DEPUTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]: With respect to the
    establishment, Detective Raquedan is expected to testify
    that he actually completed and filled out the protective
    custody form. On that form [minor son] is known by another
    name. So he is a necessary material witness to establish
    that this child was present. And he as well as Robert Asato
    signed the protective custody –-
    . . . .
    THE COURT: So why is it that you can’t simply ask the
    witness that as part of his duties, did he come into
    contact with these individuals -- the complainant, and
    during the course of his investigation or what he did, he
    ascertained defendant as the parent?
    [DEPUTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]: Okay. And the State will
    just proceed that way.
    THE COURT: That would essentially permit you to have him
    testimony [sic] to things that are within his knowledge but
    without necessarily going beyond what’s necessary to
    establish the elements of the offense. Because what
    happened with the child happened, which really has no
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    relevance. And while the defense is claiming that it is
    highly prejudicial, I’m not so sure that’s the case.
    [DEPUTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]: I’ll proceed. I’ll move on.
    THE COURT: The objection’s sustained. And you may proceed
    as I’ve indicated.[7]
    [DEPUTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]: Understood. Thanks.
    [DEPUTY PUBLIC DEFENDER]: Thank you, Your Honor.
    . . . .
    [DEPUTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]: And did you ultimately work
    in tandem with Mr. Asato on behalf of the Department of
    Human Services?
    [WITNESS]: Yes.
    [DEPUTY PUBLIC DEFENDER]: Objection, Your Honor.
    THE COURT: Sustained. Court will strike that last response.
    You will not consider it for any purpose whatsoever, ladies
    and gentlemen.
    Although the family court sustained the deputy public
    defender’s objection and struck Detective Raquedan’s reference
    to the “Department of Human Services,” of which Child Welfare
    Services is a part, the State later called social worker Robert
    Asato to testify, and elicited the following evidence:
    [DEPUTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]: Good morning, sir. Can you
    please tell us your name and occupation for the record.
    [WITNESS]: Robert Jason Asato. I’m an investigative
    social worker, Child Welfare Services.
    [DEPUTY PUBLIC DEFENDER]: Objection, Your Honor.
    THE COURT: Overruled.
    7
    Although the family court sustained the objection, it did not strike
    the response that prompted the objection, that Detective Raquedan had been
    requested by dispatch to “[a]ssist in taking police custody of a minor.”
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    [DEPUTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]: You can respond. I’m sorry.
    Tell us your name and occupation again.
    [WITNESS]: Robert Jason Asato. Investigative social
    worker, Child Welfare Services.
    [DEPUTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]: Thank you. And Mr. Asato, I
    just have several questions for you. On September 24th,
    2014, were you involved or did you come across [minor son]?
    [WITNESS]: Yes.
    [DEPUTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]: And with respect to [minor
    son], were you able -- during the course of your
    investigation, able to determine who was the sole caretaker
    of [minor son] on that date?
    [WITNESS]: Yes.
    [DEPUTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]: And the sole caretaker
    according to your investigation -- would it be fair to say
    was his father, Patrick Williams?
    [WITNESS]: Yes.
    [DEPUTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY]: And just to clarify,
    September 24th 2014, was that the first day that you were
    assigned and came across [minor son]?
    [WITNESS]:   Yes.
    In addition, during the testimony of Dr. Jennifer Doerrige
    (“Dr. Doerrige”), whose testimony is further discussed in the
    next section, the deputy prosecuting attorney asked, “[D]id you
    alert authorities after treating [minor son],” to which Dr.
    Doerrige responded, “Yes. CPS was contacted. That’s Child
    Protective Services.”8
    8
    Although the official term is “Child Welfare Services,” it appears
    “Child Protective Services” or “CPS” is still often used in common parlance.
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    B.    Other Trial Evidence Relevant to Issues on Certiorari
    The trial also included the following evidence relevant to
    the issues on certiorari.
    1.   Testimony of Nurse Santana
    Around 9:30 a.m. on September 22, 2014, Williams brought
    minor son to Wahiawa General Hospital.         That day happened to be
    minor son’s second birthday.
    Nurse Santana, who triaged minor son upon his arrival at
    the hospital, testified she saw an “obvious deformity” in minor
    son’s left femur and that minor son appeared distressed.
    Williams told her he saw minor son jump off the bed the night
    before around 10:30 p.m. and that minor son’s leg looked more
    swollen that morning.     At around 10:03 a.m., Nurse Santana
    administered fentanyl, a drug which can cause sleepiness and a
    dulling of the senses, to minor son.
    2.   Testimony of Nurse Blakey
    Nurse Blakey then assessed minor son at 10:30 a.m. and
    noted that he was alert and comfortable lying in bed, with
    Williams at his bedside, and exhibited “no apparent distress”
    after Nurse Santana had administered fentanyl.          Because minor
    son’s condition had stabilized, at around noon, Nurse Blakey
    assisted in discharging him.       Minor son then went to Tripler
    Army Medical Center (“Tripler”) for further treatment.
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    3.    Testimony of Dr. Doerrige
    Dr. Doerrige was the emergency room physician who treated
    minor son at Wahiawa General Hospital on September 22, 2014.
    She conducted a basic physical examination of minor son, and
    noticed a deformity in his left leg with soft tissue swelling.
    After discovering an “obvious” left femur fracture, she ordered
    x-rays and a whole body x-ray called a babygram.           Dr. Doerrige
    diagnosed minor son with a left transverse slightly angulated
    significantly displaced fracture of the left femur as well as
    some soft tissue swelling at the site of the fracture.
    Dr. Doerrige also opined that, had minor son not been
    treated, the fracture could have caused serious permanent
    disfigurement or protracted loss or impairment of the function
    of his left leg, and that one leg would have been significantly
    shorter than the other, which would have prevented minor son
    from running, jumping, hopping, and skipping.          Dr. Doerrige
    further opined that minor son’s injury was not consistent with
    jumping and falling off of a bed onto a carpeted floor.            She
    testified that the femur is a very strong bone that is difficult
    to break.    She testified:
    The story wasn’t very consistent because, one, most kids
    . . . learn to jump between ages of 24 months and 36
    months. So the jumping aspect was a little suspect. He
    might be advanced for his age. And then the fact that it
    probably would be greater force than that. Not like a two-
    story bed, but a two-story building that would have that
    kind of force to generate that kind of fracture.
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    Dr. Doerrige also testified that femur fractures are notoriously
    painful and that most children would be crying; in a great deal
    of distress; and unable to walk, stand, or sleep through the
    night.
    Dr. Doerrige also related that while she treated minor son
    for his injury, Williams was apathetic, “[v]ery aloof and was
    off to the side.      Was texting on his cell phone.”         She also
    observed Williams giving minor son fist bumps when minor son was
    crying after coming back from being x-rayed.
    Dr. Doerrige then testified State’s Exhibits 10, 11, and 12
    showed differing views of a femur fracture, the femur fracture
    in those exhibits was consistent with her diagnosis and
    examination of minor son, and the x-rays were a “fair and
    accurate depiction[] . . . of the left femur fracture sustained
    by [minor son].”      Dr. Doerrige testified the upper left corner
    of the x-rays noted minor son’s name.           When the State attempted
    to move these exhibits into evidence, however, the family court
    sustained the defense’s objection based on lack of foundation,
    and these x-rays were never received in evidence.
    Although Dr. Doerrige had testified she contacted “Child
    Protective Services” as noted earlier, during cross-examination
    by the deputy public defender, she also testified she could not
    rule out accidental trauma.
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    4.   Testimony of Dr. Polk
    Dr. Norman Polk (“Dr. Polk”) served as minor son’s
    diagnostic radiologist at Wahiawa General Hospital.            Dr. Polk
    had begun practicing medicine in Hawaiʻi during his residency at
    Tripler in 1975, where he worked for about four years.
    Dr. Polk was on duty as a radiologist at Wahiawa General
    Hospital on September 22, 2014.       His involvement in minor son’s
    care consisted of viewing radiographs taken of minor son and
    speaking with Dr. Doerrige regarding his findings.           He opined
    that minor son had a left femur mid-shaft fracture that was
    slightly angulated anteriorly.       Dr. Polk also testified there
    was soft tissue swelling, but the babygram did not reveal any
    prior fractures.
    After being stabilized at Wahiawa General Hospital, minor
    son had been taken to Tripler for treatment.          The deputy
    prosecuting attorney then began asking Dr. Polk whether he
    previously had the opportunity to view several x-ray images
    apparently taken at Tripler before coming to court that day.
    Dr. Polk responded that he had seen “the post-treated injury
    when [minor son] was at Tripler.”         The deputy prosecuting
    attorney then asked Dr. Polk whether in his past experience, he
    had viewed x-ray images from Tripler.         Dr. Polk then responded
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    in the affirmative to this question as well as another question
    regarding whether he relied on images from other hospitals.
    The deputy prosecuting attorney then handed State’s Exhibit
    3 for identification to Dr. Polk and asked him to verify that
    the name, date of birth, and date of the image was “in line”
    with the x-rays he had previously reviewed regarding minor son.
    Dr. Polk agreed that “[t]hey appear[ed] to correlate.”
    Dr. Polk then began testifying as to what State’s Exhibit 3
    for identification showed even before it was received in
    evidence.   In summary, he described State’s Exhibit 3 as showing
    a left femur after it had been realigned.         Although Dr. Polk did
    not testify that the image was of minor son’s left femur, he
    stated it “look[ed] [like a] fair and accurate” depiction of
    minor son’s fracture.
    The deputy prosecuting attorney then began asking about
    another Tripler x-ray, a lateral view x-ray of a left femur that
    had been realigned, marked as State’s Exhibit 4.           The deputy
    public defender then objected that Dr. Polk had been testifying
    regarding exhibits yet to be received in evidence, and also
    asserted that no proper foundation had been laid for the
    admission of the x-rays.      The family court disagreed and
    admitted State’s Exhibit 3 into evidence.         The deputy public
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    defender raised a running objection to the State’s other
    exhibits.
    Dr. Polk then further explained what was depicted in
    State’s Exhibit 3:
    For the sake of discussion, this is the femur, or
    thigh bone is what people know it as. And this is the
    fracture here, the mid-portion. And these two pieces of
    bone have been separated. And if there’s no fracture the
    white line would be contiguous all the way through. The
    knee doesn’t have any obvious fracture. The tibia and
    fibula, which are the lower leg bones, don’t show any
    obvious fracture. This is the hip. There’s no
    displacement or fracture up here. Basically the fracture
    involves the midshaft. And now it looks like it’s well
    aligned for orthopedic purposes on this film.
    The white lines out here are the plaster cast. And
    the swelling is -- it’s basically adjacent to the area of
    the fractures. You don’t see the same sort of swelling down
    below.
    After foundational questions were asked similar to those
    asked of State’s Exhibit 3, State’s Exhibit 4 was also admitted
    into evidence.
    Dr. Polk then also opined that minor son’s injury would be
    consistent with jumping and falling off of a bed only “[i]f the
    bed was on a second story of a building.”          He explained as
    follows:
    Children’s bones are unlike old people[’s bones] . . . .
    Children[’s] . . . bones tend to bend. . . . So it takes a
    lot of force to take a young kid’s leg -- and the femur is
    . . . one of the largest and strongest bones in the body --
    to take it and actually break it in two pieces, snap it in
    two and to displace it, . . . that’s a lot of force.
    He also testified that a broken femur in a two-year-old is a
    “really unusual” injury, and is often related to non-accidental
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    trauma, such as an automobile accident, falling down the stairs,
    or blunt force trauma.
    5.   Testimony of Dr. Happy
    Christopher Happy, M.D. (“Dr. Happy”), the chief medical
    examiner for the City and County of Honolulu, testified for the
    defense.     Dr. Happy testified he had “review[ed] . . . various
    X-ray images in [minor son’s] case,” and opined that a toddler
    could sustain a femur fracture from jumping and falling off of a
    bed, even if jumping onto a carpeted surface.            He stated the
    vast majority of femur fractures are accidental.
    C.    Appeal to the ICA and Application for Writ of Certiorari
    On appeal to the ICA, Williams presented three points of
    error:
    A.    The [family] court plainly erred in failing to strike
    improper statements made by the prosecutor in opening
    statement.
    . . . .
    B.    The [family] court erred in admitting the X-rays[9]
    into evidence without the necessary foundation.
    . . . .
    C.    There was insufficient evidence to sustain Williams’s
    conviction of Assault in the Third Degree.
    The ICA rejected the challenges.          As to the first issue,
    the ICA applied a plain error analysis on the grounds that
    9
    In his opening brief, Williams took issue with the admission of State’s
    Exhibits 3, 4, 10, 11, and 12. However, the family court did not admit
    State’s Exhibits 10, 11, and 12.
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    Williams had not objected to this portion of the State’s opening
    statements at trial.      See Williams, SDO at 2 (citing Hawaiʻi
    Rules of Penal Procedure (“HRPP”) Rule 52(b); State v. Sanchez,
    82 Hawaiʻi 517, 528, 
    923 P.2d 934
    , 945 (App. 1996)).10           The ICA
    stated “the burden [is] on the defendant to show bad faith on
    the part of the prosecutor, unless the fundamental rights of the
    defendant were substantially prejudiced.”          Williams, SDO at 3
    (quoting State v. Moore, 82 Hawaiʻi 202, 213, 
    921 P.2d 122
    , 133
    (1996)) (alteration in original).         The ICA also cited to State
    v. Valdivia, 95 Hawaiʻi 465, 479, 
    24 P.3d 661
    , 675 (2001),
    stating that this court concluded that even if a prosecutor’s
    comments were improper and made in bad faith, such misconduct
    was “harmless beyond a reasonable doubt because the circuit
    court instructed the jury no fewer than three times that
    counsels’ statements and arguments were not evidence and not to
    be considered during deliberations; there was no evidence that
    the jury failed to adhere to those instructions.”            Williams, SDO
    at 3–4.   Similarly, although the ICA agreed the State’s comments
    were improper because the fact that minor son was taken out of
    Williams’s custody is unrelated to any of the elements of the
    offense, as the family court had instructed the jury both before
    10
    As discussed infra, an objection was not required due to the in limine
    ruling precluding such references.
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    opening statements and when issuing general jury instructions
    that the attorneys’ comments were not evidence, and as the
    record did not demonstrate the jury failed to adhere to these
    instructions, it concluded the prosecutor’s improper comments
    were harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.         See Williams, SDO at
    4.
    As to the second issue, the ICA did not address whether a
    proper foundation had been laid for the admission of State’s
    Exhibits 3 and 4.    Instead, the ICA ruled that even if the
    family court had erred in admitting the x-rays of minor son’s
    femur bone into evidence, such error was harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt.    See Williams, SDO at 4.        The ICA referred to
    the testimony by Dr. Doerrige, Dr. Polk, and the two nurses
    regarding the extent of minor son’s injuries and the type of
    distress minor son had been in upon arriving at the hospital.
    See Williams, SDO at 4–5.      The ICA also stated, “X-ray results
    are the type of data that doctors reasonably rely on in
    rendering a diagnosis and both doctors testified as to their
    observations that [minor son] suffered a fractured femur.”              
    Id.
    As to the third issue, Williams had argued no evidence had
    been presented that he had caused bodily injury to minor son.
    The ICA noted, however, that Dr. Doerrige had testified that a
    broken femur is “notoriously painful” and “would cause most
    19
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    children to cry, and would prevent a child from sleeping through
    the night, standing, or walking,” yet Williams, minor son’s sole
    caretaker, had not brought him to the hospital until
    approximately ten hours later.       Williams, SDO at 5.       The ICA
    also referred to the evidence that Williams had appeared aloof
    at the hospital despite minor son’s severe distress and pain.
    
    Id.
       Furthermore, the ICA pointed out that both Dr. Doerrige and
    Dr. Polk testified that minor son’s injuries were inconsistent
    with Williams’s explanation of jumping or falling off a bed.
    Williams, SDO at 5-6.     The ICA also noted Dr. Doerrige’s
    testimony that children do not typically learn how to jump until
    over twenty-four months old, and minor son had just turned
    twenty-four months old.      See Williams, SDO at 6.       Viewing such
    evidence in the light most favorable to the State, the ICA
    concluded that “there is sufficient evidence that Williams at
    least recklessly caused [minor son] to suffer bodily injury.”
    
    Id.
    In his certiorari application, Williams essentially
    reasserts the same points of error:
    Whether the ICA gravely erred in holding that: (1) the
    prosecutor’s improper comments constituted harmless error;
    (2) the [family] court did not err in admitting the x-rays
    into evidence without the improper [sic] foundation; and
    (3) there was sufficient evidence to sustain Williams’s
    conviction.
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    III.   Standards of Review
    A.    Prosecutorial misconduct
    Allegations of prosecutorial misconduct are reviewed
    under the harmless beyond a reasonable doubt standard,
    which requires an examination of the record and a
    determination of whether there is a reasonable possibility
    that the error complained of might have contributed to the
    conviction. Factors considered are: (1) the nature of the
    conduct; (2) the promptness of a curative instruction; and
    (3) the strength or weakness of the evidence against the
    defendant.
    State v. Maluia, 107 Hawaiʻi 20, 24, 
    108 P.3d 974
    , 978 (2005)
    (citation omitted).
    B.    Admissibility of x-rays
    [D]ifferent standards of review must be applied to trial
    court decisions regarding the admissibility of evidence,
    depending on the requirements of the particular rule
    of evidence at issue. When application of a particular
    evidentiary rule can yield only one correct result, the
    proper standard for appellate review is the right/wrong
    standard. However, the traditional abuse of discretion
    standard is applied in the case of those rules
    of evidence that require a “judgment call” on the part of
    the trial court.
    Kealoha v. Cty. of Hawaiʻi, 
    74 Haw. 308
    , 319-20, 
    844 P.2d 670
    ,
    676 (1993).   In general, “[w]hether or not an x-ray photograph
    has been sufficiently verified so as to warrant its admission in
    evidence is a matter within the sound discretion of the trial
    judge and will be reviewed for an abuse of discretion.”            State
    v. Torres, 
    60 Haw. 271
    , 276, 
    589 P.2d 83
    , 86 (1978).
    C.    Plain error
    “[T]his court will apply the plain error standard of review
    to correct errors which seriously affect the fairness,
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    integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings, to
    serve the ends of justice, and to prevent the denial of
    fundamental rights.”      State v. Henley, 136 Hawaiʻi 471, 478, 
    363 P.3d 319
    , 326 (2015) (citations omitted).
    IV.    Discussion
    A.    The deputy prosecuting attorney’s elicitation of evidence
    regarding Child Welfare Services violated Williams’s right
    to a fair trial.
    Williams argues on certiorari that the deputy prosecuting
    attorney’s comments in his opening statement that minor son was
    “transferred to another family and reunited with his mother” and
    that the jury would meet “Detective Melvin Raquedan, who assists
    with the transfer of custody,” as well as “social worker Robert
    Asato, who aids in the transfer from Tripler [] after [minor
    son] is treated and released and how he is ultimately reunited
    down the road with his mother” was prosecutorial misconduct,
    requiring this court’s further review.
    “The term ‘prosecutorial misconduct’ is a legal term of art
    that refers to any improper action committed by a prosecutor,
    however harmless or unintentional.”         Maluia, 107 Hawaiʻi at 25,
    
    108 P.3d at 979
    .11     Williams asserts the ICA erred in ruling
    11
    We further stated in Maluia:
    [T]here are varying degrees of prosecutorial
    misconduct. . . . [M]ost cases . . . do not involve
    (continued. . .)
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    that, even if the deputy prosecuting attorney’s comments were
    improper and made in bad faith, the misconduct was harmless
    beyond a reasonable doubt because the family court had
    repeatedly instructed the jury that the attorneys’ statements
    and arguments were not evidence and not to be considered during
    (. . .continued)
    prosecutors who intend to eviscerate the defendant’s
    constitutional and statutory rights[.]
    . . . .
    Nevertheless, we decline to create a separate
    category of prosecutorial “mistake” or “error.” There are
    three reasons why we believe that our current method of
    analysis -- in which all improper conduct is labeled
    “prosecutorial misconduct” -- is more appropriate.
    First, there is no need to create separate categories
    because this court already distinguishes innocuous
    prosecutorial misconduct from more serious deceitful
    behavior[.] . . . In sum, whenever a defendant
    alleges prosecutorial misconduct, this court must decide:
    (1) whether the conduct was improper; (2) if the conduct
    was improper, whether the misconduct was harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt; and (3) if the misconduct was not
    harmless, whether the misconduct was so egregious as to bar
    reprosecution. In the course of making these three
    determinations, the seriousness of the misconduct becomes
    evident, and we need not attach a separate label for our
    disposition to be clear. Consequently, a separate label for
    “misconduct” cases and “error” cases is unnecessary.
    Second, a finding of “prosecutorial misconduct” is
    not equivalent to a finding of “professional misconduct”
    pursuant to the Hawaiʻi Rules of Professional Conduct
    (HRPC), and a prosecutor need not face disciplinary
    sanctions merely because we have used the term
    “prosecutorial misconduct.” . . .
    Third, we believe that separate nomenclature for
    different types of prosecutorial misconduct would lead to
    protracted litigation over semantics; this would place an
    additional burden on our courts with no corresponding
    benefit.
    107 Hawaiʻi at 25-26, 
    108 P.3d at 979-80
    .
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    deliberations, and that there was no evidence that the jury
    failed to adhere to those instructions.         We agree with Williams
    that the ICA erred.
    Whenever a defendant alleges prosecutorial misconduct, this
    court must consider three factors: “(1) whether the conduct was
    improper; (2) if the conduct was improper, whether the
    misconduct was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt; and (3) if
    the misconduct was not harmless, whether the misconduct was so
    egregious as to bar reprosecution.”        Maluia, 107 Hawaiʻi at 26,
    
    108 P.3d at 980
    .    Williams argues the deputy prosecuting
    attorney’s opening statement comments were improper.            He
    specifically only raises the issue of improper reference to
    Child Welfare Services in the context of the opening statement.
    The deputy prosecuting attorney’s opening statement
    comments were clearly improper, but we need not address whether
    the ICA erred in ruling them harmless based on the family
    court’s instruction to not consider them as evidence.            This is
    because the deputy prosecuting attorney improperly elicited
    evidence of the involvement of Child Welfare or Protective
    Services in minor son’s case during the testimonies of Detective
    Raquedan, social worker Robert Asato, and Dr. Doerrige,
    notwithstanding the family court’s order granting a defense
    motion in limine excluding any reference to an investigation and
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    case by Child Welfare Services and any legal issues stemming
    from that investigation and case.         On appeal and certiorari,
    Williams did not raise this elicitation of evidence as
    additional bases of misconduct.        When a defendant has not raised
    misconduct on appeal, we must determine whether the misconduct
    constituted plain error affecting the defendant’s substantial
    rights.12
    Granted, the State was required to prove Williams was the
    “parent or guardian or any other person having legal or physical
    custody” of [minor son] to establish the family court’s
    jurisdiction over the case.13       It is unclear why the extensive
    testimony that Williams identified himself as minor son’s father
    to the medical witnesses was insufficient to establish this
    requirement and if not, why additional evidence could not have
    been elicited from one or more of the medical witnesses.14
    Especially when it chose to call Detective Raquedan and social
    worker Robert Asato, the State should have been careful not to
    12
    HRPP Rule 52(b) provides that “[p]lain errors or defects affecting
    substantial rights may be noticed even if they were not brought to the
    attention of the court.”
    13
    See supra notes 2 and 3. See also HRS § 701-114(1)(c) (2014)
    (requiring proof beyond a reasonable doubt of facts establishing jurisdiction
    for a person to be convicted of an offense).
    14
    For example, nurses Santana and Blakey and Dr. Doerrige testified
    extensively regarding minor son and his father, Williams.
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    elicit evidence regarding the involvement of Child Welfare
    Services, which violated the motion in limine.          In addition, it
    should not have asked Dr. Doerrige whether she had alerted
    authorities to elicit her response that “Child Protective
    Services” had been contacted.
    Thus, because the elicited evidentiary references to the
    involvement of Child Welfare Services were improper under the
    first factor of the prosecutorial misconduct analysis, we next
    address whether the misconduct was harmless beyond a reasonable
    doubt under the second factor.
    “Allegations of prosecutorial misconduct are [then]
    reviewed under the harmless beyond a reasonable doubt standard,
    which requires an examination of the record and a determination
    of whether there is a reasonable possibility that the error
    complained of might have contributed to the conviction.”                State
    v. Pasene, 144 Hawaiʻi 339, 365, 
    439 P.3d 864
    , 890 (2019)
    (citations omitted).     To address whether misconduct was harmless
    beyond a reasonable doubt, we consider three prongs: “the nature
    of the alleged misconduct, the promptness or lack of a curative
    instruction, and the strength or weakness of the evidence
    against the defendant.”      State v. Iuli, 101 Hawai‘i 196, 208, 
    65 P.3d 143
    , 155 (2003) (citations omitted).
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    Addressing the first prong, the nature of the alleged
    misconduct, the evidence improperly adduced by the State that
    Dr. Doerrige called “Child Protective Services” and that Child
    Welfare Services had become involved in the case, which, at
    minimum, implied that Dr. Doerrige, a medical expert, suspected
    or found abuse, which was directly related to the central
    question of whether Williams had intentionally, knowingly, or
    recklessly caused minor son’s injury, and was therefore
    extremely prejudicial to Williams.         As to the second prong, the
    promptness or lack of a curative instruction, there was no
    curative instruction.      With respect to the third prong, the
    strength or weakness of the evidence against Williams, we note
    the medical witnesses differed on the cause of minor son’s
    injury and Dr. Happy testified on behalf of Williams that minor
    son’s injuries were consistent with jumping and falling off of a
    bed.   Therefore, the evidence against Williams was not so
    overwhelmingly strong that there was not “a reasonable
    possibility that the error complained of might have contributed
    to” the conviction.      State v. Underwood, 142 Hawai‘i 317, 328,
    
    418 P.3d 658
    , 669 (2018) (citation omitted).           Thus, the
    prosecutor’s improper elicitation of evidence affected
    Williams’s substantial rights and was not harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt.
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    Turning to the third factor of the prosecutorial misconduct
    analysis, however, we do not find the misconduct so egregious as
    to bar reprosecution.     We therefore vacate the conviction, but
    remand the case to the family court for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    B.    There was insufficient foundation for the admission of
    State’s Exhibits 3 and 4.
    On certiorari, without identifying the x-rays he objects to
    by exhibit number, Williams argues that certain x-rays should
    not have been admitted in evidence due to a lack of foundation.
    In his opening brief, Williams took issue with the admission of
    State’s Exhibits 3, 4, 10, 11, and 12.         The family court did
    not, however, actually admit State’s Exhibits 10, 11, and 12, x-
    ray images of minor son’s left leg taken at Wahiawa General
    Hospital, into evidence.      Dr. Doerrige testified, without
    defense objection, that these were x-rays of minor son’s left
    femur fracture taken at Wahiawa General Hospital and what they
    depicted was consistent with her diagnosis and examination of
    minor son.    When they were offered into evidence, however, the
    family court sustained the defense’s objection based on lack of
    foundation.    The State then indicated it would offer them later
    subject to linkage, but they were never proffered again.                Thus,
    we only address the admission of State’s Exhibits 3 and 4.
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    On certiorari, Williams asserts the State failed to
    authenticate the x-rays as those of minor son.            Williams asserts
    the family court’s error in admitting the x-rays cannot be
    considered harmless error because the admission of the x-rays
    depicting a broken and realigned femur substantially prejudiced
    him.   He also asserts the visual evidence of a broken bone was
    graphic and pulled at the emotions of the triers of fact and
    prejudiced his right to a fair and impartial jury under article
    I, section 14 of the Hawaiʻi Constitution and the Sixth Amendment
    to the United States Constitution.
    The State appears to concede a lack of foundation, as it
    does not argue a proper foundation had been laid for the
    admission of State’s Exhibits 3 and 4; it only argued that their
    admission was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, as later
    concluded by the ICA, but we proceed to address whether there
    was sufficient foundation for the admission of State’s Exhibits
    3 and 4.
    State’s Exhibits 3 and 4 would have been admissible as a
    “record of regularly conducted activity” pursuant to HRE Rule
    803(b)(6) if sufficient foundation was laid as to their
    authenticity by “the testimony of the custodian or other
    qualified witness, or by certification that complies with rule
    902(11) or a statute permitted certification[.]”            There was no
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    certification, and Dr. Polk was not a “custodian” of records of
    Tripler.   The issue therefore is whether Dr. Polk could be
    deemed an “other qualified witness” for purposes of laying a
    foundation for admission of the x-rays from Tripler.
    In State v. Fitzwater, 122 Hawaiʻi 354, 
    227 P.3d 520
     (2010),
    this court stated:
    A person can be a “qualified witness” who can
    authenticate a document as a record of regularly conducted
    activity under HRE Rule 803(b)(6) or its federal
    counterpart even if he or she is not an employee of the
    business that created the document, or has no direct,
    personal knowledge of how the document was created. As one
    leading commentator has noted:
    ... The phrase “other qualified witness” is
    given a very broad interpretation. The witness
    need only have enough familiarity with the
    record-keeping system of the business in
    question to explain how the record came into
    existence in the ordinary course of business.
    The witness need not have personal knowledge of
    the actual creation of the documents or have
    personally assembled the records. In fact, the
    witness need not even be an employee of the
    record-keeping entity as long as the witness
    understands the entity’s record-keeping system.
    There is no requirement that the records have
    been prepared by the entity that has custody of
    them, as long as they were created in the
    regular course of some entity’s business.
    The sufficiency of the foundation evidence
    depends in part on the nature of the documents
    at issue. Documents that are “standard records
    of the type regularly maintained by firms in a
    particular industry may require less by way of
    foundation testimony than less conventional
    documents proffered for admission as business
    records.”
    5 Joseph McLaughlin, Weinstein’s Federal Evidence §
    803.08[8][a] (2d ed. 2009) (footnotes omitted).
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    122 Hawaiʻi at 366, 227 P.3d at 532 (footnote omitted) (ellipsis
    in original).
    Dr. Polk had apparently worked for Tripler as a resident
    for four years in the late 1970s, but there was no foundation
    laid sufficient to render him an “other qualified witness” as to
    Tripler’s x-rays.     In addition, the ICA’s statement that “[x]-
    ray results are the type of data that doctors reasonably rely on
    in rendering a diagnosis and both doctors testified as to their
    observations that [minor son] suffered a fractured femur” as a
    basis for its conclusion that the admission of the x-rays was
    harmless does not go to the issue of whether sufficient
    foundation had been laid for their admission, but only as to a
    basis for expert testimony pursuant to HRE Rule 703 (1984).15
    Thus, insufficient foundation was laid for the admission of
    State’s Exhibits 3 and 4.       Because we vacate the conviction on
    other grounds, we need not address whether the admission of
    these x-rays was harmless.
    15
    HRE Rule 703 provides in relevant part:
    The facts or data in the particular case upon which
    an expert bases an opinion or inference may be those
    perceived by or made known to the expert at or before the
    hearing. If of a type reasonably relied upon by experts in
    the particular field in forming opinions or inferences upon
    the subject, the facts or data need not be admissible
    in evidence.
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    C.    Williams’s conviction was supported by substantial
    evidence.
    Because the defense raised the issue of sufficiency and we
    have decided the prosecutorial misconduct was not of the nature
    that precludes reprosecution, we must address the third issue on
    certiorari.     Namely, we address whether there was sufficient
    evidence despite trial error to support the conviction on the
    charge of assault in the third degree.           See State v. Davis, 133
    Hawaiʻi 102, 120, 
    324 P.3d 912
    , 930 (2014) (“[A] reviewing court
    is required under article I, section 10 of the Hawaiʻi
    Constitution to address a defendant’s express claim of
    insufficiency of the evidence prior to remanding for a new trial
    . . . .”).
    An appellate court reviews the sufficiency of evidence on
    appeal as follows:
    [E]vidence adduced in the trial court must be
    considered in the strongest light for the prosecution when
    the appellate court passes on the legal sufficiency of such
    evidence to support a conviction; the same standard applies
    whether the case was before a judge or jury. The test on
    appeal is not whether guilt is established beyond a
    reasonable doubt, but whether there was substantial
    evidence to support the conclusion of the trier of fact.
    State v. Richie, 88 Hawaiʻi 19, 33, 
    960 P.2d 1227
    , 1241 (1998)
    (alteration in original) (citation omitted).            “‘Substantial
    evidence’ as to every material element of the offense charged is
    credible evidence which is of sufficient quality and probative
    value to enable a person of reasonable caution to support a
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    conclusion.”   
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks and citation
    omitted).
    For the reasons explained by the ICA in Section II.C above,
    the conviction of assault in the third degree was supported by
    substantial evidence.     Therefore, the third issue on certiorari
    lacks merit.
    V.   Conclusion
    For the reasons explained above, we vacate the family
    court’s March 28, 2017 final judgment, as well as the ICA’s
    September 25, 2018 judgment on appeal, and remand this case to
    the family court for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    Lesley N. Maloian,                 /s/ Mark E. Recktenwald
    for petitioner
    /s/ Paula A. Nakayama
    Stephen K. Tsushima,
    for respondent                     /s/ Sabrina S. McKenna
    /s/ Richard W. Pollack
    /s/ Michael D. Wilson
    33